package ExtUtils::TBone; =head1 NAME ExtUtils::TBone - a "skeleton" for writing "t/*.t" test files. =head1 SYNOPSIS Include a copy of this module in your t directory (as t/ExtUtils/TBone.pm), and then write your t/*.t files like this: use lib "./t"; # to pick up a ExtUtils::TBone use ExtUtils::TBone; # Make a tester... here are 3 different alternatives: my $T = typical ExtUtils::TBone; # standard log my $T = new ExtUtils::TBone; # no log my $T = new ExtUtils::TBone "testout/Foo.tlog"; # explicit log # Begin testing, and expect 3 tests in all: $T->begin(3); # expect 3 tests $T->msg("Something for the log file"); # message for the log # Run some tests: $T->ok($this); # test 1: no real info logged $T->ok($that, # test 2: logs a comment "Is that ok, or isn't it?"); $T->ok(($this eq $that), # test 3: logs comment + vars "Do they match?", This => $this, That => $that); # That last one could have also been written... $T->ok_eq($this, $that); # does 'eq' and logs operands $T->ok_eqnum($this, $that); # does '==' and logs operands # End testing: $T->end; =head1 DESCRIPTION This module is intended for folks who release CPAN modules with "t/*.t" tests. It makes it easy for you to output syntactically correct test-output while at the same time logging all test activity to a log file. Hopefully, bug reports which include the contents of this file will be easier for you to investigate. =head1 OUTPUT =head2 Standard output Pretty much as described by C, with a special "# END" comment placed at the very end: 1..3 ok 1 not ok 2 ok 3 # END =head1 Log file A typical log file output by this module looks like this: 1..3 ** A message logged with msg(). ** Another one. 1: My first test, using test(): how'd I do? 1: ok 1 ** Yet another message. 2: My second test, using test_eq()... 2: A: The first string 2: B: The second string 2: not ok 2 3: My third test. 3: ok 3 # END Each test() is logged with the test name and results, and the test-number prefixes each line. This allows you to scan a large file easily with "grep" (or, ahem, "perl"). A blank line follows each test's record, for clarity. =head1 PUBLIC INTERFACE =cut # Globals: use strict; use vars qw($VERSION); use FileHandle; use File::Basename; # The package version, both in 1.23 style *and* usable by MakeMaker: $VERSION = substr q$Revision: 1.124 $, 10; #------------------------------ =head2 Construction =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item new [ARGS...] I Create a new tester. Any arguments are sent to log_open(). =cut sub new { my $self = bless { OUT =>\*STDOUT, Begin=>0, End =>0, Count=>0, }, shift; $self->log_open(@_) if @_; $self; } #------------------------------ =item typical I Create a typical tester. Use this instead of new() for most applicaitons. The directory "testout" is created for you automatically, to hold the output log file, and log_warnings() is invoked. =cut sub typical { my $class = shift; my ($tfile) = basename $0; unless (-d "testout") { mkdir "testout", 0755 or die "Couldn't create a 'testout' subdirectory: $!\n"; ### warn "$class: created 'testout' directory\n"; } my $self = $class->new($class->catfile('.', 'testout', "${tfile}log")); $self->log_warnings; $self; } #------------------------------ # DESTROY #------------------------------ # Class method, destructor. # Automatically closes the log. # sub DESTROY { $_[0]->log_close; } #------------------------------ =back =head2 Doing tests =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item begin NUMTESTS I Start testing. This outputs the 1..NUMTESTS line to the standard output. =cut sub begin { my ($self, $n) = @_; return if $self->{Begin}++; $self->l_print("1..$n\n\n"); print {$self->{OUT}} "1..$n\n"; } #------------------------------ =item end I Indicate the end of testing. This outputs a "# END" line to the standard output. =cut sub end { my ($self) = @_; return if $self->{End}++; $self->l_print("# END\n"); print {$self->{OUT}} "# END\n"; } #------------------------------ =item ok BOOL, [TESTNAME], [PARAMHASH...] I Do a test, and log some information connected with it. This outputs the test result lines to the standard output: ok 12 not ok 13 Use it like this: $T->ok(-e $dotforward); Or better yet, like this: $T->ok((-e $dotforward), "Does the user have a .forward file?"); Or even better, like this: $T->ok((-e $dotforward), "Does the user have a .forward file?", User => $ENV{USER}, Path => $dotforward, Fwd => $ENV{FWD}); That last one, if it were test #3, would be logged as: 3: Does the user have a .forward file? 3: User: "alice" 3: Path: "/home/alice/.forward" 3: Fwd: undef 3: ok You get the idea. Note that defined quantities are logged with delimiters and with all nongraphical characters suitably escaped, so you can see evidence of unexpected whitespace and other badnasties. Had "Fwd" been the string "this\nand\nthat", you'd have seen: 3: Fwd: "this\nand\nthat" And unblessed array refs like ["this", "and", "that"] are treated as multiple values: 3: Fwd: "this" 3: Fwd: "and" 3: Fwd: "that" =cut sub ok { my ($self, $ok, $test, @ps) = @_; ++($self->{Count}); # next test # Report to harness: my $status = ($ok ? "ok " : "not ok ") . $self->{Count}; print {$self->{OUT}} $status, "\n"; # Log: $self->ln_print($test, "\n") if $test; while (@ps) { my ($k, $v) = (shift @ps, shift @ps); my @vs = ((ref($v) and (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY'))? @$v : ($v)); foreach (@vs) { if (!defined($_)) { # value not defined: output keyword $self->ln_print(qq{ $k: undef\n}); } else { # value defined: output quoted, encoded form s{([\n\t\x00-\x1F\x7F-\xFF\\\"])} {'\\'.sprintf("%02X",ord($1)) }exg; s{\\0A}{\\n}g; $self->ln_print(qq{ $k: "$_"\n}); } } } $self->ln_print($status, "\n"); $self->l_print("\n"); 1; } #------------------------------ =item ok_eq ASTRING, BSTRING, [TESTNAME], [PARAMHASH...] I Convenience front end to ok(): test whether C, and logs the operands as 'A' and 'B'. =cut sub ok_eq { my ($self, $this, $that, $test, @ps) = @_; $self->ok(($this eq $that), ($test || "(Is 'A' string-equal to 'B'?)"), A => $this, B => $that, @ps); } #------------------------------ =item ok_eqnum ANUM, BNUM, [TESTNAME], [PARAMHASH...] I Convenience front end to ok(): test whether C, and logs the operands as 'A' and 'B'. =cut sub ok_eqnum { my ($self, $this, $that, $test, @ps) = @_; $self->ok(($this == $that), ($test || "(Is 'A' numerically-equal to 'B'?)"), A => $this, B => $that, @ps); } #------------------------------ =back =head2 Logging messages =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item log_open PATH I Open a log file for messages to be output to. This is invoked for you automatically by C and C. =cut sub log_open { my ($self, $path) = @_; $self->{LogPath} = $path; $self->{LOG} = FileHandle->new(">$path") || die "open $path: $!"; $self; } #------------------------------ =item log_close I Close the log file and stop logging. You shouldn't need to invoke this directly; the destructor does it. =cut sub log_close { my $self = shift; close(delete $self->{LOG}) if $self->{LOG}; } #------------------------------ =item log_warnings I Invoking this redefines $SIG{__WARN__} to log to STDERR and to the tester's log. This is automatically invoked when using the C constructor. =cut sub log_warnings { my ($self) = @_; $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { print STDERR $_[0]; $self->log("warning: ", $_[0]); }; } #------------------------------ =item log MESSAGE... I Log a message to the log file. No alterations are made on the text of the message. See msg() for an alternative. =cut sub log { my $self = shift; print {$self->{LOG}} @_ if $self->{LOG}; } #------------------------------ =item msg MESSAGE... I Log a message to the log file. Lines are prefixed with "** " for clarity, and a terminating newline is forced. =cut sub msg { my $self = shift; my $text = join '', @_; chomp $text; $text =~ s{^}{** }gm; $self->l_print($text, "\n"); } #------------------------------ # # l_print MESSAGE... # # Instance method, private. # Print to the log file if there is one. # sub l_print { my $self = shift; print { $self->{LOG} } @_ if $self->{LOG}; } #------------------------------ # # ln_print MESSAGE... # # Instance method, private. # Print to the log file, prefixed by message number. # sub ln_print { my $self = shift; foreach (split /\n/, join('', @_)) { $self->l_print("$self->{Count}: $_\n"); } } #------------------------------ =back =head2 Utilities =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item catdir DIR, ..., DIR I Concatenate several directories into a path ending in a directory. Lightweight version of the one in C; this method dates back to a more-innocent time when File::Spec was younger and less ubiquitous. Paths are assumed to be absolute. To signify a relative path, the first DIR must be ".", which is processed specially. On Mac, the path I end in a ':'. On Unix, the path I end in a '/'. =cut sub catdir { my $self = shift; my $relative = shift @_ if ($_[0] eq '.'); if ($^O eq 'Mac') { return ($relative ? ':' : '') . (join ':', @_) . ':'; } else { return ($relative ? './' : '/') . join '/', @_; } } #------------------------------ =item catfile DIR, ..., DIR, FILE I Like catdir(), but last element is assumed to be a file. Note that, at a minimum, you must supply at least a single DIR. =cut sub catfile { my $self = shift; my $file = pop; if ($^O eq 'Mac') { return $self->catdir(@_) . $file; } else { return $self->catdir(@_) . "/$file"; } } #------------------------------ =back =head1 VERSION $Id: TBone.pm,v 1.124 2001/08/20 20:30:07 eryq Exp $ =head1 CHANGE LOG =over 4 =item Version 1.124 (2001/08/20) The terms-of-use have been placed in the distribution file "COPYING". Also, small documentation tweaks were made. =item Version 1.122 (2001/08/20) Changed output of C<"END"> to C<"# END">; apparently, "END" is not a directive. Maybe it never was. I The storyteller need not say "the end" aloud; Silence is enough. Automatically invoke C when constructing via C. =item Version 1.120 (2001/08/17) Added log_warnings() to support the logging of SIG{__WARN__} messages to the log file (if any). =item Version 1.116 (2000/03/23) Cosmetic improvements only. =item Version 1.112 (1999/05/12) Added lightweight catdir() and catfile() (a la File::Spec) to enhance portability to Mac environment. =item Version 1.111 (1999/04/18) Now uses File::Basename to create "typical" logfile name, for portability. =item Version 1.110 (1999/04/17) Fixed bug in constructor that surfaced if no log was being used. =back Created: Friday-the-13th of February, 1998. =head1 AUTHOR Eryq (F). President, ZeeGee Software Inc. (F). Go to F for the latest downloads and on-line documentation for this module. Enjoy. Yell if it breaks. =cut #------------------------------ 1; __END__ my $T = new ExtUtils::TBone "testout/foo.tlog"; $T->begin(3); $T->msg("before 1\nor 2"); $T->ok(1, "one"); $T->ok(2, "Two"); $T->ok(3, "Three", Roman=>'III', Arabic=>[3, '03'], Misc=>"3\nor 3"); $T->end; 1;