Test2::Manual::Tooling::Formatter - How to write a custom formatter, in our case a JSONL formatter.
This tutorial explains a minimal formatter that outputs each event as a json string on its own line. A true formatter will probably be significantly more complicated, but this will give you the basics needed to get started.
package Test2::Formatter::MyFormatter;
use strict;
use warnings;
use JSON::MaybeXS qw/encode_json/;
use base qw/Test2::Formatter/;
sub new { bless {}, shift }
sub encoding {};
sub write {
my ($self, $e, $num, $f) = @_;
$f ||= $e->facet_data;
print encode_json($f), "\n";
}
1;
All formatters should inherit from Test2::Formatter.
Formatters need to be instantiable objects, this is a minimal new()
method.
For this example we leave this sub empty. In general you should implement this sub to make sure you honor situations where the encoding is set. Test2::V0 itself will try to set the encoding to UTF8.
The write()
method is the most important, each event is sent here.
The write()
method receives 3 or 4 arguments, the fourth is optional.
The formatter itself.
The event being written
The most recent assertion number. If the event being processed is an assertion then this will have been bumped by 1 since the last call to write. For non assertions this number is set to the most recent assertion.
This MAY be a hashref containing all the facet data from the event. More often then not this will be undefined. This is only set if the facet data was needed by the hub, and it usually is not.
We want to dump the event facet data. This will set $f
to the facet data unless we already have the facet data.
This line prints the JSON encoded facet data, and a newline.
Test2::Manual - Primary index of the manual.
The source code repository for Test2-Manual can be found at https://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.
Copyright 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/