From e6a05dbef707dc10e546ef8fef8fc2a8b7d805bf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cvs2svn Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2005 15:46:33 +0000 Subject: This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create branch 'POSTSCRIPT'. --- Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm | 1408 ------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 1408 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm (limited to 'Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm') diff --git a/Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm b/Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm deleted file mode 100644 index 6f3edd8..0000000 --- a/Perl/t/Test/Builder.pm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1408 +0,0 @@ -package Test::Builder; - -use 5.004; - -# $^C was only introduced in 5.005-ish. We do this to prevent -# use of uninitialized value warnings in older perls. -$^C ||= 0; - -use strict; -use vars qw($VERSION $CLASS); -$VERSION = '0.17'; -$CLASS = __PACKAGE__; - -my $IsVMS = $^O eq 'VMS'; - -# Make Test::Builder thread-safe for ithreads. -BEGIN { - use Config; - if( $] >= 5.008 && $Config{useithreads} ) { - require threads; - require threads::shared; - threads::shared->import; - } - else { - *share = sub { 0 }; - *lock = sub { 0 }; - } -} - -use vars qw($Level); -my($Test_Died) = 0; -my($Have_Plan) = 0; -my $Original_Pid = $$; -my $Curr_Test = 0; share($Curr_Test); -my @Test_Results = (); share(@Test_Results); -my @Test_Details = (); share(@Test_Details); - - -=head1 NAME - -Test::Builder - Backend for building test libraries - -=head1 SYNOPSIS - - package My::Test::Module; - use Test::Builder; - require Exporter; - @ISA = qw(Exporter); - @EXPORT = qw(ok); - - my $Test = Test::Builder->new; - $Test->output('my_logfile'); - - sub import { - my($self) = shift; - my $pack = caller; - - $Test->exported_to($pack); - $Test->plan(@_); - - $self->export_to_level(1, $self, 'ok'); - } - - sub ok { - my($test, $name) = @_; - - $Test->ok($test, $name); - } - - -=head1 DESCRIPTION - -Test::Simple and Test::More have proven to be popular testing modules, -but they're not always flexible enough. Test::Builder provides the a -building block upon which to write your own test libraries I. - -=head2 Construction - -=over 4 - -=item B - - my $Test = Test::Builder->new; - -Returns a Test::Builder object representing the current state of the -test. - -Since you only run one test per program, there is B -Test::Builder object. No matter how many times you call new(), you're -getting the same object. (This is called a singleton). - -=cut - -my $Test; -sub new { - my($class) = shift; - $Test ||= bless ['Move along, nothing to see here'], $class; - return $Test; -} - -=back - -=head2 Setting up tests - -These methods are for setting up tests and declaring how many there -are. You usually only want to call one of these methods. - -=over 4 - -=item B - - my $pack = $Test->exported_to; - $Test->exported_to($pack); - -Tells Test::Builder what package you exported your functions to. -This is important for getting TODO tests right. - -=cut - -my $Exported_To; -sub exported_to { - my($self, $pack) = @_; - - if( defined $pack ) { - $Exported_To = $pack; - } - return $Exported_To; -} - -=item B - - $Test->plan('no_plan'); - $Test->plan( skip_all => $reason ); - $Test->plan( tests => $num_tests ); - -A convenient way to set up your tests. Call this and Test::Builder -will print the appropriate headers and take the appropriate actions. - -If you call plan(), don't call any of the other methods below. - -=cut - -sub plan { - my($self, $cmd, $arg) = @_; - - return unless $cmd; - - if( $Have_Plan ) { - die sprintf "You tried to plan twice! Second plan at %s line %d\n", - ($self->caller)[1,2]; - } - - if( $cmd eq 'no_plan' ) { - $self->no_plan; - } - elsif( $cmd eq 'skip_all' ) { - return $self->skip_all($arg); - } - elsif( $cmd eq 'tests' ) { - if( $arg ) { - return $self->expected_tests($arg); - } - elsif( !defined $arg ) { - die "Got an undefined number of tests. Looks like you tried to ". - "say how many tests you plan to run but made a mistake.\n"; - } - elsif( !$arg ) { - die "You said to run 0 tests! You've got to run something.\n"; - } - } - else { - require Carp; - my @args = grep { defined } ($cmd, $arg); - Carp::croak("plan() doesn't understand @args"); - } - - return 1; -} - -=item B - - my $max = $Test->expected_tests; - $Test->expected_tests($max); - -Gets/sets the # of tests we expect this test to run and prints out -the appropriate headers. - -=cut - -my $Expected_Tests = 0; -sub expected_tests { - my($self, $max) = @_; - - if( defined $max ) { - $Expected_Tests = $max; - $Have_Plan = 1; - - $self->_print("1..$max\n") unless $self->no_header; - } - return $Expected_Tests; -} - - -=item B - - $Test->no_plan; - -Declares that this test will run an indeterminate # of tests. - -=cut - -my($No_Plan) = 0; -sub no_plan { - $No_Plan = 1; - $Have_Plan = 1; -} - -=item B - - $plan = $Test->has_plan - -Find out whether a plan has been defined. $plan is either C (no plan has been set), C (indeterminate # of tests) or an integer (the number of expected tests). - -=cut - -sub has_plan { - return($Expected_Tests) if $Expected_Tests; - return('no_plan') if $No_Plan; - return(undef); -}; - - -=item B - - $Test->skip_all; - $Test->skip_all($reason); - -Skips all the tests, using the given $reason. Exits immediately with 0. - -=cut - -my $Skip_All = 0; -sub skip_all { - my($self, $reason) = @_; - - my $out = "1..0"; - $out .= " # Skip $reason" if $reason; - $out .= "\n"; - - $Skip_All = 1; - - $self->_print($out) unless $self->no_header; - exit(0); -} - -=back - -=head2 Running tests - -These actually run the tests, analogous to the functions in -Test::More. - -$name is always optional. - -=over 4 - -=item B - - $Test->ok($test, $name); - -Your basic test. Pass if $test is true, fail if $test is false. Just -like Test::Simple's ok(). - -=cut - -sub ok { - my($self, $test, $name) = @_; - - # $test might contain an object which we don't want to accidentally - # store, so we turn it into a boolean. - $test = $test ? 1 : 0; - - unless( $Have_Plan ) { - require Carp; - Carp::croak("You tried to run a test without a plan! Gotta have a plan."); - } - - lock $Curr_Test; - $Curr_Test++; - - $self->diag(<caller; - - my $todo = $self->todo($pack); - - my $out; - my $result = {}; - share($result); - - unless( $test ) { - $out .= "not "; - @$result{ 'ok', 'actual_ok' } = ( ( $todo ? 1 : 0 ), 0 ); - } - else { - @$result{ 'ok', 'actual_ok' } = ( 1, $test ); - } - - $out .= "ok"; - $out .= " $Curr_Test" if $self->use_numbers; - - if( defined $name ) { - $name =~ s|#|\\#|g; # # in a name can confuse Test::Harness. - $out .= " - $name"; - $result->{name} = $name; - } - else { - $result->{name} = ''; - } - - if( $todo ) { - my $what_todo = $todo; - $out .= " # TODO $what_todo"; - $result->{reason} = $what_todo; - $result->{type} = 'todo'; - } - else { - $result->{reason} = ''; - $result->{type} = ''; - } - - $Test_Results[$Curr_Test-1] = $result; - $out .= "\n"; - - $self->_print($out); - - unless( $test ) { - my $msg = $todo ? "Failed (TODO)" : "Failed"; - $self->diag(" $msg test ($file at line $line)\n"); - } - - return $test ? 1 : 0; -} - -=item B - - $Test->is_eq($got, $expected, $name); - -Like Test::More's is(). Checks if $got eq $expected. This is the -string version. - -=item B - - $Test->is_num($got, $expected, $name); - -Like Test::More's is(). Checks if $got == $expected. This is the -numeric version. - -=cut - -sub is_eq { - my($self, $got, $expect, $name) = @_; - local $Level = $Level + 1; - - if( !defined $got || !defined $expect ) { - # undef only matches undef and nothing else - my $test = !defined $got && !defined $expect; - - $self->ok($test, $name); - $self->_is_diag($got, 'eq', $expect) unless $test; - return $test; - } - - return $self->cmp_ok($got, 'eq', $expect, $name); -} - -sub is_num { - my($self, $got, $expect, $name) = @_; - local $Level = $Level + 1; - - if( !defined $got || !defined $expect ) { - # undef only matches undef and nothing else - my $test = !defined $got && !defined $expect; - - $self->ok($test, $name); - $self->_is_diag($got, '==', $expect) unless $test; - return $test; - } - - return $self->cmp_ok($got, '==', $expect, $name); -} - -sub _is_diag { - my($self, $got, $type, $expect) = @_; - - foreach my $val (\$got, \$expect) { - if( defined $$val ) { - if( $type eq 'eq' ) { - # quote and force string context - $$val = "'$$val'" - } - else { - # force numeric context - $$val = $$val+0; - } - } - else { - $$val = 'undef'; - } - } - - return $self->diag(sprintf < - - $Test->isnt_eq($got, $dont_expect, $name); - -Like Test::More's isnt(). Checks if $got ne $dont_expect. This is -the string version. - -=item B - - $Test->is_num($got, $dont_expect, $name); - -Like Test::More's isnt(). Checks if $got ne $dont_expect. This is -the numeric version. - -=cut - -sub isnt_eq { - my($self, $got, $dont_expect, $name) = @_; - local $Level = $Level + 1; - - if( !defined $got || !defined $dont_expect ) { - # undef only matches undef and nothing else - my $test = defined $got || defined $dont_expect; - - $self->ok($test, $name); - $self->_cmp_diag('ne', $got, $dont_expect) unless $test; - return $test; - } - - return $self->cmp_ok($got, 'ne', $dont_expect, $name); -} - -sub isnt_num { - my($self, $got, $dont_expect, $name) = @_; - local $Level = $Level + 1; - - if( !defined $got || !defined $dont_expect ) { - # undef only matches undef and nothing else - my $test = defined $got || defined $dont_expect; - - $self->ok($test, $name); - $self->_cmp_diag('!=', $got, $dont_expect) unless $test; - return $test; - } - - return $self->cmp_ok($got, '!=', $dont_expect, $name); -} - - -=item B - - $Test->like($this, qr/$regex/, $name); - $Test->like($this, '/$regex/', $name); - -Like Test::More's like(). Checks if $this matches the given $regex. - -You'll want to avoid qr// if you want your tests to work before 5.005. - -=item B - - $Test->unlike($this, qr/$regex/, $name); - $Test->unlike($this, '/$regex/', $name); - -Like Test::More's unlike(). Checks if $this B the -given $regex. - -=cut - -sub like { - my($self, $this, $regex, $name) = @_; - - local $Level = $Level + 1; - $self->_regex_ok($this, $regex, '=~', $name); -} - -sub unlike { - my($self, $this, $regex, $name) = @_; - - local $Level = $Level + 1; - $self->_regex_ok($this, $regex, '!~', $name); -} - -=item B - - $Test->maybe_regex(qr/$regex/); - $Test->maybe_regex('/$regex/'); - -Convenience method for building testing functions that take regular -expressions as arguments, but need to work before perl 5.005. - -Takes a quoted regular expression produced by qr//, or a string -representing a regular expression. - -Returns a Perl value which may be used instead of the corresponding -regular expression, or undef if it's argument is not recognised. - -For example, a version of like(), sans the useful diagnostic messages, -could be written as: - - sub laconic_like { - my ($self, $this, $regex, $name) = @_; - my $usable_regex = $self->maybe_regex($regex); - die "expecting regex, found '$regex'\n" - unless $usable_regex; - $self->ok($this =~ m/$usable_regex/, $name); - } - -=cut - - -sub maybe_regex { - my ($self, $regex) = @_; - my $usable_regex = undef; - if( ref $regex eq 'Regexp' ) { - $usable_regex = $regex; - } - # Check if it looks like '/foo/' - elsif( my($re, $opts) = $regex =~ m{^ /(.*)/ (\w*) $ }sx ) { - $usable_regex = length $opts ? "(?$opts)$re" : $re; - }; - return($usable_regex) -}; - -sub _regex_ok { - my($self, $this, $regex, $cmp, $name) = @_; - - local $Level = $Level + 1; - - my $ok = 0; - my $usable_regex = $self->maybe_regex($regex); - unless (defined $usable_regex) { - $ok = $self->ok( 0, $name ); - $self->diag(" '$regex' doesn't look much like a regex to me."); - return $ok; - } - - { - local $^W = 0; - my $test = $this =~ /$usable_regex/ ? 1 : 0; - $test = !$test if $cmp eq '!~'; - $ok = $self->ok( $test, $name ); - } - - unless( $ok ) { - $this = defined $this ? "'$this'" : 'undef'; - my $match = $cmp eq '=~' ? "doesn't match" : "matches"; - $self->diag(sprintf < - - $Test->cmp_ok($this, $type, $that, $name); - -Works just like Test::More's cmp_ok(). - - $Test->cmp_ok($big_num, '!=', $other_big_num); - -=cut - -sub cmp_ok { - my($self, $got, $type, $expect, $name) = @_; - - my $test; - { - local $^W = 0; - local($@,$!); # don't interfere with $@ - # eval() sometimes resets $! - $test = eval "\$got $type \$expect"; - } - local $Level = $Level + 1; - my $ok = $self->ok($test, $name); - - unless( $ok ) { - if( $type =~ /^(eq|==)$/ ) { - $self->_is_diag($got, $type, $expect); - } - else { - $self->_cmp_diag($got, $type, $expect); - } - } - return $ok; -} - -sub _cmp_diag { - my($self, $got, $type, $expect) = @_; - - $got = defined $got ? "'$got'" : 'undef'; - $expect = defined $expect ? "'$expect'" : 'undef'; - return $self->diag(sprintf < - - $Test->BAILOUT($reason); - -Indicates to the Test::Harness that things are going so badly all -testing should terminate. This includes running any additional test -scripts. - -It will exit with 255. - -=cut - -sub BAILOUT { - my($self, $reason) = @_; - - $self->_print("Bail out! $reason"); - exit 255; -} - -=item B - - $Test->skip; - $Test->skip($why); - -Skips the current test, reporting $why. - -=cut - -sub skip { - my($self, $why) = @_; - $why ||= ''; - - unless( $Have_Plan ) { - require Carp; - Carp::croak("You tried to run tests without a plan! Gotta have a plan."); - } - - lock($Curr_Test); - $Curr_Test++; - - my %result; - share(%result); - %result = ( - 'ok' => 1, - actual_ok => 1, - name => '', - type => 'skip', - reason => $why, - ); - $Test_Results[$Curr_Test-1] = \%result; - - my $out = "ok"; - $out .= " $Curr_Test" if $self->use_numbers; - $out .= " # skip $why\n"; - - $Test->_print($out); - - return 1; -} - - -=item B - - $Test->todo_skip; - $Test->todo_skip($why); - -Like skip(), only it will declare the test as failing and TODO. Similar -to - - print "not ok $tnum # TODO $why\n"; - -=cut - -sub todo_skip { - my($self, $why) = @_; - $why ||= ''; - - unless( $Have_Plan ) { - require Carp; - Carp::croak("You tried to run tests without a plan! Gotta have a plan."); - } - - lock($Curr_Test); - $Curr_Test++; - - my %result; - share(%result); - %result = ( - 'ok' => 1, - actual_ok => 0, - name => '', - type => 'todo_skip', - reason => $why, - ); - - $Test_Results[$Curr_Test-1] = \%result; - - my $out = "not ok"; - $out .= " $Curr_Test" if $self->use_numbers; - $out .= " # TODO & SKIP $why\n"; - - $Test->_print($out); - - return 1; -} - - -=begin _unimplemented - -=item B - - $Test->skip_rest; - $Test->skip_rest($reason); - -Like skip(), only it skips all the rest of the tests you plan to run -and terminates the test. - -If you're running under no_plan, it skips once and terminates the -test. - -=end _unimplemented - -=back - - -=head2 Test style - -=over 4 - -=item B - - $Test->level($how_high); - -How far up the call stack should $Test look when reporting where the -test failed. - -Defaults to 1. - -Setting $Test::Builder::Level overrides. This is typically useful -localized: - - { - local $Test::Builder::Level = 2; - $Test->ok($test); - } - -=cut - -sub level { - my($self, $level) = @_; - - if( defined $level ) { - $Level = $level; - } - return $Level; -} - -$CLASS->level(1); - - -=item B - - $Test->use_numbers($on_or_off); - -Whether or not the test should output numbers. That is, this if true: - - ok 1 - ok 2 - ok 3 - -or this if false - - ok - ok - ok - -Most useful when you can't depend on the test output order, such as -when threads or forking is involved. - -Test::Harness will accept either, but avoid mixing the two styles. - -Defaults to on. - -=cut - -my $Use_Nums = 1; -sub use_numbers { - my($self, $use_nums) = @_; - - if( defined $use_nums ) { - $Use_Nums = $use_nums; - } - return $Use_Nums; -} - -=item B - - $Test->no_header($no_header); - -If set to true, no "1..N" header will be printed. - -=item B - - $Test->no_ending($no_ending); - -Normally, Test::Builder does some extra diagnostics when the test -ends. It also changes the exit code as described in Test::Simple. - -If this is true, none of that will be done. - -=cut - -my($No_Header, $No_Ending) = (0,0); -sub no_header { - my($self, $no_header) = @_; - - if( defined $no_header ) { - $No_Header = $no_header; - } - return $No_Header; -} - -sub no_ending { - my($self, $no_ending) = @_; - - if( defined $no_ending ) { - $No_Ending = $no_ending; - } - return $No_Ending; -} - - -=back - -=head2 Output - -Controlling where the test output goes. - -It's ok for your test to change where STDOUT and STDERR point to, -Test::Builder's default output settings will not be affected. - -=over 4 - -=item B - - $Test->diag(@msgs); - -Prints out the given $message. Normally, it uses the failure_output() -handle, but if this is for a TODO test, the todo_output() handle is -used. - -Output will be indented and marked with a # so as not to interfere -with test output. A newline will be put on the end if there isn't one -already. - -We encourage using this rather than calling print directly. - -Returns false. Why? Because diag() is often used in conjunction with -a failing test (C) it "passes through" the failure. - - return ok(...) || diag(...); - -=for blame transfer -Mark Fowler - -=cut - -sub diag { - my($self, @msgs) = @_; - return unless @msgs; - - # Prevent printing headers when compiling (i.e. -c) - return if $^C; - - # Escape each line with a #. - foreach (@msgs) { - $_ = 'undef' unless defined; - s/^/# /gms; - } - - push @msgs, "\n" unless $msgs[-1] =~ /\n\Z/; - - local $Level = $Level + 1; - my $fh = $self->todo ? $self->todo_output : $self->failure_output; - local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); - print $fh @msgs; - - return 0; -} - -=begin _private - -=item B<_print> - - $Test->_print(@msgs); - -Prints to the output() filehandle. - -=end _private - -=cut - -sub _print { - my($self, @msgs) = @_; - - # Prevent printing headers when only compiling. Mostly for when - # tests are deparsed with B::Deparse - return if $^C; - - local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); - my $fh = $self->output; - - # Escape each line after the first with a # so we don't - # confuse Test::Harness. - foreach (@msgs) { - s/\n(.)/\n# $1/sg; - } - - push @msgs, "\n" unless $msgs[-1] =~ /\n\Z/; - - print $fh @msgs; -} - - -=item B - - $Test->output($fh); - $Test->output($file); - -Where normal "ok/not ok" test output should go. - -Defaults to STDOUT. - -=item B - - $Test->failure_output($fh); - $Test->failure_output($file); - -Where diagnostic output on test failures and diag() should go. - -Defaults to STDERR. - -=item B - - $Test->todo_output($fh); - $Test->todo_output($file); - -Where diagnostics about todo test failures and diag() should go. - -Defaults to STDOUT. - -=cut - -my($Out_FH, $Fail_FH, $Todo_FH); -sub output { - my($self, $fh) = @_; - - if( defined $fh ) { - $Out_FH = _new_fh($fh); - } - return $Out_FH; -} - -sub failure_output { - my($self, $fh) = @_; - - if( defined $fh ) { - $Fail_FH = _new_fh($fh); - } - return $Fail_FH; -} - -sub todo_output { - my($self, $fh) = @_; - - if( defined $fh ) { - $Todo_FH = _new_fh($fh); - } - return $Todo_FH; -} - -sub _new_fh { - my($file_or_fh) = shift; - - my $fh; - unless( UNIVERSAL::isa($file_or_fh, 'GLOB') ) { - $fh = do { local *FH }; - open $fh, ">$file_or_fh" or - die "Can't open test output log $file_or_fh: $!"; - } - else { - $fh = $file_or_fh; - } - - return $fh; -} - -unless( $^C ) { - # We dup STDOUT and STDERR so people can change them in their - # test suites while still getting normal test output. - open(TESTOUT, ">&STDOUT") or die "Can't dup STDOUT: $!"; - open(TESTERR, ">&STDERR") or die "Can't dup STDERR: $!"; - - # Set everything to unbuffered else plain prints to STDOUT will - # come out in the wrong order from our own prints. - _autoflush(\*TESTOUT); - _autoflush(\*STDOUT); - _autoflush(\*TESTERR); - _autoflush(\*STDERR); - - $CLASS->output(\*TESTOUT); - $CLASS->failure_output(\*TESTERR); - $CLASS->todo_output(\*TESTOUT); -} - -sub _autoflush { - my($fh) = shift; - my $old_fh = select $fh; - $| = 1; - select $old_fh; -} - - -=back - - -=head2 Test Status and Info - -=over 4 - -=item B - - my $curr_test = $Test->current_test; - $Test->current_test($num); - -Gets/sets the current test # we're on. - -You usually shouldn't have to set this. - -=cut - -sub current_test { - my($self, $num) = @_; - - lock($Curr_Test); - if( defined $num ) { - unless( $Have_Plan ) { - require Carp; - Carp::croak("Can't change the current test number without a plan!"); - } - - $Curr_Test = $num; - if( $num > @Test_Results ) { - my $start = @Test_Results ? $#Test_Results + 1 : 0; - for ($start..$num-1) { - my %result; - share(%result); - %result = ( ok => 1, - actual_ok => undef, - reason => 'incrementing test number', - type => 'unknown', - name => undef - ); - $Test_Results[$_] = \%result; - } - } - } - return $Curr_Test; -} - - -=item B - - my @tests = $Test->summary; - -A simple summary of the tests so far. True for pass, false for fail. -This is a logical pass/fail, so todos are passes. - -Of course, test #1 is $tests[0], etc... - -=cut - -sub summary { - my($self) = shift; - - return map { $_->{'ok'} } @Test_Results; -} - -=item B
- - my @tests = $Test->details; - -Like summary(), but with a lot more detail. - - $tests[$test_num - 1] = - { 'ok' => is the test considered a pass? - actual_ok => did it literally say 'ok'? - name => name of the test (if any) - type => type of test (if any, see below). - reason => reason for the above (if any) - }; - -'ok' is true if Test::Harness will consider the test to be a pass. - -'actual_ok' is a reflection of whether or not the test literally -printed 'ok' or 'not ok'. This is for examining the result of 'todo' -tests. - -'name' is the name of the test. - -'type' indicates if it was a special test. Normal tests have a type -of ''. Type can be one of the following: - - skip see skip() - todo see todo() - todo_skip see todo_skip() - unknown see below - -Sometimes the Test::Builder test counter is incremented without it -printing any test output, for example, when current_test() is changed. -In these cases, Test::Builder doesn't know the result of the test, so -it's type is 'unkown'. These details for these tests are filled in. -They are considered ok, but the name and actual_ok is left undef. - -For example "not ok 23 - hole count # TODO insufficient donuts" would -result in this structure: - - $tests[22] = # 23 - 1, since arrays start from 0. - { ok => 1, # logically, the test passed since it's todo - actual_ok => 0, # in absolute terms, it failed - name => 'hole count', - type => 'todo', - reason => 'insufficient donuts' - }; - -=cut - -sub details { - return @Test_Results; -} - -=item B - - my $todo_reason = $Test->todo; - my $todo_reason = $Test->todo($pack); - -todo() looks for a $TODO variable in your tests. If set, all tests -will be considered 'todo' (see Test::More and Test::Harness for -details). Returns the reason (ie. the value of $TODO) if running as -todo tests, false otherwise. - -todo() is pretty part about finding the right package to look for -$TODO in. It uses the exported_to() package to find it. If that's -not set, it's pretty good at guessing the right package to look at. - -Sometimes there is some confusion about where todo() should be looking -for the $TODO variable. If you want to be sure, tell it explicitly -what $pack to use. - -=cut - -sub todo { - my($self, $pack) = @_; - - $pack = $pack || $self->exported_to || $self->caller(1); - - no strict 'refs'; - return defined ${$pack.'::TODO'} ? ${$pack.'::TODO'} - : 0; -} - -=item B - - my $package = $Test->caller; - my($pack, $file, $line) = $Test->caller; - my($pack, $file, $line) = $Test->caller($height); - -Like the normal caller(), except it reports according to your level(). - -=cut - -sub caller { - my($self, $height) = @_; - $height ||= 0; - - my @caller = CORE::caller($self->level + $height + 1); - return wantarray ? @caller : $caller[0]; -} - -=back - -=cut - -=begin _private - -=over 4 - -=item B<_sanity_check> - - _sanity_check(); - -Runs a bunch of end of test sanity checks to make sure reality came -through ok. If anything is wrong it will die with a fairly friendly -error message. - -=cut - -#'# -sub _sanity_check { - _whoa($Curr_Test < 0, 'Says here you ran a negative number of tests!'); - _whoa(!$Have_Plan and $Curr_Test, - 'Somehow your tests ran without a plan!'); - _whoa($Curr_Test != @Test_Results, - 'Somehow you got a different number of results than tests ran!'); -} - -=item B<_whoa> - - _whoa($check, $description); - -A sanity check, similar to assert(). If the $check is true, something -has gone horribly wrong. It will die with the given $description and -a note to contact the author. - -=cut - -sub _whoa { - my($check, $desc) = @_; - if( $check ) { - die < - - _my_exit($exit_num); - -Perl seems to have some trouble with exiting inside an END block. 5.005_03 -and 5.6.1 both seem to do odd things. Instead, this function edits $? -directly. It should ONLY be called from inside an END block. It -doesn't actually exit, that's your job. - -=cut - -sub _my_exit { - $? = $_[0]; - - return 1; -} - - -=back - -=end _private - -=cut - -$SIG{__DIE__} = sub { - # We don't want to muck with death in an eval, but $^S isn't - # totally reliable. 5.005_03 and 5.6.1 both do the wrong thing - # with it. Instead, we use caller. This also means it runs under - # 5.004! - my $in_eval = 0; - for( my $stack = 1; my $sub = (CORE::caller($stack))[3]; $stack++ ) { - $in_eval = 1 if $sub =~ /^\(eval\)/; - } - $Test_Died = 1 unless $in_eval; -}; - -sub _ending { - my $self = shift; - - _sanity_check(); - - # Don't bother with an ending if this is a forked copy. Only the parent - # should do the ending. - do{ _my_exit($?) && return } if $Original_Pid != $$; - - # Bailout if plan() was never called. This is so - # "require Test::Simple" doesn't puke. - do{ _my_exit(0) && return } if !$Have_Plan && !$Test_Died; - - # Figure out if we passed or failed and print helpful messages. - if( @Test_Results ) { - # The plan? We have no plan. - if( $No_Plan ) { - $self->_print("1..$Curr_Test\n") unless $self->no_header; - $Expected_Tests = $Curr_Test; - } - - # 5.8.0 threads bug. Shared arrays will not be auto-extended - # by a slice. Worse, we have to fill in every entry else - # we'll get an "Invalid value for shared scalar" error - for my $idx ($#Test_Results..$Expected_Tests-1) { - my %empty_result = (); - share(%empty_result); - $Test_Results[$idx] = \%empty_result - unless defined $Test_Results[$idx]; - } - - my $num_failed = grep !$_->{'ok'}, @Test_Results[0..$Expected_Tests-1]; - $num_failed += abs($Expected_Tests - @Test_Results); - - if( $Curr_Test < $Expected_Tests ) { - $self->diag(<<"FAIL"); -Looks like you planned $Expected_Tests tests but only ran $Curr_Test. -FAIL - } - elsif( $Curr_Test > $Expected_Tests ) { - my $num_extra = $Curr_Test - $Expected_Tests; - $self->diag(<<"FAIL"); -Looks like you planned $Expected_Tests tests but ran $num_extra extra. -FAIL - } - elsif ( $num_failed ) { - $self->diag(<<"FAIL"); -Looks like you failed $num_failed tests of $Expected_Tests. -FAIL - } - - if( $Test_Died ) { - $self->diag(<<"FAIL"); -Looks like your test died just after $Curr_Test. -FAIL - - _my_exit( 255 ) && return; - } - - _my_exit( $num_failed <= 254 ? $num_failed : 254 ) && return; - } - elsif ( $Skip_All ) { - _my_exit( 0 ) && return; - } - elsif ( $Test_Died ) { - $self->diag(<<'FAIL'); -Looks like your test died before it could output anything. -FAIL - } - else { - $self->diag("No tests run!\n"); - _my_exit( 255 ) && return; - } -} - -END { - $Test->_ending if defined $Test and !$Test->no_ending; -} - -=head1 THREADS - -In perl 5.8.0 and later, Test::Builder is thread-safe. The test -number is shared amongst all threads. This means if one thread sets -the test number using current_test() they will all be effected. - -=head1 EXAMPLES - -CPAN can provide the best examples. Test::Simple, Test::More, -Test::Exception and Test::Differences all use Test::Builder. - -=head1 SEE ALSO - -Test::Simple, Test::More, Test::Harness - -=head1 AUTHORS - -Original code by chromatic, maintained by Michael G Schwern -Eschwern@pobox.comE - -=head1 COPYRIGHT - -Copyright 2002 by chromatic Echromatic@wgz.orgE, - Michael G Schwern Eschwern@pobox.comE. - -This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or -modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. - -See F - -=cut - -1; -- cgit v1.1