Test2::Util(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test2::Util(3)
NAME
Test2::Util - Tools used by Test2 and friends.
DESCRIPTION
Collection of tools used by Test2 and friends.
EXPORTS
All exports are optional. You must specify subs to import.
($success, $error) = try { ... }
Eval the codeblock, return success or failure, and the error
message. This code protects $@ and $!, they will be restored by the
end of the run. This code also temporarily blocks $SIG{DIE}
handlers.
protect { ... }
Similar to try, except that it does not catch exceptions. The idea
here is to protect $@ and $! from changes. $@ and $! will be
restored to whatever they were before the run so long as it is
successful. If the run fails $! will still be restored, but $@ will
contain the exception being thrown.
CAN_FORK
True if this system is capable of true or pseudo-fork.
CAN_REALLY_FORK
True if the system can really fork. This will be false for systems
where fork is emulated.
CAN_THREAD
True if this system is capable of using threads.
USE_THREADS
Returns true if threads are enabled, false if they are not.
get_tid
This will return the id of the current thread when threads are
enabled, otherwise it returns 0.
my $file = pkg_to_file($package)
Convert a package name to a filename.
$string = ipc_separator()
Get the IPC separator. Currently this is always the string '~'.
$string = gen_uid()
Generate a unique id (NOT A UUID). This will typically be the
process id, the thread id, the time, and an incrementing integer
all joined with the "ipc_separator()".
These ID's are unique enough for most purposes. For identical ids
to be generated you must have 2 processes with the same PID
generate IDs at the same time with the same current state of the
incrementing integer. This is a perfectly reasonable thing to
expect to happen across multiple machines, but is quite unlikely to
happen on one machine.
This can fail to be unique if a process generates an id, calls
exec, and does it again after the exec and it all happens in less
than a second. It can also happen if the systems process id's cycle
in less than a second allowing 2 different programs that use this
generator to run with the same PID in less than a second. Both
these cases are sufficiently unlikely. If you need universally
unique ids, or ids that are unique in these conditions, look at
Data::UUID.
($ok, $err) = do_rename($old_name, $new_name)
Rename a file, this wraps "rename()" in a way that makes it more
reliable cross-platform when trying to rename files you recently
altered.
($ok, $err) = do_unlink($filename)
Unlink a file, this wraps "unlink()" in a way that makes it more
reliable cross-platform when trying to unlink files you recently
altered.
($ok, $err) = try_sig_mask { ... }
Complete an action with several signals masked, they will be
unmasked at the end allowing any signals that were intercepted to
get handled.
This is primarily used when you need to make several actions atomic
(against some signals anyway).
Signals that are intercepted:
SIGINT
SIGALRM
SIGHUP
SIGTERM
SIGUSR1
SIGUSR2
NOTES && CAVEATS
5.10.0
Perl 5.10.0 has a bug when compiled with newer gcc versions. This
bug causes a segfault whenever a new thread is launched. Test2 will
attempt to detect this, and note that the system is not capable of
forking when it is detected.
Devel::Cover
Devel::Cover does not support threads. CAN_THREAD will return false
if Devel::Cover is loaded before the check is first run.
SOURCE
The source code repository for Test2 can be found at
http://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.
MAINTAINERS
Chad Granum <exodist AT cpan.org>
AUTHORS
Chad Granum <exodist AT cpan.org>
Kent Fredric <kentnl AT cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2019 Chad Granum <exodist AT 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/
perl v5.16.3 2019-09-06 Test2::Util(3)