# Before `make install' is performed this script should be runnable with # `make test'. After `make install' it should work as `perl test.pl' ######################### We start with some black magic to print on failure. # Change 1..1 below to 1..last_test_to_print . # (It may become useful if the test is moved to ./t subdirectory.) BEGIN { $| = 1; print "1..3\n"; } END {print "not ok 1\n" unless $loaded;} use C::DynaLib::Struct; $loaded = 1; print "ok 1\n"; ######################### End of black magic. # Insert your test code below (better if it prints "ok 13" # (correspondingly "not ok 13") depending on the success of chunk 13 # of the test code): $num = 2; sub assert { my ($assertion, $got, $expected) = @_; if ($assertion && $got eq $expected) { print "ok $num\n"; } elsif ($got ne $expected) { print "not ok $num; expected \"$expected\", got \"$got\"\n"; } else { print "not ok $num\n"; } ++ $num; } # # struct FooBar { # int foo; # double bar; # char *baz; # }; # Define C::DynaLib::Struct('FooBar', "i", ['foo'], "dp", [ qw(bar baz) ]); $pfoobar = tie ($foobar, 'FooBar', 1, 2); $pfoobar->baz("Hello"); $pfoobar->foo(3); @expected = (3, 2, "Hello"); @got = unpack("idp", $foobar); assert(1, "[@got]", "[@expected]"); @expected = (-65, 5e9, "string"); $foobar = pack("idp", @expected); @got = ($pfoobar->foo, (tied $foobar)->bar, $pfoobar->baz); assert(1, "[@got]", "[@expected]");