use strict; use warnings; use Test::More; use Test::Warn; use Test::Exception; use lib qw(t/lib); use_ok( 'DBICTest' ); use_ok( 'DBICTest::Schema' ); my $schema = DBICTest->init_schema; warnings_are ( sub { throws_ok ( sub { $schema->resultset('CD')->create({ title => 'vacation in antarctica' }) }, qr/DBI Exception.+cd\.artist.+NULL/s ); # as opposed to some other error }, [], 'No warnings besides exception' ); my $dbh = $schema->storage->dbh; throws_ok ( sub { $dbh->do ('INSERT INTO nonexistent_table VALUES (1)') }, qr/DBI Exception.+no such table.+nonexistent_table/s, 'DBI exceptions properly handled by dbic-installed callback' ); # This usage is a bit unusual but it was actually seen in the wild # destruction of everything except the $dbh should use the proper # exception fallback: SKIP: { if (DBIx::Class::_ENV_::PEEPEENESS()) { skip "Your perl version $] appears to leak like a sieve - skipping garbage collected \$schema test", 1; } undef ($schema); throws_ok ( sub { $dbh->do ('INSERT INTO nonexistent_table VALUES (1)') }, qr/DBI Exception.+unhandled by DBIC.+no such table.+nonexistent_table/s, 'callback works after $schema is gone' ); } done_testing;