Test2::Tools::Subtest(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Test2::Tools::Subtest(3) |
Test2::Tools::Subtest - Tools for writing subtests
This package exports subs that let you write subtests.
There are two types of subtests, buffered and streamed. Streamed subtests mimic subtests from Test::More in that they render all events as soon as they are produced. Buffered subtests wait until the subtest completes before rendering any results.
The main difference is that streamed subtests are unreadable when combined with concurrency. Buffered subtests look fine with any number of concurrent threads and processes.
use Test2::Tools::Subtest qw/subtest_buffered/; subtest_buffered my_test => sub { ok(1, "subtest event A"); ok(1, "subtest event B"); };
This will produce output like this:
ok 1 - my_test { ok 1 - subtest event A ok 2 - subtest event B 1..2 }
The default option is 'buffered'. If you want streamed subtests, the way Test::Builder does it, use this:
use Test2::Tools::Subtest qw/subtest_streamed/; subtest_streamed my_test => sub { ok(1, "subtest event A"); ok(1, "subtest event B"); };
This will produce output like this:
# Subtest: my_test ok 1 - subtest event A ok 2 - subtest event B 1..2 ok 1 - Subtest: my_test
You can use "bail_out" or "skip_all" in a subtest, but not in a BEGIN block or "use" statement. This is due to the way flow control works within a BEGIN block. This is not normally an issue, but can happen in rare conditions using eval, or script files as subtests.
"\%params" is a hashref with any arguments you wish to pass into hub construction.
"\%params" is a hashref with any arguments you wish to pass into hub construction.
The source code repository for Test2-Suite can be found at https://github.com/Test-More/Test2-Suite/.
Copyright 2018 Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
2020-10-22 | perl v5.34.0 |