NAME¶
Time::Fake - Simulate different times without changing your system clock
SYNOPSIS¶
Pretend we are running 1 day in the future:
use Time::Fake '+1d';
Pretend we are running 1 year in the past:
use Time::Fake '-1y';
Pretend the script started at epoch time 1234567:
use Time::Fake 1234567;
See what an existing script would do if run 20 years in the future:
% perl -MTime::Fake="+20y" test.pl
Run a section of code in a time warp:
use Time::Fake;
# do some setup
Time::Fake->offset("+1y");
run_tests(); # thinks it's a year ahead
Time::Fake->reset; # back to the present
DESCRIPTION¶
Use this module to achieve the effect of changing your system clock, but without
actually changing your system clock. It overrides the Perl builtin subs
"time", "localtime", and "gmtime", causing them
to return a "faked" time of your choice. From the script's point of
view, time still flows at the normal rate, but it is just offset as if it were
executing in the past or present.
You may find this module useful in writing test scripts for code that has
time-sensitive logic.
USAGE¶
Using and importing:¶
use Time::Fake $t;
Is equivalent to:
use Time::Fake;
Time::Fake->offset($t);
See below for arguments to "offset". This usage makes it easy to fake
the time for existing scripts, as in:
% perl -MTime::Fake=+1y script.pl
offset¶
Time::Fake->offset( [$t] );
$t is either an epoch time, or a relative offset of the following form:
+3 # 3 seconds in the future
-3s # 3 seconds in the past
+1h # 1 hour in the future
etc..
Relative offsets must begin with a plus or minus symbol. The supported units
are:
s second
m minute
h hour
d day (24 hours)
M month (30 days)
y year (365 days)
If $t is an epoch time, then "time", "localtime", and
"gmtime" will act as though the the current time (when
"offset" was called) was actually at $t epoch seconds. Otherwise,
the offset $t will be added to the times returned by these builtin subs.
When $t is false, "time", "localtime", "gmtime"
remain overridden, but their behavior resets to reflect the actual system
time.
When $t is omitted, nothing is changed, but "offset" returns the
current additive offset (in seconds). Otherwise, its return value is the
previous offset.
"offset" may be called several times. However,
The effect of
multiple calls is NOT CUMULATIVE. That is:
Time::Fake->offset("+1h");
Time::Fake->offset("+1h");
## same as
# Time::Fake->offset("+1h");
## NOT the same as
# Time::Fake->offset("+2h");
Each call to "offset" completely cancels out the effect of any
previous calls. To make the effect cumulative, use the return value of calling
"offset" with no arguments:
Time::Fake->offset("+1h");
...
Time::Fake->offset( Time::Fake->offset + 3600 ); # add another hour
reset¶
Time::Fake->reset;
Is the same as:
Time::Fake->offset(0);
That is, it returns all the affected builtin subs to their default behavior --
reporing the actual system time.
KNOWN CAVEATS¶
Time::Fake must be loaded at "BEGIN"-time (e.g., with a standard
"use" statement). It must be loaded before perl
compiles any
code that uses "time", "localtime", or "gmtime".
Due to inherent limitations in overriding builtin subs, any code that was
compiled before loading Time::Fake will not be affected.
Because the system clock is not being changed, only Perl code that uses
"time", "localtime", or "gmtime" will be fooled
about the date. In particular, the operating system is not fooled, nor are
other programs. If your Perl code modifies a file for example, the file's
modification time will reflect the
actual (not faked) time. Along the
same lines, if your Perl script obtains the time from somewhere other than the
affected builtins subs (e.g., "qx/date/"), the actual (not faked)
time will be reflected.
Time::Fake doesn't affect -M, -A, -C filetest operators in the way you'd
probably want. These still report the
actual (not faked) script start
time minus file access time.
Time::Fake has not been tested with other modules that override the time
builtins, e.g., Time::HiRes.
SEE ALSO¶
Time::Warp, which uses XS to fool more of Perl.
AUTHOR¶
Time::Fake is written by Mike Rosulek <mike@mikero.com>. Feel free to
contact me with comments, questions, patches, or whatever.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2008 Mike Rosulek. All rights reserved. This module is free
software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
Perl itself.