NAME¶
App::Cmd::Tester - for capturing the result of running an app
VERSION¶
version 0.318
SYNOPSIS¶
use Test::More tests => 4;
use App::Cmd::Tester;
use YourApp;
my $result = test_app(YourApp => [ qw(command --opt value) ]);
like($result->stdout, qr/expected output/, 'printed what we expected');
is($result->stderr, '', 'nothing sent to sderr');
is($result->error, undef, 'threw no exceptions');
my $result = test_app(YourApp => [ qw(command --opt value --quiet) ]);
is($result->output, '', 'absolutely no output with --quiet');
DESCRIPTION¶
One of the reasons that user-executed programs are so often poorly tested is
that they are hard to test. App::Cmd::Tester is one of the tools App-Cmd
provides to help make it easy to test App::Cmd-based programs.
It provides one routine: test_app.
METHODS¶
test_app¶
Note: while "test_app" is a method, it is by default exported
as a subroutine into the namespace that uses App::Cmd::Tester. In other words:
you probably don't need to think about this as a method unless you want to
subclass App::Cmd::Tester.
my $result = test_app($app_class => \@argv_contents);
This will locally set @ARGV to simulate command line arguments, and will then
call the "run" method on the given application class (or
application). Output to the standard output and standard error filehandles
will be captured.
$result is an App::Cmd::Tester::Result object, which has methods to access the
following data:
stdout - the output sent to stdout
stderr - the output sent to stderr
output - the combined output of stdout and stderr
error - the exception thrown by running the application, or undef
run_rv - the return value of the run method (generally irrelevant)
exit_code - the numeric exit code that would've been issued (0 is 'okay')
AUTHOR¶
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.