#!./perl BEGIN { chdir 't' if -d 't'; @INC = '../lib'; } use Test::More tests => 11; # these two should be kept in sync with the pragma itself # if hint bits are changed there, other things *will* break my $hint_bits = 0x00400000; my $error = "filetest: the only implemented subpragma is 'access'.\n"; # can't use it yet, because of the import death ok( require filetest, 'required pragma successfully' ); # and here's one culprit, right here eval { filetest->import('bad subpragma') }; is( $@, $error, 'filetest dies with bad subpragma on import' ); is( $^H & $hint_bits, 0, 'hint bits not set without pragma in place' ); # now try the normal usage # can't check $^H here; it's lexically magic (see perlvar) # the test harness unintentionally hoards the goodies for itself use_ok( 'filetest', 'access' ); # and import again, to see it here filetest->import('access'); ok( $^H & $hint_bits, 'hint bits set with pragma loaded' ); # and now get rid of it filetest->unimport('access'); is( $^H & $hint_bits, 0, 'hint bits not set with pragma unimported' ); eval { filetest->unimport() }; is( $@, $error, 'filetest dies without subpragma on unimport' ); # there'll be a compilation aborted failure here, with the eval string eval "no filetest 'fake pragma'"; like( $@, qr/^$error/, 'filetest dies with bad subpragma on unuse' ); eval "use filetest 'bad subpragma'"; like( $@, qr/^$error/, 'filetest dies with bad subpragma on use' ); eval "use filetest"; like( $@, qr/^$error/, 'filetest dies with missing subpragma on use' ); eval "no filetest"; like( $@, qr/^$error/, 'filetest dies with missing subpragma on unuse' );