Provided by: libtest-lwp-useragent-perl_0.022-1_all bug

NAME

       Test::LWP::UserAgent - a LWP::UserAgent suitable for simulating and testing network calls

VERSION

       version 0.022

SYNOPSIS

       In your application code:

           use URI;
           use HTTP::Request::Common;
           use LWP::UserAgent;

           my $useragent = $self->useragent || LWP::UserAgent->new;

           my $uri = URI->new('http://example.com');
           $uri->port('3000');
           $uri->path('success');
           my $request = POST($uri, a => 1);
           my $response = $useragent->request($request);

       Then, in your tests:

           use Test::LWP::UserAgent;
           use Test::More;

           my $useragent = Test::LWP::UserAgent->new;
           $useragent->map_response(
               qr{example.com/success}, HTTP::Response->new('200', 'OK', ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], ''));
           $useragent->map_response(
               qr{example.com/fail}, HTTP::Response->new('500', 'ERROR', ['Content-Type' => 'text/plain'], ''));

           # now, do something that sends a request, and test how your application
           # responds to that response

DESCRIPTION

       This module is a subclass of LWP::UserAgent which overrides a few key low-level methods
       that are concerned with actually sending your request over the network, allowing an
       interception of that request and simulating a particular response.  This greatly
       facilitates testing of client networking code where the server follows a known protocol.

       The synopsis describes a classic case where you want to test how your application reacts
       to various responses from the server.  This module will let you send back various
       responses depending on the request, without having to set up a real server to test
       against.  This can be invaluable when you need to test edge cases or error conditions that
       do not normally arise from the server.

       There are a lot of different ways you can set up the response mappings, and hook into this
       module; see the documentation for the individual interface methods.

       You can use a PSGI app to handle the requests - see examples/call_psgi.t in this dist, and
       also "register_psgi" below.

       OR, you can route some or all requests through the network as normal, but still gain the
       hooks provided by this class to test what was sent and received:

           my $useragent = Test::LWP::UserAgent->new(network_fallback => 1);

       or:

           $useragent->map_network_response(qr/real.network.host/);

           # ... generate a request...

           # and then in your tests:
           is(
               $useragent->last_useragent->timeout,
               180,
               'timeout was overridden properly',
           );
           is(
               $useragent->last_http_request_sent->uri,
               'uri my code should have constructed',
           );
           is(
               $useragent->last_http_response_received->code,
               '200',
               'I should have gotten an OK response',
           );

   Ensuring the right useragent is used
       Note that LWP::UserAgent itself is not monkey-patched - you must use this module (or a
       subclass) to send your request, or it cannot be caught and processed.

       One common mechanism to swap out the useragent implementation is via a lazily-built Moose
       attribute; if no override is provided at construction time, default to
       "LWP::UserAgent->new(%options)".

       Additionally, most methods can be called as class methods, which will store the settings
       globally, so that any instance of Test::LWP::UserAgent can use them, which can simplify
       some of your application code.

METHODS

       •   "new"

           Accepts all options as in LWP::UserAgent, including "use_eval", an undocumented
           boolean which is enabled by default. When set, sending the HTTP request is wrapped in
           an "eval {}", allowing all exceptions to be caught and an appropriate error response
           (usually HTTP 500) to be returned. You may want to unset this if you really want to
           test extraordinary errors within your networking code.  Normally, you should leave it
           alone, as LWP::UserAgent and this module are capable of handling normal errors.

           Plus, this option is added:

           •   "network_fallback => <boolean>"

               If true, requests passing through this object that do not match a previously-
               configured mapping or registration will be directed to the network.  (To only
               divert matched requests rather than unmatched requests, use
               "map_network_response", see below.)

               This option is also available as a read/write accessor via
               "$useragent->network_fallback(<value?>)".

           All other methods below may be called on a specific object instance, or as a class
           method.  If called as on a blessed object, the action performed or data returned is
           limited to just that object; if called as a class method, the action or data is
           global.

       •   "map_response($request_specification, $http_response)"

           With this method, you set up what HTTP::Response should be returned for each request
           received.

           The request match specification can be described in multiple ways:

           •   string

               The string is matched identically against the "host" field of the URI in the
               request.

                   $test_ua->map_response('example.com', HTTP::Response->new('500'));

           •   regexp

               The regexp is matched against the URI in the request.

                   $test_ua->map_response(qr{foo/bar}, HTTP::Response->new('200'));
                   $test_ua->map_response(qr{baz/quux}, HTTP::Response->new('500'));

           •   code

               The provided coderef is passed a single argument, the HTTP::Request, and returns a
               boolean indicating if there is a match.

                   # matches all GET and POST requests
                   $test_ua->map_response(sub {
                           my $request = shift;
                           return 1 if $request->method eq 'GET' || $request->method eq 'POST';
                       },
                       HTTP::Response->new('200'),
                   );

           •   HTTP::Request object

               The HTTP::Request object is matched identically (including all query parameters,
               headers etc) against the provided object.

           The response can be represented either as a literal HTTP::Request object, or as a
           coderef that is run at the time of matching, with the request passed as the single
           argument:

               HTTP::Response->new(...);

           or

               sub {
                   my $request = shift;
                   HTTP::Response->new(...);
               }

           Instance mappings take priority over global (class method) mappings - if no matches
           are found from mappings added to the instance, the global mappings are then examined.
           When no matches have been found, a 404 response is returned.

       •   "map_network_response($request_description)"

           Same as "map_response" above, only requests that match this description will not use a
           response that you specify, but instead uses a real LWP::UserAgent to dispatch your
           request to the network.

           If called on an instance, all options passed to the constructor (e.g. timeout) are
           used for making the real network call. If called as a class method, a pristine
           LWP::UserAgent object with no customized options will be used instead.

       •   "unmap_all(instance_only?)"

           When called as a class method, removes all mappings set up globally (across all
           objects). Mappings set up on an individual object will still remain.

           When called as an object method, removes all mappings both globally and on this
           instance, unless a true value is passed as an argument, in which only mappings local
           to the object will be removed. (Any true value will do, so you can pass a meaningful
           string.)

       •   "register_psgi($domain, $app)"

           Register a particular PSGI app (code reference) to be used when requests for a domain
           are received (matches are made exactly against "$request->uri->host").  The request is
           passed to the $app for processing, and the PSGI response is converted back to an
           HTTP::Response (you must already have loaded HTTP::Message::PSGI or equivalent, as
           this is not done for you).

           You can also use "register_psgi" with a regular expression as the first argument, or
           any of the other forms used by "map_response", if you wish, as calling
           "$test_ua->register_psgi($domain, $app)" is equivalent to:

               $test_ua->map_response(
                   $domain,
                   sub { HTTP::Response->from_psgi($app->($_[0]->to_psgi)) },
               );

           This feature is useful for testing your PSGI applications, or for simulating a server
           so as to test your client code.

           You might find using Plack::Test or Plack::Test::ExternalServer easier for your needs,
           so check those out as well.

       •   "unregister_psgi($domain, instance_only?)"

           When called as a class method, removes a domain->PSGI app entry that had been
           registered globally.  Some mappings set up on an individual object may still remain.

           When called as an object method, removes a domain registration that was made both
           globally and locally, unless a true value was passed as the second argument, in which
           case only the registration local to the object will be removed. This allows a
           different mapping made globally to take over.

           If you want to mask a global registration on just one particular instance, then add
           "undef" as a mapping on your instance:

               $useragent->map_response($domain, undef);

       •   "last_http_request_sent"

           The last HTTP::Request object that this object (if called on an object) or module (if
           called as a class method) processed, whether or not it matched a mapping you set up
           earlier.

           Note that this is also available via "last_http_response_received->request".

       •   "last_http_response_received"

           The last HTTP::Response object that this module returned, as a result of a mapping you
           set up earlier with "map_response". You shouldn't normally need to use this, as you
           know what you responded with - you should instead be testing how your code reacted to
           receiving this response.

       •   "last_useragent"

           The last Test::LWP::UserAgent object that was used to send a request.  Obviously this
           only provides new information if called as a class method; you can use this if you
           don't have direct control over the useragent itself, to get the object that was used,
           to verify options such as the network timeout.

       •   "network_fallback"

           Getter/setter method for the network_fallback preference that will be used on this
           object (if called as an instance method), or globally, if called as a class method.
           Note that the actual behaviour used on an object is the ORed value of the instance
           setting and the global setting.

       •   "send_request($request)"

           This is the only method from LWP::UserAgent that has been overridden, which processes
           the HTTP::Request, sends to the network, then creates the HTTP::Response object from
           the reply received. Here, we loop through your local and global domain registrations,
           and local and global mappings (in this order) and returns the first match found;
           otherwise, a simple 404 response is returned (unless "network_fallback" was specified
           as a constructor option, in which case unmatched requests will be delivered to the
           network.)

       All other methods from LWP::UserAgent are available unchanged.

Usage with SOAP requests

       •   SOAP::Lite

           To use this module when communicating via SOAP::Lite with a SOAP server (either a real
           one, with live network requests, see above or with one simulated with mapped
           responses), simply do this:

               use SOAP::Lite;
               use SOAP::Transport::HTTP;
               $SOAP::Transport::HTTP::Client::USERAGENT_CLASS = 'Test::LWP::UserAgent';

           You must then make all your configuration changes and mappings globally.

           See also "CHANGING THE DEFAULT USERAGENT CLASS" in SOAP::Transport.

       •   XML::Compile::SOAP

           When using XML::Compile::SOAP with a compiled WSDL, you can change the useragent
           object via XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP:

               my $call = $wsdl->compileClient(
                   $interface_name,
                   transport => XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP->new(
                       user_agent => $useragent,
                       address => $wsdl->endPoint,
                   ),
               );

           See also "Adding HTTP headers" in XML::Compile::SOAP::FAQ.

MOTIVATION

       Most mock libraries on the CPAN use Test::MockObject, which is widely considered not good
       practice (among other things, @ISA is violated, it requires knowing far too much about the
       module's internals, and is very clumsy to work with).  (This blog entry is one of many
       that chronicles its issues.)

       This module is a direct descendant of LWP::UserAgent, exports nothing into your namespace,
       and all access is via method calls, so it is fully inheritable should you desire to add
       more features or override some bits of functionality.

       (Aside from the constructor), it only overrides the one method in LWP::UserAgent that
       issues calls to the network, so real HTTP::Request and HTTP::Headers objects are used
       throughout. It provides a method ("last_http_request_sent") to access the last
       HTTP::Request, for testing things like the URI and headers that your code sent to
       LWP::UserAgent.

SUPPORT

       Bugs may be submitted through the RT bug tracker
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Test-LWP-UserAgent> (or
       bug-Test-LWP-UserAgent@rt.cpan.org).  I am also usually active on irc, as 'ether' at
       "irc.perl.org".

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       AirG Inc. <http://corp.airg.com>, my former employer, and the first user of this
       distribution.

       mst - Matt S. Trout <mst@shadowcat.co.uk>, for the better name of this distribution, and
       for the PSGI registration concept.

       Also Yury Zavarin, whose Test::Mock::LWP::Dispatch inspired me to write this module, and
       from where I borrowed some aspects of the API.

SEE ALSO

       •   Perl advent article, 2012 <http://www.perladvent.org/2012/2012-12-12.html>

       •   Test::Mock::LWP::Dispatch

       •   Test::Mock::LWP::UserAgent

       •   LWP::UserAgent

       •   PSGI, HTTP::Message::PSGI, LWP::Protocol::PSGI,

       •   Plack::Test, Plack::Test::ExternalServer

AUTHOR

       Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Karen Etheridge.

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