table of contents
Test::Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Test::Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable(3pm) |
NAME¶
"Test::Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable" - conformance tests for awaitable role API
SYNOPSIS¶
use Test::More; use Test::Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable; use My::Future::Subclass; test_awaitable "My subclass of Future", class => "My::Future::Subclass"; done_testing;
DESCRIPTION¶
This module provides a single test function, which runs a suite of subtests to check that a given class provides a useable implementation of the Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable role. It runs tests that simulate various ways in which Future::AsyncAwait will try to use an instance of this class, to check that the implementation is valid.
FUNCTIONS¶
test_awaitable¶
test_awaitable( $title, %args );
Runs the API conformance tests. $title is printed in the test description output so should be some human-friendly string.
Takes the following named arguments:
- class => STRING
- Gives the name of the class. This is the class on which the "AWAIT_NEW_DONE" and "AWAIT_NEW_FAIL" methods will be invoked.
- new => CODE
- Optional. Gives a callback function to invoke to construct a new pending
instance; used by the tests to create pending instances that would be
passed into the "await" keyword. As this
is not part of the API as such, the test code does not rely on being able
to directly perform it via the API.
This argument is optional; if not provided the tests will simply try to invoke the regular "new" constructor on the given class name. For most implementations this should be sufficient.
$f = $new->();
- cancel => CODE
- Optional. Gives a callback function to invoke to cancel a pending
instance, if the implementation provides cancellation semantics. If this
callback is provided then an extra subtest suite is run to check the API
around cancellation.
$cancel->( $f );
- force => CODE
- Optional. Gives a callback function to invoke to wait for a promise to
invoke its on-ready callbacks. Some future-like implementations will run
these immediately when the future is marked as done or failed, and so this
callback will not be required. Other implementations will defer these
invocations, perhaps until the next tick of an event loop or similar. In
the latter case, these implementations should provide a way for the test
to wait for this to happen.
$force->( $f );
AUTHOR¶
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
2025-01-06 | perl v5.40.0 |