oracular (3) Dancer2::Manual::Testing.3pm.gz

Provided by: libdancer2-perl_1.1.1+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       Dancer2::Manual::Testing - Writing tests for Dancer2

VERSION

       version 1.1.1

Basic application testing

       Since Dancer2 produces PSGI applications, you can easily write tests using Plack::Test and provide your
       Dancer application as the app for testing.

       A basic test (which we also scaffold with dancer2) looks like this:

           use strict;
           use warnings;

           use Test::More tests => 4;
           use Plack::Test;
           use HTTP::Request::Common;

           use_ok('MyApp');

           # create an application
           my $app = MyApp->to_app;
           isa_ok( $app, 'CODE' );

           # create a testing object
           my $test = Plack::Test->create($app);

           # now you can call requests on it and get responses
           # requests are of HTTP::Request
           # responses are of HTTP::Response

           # "GET" from HTTP::Request::Common creates an HTTP::Request object
           my $response = $test->request( GET '/' );

           # same as:
           # my $response = $test->request( HTTP::Request->new( GET => '/' ) );

           ok( $response->is_success, 'Successful request' );
           is( $response->content, 'OK', 'Correct response content' );

       Read the documentation for HTTP::Request and HTTP::Request::Common to see the different options for
       sending parameters.

Cookies

       If you don't want to use an entire user agent for this test, you can use HTTP::Cookies to store cookies
       and then retrieve them:

           use strict;
           use warnings;

           use Test::More tests => 3;
           use Plack::Test;
           use HTTP::Request::Common;
           use HTTP::Cookies;

           use_ok('MyApp');

           my $url  = 'http://localhost';
           my $jar  = HTTP::Cookies->new();
           my $test = Plack::Test->create( MyApp->to_app );

           subtest 'Create session' => sub {
               my $res = $test->request( GET "$url/login" );
               ok( $res->is_success, 'Successful login' );

               # extract cookies from the response and store in the jar
               $jar->extract_cookies($res);
           };

           subtest 'Check session' => sub {
               my $req = GET "$url/logout";

               # add cookies to the request
               $jar->add_cookie_header($req);

               my $res = $test->request($req);
               ok( $res->is_success, 'Successful logout' );
               like(
                   $res->content,
                   'Successfully logged out',
                   'Got correct log out content',
               );
           };

       Please note that the request URL must include scheme and host for the call to "add_cookie_header" in
       HTTP::Cookies to work.

Plugins

       In order to test plugins, you can create an application on the spot, as part of the test script code, and
       use the plugin there.

           use strict;
           use warnings;

           use Test::More tests => 2;
           use Plack::Test;
           use HTTP::Request::Common;

           {
               package MyTestApp;
               use Dancer2;
               use Dancer2::Plugin::MyPlugin;

               get '/' => sub { my_keyword };
           }

           my $test = Plack::Test->create( MyTestApp->to_app );
           my $res  = $test->request( GET '/' );

           ok( $res->is_success, 'Successful request' );
           is( $res->content, 'MyPlugin-MyKeyword', 'Correct content' );

AUTHOR

       Dancer Core Developers

       This software is copyright (c) 2024 by Alexis Sukrieh.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.