0
Fork 0
mirror of https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo.git synced 2024-12-27 01:44:10 -05:00
forgejo/vendor/github.com/facebookgo/clock/README.md
Mura Li d77176912b Use Go1.11 module (#5743)
* Migrate to go modules

* make vendor

* Update mvdan.cc/xurls

* make vendor

* Update code.gitea.io/git

* make fmt-check

* Update github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql

* make vendor
2019-03-27 19:15:23 +08:00

104 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown

clock [![Build Status](https://drone.io/github.com/benbjohnson/clock/status.png)](https://drone.io/github.com/benbjohnson/clock/latest) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/benbjohnson/clock/badge.png?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/benbjohnson/clock?branch=master) [![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/benbjohnson/clock?status.png)](https://godoc.org/github.com/benbjohnson/clock) ![Project status](http://img.shields.io/status/experimental.png?color=red)
=====
Clock is a small library for mocking time in Go. It provides an interface
around the standard library's [`time`][time] package so that the application
can use the realtime clock while tests can use the mock clock.
[time]: http://golang.org/pkg/time/
## Usage
### Realtime Clock
Your application can maintain a `Clock` variable that will allow realtime and
mock clocks to be interchangable. For example, if you had an `Application` type:
```go
import "github.com/benbjohnson/clock"
type Application struct {
Clock clock.Clock
}
```
You could initialize it to use the realtime clock like this:
```go
var app Application
app.Clock = clock.New()
...
```
Then all timers and time-related functionality should be performed from the
`Clock` variable.
### Mocking time
In your tests, you will want to use a `Mock` clock:
```go
import (
"testing"
"github.com/benbjohnson/clock"
)
func TestApplication_DoSomething(t *testing.T) {
mock := clock.NewMock()
app := Application{Clock: mock}
...
}
```
Now that you've initialized your application to use the mock clock, you can
adjust the time programmatically. The mock clock always starts from the Unix
epoch (midnight, Jan 1, 1970 UTC).
### Controlling time
The mock clock provides the same functions that the standard library's `time`
package provides. For example, to find the current time, you use the `Now()`
function:
```go
mock := clock.NewMock()
// Find the current time.
mock.Now().UTC() // 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 UTC
// Move the clock forward.
mock.Add(2 * time.Hour)
// Check the time again. It's 2 hours later!
mock.Now().UTC() // 1970-01-01 02:00:00 +0000 UTC
```
Timers and Tickers are also controlled by this same mock clock. They will only
execute when the clock is moved forward:
```
mock := clock.NewMock()
count := 0
// Kick off a timer to increment every 1 mock second.
go func() {
ticker := clock.Ticker(1 * time.Second)
for {
<-ticker.C
count++
}
}()
runtime.Gosched()
// Move the clock forward 10 second.
mock.Add(10 * time.Second)
// This prints 10.
fmt.Println(count)
```