Test2::V0(3) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Test2::V0(3)

Test2::V0 - 0Th edition of the Test2 recommended bundle.

This is the big-daddy bundle. This bundle includes nearly every tool, and several plugins, that the Test2 author uses. This bundle is used extensively to test Test2::Suite itself.

This bundle should not change in a severely incompatible way. Some minor breaking changes, specially bugfixes, may be allowed. If breaking changes are needed then a new "Test2::V#" module should be released instead.

As new "V#" modules are released old ones may be moved to different cpan distributions. You should always use a specific bundle version and list that version in your distributions testing requirements. You should never simply list Test2::Suite as your modules dep, instead list the specific bundle, or tools and plugins you use directly in your metadata.

    use Test2::V0;
    ok(1, "pass");
    ...
    done_testing;

    use Test2::V0 '!meta';

Moose and Test2::V0 both export very different meta() subs. Adding '!meta' to the import args will prevent the sub from being imported. This bundle also exports the sub under the name meta_check() so you can use that spelling as an alternative.

:DEFAULT
The following are both identical:

    use Test2::V0;
    use Test2::V0 ':DEFAULT';
    

    use Test2::V0 ':DEFAULT', '!ok', ok => {-as => 'my_ok'};

This bundle uses Test2::Util::Importer for exporting, as such you can use any arguments it accepts.

Explanation:

'!ok'
Do not export ok()
Actually, go ahead and import ok() but under the name my_ok().

If you did not add the '!ok' argument then you would have both ok() and my_ok()

All of these can be disabled via individual import arguments, or by the "-no_pragmas" argument.

    use Test2::V0 -no_pragmas => 1;

strict is turned on for you. You can disable this with the "-no_strict" or "-no_pragmas" import arguments:

    use Test2::V0 -no_strict => 1;

warnings are turned on for you. You can disable this with the "-no_warnings" or "-no_pragmas" import arguments:

    use Test2::V0 -no_warnings => 1;

This is actually done via the Test2::Plugin::UTF8 plugin, see the "PLUGINS" section for details.

Note: "-no_pragmas => 1" will turn off the entire plugin.

See Test2::Plugin::SRand.

This will set the random seed to today's date. You can provide an alternate seed with the "-srand" import option:

    use Test2::V0 -srand => 1234;

You can also disable this behavior:

    use Test2::V0 -no_srand => 1;

Note When srand is on (default) it can cause problems with things like File::Temp which will end up attempting the same "random" filenames for every test process started on a given day (or sharing the same seed).

See Test2::Plugin::UTF8.

This will set the file, and all output handles (including formatter handles), to utf8. This will turn on the utf8 pragma for the current scope.

This can be disabled using the "-no_utf8 => 1" or "-no_pragmas => 1" import arguments.

    use Test2::V0 -no_utf8 => 1;

See Test2::Plugin::ExitSummary.

This plugin has no configuration.

See Test2::API for these

$ctx = context()
$events = intercept { ... }

See Test2::Tools::Target.

You can specify a target class with the "-target" import argument. If you do not provide a target then $CLASS and CLASS() will not be imported.

    use Test2::V0 -target => 'My::Class';
    print $CLASS;  # My::Class
    print CLASS(); # My::Class

Or you can specify names:

    use Test2::V0 -target => { pkg => 'Some::Package' };
    pkg()->xxx; # Call 'xxx' on Some::Package
    $pkg->xxx;  # Same
$CLASS
Package variable that contains the target class name.
$class = CLASS()
Constant function that returns the target class name.

See Test2::Tools::Defer.

See Test2::Tools::Basic.

$todo = todo($reason)

See Test2::Tools::Compare.

$check = match(qr/pattern/)
$check = mismatch(qr/pattern/)
$check = validator(sub { return $bool })
$check = hash { ... }
$check = array { ... }
$check = bag { ... }
$check = object { ... }
$check = meta { ... }
$check = number($num)
$check = string($str)
$check = bool($bool)
$check = check_isa($class_name)
$check = in_set(@things)
$check = not_in_set(@things)
$check = check_set(@things)
$check = item($thing)
$check = item($idx => $thing)
$check = field($name => $val)
$check = call($method => $expect)
$check = call_list($method => $expect)
$check = call_hash($method => $expect)
$check = prop($name => $expect)
$check = check($thing)
$check = T()
$check = F()
$check = D()
$check = DF()
$check = E()
$check = DNE()
$check = FDNE()
$check = U()
$check = L()
$check = exact_ref($ref)
$check = event $type => ...
@checks = fail_events $type => ...

See Test2::Tools::ClassicCompare.

See Test2::Tools::Subtest.

(Note: This is called subtest_buffered() in the Tools module.)

See Test2::Tools::Class.

See Test2::Tools::Encoding.

See Test2::Tools::Exports.

See Test2::Tools::Ref.

See Test2::Tools::Refcount.

$count = refcount($ref)

See Test2::Tools::Mock.

$control = mock ...
$bool = mocked($thing)

See Test2::Tools::Exception.

$exception = dies { ... }
$bool = lives { ... }
$bool = try_ok { ... }

See Test2::Tools::Warnings.

$count = warns { ... }
$warning = warning { ... }
$warnings_ref = warnings { ... }
$bool = no_warnings { ... }

The source code repository for Test2-Suite can be found at https://github.com/Test-More/Test2-Suite/.

Copyright 2018 Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/

2024-04-28 perl v5.40.0