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1
2 require 5.004;
3 package Test;
4 # Time-stamp: "2004-04-28 21:46:51 ADT"
5
6 use strict;
7
8 use Carp;
9 use vars (qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK $ntest $TestLevel), #public-ish
10 qw($TESTOUT $TESTERR %Program_Lines $told_about_diff
11 $ONFAIL %todo %history $planned @FAILDETAIL) #private-ish
12 );
13
14 # In case a test is run in a persistent environment.
15 sub _reset_globals {
16 %todo = ();
17 %history = ();
18 @FAILDETAIL = ();
19 $ntest = 1;
20 $TestLevel = 0; # how many extra stack frames to skip
21 $planned = 0;
22 }
23
24 $VERSION = '1.25';
25 require Exporter;
26 @ISA=('Exporter');
27
28 @EXPORT = qw(&plan &ok &skip);
29 @EXPORT_OK = qw($ntest $TESTOUT $TESTERR);
30
31 $|=1;
32 $TESTOUT = *STDOUT{IO};
33 $TESTERR = *STDERR{IO};
34
35 # Use of this variable is strongly discouraged. It is set mainly to
36 # help test coverage analyzers know which test is running.
37 $ENV{REGRESSION_TEST} = $0;
38
39
40 =head1 NAME
41
42 Test - provides a simple framework for writing test scripts
43
44 =head1 SYNOPSIS
45
46 use strict;
47 use Test;
48
49 # use a BEGIN block so we print our plan before MyModule is loaded
50 BEGIN { plan tests => 14, todo => [3,4] }
51
52 # load your module...
53 use MyModule;
54
55 # Helpful notes. All note-lines must start with a "#".
56 print "# I'm testing MyModule version $MyModule::VERSION\n";
57
58 ok(0); # failure
59 ok(1); # success
60
61 ok(0); # ok, expected failure (see todo list, above)
62 ok(1); # surprise success!
63
64 ok(0,1); # failure: '0' ne '1'
65 ok('broke','fixed'); # failure: 'broke' ne 'fixed'
66 ok('fixed','fixed'); # success: 'fixed' eq 'fixed'
67 ok('fixed',qr/x/); # success: 'fixed' =~ qr/x/
68
69 ok(sub { 1+1 }, 2); # success: '2' eq '2'
70 ok(sub { 1+1 }, 3); # failure: '2' ne '3'
71
72 my @list = (0,0);
73 ok @list, 3, "\@list=".join(',',@list); #extra notes
74 ok 'segmentation fault', '/(?i)success/'; #regex match
75
76 skip(
77 $^O =~ m/MSWin/ ? "Skip if MSWin" : 0, # whether to skip
78 $foo, $bar # arguments just like for ok(...)
79 );
80 skip(
81 $^O =~ m/MSWin/ ? 0 : "Skip unless MSWin", # whether to skip
82 $foo, $bar # arguments just like for ok(...)
83 );
84
85 =head1 DESCRIPTION
86
87 This module simplifies the task of writing test files for Perl modules,
88 such that their output is in the format that
89 L<Test::Harness|Test::Harness> expects to see.
90
91 =head1 QUICK START GUIDE
92
93 To write a test for your new (and probably not even done) module, create
94 a new file called F<t/test.t> (in a new F<t> directory). If you have
95 multiple test files, to test the "foo", "bar", and "baz" feature sets,
96 then feel free to call your files F<t/foo.t>, F<t/bar.t>, and
97 F<t/baz.t>
98
99 =head2 Functions
100
101 This module defines three public functions, C<plan(...)>, C<ok(...)>,
102 and C<skip(...)>. By default, all three are exported by
103 the C<use Test;> statement.
104
105 =over 4
106
107 =item C<plan(...)>
108
109 BEGIN { plan %theplan; }
110
111 This should be the first thing you call in your test script. It
112 declares your testing plan, how many there will be, if any of them
113 should be allowed to fail, and so on.
114
115 Typical usage is just:
116
117 use Test;
118 BEGIN { plan tests => 23 }
119
120 These are the things that you can put in the parameters to plan:
121
122 =over
123
124 =item C<tests =E<gt> I<number>>
125
126 The number of tests in your script.
127 This means all ok() and skip() calls.
128
129 =item C<todo =E<gt> [I<1,5,14>]>
130
131 A reference to a list of tests which are allowed to fail.
132 See L</TODO TESTS>.
133
134 =item C<onfail =E<gt> sub { ... }>
135
136 =item C<onfail =E<gt> \&some_sub>
137
138 A subroutine reference to be run at the end of the test script, if
139 any of the tests fail. See L</ONFAIL>.
140
141 =back
142
143 You must call C<plan(...)> once and only once. You should call it
144 in a C<BEGIN {...}> block, like so:
145
146 BEGIN { plan tests => 23 }
147
148 =cut
149
150 sub plan {
151 croak "Test::plan(%args): odd number of arguments" if @_ & 1;
152 croak "Test::plan(): should not be called more than once" if $planned;
153
154 local($\, $,); # guard against -l and other things that screw with
155 # print
156
157 _reset_globals();
158
159 _read_program( (caller)[1] );
160
161 my $max=0;
162 while (@_) {
163 my ($k,$v) = splice(@_, 0, 2);
164 if ($k =~ /^test(s)?$/) { $max = $v; }
165 elsif ($k eq 'todo' or
166 $k eq 'failok') { for (@$v) { $todo{$_}=1; }; }
167 elsif ($k eq 'onfail') {
168 ref $v eq 'CODE' or croak "Test::plan(onfail => $v): must be CODE";
169 $ONFAIL = $v;
170 }
171 else { carp "Test::plan(): skipping unrecognized directive '$k'" }
172 }
173 my @todo = sort { $a <=> $b } keys %todo;
174 if (@todo) {
175 print $TESTOUT "1..$max todo ".join(' ', @todo).";\n";
176 } else {
177 print $TESTOUT "1..$max\n";
178 }
179 ++$planned;
180 print $TESTOUT "# Running under perl version $] for $^O",
181 (chr(65) eq 'A') ? "\n" : " in a non-ASCII world\n";
182
183 print $TESTOUT "# Win32::BuildNumber ", &Win32::BuildNumber(), "\n"
184 if defined(&Win32::BuildNumber) and defined &Win32::BuildNumber();
185
186 print $TESTOUT "# MacPerl version $MacPerl::Version\n"
187 if defined $MacPerl::Version;
188
189 printf $TESTOUT
190 "# Current time local: %s\n# Current time GMT: %s\n",
191 scalar(localtime($^T)), scalar(gmtime($^T));
192
193 print $TESTOUT "# Using Test.pm version $VERSION\n";
194
195 # Retval never used:
196 return undef;
197 }
198
199 sub _read_program {
200 my($file) = shift;
201 return unless defined $file and length $file
202 and -e $file and -f _ and -r _;
203 open(SOURCEFILE, "<$file") || return;
204 $Program_Lines{$file} = [<SOURCEFILE>];
205 close(SOURCEFILE);
206
207 foreach my $x (@{$Program_Lines{$file}})
208 { $x =~ tr/\cm\cj\n\r//d }
209
210 unshift @{$Program_Lines{$file}}, '';
211 return 1;
212 }
213
214 =begin _private
215
216 =item B<_to_value>
217
218 my $value = _to_value($input);
219
220 Converts an C<ok> parameter to its value. Typically this just means
221 running it, if it's a code reference. You should run all inputted
222 values through this.
223
224 =cut
225
226 sub _to_value {
227 my ($v) = @_;
228 return ref $v eq 'CODE' ? $v->() : $v;
229 }
230
231 sub _quote {
232 my $str = $_[0];
233 return "<UNDEF>" unless defined $str;
234 $str =~ s/\\/\\\\/g;
235 $str =~ s/"/\\"/g;
236 $str =~ s/\a/\\a/g;
237 $str =~ s/[\b]/\\b/g;
238 $str =~ s/\e/\\e/g;
239 $str =~ s/\f/\\f/g;
240 $str =~ s/\n/\\n/g;
241 $str =~ s/\r/\\r/g;
242 $str =~ s/\t/\\t/g;
243 $str =~ s/([\0-\037])(?!\d)/sprintf('\\%o',ord($1))/eg;
244 $str =~ s/([\0-\037\177-\377])/sprintf('\\x%02X',ord($1))/eg;
245 $str =~ s/([^\0-\176])/sprintf('\\x{%X}',ord($1))/eg;
246 #if( $_[1] ) {
247 # substr( $str , 218-3 ) = "..."
248 # if length($str) >= 218 and !$ENV{PERL_TEST_NO_TRUNC};
249 #}
250 return qq("$str");
251 }
252
253
254 =end _private
255
256 =item C<ok(...)>
257
258 ok(1 + 1 == 2);
259 ok($have, $expect);
260 ok($have, $expect, $diagnostics);
261
262 This function is the reason for C<Test>'s existence. It's
263 the basic function that
264 handles printing "C<ok>" or "C<not ok>", along with the
265 current test number. (That's what C<Test::Harness> wants to see.)
266
267 In its most basic usage, C<ok(...)> simply takes a single scalar
268 expression. If its value is true, the test passes; if false,
269 the test fails. Examples:
270
271 # Examples of ok(scalar)
272
273 ok( 1 + 1 == 2 ); # ok if 1 + 1 == 2
274 ok( $foo =~ /bar/ ); # ok if $foo contains 'bar'
275 ok( baz($x + $y) eq 'Armondo' ); # ok if baz($x + $y) returns
276 # 'Armondo'
277 ok( @a == @b ); # ok if @a and @b are the same length
278
279 The expression is evaluated in scalar context. So the following will
280 work:
281
282 ok( @stuff ); # ok if @stuff has any elements
283 ok( !grep !defined $_, @stuff ); # ok if everything in @stuff is
284 # defined.
285
286 A special case is if the expression is a subroutine reference (in either
287 C<sub {...}> syntax or C<\&foo> syntax). In
288 that case, it is executed and its value (true or false) determines if
289 the test passes or fails. For example,
290
291 ok( sub { # See whether sleep works at least passably
292 my $start_time = time;
293 sleep 5;
294 time() - $start_time >= 4
295 });
296
297 In its two-argument form, C<ok(I<arg1>, I<arg2>)> compares the two
298 scalar values to see if they match. They match if both are undefined,
299 or if I<arg2> is a regex that matches I<arg1>, or if they compare equal
300 with C<eq>.
301
302 # Example of ok(scalar, scalar)
303
304 ok( "this", "that" ); # not ok, 'this' ne 'that'
305 ok( "", undef ); # not ok, "" is defined
306
307 The second argument is considered a regex if it is either a regex
308 object or a string that looks like a regex. Regex objects are
309 constructed with the qr// operator in recent versions of perl. A
310 string is considered to look like a regex if its first and last
311 characters are "/", or if the first character is "m"
312 and its second and last characters are both the
313 same non-alphanumeric non-whitespace character. These regexp
314
315 Regex examples:
316
317 ok( 'JaffO', '/Jaff/' ); # ok, 'JaffO' =~ /Jaff/
318 ok( 'JaffO', 'm|Jaff|' ); # ok, 'JaffO' =~ m|Jaff|
319 ok( 'JaffO', qr/Jaff/ ); # ok, 'JaffO' =~ qr/Jaff/;
320 ok( 'JaffO', '/(?i)jaff/ ); # ok, 'JaffO' =~ /jaff/i;
321
322 If either (or both!) is a subroutine reference, it is run and used
323 as the value for comparing. For example:
324
325 ok sub {
326 open(OUT, ">x.dat") || die $!;
327 print OUT "\x{e000}";
328 close OUT;
329 my $bytecount = -s 'x.dat';
330 unlink 'x.dat' or warn "Can't unlink : $!";
331 return $bytecount;
332 },
333 4
334 ;
335
336 The above test passes two values to C<ok(arg1, arg2)> -- the first
337 a coderef, and the second is the number 4. Before C<ok> compares them,
338 it calls the coderef, and uses its return value as the real value of
339 this parameter. Assuming that C<$bytecount> returns 4, C<ok> ends up
340 testing C<4 eq 4>. Since that's true, this test passes.
341
342 Finally, you can append an optional third argument, in
343 C<ok(I<arg1>,I<arg2>, I<note>)>, where I<note> is a string value that
344 will be printed if the test fails. This should be some useful
345 information about the test, pertaining to why it failed, and/or
346 a description of the test. For example:
347
348 ok( grep($_ eq 'something unique', @stuff), 1,
349 "Something that should be unique isn't!\n".
350 '@stuff = '.join ', ', @stuff
351 );
352
353 Unfortunately, a note cannot be used with the single argument
354 style of C<ok()>. That is, if you try C<ok(I<arg1>, I<note>)>, then
355 C<Test> will interpret this as C<ok(I<arg1>, I<arg2>)>, and probably
356 end up testing C<I<arg1> eq I<arg2>> -- and that's not what you want!
357
358 All of the above special cases can occasionally cause some
359 problems. See L</BUGS and CAVEATS>.
360
361 =cut
362
363 # A past maintainer of this module said:
364 # <<ok(...)'s special handling of subroutine references is an unfortunate
365 # "feature" that can't be removed due to compatibility.>>
366 #
367
368 sub ok ($;$$) {
369 croak "ok: plan before you test!" if !$planned;
370
371 local($\,$,); # guard against -l and other things that screw with
372 # print
373
374 my ($pkg,$file,$line) = caller($TestLevel);
375 my $repetition = ++$history{"$file:$line"};
376 my $context = ("$file at line $line".
377 ($repetition > 1 ? " fail \#$repetition" : ''));
378
379 # Are we comparing two values?
380 my $compare = 0;
381
382 my $ok=0;
383 my $result = _to_value(shift);
384 my ($expected, $isregex, $regex);
385 if (@_ == 0) {
386 $ok = $result;
387 } else {
388 $compare = 1;
389 $expected = _to_value(shift);
390 if (!defined $expected) {
391 $ok = !defined $result;
392 } elsif (!defined $result) {
393 $ok = 0;
394 } elsif (ref($expected) eq 'Regexp') {
395 $ok = $result =~ /$expected/;
396 $regex = $expected;
397 } elsif (($regex) = ($expected =~ m,^ / (.+) / $,sx) or
398 (undef, $regex) = ($expected =~ m,^ m([^\w\s]) (.+) \1 $,sx)) {
399 $ok = $result =~ /$regex/;
400 } else {
401 $ok = $result eq $expected;
402 }
403 }
404 my $todo = $todo{$ntest};
405 if ($todo and $ok) {
406 $context .= ' TODO?!' if $todo;
407 print $TESTOUT "ok $ntest # ($context)\n";
408 } else {
409 # Issuing two seperate prints() causes problems on VMS.
410 if (!$ok) {
411 print $TESTOUT "not ok $ntest\n";
412 }
413 else {
414 print $TESTOUT "ok $ntest\n";
415 }
416
417 $ok or _complain($result, $expected,
418 {
419 'repetition' => $repetition, 'package' => $pkg,
420 'result' => $result, 'todo' => $todo,
421 'file' => $file, 'line' => $line,
422 'context' => $context, 'compare' => $compare,
423 @_ ? ('diagnostic' => _to_value(shift)) : (),
424 });
425
426 }
427 ++ $ntest;
428 $ok;
429 }
430
431
432 sub _complain {
433 my($result, $expected, $detail) = @_;
434 $$detail{expected} = $expected if defined $expected;
435
436 # Get the user's diagnostic, protecting against multi-line
437 # diagnostics.
438 my $diag = $$detail{diagnostic};
439 $diag =~ s/\n/\n#/g if defined $diag;
440
441 $$detail{context} .= ' *TODO*' if $$detail{todo};
442 if (!$$detail{compare}) {
443 if (!$diag) {
444 print $TESTERR "# Failed test $ntest in $$detail{context}\n";
445 } else {
446 print $TESTERR "# Failed test $ntest in $$detail{context}: $diag\n";
447 }
448 } else {
449 my $prefix = "Test $ntest";
450
451 print $TESTERR "# $prefix got: " . _quote($result) .
452 " ($$detail{context})\n";
453 $prefix = ' ' x (length($prefix) - 5);
454 my $expected_quoted = (defined $$detail{regex})
455 ? 'qr{'.($$detail{regex}).'}' : _quote($expected);
456
457 print $TESTERR "# $prefix Expected: $expected_quoted",
458 $diag ? " ($diag)" : (), "\n";
459
460 _diff_complain( $result, $expected, $detail, $prefix )
461 if defined($expected) and 2 < ($expected =~ tr/\n//);
462 }
463
464 if(defined $Program_Lines{ $$detail{file} }[ $$detail{line} ]) {
465 print $TESTERR
466 "# $$detail{file} line $$detail{line} is: $Program_Lines{ $$detail{file} }[ $$detail{line} ]\n"
467 if $Program_Lines{ $$detail{file} }[ $$detail{line} ]
468 =~ m/[^\s\#\(\)\{\}\[\]\;]/; # Otherwise it's uninformative
469
470 undef $Program_Lines{ $$detail{file} }[ $$detail{line} ];
471 # So we won't repeat it.
472 }
473
474 push @FAILDETAIL, $detail;
475 return;
476 }
477
478
479
480 sub _diff_complain {
481 my($result, $expected, $detail, $prefix) = @_;
482 return _diff_complain_external(@_) if $ENV{PERL_TEST_DIFF};
483 return _diff_complain_algdiff(@_)
484 if eval { require Algorithm::Diff; Algorithm::Diff->VERSION(1.15); 1; };
485
486 $told_about_diff++ or print $TESTERR <<"EOT";
487 # $prefix (Install the Algorithm::Diff module to have differences in multiline
488 # $prefix output explained. You might also set the PERL_TEST_DIFF environment
489 # $prefix variable to run a diff program on the output.)
490 EOT
491 ;
492 return;
493 }
494
495
496
497 sub _diff_complain_external {
498 my($result, $expected, $detail, $prefix) = @_;
499 my $diff = $ENV{PERL_TEST_DIFF} || die "WHAAAA?";
500
501 require File::Temp;
502 my($got_fh, $got_filename) = File::Temp::tempfile("test-got-XXXXX");
503 my($exp_fh, $exp_filename) = File::Temp::tempfile("test-exp-XXXXX");
504 unless ($got_fh && $exp_fh) {
505 warn "Can't get tempfiles";
506 return;
507 }
508
509 print $got_fh $result;
510 print $exp_fh $expected;
511 if (close($got_fh) && close($exp_fh)) {
512 my $diff_cmd = "$diff $exp_filename $got_filename";
513 print $TESTERR "#\n# $prefix $diff_cmd\n";
514 if (open(DIFF, "$diff_cmd |")) {
515 local $_;
516 while (<DIFF>) {
517 print $TESTERR "# $prefix $_";
518 }
519 close(DIFF);
520 }
521 else {
522 warn "Can't run diff: $!";
523 }
524 } else {
525 warn "Can't write to tempfiles: $!";
526 }
527 unlink($got_filename);
528 unlink($exp_filename);
529 return;
530 }
531
532
533
534 sub _diff_complain_algdiff {
535 my($result, $expected, $detail, $prefix) = @_;
536
537 my @got = split(/^/, $result);
538 my @exp = split(/^/, $expected);
539
540 my $diff_kind;
541 my @diff_lines;
542
543 my $diff_flush = sub {
544 return unless $diff_kind;
545
546 my $count_lines = @diff_lines;
547 my $s = $count_lines == 1 ? "" : "s";
548 my $first_line = $diff_lines[0][0] + 1;
549
550 print $TESTERR "# $prefix ";
551 if ($diff_kind eq "GOT") {
552 print $TESTERR "Got $count_lines extra line$s at line $first_line:\n";
553 for my $i (@diff_lines) {
554 print $TESTERR "# $prefix + " . _quote($got[$i->[0]]) . "\n";
555 }
556 } elsif ($diff_kind eq "EXP") {
557 if ($count_lines > 1) {
558 my $last_line = $diff_lines[-1][0] + 1;
559 print $TESTERR "Lines $first_line-$last_line are";
560 }
561 else {
562 print $TESTERR "Line $first_line is";
563 }
564 print $TESTERR " missing:\n";
565 for my $i (@diff_lines) {
566 print $TESTERR "# $prefix - " . _quote($exp[$i->[1]]) . "\n";
567 }
568 } elsif ($diff_kind eq "CH") {
569 if ($count_lines > 1) {
570 my $last_line = $diff_lines[-1][0] + 1;
571 print $TESTERR "Lines $first_line-$last_line are";
572 }
573 else {
574 print $TESTERR "Line $first_line is";
575 }
576 print $TESTERR " changed:\n";
577 for my $i (@diff_lines) {
578 print $TESTERR "# $prefix - " . _quote($exp[$i->[1]]) . "\n";
579 print $TESTERR "# $prefix + " . _quote($got[$i->[0]]) . "\n";
580 }
581 }
582
583 # reset
584 $diff_kind = undef;
585 @diff_lines = ();
586 };
587
588 my $diff_collect = sub {
589 my $kind = shift;
590 &$diff_flush() if $diff_kind && $diff_kind ne $kind;
591 $diff_kind = $kind;
592 push(@diff_lines, [@_]);
593 };
594
595
596 Algorithm::Diff::traverse_balanced(
597 \@got, \@exp,
598 {
599 DISCARD_A => sub { &$diff_collect("GOT", @_) },
600 DISCARD_B => sub { &$diff_collect("EXP", @_) },
601 CHANGE => sub { &$diff_collect("CH", @_) },
602 MATCH => sub { &$diff_flush() },
603 },
604 );
605 &$diff_flush();
606
607 return;
608 }
609
610
611
612
613 #~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~
614
615
616 =item C<skip(I<skip_if_true>, I<args...>)>
617
618 This is used for tests that under some conditions can be skipped. It's
619 basically equivalent to:
620
621 if( $skip_if_true ) {
622 ok(1);
623 } else {
624 ok( args... );
625 }
626
627 ...except that the C<ok(1)> emits not just "C<ok I<testnum>>" but
628 actually "C<ok I<testnum> # I<skip_if_true_value>>".
629
630 The arguments after the I<skip_if_true> are what is fed to C<ok(...)> if
631 this test isn't skipped.
632
633 Example usage:
634
635 my $if_MSWin =
636 $^O =~ m/MSWin/ ? 'Skip if under MSWin' : '';
637
638 # A test to be skipped if under MSWin (i.e., run except under MSWin)
639 skip($if_MSWin, thing($foo), thing($bar) );
640
641 Or, going the other way:
642
643 my $unless_MSWin =
644 $^O =~ m/MSWin/ ? '' : 'Skip unless under MSWin';
645
646 # A test to be skipped unless under MSWin (i.e., run only under MSWin)
647 skip($unless_MSWin, thing($foo), thing($bar) );
648
649 The tricky thing to remember is that the first parameter is true if
650 you want to I<skip> the test, not I<run> it; and it also doubles as a
651 note about why it's being skipped. So in the first codeblock above, read
652 the code as "skip if MSWin -- (otherwise) test whether C<thing($foo)> is
653 C<thing($bar)>" or for the second case, "skip unless MSWin...".
654
655 Also, when your I<skip_if_reason> string is true, it really should (for
656 backwards compatibility with older Test.pm versions) start with the
657 string "Skip", as shown in the above examples.
658
659 Note that in the above cases, C<thing($foo)> and C<thing($bar)>
660 I<are> evaluated -- but as long as the C<skip_if_true> is true,
661 then we C<skip(...)> just tosses out their value (i.e., not
662 bothering to treat them like values to C<ok(...)>. But if
663 you need to I<not> eval the arguments when skipping the
664 test, use
665 this format:
666
667 skip( $unless_MSWin,
668 sub {
669 # This code returns true if the test passes.
670 # (But it doesn't even get called if the test is skipped.)
671 thing($foo) eq thing($bar)
672 }
673 );
674
675 or even this, which is basically equivalent:
676
677 skip( $unless_MSWin,
678 sub { thing($foo) }, sub { thing($bar) }
679 );
680
681 That is, both are like this:
682
683 if( $unless_MSWin ) {
684 ok(1); # but it actually appends "# $unless_MSWin"
685 # so that Test::Harness can tell it's a skip
686 } else {
687 # Not skipping, so actually call and evaluate...
688 ok( sub { thing($foo) }, sub { thing($bar) } );
689 }
690
691 =cut
692
693 sub skip ($;$$$) {
694 local($\, $,); # guard against -l and other things that screw with
695 # print
696
697 my $whyskip = _to_value(shift);
698 if (!@_ or $whyskip) {
699 $whyskip = '' if $whyskip =~ m/^\d+$/;
700 $whyskip =~ s/^[Ss]kip(?:\s+|$)//; # backwards compatibility, old
701 # versions required the reason
702 # to start with 'skip'
703 # We print in one shot for VMSy reasons.
704 my $ok = "ok $ntest # skip";
705 $ok .= " $whyskip" if length $whyskip;
706 $ok .= "\n";
707 print $TESTOUT $ok;
708 ++ $ntest;
709 return 1;
710 } else {
711 # backwards compatiblity (I think). skip() used to be
712 # called like ok(), which is weird. I haven't decided what to do with
713 # this yet.
714 # warn <<WARN if $^W;
715 #This looks like a skip() using the very old interface. Please upgrade to
716 #the documented interface as this has been deprecated.
717 #WARN
718
719 local($TestLevel) = $TestLevel+1; #to ignore this stack frame
720 return &ok(@_);
721 }
722 }
723
724 =back
725
726 =cut
727
728 END {
729 $ONFAIL->(\@FAILDETAIL) if @FAILDETAIL && $ONFAIL;
730 }
731
732 1;
733 __END__
734
735 =head1 TEST TYPES
736
737 =over 4
738
739 =item * NORMAL TESTS
740
741 These tests are expected to succeed. Usually, most or all of your tests
742 are in this category. If a normal test doesn't succeed, then that
743 means that something is I<wrong>.
744
745 =item * SKIPPED TESTS
746
747 The C<skip(...)> function is for tests that might or might not be
748 possible to run, depending
749 on the availability of platform-specific features. The first argument
750 should evaluate to true (think "yes, please skip") if the required
751 feature is I<not> available. After the first argument, C<skip(...)> works
752 exactly the same way as C<ok(...)> does.
753
754 =item * TODO TESTS
755
756 TODO tests are designed for maintaining an B<executable TODO list>.
757 These tests are I<expected to fail.> If a TODO test does succeed,
758 then the feature in question shouldn't be on the TODO list, now
759 should it?
760
761 Packages should NOT be released with succeeding TODO tests. As soon
762 as a TODO test starts working, it should be promoted to a normal test,
763 and the newly working feature should be documented in the release
764 notes or in the change log.
765
766 =back
767
768 =head1 ONFAIL
769
770 BEGIN { plan test => 4, onfail => sub { warn "CALL 911!" } }
771
772 Although test failures should be enough, extra diagnostics can be
773 triggered at the end of a test run. C<onfail> is passed an array ref
774 of hash refs that describe each test failure. Each hash will contain
775 at least the following fields: C<package>, C<repetition>, and
776 C<result>. (You shouldn't rely on any other fields being present.) If the test
777 had an expected value or a diagnostic (or "note") string, these will also be
778 included.
779
780 The I<optional> C<onfail> hook might be used simply to print out the
781 version of your package and/or how to report problems. It might also
782 be used to generate extremely sophisticated diagnostics for a
783 particularly bizarre test failure. However it's not a panacea. Core
784 dumps or other unrecoverable errors prevent the C<onfail> hook from
785 running. (It is run inside an C<END> block.) Besides, C<onfail> is
786 probably over-kill in most cases. (Your test code should be simpler
787 than the code it is testing, yes?)
788
789
790 =head1 BUGS and CAVEATS
791
792 =over
793
794 =item *
795
796 C<ok(...)>'s special handing of strings which look like they might be
797 regexes can also cause unexpected behavior. An innocent:
798
799 ok( $fileglob, '/path/to/some/*stuff/' );
800
801 will fail, since Test.pm considers the second argument to be a regex!
802 The best bet is to use the one-argument form:
803
804 ok( $fileglob eq '/path/to/some/*stuff/' );
805
806 =item *
807
808 C<ok(...)>'s use of string C<eq> can sometimes cause odd problems
809 when comparing
810 numbers, especially if you're casting a string to a number:
811
812 $foo = "1.0";
813 ok( $foo, 1 ); # not ok, "1.0" ne 1
814
815 Your best bet is to use the single argument form:
816
817 ok( $foo == 1 ); # ok "1.0" == 1
818
819 =item *
820
821 As you may have inferred from the above documentation and examples,
822 C<ok>'s prototype is C<($;$$)> (and, incidentally, C<skip>'s is
823 C<($;$$$)>). This means, for example, that you can do C<ok @foo, @bar>
824 to compare the I<size> of the two arrays. But don't be fooled into
825 thinking that C<ok @foo, @bar> means a comparison of the contents of two
826 arrays -- you're comparing I<just> the number of elements of each. It's
827 so easy to make that mistake in reading C<ok @foo, @bar> that you might
828 want to be very explicit about it, and instead write C<ok scalar(@foo),
829 scalar(@bar)>.
830
831 =item *
832
833 This almost definitely doesn't do what you expect:
834
835 ok $thingy->can('some_method');
836
837 Why? Because C<can> returns a coderef to mean "yes it can (and the
838 method is this...)", and then C<ok> sees a coderef and thinks you're
839 passing a function that you want it to call and consider the truth of
840 the result of! I.e., just like:
841
842 ok $thingy->can('some_method')->();
843
844 What you probably want instead is this:
845
846 ok $thingy->can('some_method') && 1;
847
848 If the C<can> returns false, then that is passed to C<ok>. If it
849 returns true, then the larger expression S<< C<<
850 $thingy->can('some_method') && 1 >> >> returns 1, which C<ok> sees as
851 a simple signal of success, as you would expect.
852
853
854 =item *
855
856 The syntax for C<skip> is about the only way it can be, but it's still
857 quite confusing. Just start with the above examples and you'll
858 be okay.
859
860 Moreover, users may expect this:
861
862 skip $unless_mswin, foo($bar), baz($quux);
863
864 to not evaluate C<foo($bar)> and C<baz($quux)> when the test is being
865 skipped. But in reality, they I<are> evaluated, but C<skip> just won't
866 bother comparing them if C<$unless_mswin> is true.
867
868 You could do this:
869
870 skip $unless_mswin, sub{foo($bar)}, sub{baz($quux)};
871
872 But that's not terribly pretty. You may find it simpler or clearer in
873 the long run to just do things like this:
874
875 if( $^O =~ m/MSWin/ ) {
876 print "# Yay, we're under $^O\n";
877 ok foo($bar), baz($quux);
878 ok thing($whatever), baz($stuff);
879 ok blorp($quux, $whatever);
880 ok foo($barzbarz), thang($quux);
881 } else {
882 print "# Feh, we're under $^O. Watch me skip some tests...\n";
883 for(1 .. 4) { skip "Skip unless under MSWin" }
884 }
885
886 But be quite sure that C<ok> is called exactly as many times in the
887 first block as C<skip> is called in the second block.
888
889 =back
890
891
892 =head1 ENVIRONMENT
893
894 If C<PERL_TEST_DIFF> environment variable is set, it will be used as a
895 command for comparing unexpected multiline results. If you have GNU
896 diff installed, you might want to set C<PERL_TEST_DIFF> to C<diff -u>.
897 If you don't have a suitable program, you might install the
898 C<Text::Diff> module and then set C<PERL_TEST_DIFF> to be C<perl
899 -MText::Diff -e 'print diff(@ARGV)'>. If C<PERL_TEST_DIFF> isn't set
900 but the C<Algorithm::Diff> module is available, then it will be used
901 to show the differences in multiline results.
902
903 =for comment
904 If C<PERL_TEST_NO_TRUNC> is set, then the initial "Got 'something' but
905 expected 'something_else'" readings for long multiline output values aren't
906 truncated at about the 230th column, as they normally could be in some
907 cases. Normally you won't need to use this, unless you were carefully
908 parsing the output of your test programs.
909
910
911 =head1 NOTE
912
913 A past developer of this module once said that it was no longer being
914 actively developed. However, rumors of its demise were greatly
915 exaggerated. Feedback and suggestions are quite welcome.
916
917 Be aware that the main value of this module is its simplicity. Note
918 that there are already more ambitious modules out there, such as
919 L<Test::More> and L<Test::Unit>.
920
921 Some earlier versions of this module had docs with some confusing
922 typoes in the description of C<skip(...)>.
923
924
925 =head1 SEE ALSO
926
927 L<Test::Harness>
928
929 L<Test::Simple>, L<Test::More>, L<Devel::Cover>
930
931 L<Test::Builder> for building your own testing library.
932
933 L<Test::Unit> is an interesting XUnit-style testing library.
934
935 L<Test::Inline> and L<SelfTest> let you embed tests in code.
936
937
938 =head1 AUTHOR
939
940 Copyright (c) 1998-2000 Joshua Nathaniel Pritikin. All rights reserved.
941
942 Copyright (c) 2001-2002 Michael G. Schwern.
943
944 Copyright (c) 2002-2004 and counting Sean M. Burke.
945
946 Current maintainer: Sean M. Burke. E<lt>sburke@cpan.orgE<gt>
947
948 This package is free software and is provided "as is" without express
949 or implied warranty. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified
950 under the same terms as Perl itself.
951
952 =cut
953
954 # "Your mistake was a hidden intention."
955 # -- /Oblique Strategies/, Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt