#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use Test::More tests => 5; use Test::HexString; use IO::Async::Loop; use IO::Async::Test; use FCGI::Async; use t::lib::TestFCGI; my $request; my ( $S, $selfaddr ) = make_server_sock; my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new(); testing_loop( $loop ); my $fcgi = FCGI::Async->new( loop => $loop, handle => $S, on_request => sub { $request = $_[1] }, ); my $C = connect_client_sock( $selfaddr ); # Got it - now pretend to be an FCGI client, such as how a webserver would # behave. $C->syswrite( # Begin fcgi_trans( type => 1, id => 1, data => "\0\1\0\0\0\0\0\0" ) . # No parameters fcgi_trans( type => 4, id => 1, data => "" ) . # No STDIN fcgi_trans( type => 5, id => 1, data => "" ) ); wait_for { defined $request }; isa_ok( $request, 'FCGI::Async::Request', '$request isa FCGI::Async::Request' ); is_deeply( $request->params, {}, '$request has empty params hash' ); is( $request->read_stdin_line, undef, '$request has empty STDIN' ); $request->print_stdout( "Hello, world!" ); # Client goes away before we finish close $C; wait_for { $request->is_aborted }; is( $request->is_aborted, 1, 'Request is aborted' ); $request->finish; $loop->loop_once( 0 ); # If we're still alive here then the code didn't die. Good. ok( 1, 'Still alive after $request->finish' );