Test2::EventFacet::Trace - Debug information for events
The Test2::API::Context object, as well as all Test2::Event types need to have
access to information about where they were created. This object represents
that information.
use Test2::EventFacet::Trace;
my $trace = Test2::EventFacet::Trace->new(
frame => [$package, $file, $line, $subname],
);
- $string = $trace->{details}
- $string = $trace->details()
- Used as a custom trace message that will be used INSTEAD of
"at <FILE> line <LINE>" when
calling "$trace->debug".
- $frame = $trace->{frame}
- $frame = $trace->frame()
- Get the call frame arrayref.
[$package, $file, $line, $subname]
- $int = $trace->{pid}
- $int = $trace->pid()
- The process ID in which the event was generated.
- $int = $trace->{tid}
- $int = $trace->tid()
- The thread ID in which the event was generated.
- $id = $trace->{cid}
- $id = $trace->cid()
- The ID of the context that was used to create the event.
- $uuid = $trace->{uuid}
- $uuid = $trace->uuid()
- The UUID of the context that was used to create the event. (If uuid
tagging was enabled)
- ($pkg, $file, $line, $subname) = $trace->call
- Get the basic call info as a list.
- @caller = $trace->full_call
- Get the full caller(N) results.
- $warning_bits = $trace->warning_bits
- Get index 9 from the full caller info. This is the warnings_bits field.
The value of this is not portable across perl versions or even
processes. However it can be used in the process that generated it to
reproduce the warnings settings in a new scope.
eval <<EOT;
BEGIN { ${^WARNING_BITS} = $trace->warning_bits };
... context's warning settings apply here ...
EOT
These fields were not always set properly by tools. These are MOSTLY
deprecated by the Test2::EventFacet::Hub facets. These fields are not
required, and may only reflect the hub that was current when the event was
created, which is not necessarily the same as the hub the event was sent
through.
Some tools did do a good job setting these to the correct hub, but
you cannot always rely on that. Use the 'hubs' facet list instead.
- $hid = $trace->{hid}
- $hid = $trace->hid()
- The ID of the hub that was current when the event was created.
- $huuid = $trace->{huuid}
- $huuid = $trace->huuid()
- The UUID of the hub that was current when the event was created. (If uuid
tagging was enabled).
- $int = $trace->{nested}
- $int = $trace->nested()
- How deeply nested the event is.
- $bool = $trace->{buffered}
- $bool = $trace->buffered()
- True if the event was buffered and not sent to the formatter independent
of a parent (This should never be set when nested is
0 or
"undef").
Note: All facet frames are also methods.
- $trace->set_detail($msg)
- $msg = $trace->detail
- Used to get/set a custom trace message that will be used INSTEAD of
"at <FILE> line <LINE>" when
calling "$trace->debug".
"detail()" is an alias to
the "details" facet field for
backwards compatibility.
- $str = $trace->debug
- Typically returns the string "at <FILE> line
<LINE>". If "detail"
is set then its value will be returned instead.
- $trace->alert($MESSAGE)
- This issues a warning at the frame (filename and line number where errors
should be reported).
- $trace->throw($MESSAGE)
- This throws an exception at the frame (filename and line number where
errors should be reported).
- ($package, $file, $line, $subname) = $trace->call()
- Get the caller details for the debug-info. This is where errors should be
reported.
- $pkg = $trace->package
- Get the debug-info package.
- $file = $trace->file
- Get the debug-info filename.
- $line = $trace->line
- Get the debug-info line number.
- $subname = $trace->subname
- Get the debug-info subroutine name.
- $sig = trace->signature
- Get a signature string that identifies this trace. This is used to check
if multiple events are related. The signature includes pid, tid, file,
line number, and the cid.
The source code repository for Test2 can be found at
http://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.
- Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
- Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
Copyright 2020 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/