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Full Discussion: Log Out vs Remember Me
Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Log Out vs Remember Me Post 302918053 by danuke on Saturday 20th of September 2014 08:49:42 AM
Old 09-20-2014
Log Out vs Remember Me

Howdy,
I clicked the rememberer me when I log in, and evidently I really do not understand what that means. I had hoped that at least it would remember my user name for the next time that I log in. However, when I log out, I see a message about cookies being removed and one other thing that I can't recall, and when I come back to the site, I have to enter all the login info all over.
Have I missed something?
I am using an iMac on OS 10.9.5

Thank you for your help,
DN
 

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Log::Any::Test(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Log::Any::Test(3pm)

NAME
Log::Any::Test -- Test what you're logging with Log::Any SYNOPSIS
use Test::More; use Log::Any::Test; # should appear before 'use Log::Any'! use Log::Any qw($log); # ... # call something that logs using Log::Any # ... # now test to make sure you logged the right things $log->contains_ok(qr/good log message/, "good message was logged"); $log->does_not_contain_ok(qr/unexpected log message/, "unexpected message was not logged"); $log->empty_ok("no more logs"); # or my $msgs = $log->msgs; cmp_deeply($msgs, [{message => 'msg1', level => 'debug'}, ...]); DESCRIPTION
"Log::Any::Test" is a simple module that allows you to test what has been logged with Log::Any. Most of its API and implementation have been taken from Log::Any::Dispatch. Using "Log::Any::Test" sends all subsequent Log::Any log messages to a single global in-memory buffer. It should be used before Log::Any. METHODS
The test_name is optional in the *_ok methods; a reasonable default will be provided. msgs () Returns the current contents of the global log buffer as an array reference, where each element is a hash containing a category, level, and message key. e.g. { category => 'Foo', level => 'error', message => 'this is an error' }, { category => 'Bar::Baz', level => 'debug', message => 'this is a debug' } contains_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that a message in the log buffer matches $regex. On success, the message is removed from the log buffer (but any other matches are left untouched). does_not_contain_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that no message in the log buffer matches $regex. empty_ok ([$test_name]) Tests that there is no log buffer left. On failure, the log buffer is cleared to limit further cascading failures. contains_only_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that there is a single message in the log buffer and it matches $regex. On success, the message is removed. clear () Clears the log buffer. SEE ALSO
Log::Any, Test::Log::Dispatch AUTHOR
Jonathan Swartz COPYRIGHT &; LICENSE Copyright (C) 2009 Jonathan Swartz, all rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2009-12-08 Log::Any::Test(3pm)
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