Provided by: libplack-middleware-test-stashwarnings-perl_0.07-1_all
NAME
Plack::Middleware::Test::StashWarnings - Test your application's warnings
SYNOPSIS
# for your PSGI application: enable "Test::StashWarnings"; # for your Test::WWW::Mechanize subclass: use Storable 'thaw'; sub get_warnings { local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1; my $self = shift; my $clone = $self->clone; return unless $clone->get_ok('/__test_warnings'); my @warnings = @{ thaw $clone->content }; return @warnings; }
DESCRIPTION
Plack::Middleware::Test::StashWarnings is a Plack middleware component to record warnings generated by your application so that you can test them to make sure your application complains about the right things. The warnings generated by your application are available at a special URL ("/__test_warnings"), encoded with "nfreeze" in Storable. So using Test::WWW::Mechanize you can just "get" that URL and "thaw" in Storable its content.
RATIONALE
Warnings are an important part of any application. Your web application should warn its operators when something is amiss. Almost as importantly, your web application should gracefully cope with bad input, the back button, and all other aspects of the user experience. Unfortunately, tests seldom cover what happens when things go poorly. Are you sure that your application correctly denies that action and logs the failure? Are you sure it will tomorrow? This module lets you retrieve the warnings that your forked server issues. That way you can test that your application continues to issue warnings when it makes sense. Catching the warnings also keeps your test output tidy. Finally, you'll be able to see (and be notified via failing tests) when your application issues new, unexpected warnings so you can fix them immediately.
AUTHOR
Shawn M Moore "sartak@bestpractical.com" Tatsuhiko Miyagawa wrote Plack::Middleware::Test::Recorder which served as a model for this module.
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Test::HTTP::Server::Simple::StashWarnings