NAME¶
Test::MockObject - Perl extension for emulating troublesome interfaces
SYNOPSIS¶
use Test::MockObject;
my $mock = Test::MockObject->new();
$mock->set_true( 'somemethod' );
ok( $mock->somemethod() );
$mock->set_true( 'veritas')
->set_false( 'ficta' )
->set_series( 'amicae', 'Sunny', 'Kylie', 'Bella' );
DESCRIPTION¶
It's a simple program that doesn't use any other modules, and those are easy to
test. More often, testing a program completely means faking up input to
another module, trying to coax the right output from something you're not
supposed to be testing anyway.
Testing is a lot easier when you can control the entire environment. With
Test::MockObject, you can get a lot closer.
Test::MockObject allows you to create objects that conform to particular
interfaces with very little code. You don't have to reimplement the behavior,
just the input and the output.
IMPORTANT CAVEATS¶
Before you go wild with your testing powers, consider three caveats:
- •
- It is possible to write highly detailed unit tests that pass even when
your integration tests may fail. Testing the pieces individually does not
excuse you from testing the whole thing together.
- •
- In cases where you only need to mock one or two pieces of an existing
module, consider Test::MockObject::Extends instead.
- •
- If the code under testing produces strange errors about type checks, pass
the "-debug" flag when using "Test::MockObject" or
"Test::MockObject::Extends". This will load both UNIVERSAL::isa
and UNIVERSAL::can to perform additional debugging on the incorrect use of
both methods from the UNIVERSAL package. (This behavior used to be active
by default, but that was, however correct, probably a burden to onerous
for the CPAN.)
EXPORT¶
None.
METHODS¶
The most important thing a Mock Object can do is to conform sufficiently to an
interface. For example, if you're testing something that relies on CGI.pm, you
may find it easier to create a mock object that returns controllable results
at given times than to fake query string input.
The Basics
- •
- "new"
Creates a new mock object. By default, this is a blessed hash. Pass a
reference to bless that reference.
my $mock_array = Test::MockObject->new( [] );
my $mock_scalar = Test::MockObject->new( \( my $scalar ) );
my $mock_code = Test::MockObject->new( sub {} );
my $mock_glob = Test::MockObject->new( \*GLOB );
Mocking
Your mock object is nearly useless if you don't tell it what it's mocking. This
is done by installing methods. You control the output of these mocked methods.
In addition, any mocked method is tracked. You can tell not only what was
called, but which arguments were passed. Please note that you cannot track
non-mocked method calls. They will still be allowed, though Test::MockObject
will
carp() about them. This is considered a feature, though it may be
possible to disable this in the future.
As implied in the example above, it's possible to chain these calls together.
Thanks to a suggestion from the fabulous Piers Cawley (CPAN RT #1249), this
feature came about in version 0.09. Shorter testing code is nice!
- •
- "mock(name, coderef)"
Adds a coderef to the object. This allows code to call the named method on
the object. For example, this code:
my $mock = Test::MockObject->new();
$mock->mock( 'fluorinate',
sub { 'impurifying precious bodily fluids' } );
print $mock->fluorinate;
will print a helpful warning message. Please note that methods are only
added to a single object at a time and not the class. (There is no small
similarity to the Self programming language or the Class::Prototyped
module.)
This method forms the basis for most of Test::MockObject's testing goodness.
Please Note: this method used to be "add()". Due to its
ambiguity, it now has a different spelling. For backwards compatibility
purposes, add() is available, though version 0.07 deprecated it. It
goes to some contortions to try to do what you mean, but I make few
guarantees.
- •
- "fake_module(module name), [ subname ="
coderef, ... ]
Note: See Test::MockModule for an alternate (and better) approach.
Lies to Perl that it has already loaded a named module. This is handy when
providing a mockup of a real module if you'd like to prevent the actual
module from interfering with the nice fakery. If you're mocking
Regexp::English, say:
$mock->fake_module( 'Regexp::English' );
This is both a class and as an object method. Beware that this must take
place before the actual module has a chance to load. Either wrap it in a
BEGIN block before a use or require or place it before a
"use_ok()" or "require_ok()" call.
You can optionally add functions to the mocked module by passing them as
name => coderef pairs to "fake_module()". This is handy if
you want to test an "import()":
my $import;
$mock->fake_module(
'Regexp::English',
import => sub { $import = caller }
);
use_ok( 'Regexp::Esperanto' );
is( $import, 'Regexp::Esperanto',
'Regexp::Esperanto should use() Regexp::English' );
If you use "fake_module()" to mock a module that already exists in
memory -- one you've loaded elsewhere perhaps, but do not pass any
subroutines to mock, this method will throw an exception. This is because
if you call the constructor later on, you probably won't get a mock object
back and you'll be confused.
- •
- "fake_new(module name)"
Note: see Test::MockObject::Extends for a better alternative to this
method.
Provides a fake constructor for the given module that returns the invoking
mock object. Used in conjunction with "fake_module()", you can
force the tested unit to work with the mock object instead.
$mock->fake_module( 'CGI' );
$mock->fake_new( 'CGI' );
use_ok( 'Some::Module' );
my $s = Some::Module->new();
is( $s->{_cgi}, $mock,
'new() should create and store a new CGI object' );
- •
- "set_always(name, value)"
Adds a method of the specified name that always returns the specified
value.
- •
- "set_true(name_1, name_2, ... name_n)"
Adds a method of the specified name that always returns a true value. This
can take a list of names.
- •
- "set_false(name_1, name_2, ... name_n)"
Adds a method of the specified name that always returns a false value.
(Since it installs an empty subroutine, the value should be false in both
scalar and list contexts.) This can take a list of names.
- •
- "set_list(name, [ item1, item2, ... ]"
Adds a method that always returns a given list of values. It takes some care
to provide a list and not an array, if that's important to you.
- •
- "set_series(name, [ item1, item2, ... ]"
Adds a method that will return the next item in a series on each call. This
can help to test error handling, by forcing a failure on the first method
call and then subsequent successes. Note that the series does not repeat;
it will eventually run out.
- •
- "set_bound(name, reference)"
Adds a method bound to a variable. Pass in a reference to a variable in your
test. When you change the variable, the return value of the new method
will change as well. This is often handier than replacing mock
methods.
- •
- "set_isa( name1, name2, ... namen )"
Adds an apparent parent to the module, so that calling "isa()" on
the mock will return true appropriately. Sometimes you really need
this.
- •
- "remove(name)"
Removes a named method.
Checking Your Mocks
- •
- "can( $method_name )"
Returns a subroutine reference if this particular mocked object can handle
the named method, false otherwise.
- •
- "isa( $class_name )"
Returns true if the invocant object mocks a particular class. You must have
used "set_isa()" first.
- •
- "called(name)"
Checks to see if something has called a named method on the object. This
returns a boolean value. The current implementation does not scale
especially well, so use this sparingly if you need to search through
hundreds of calls.
- •
- "clear()"
Clears the internal record of all method calls on the object. It's handy to
do this every now and then. Note that this does not affect the mocked
methods, only all of the methods called on the object to this point.
It's handy to "clear()" methods in between series of tests. That
makes it much easier to call "next_method()" without having to
skip over the calls from the last set of tests.
- •
- "next_call([ position ])"
Returns the name and argument list of the next mocked method called on an
object, in list context. In scalar context, returns only the method name.
There are two important things to know about this method. First, it starts
at the beginning of the call list. If your code runs like this:
$mock->set_true( 'foo' );
$mock->set_true( 'bar' );
$mock->set_true( 'baz' );
$mock->foo();
$mock->bar( 3, 4 );
$mock->foo( 1, 2 );
Then you might see output of:
my ($name, $args) = $mock->next_call();
print "$name (@$args)";
# prints 'foo'
$name = $mock->next_call();
print $name;
# prints 'bar'
($name, $args) = $mock->next_call();
print "$name (@$args)";
# prints 'foo 1 2'
If you provide an optional number as the position argument, the
method will skip that many calls, returning the data for the last one
skipped.
$mock->foo();
$mock->bar();
$mock->baz();
$name = $mock->next_call();
print $name;
# prints 'foo'
$name = $mock->next_call( 2 );
print $name
# prints 'baz'
When it reaches the end of the list, it returns undef. This is probably the
most convenient method in the whole module, but for the sake of
completeness and backwards compatibility (it takes me a while to reach the
truest state of laziness!), there are several other methods.
- •
- "call_pos(position)"
Returns the name of the method called on the object at a specified position.
This is handy if you need to test a certain order of calls. For example:
Some::Function( $mock );
is( $mock->call_pos(1), 'setup',
'Function() should first call setup()' );
is( $mock->call_pos(-1), 'end',
'... and last call end()' );
Positions can be positive or negative. Please note that the first position
is, in fact, 1. (This may change in the future. I like it, but am willing
to reconsider.)
- •
- "call_args(position)"
Returns a list of the arguments provided to the method called at the
appropriate position. Following the test above, one might say:
is( ($mock->call_args(1))[0], $mock,
'... passing the object to setup()' );
is( scalar $mock->call_args(-1), 0,
'... and no args to end()' );
- •
- "call_args_pos(call position, argument position)"
Returns the argument at the specified position for the method call at the
specified position. One might rewrite the first test of the last example
as:
is( $mock->call_args_pos(1, 1), $mock,
'... passing the object to setup()');
- •
- "call_args_string(position, [ separator ])"
Returns a stringified version of the arguments at the specified position. If
no separator is given, they will not be separated. This can be used as:
is( $mock->call_args_string(1), "$mock initialize",
'... passing object, initialize as arguments' );
- •
- "called_ok(method name, [ test name ])"
Tests to see whether a method of the specified name has been called on the
object. This and the following methods use Test::Builder, so they
integrate nicely with a test suite built around Test::Simple, Test::More,
or anything else compatible:
$mock->foo();
$mock->called_ok( 'foo' );
A generic default test name is provided.
- •
- "called_pos_ok(position, method name, [ test
name ])"
Tests to see whether the named method was called at the specified position.
A default test name is provided.
- •
- "called_args_pos_is(method position, argument position,
expected, [ test name ])"
Tests to see whether the argument at the appropriate position of the method
in the specified position equals a specified value. A default, rather
non-descript test name is provided.
- •
- "called_args_string_is(method position, separator,
expected, [ test name ])"
Joins together all of the arguments to a method at the appropriate position
and matches against a specified string. A generically bland test name is
provided by default. You can probably do much better.
- •
- "check_class_loaded( $class_name )"
Attempts to determine whether you have a class of the given name loaded and
compiled. Returns true or false.
Logging
Test::MockObject logs all mocked methods by default. Sometimes you don't want to
do this. To prevent logging all calls to a given method, prepend the name of
the method with "-" when mocking it.
That is:
$mock->set_true( '-foo', 'bar' );
will set mock both "foo()" and "bar()", causing both to
return true. However, the object will log only calls to "bar()", not
"foo()". To log "foo()" again, merely mock it again
without the leading "-":
$mock->set_true( 'foo' );
$mock will log all subsequent calls to "foo()" again.
Subclassing
There are two methods provided for subclassing:
- •
- "dispatch_mocked_method( $method_name, @_ )"
This method determines how to call a method (named as $method_name) not
available in this class. It also controls logging. You may or may not find
it useful, but I certainly take advantage of it for
Test::MockObject::Extends.
- •
- "log_call( $method_name, @_ )"
This method tracks the call of the named method and its arguments.
TODO¶
- •
- Add a factory method to avoid namespace collisions (soon)
- •
- Add more useful methods (catch "import()"?)
AUTHOR¶
chromatic, <chromatic at wgz dot org>
Thanks go to Curtis 'Ovid' Poe, as well as ONSITE! Technology, Inc., for finding
several bugs and providing several constructive suggestions.
Jay Bonci also found a false positive in "called_ok()". Thanks!
Chris Winters was the first to report I'd accidentally scheduled 0.12 for
deletion without uploading a newer version. He also gave useful feedback on
Test::MockObject::Extends.
Stevan Little provided the impetus and code for "set_isa()".
Nicholas Clark found a documentation error.
Mutant suggested a potential problem with
fake_module().
SEE ALSO¶
perl, Test::Tutorial, Test::More,
http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/12/04/testing.html, and
http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/07/10/tmo.html.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2002 - 2011 by chromatic <chromatic at wgz dot org>.
This program is free software; you can use, modify, and redistribute it under
the same terms as Perl 5.10.x itself.
See
http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html