NAME¶
poe-gen-tests - generate standard POE tests for third-party modules
SYNOPSIS¶
poe-gen-tests --dirbase t/loops \
--loop Glib \
--loop Kqueue \
--loop Event::Lib \
--loop POE::XS::Loop::Poll
DESCRIPTION¶
This program and the accompanying POE::Test::Loop::* modules make up POE's tests
for POE::Loop subclasses. These tests are designed to run identically
regardless of the current event loop. POE uses them to test the event loops it
bundles:
POE::Loop::Gtk
POE::Loop::IO_Poll (--loop IO::Poll)
POE::Loop::Tk
POE::Loop::Event
POE::Loop::Select
Developers of other POE::Loop modules are encouraged use this package to
generate over 420 comprehensive tests for their own work.
USAGE¶
poe-gen-tests creates test files for one or more event loops beneath the
directory specified in --dirbase. For example,
poe-gen-tests --dirbase t/loops --loop Select
generates the following test files:
t/loops/select/all_errors.t
t/loops/select/comp_tcp.t
t/loops/select/comp_tcp_concurrent.t
t/loops/select/connect_errors.t
t/loops/select/k_alarms.t
t/loops/select/k_aliases.t
t/loops/select/k_detach.t
t/loops/select/k_selects.t
t/loops/select/k_sig_child.t
t/loops/select/k_signals.t
t/loops/select/k_signals_rerun.t
t/loops/select/sbk_signal_init.t
t/loops/select/ses_nfa.t
t/loops/select/ses_session.t
t/loops/select/wheel_accept.t
t/loops/select/wheel_curses.t
t/loops/select/wheel_readline.t
t/loops/select/wheel_readwrite.t
t/loops/select/wheel_run.t
t/loops/select/wheel_sf_ipv6.t
t/loops/select/wheel_sf_tcp.t
t/loops/select/wheel_sf_udp.t
t/loops/select/wheel_sf_unix.t
t/loops/select/wheel_tail.t
The --loop parameter is either a POE::Loop::... class name or the event loop
class that will complete the POE::Loop::... package name.
poe-gen-tests --dirbase t/loops --loop Event::Lib
poe-gen-tests --dirbase t/loops --loop POE::Loop::Event_Lib
poe-gen-tests looks for a "=for poe_tests" or "=begin
poe_tests" section within the POE::Loop class being tested. If defined,
this section should include a single function,
skip_tests(), that
determines whether any given test should be skipped.
Please see perlpod for syntax for "=for" and "=begin". Also
see PODDITIES for notable differences between POE::Test::Loop's POD support
and the standard.
skip_tests() is called with one parameter, the base name of the test
about to be executed. It returns false if the test should run, or a message
that will be displayed to the user explaining why the test will be skipped.
This message is passed directly to Test::More's
plan() along with
"skip_all". The logic is essentially:
if (my $why = skip_tests("k_signals_rerun")) {
plan skip_all => $why;
}
skip_tests() should load any modules required by the event loop. See most
of the examples below.
Example poe_tests Directives¶
POE::Loop::Event checks whether the Event module exists and can be loaded, then
whether specific tests can run under specific operating systems.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
return "Event tests require the Event module" if (
do { eval "use Event"; $@ }
);
my $test_name = shift;
if ($test_name eq "k_signals_rerun" and $^O eq "MSWin32") {
return "This test crashes Perl when run with Tk on $^O";
}
if ($test_name eq "wheel_readline" and $^O eq "darwin") {
return "Event skips two of its own tests for the same reason";
}
}
POE::Loop::Gtk checks whether DISPLAY is set, which implies that X is running.
It then checks whether Gtk is available, loadable, and safely initializable
before skipping specific tests.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
my $test_name = shift;
return "Gtk needs a DISPLAY (set one today, okay?)" unless (
defined $ENV{DISPLAY} and length $ENV{DISPLAY}
);
return "Gtk tests require the Gtk module" if do { eval "use Gtk"; $@ };
return "Gtk init failed. Is DISPLAY valid?" unless defined Gtk->init_check;
if ($test_name eq "z_rt39872_sigchld_stop") {
return "Gdk crashes";
}
return;
}
POE::Loop::IO_Poll checks for system compatibility before verifying that
IO::Poll is available and loadable.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
return "IO::Poll is not 100% compatible with $^O" if $^O eq "MSWin32";
return "IO::Poll tests require the IO::Poll module" if (
do { eval "use IO::Poll"; $@ }
);
}
POE::Loop::Select has no specific requirements.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests { return }
POE::Loop::Tk needs an X display (except on Windows). Tk is not safe for
fork(), so skip tests that require forking. And finally, check whether
the Tk module is available, loadable, and runnable.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
return "Tk needs a DISPLAY (set one today, okay?)" unless (
(defined $ENV{DISPLAY} and length $ENV{DISPLAY}) or $^O eq "MSWin32"
);
my $test_name = shift;
if ($test_name eq "k_signals_rerun" and $^O eq "MSWin32") {
return "This test crashes Perl when run with Tk on $^O";
}
return "Tk tests require the Tk module" if do { eval "use Tk"; $@ };
my $m = eval { Tk::MainWindow->new() };
if ($@) {
my $why = $@;
$why =~ s/ at .*//;
return "Tk couldn't be initialized: $why";
}
return;
}
INSTALL SCRIPT INTEGRATION¶
The POE::Loop tests started out as part of the POE distribution. All the
recommendations and examples that follow are written and tested against
ExtUtils::MakeMaker because that's what POE uses. Please adjust these recipes
according to your taste and preference.
Calling the Test Generator¶
Tests need to be generated prior to the user or CPAN shell running "make
test". A tidy way to do this might be to create a new Makefile target and
include that as a dependency for "make test". POE takes a simpler
approach, calling the script from its Makefile.PL:
system(
$^X, "poe-gen-tests", "--dirbase", "t/30_loops",
"--loop", "Event", "--loop", "Gtk", "--loop", "IO::Poll",
"--loop", "Select", "--loop", "Tk",
) and die $!;
The previous approach generates tests at install time, so it's not necessary to
include the generated files in the MANIFEST. Test directories should also be
excluded from the MANIFEST. poe-gen-tests will create the necessary paths.
It's also possible to generate the tests prior to "make dist". The
distribution's MANIFEST must include the generated files in this case.
Most people will not need to add the generated tests to their repositories.
Running the Tests¶
By default, ExtUtils::MakeMaker generates Makefiles that only run tests matching
t/*.t. However authors are allowed to specify other test locations. Add the
following parameter to
WriteMakefile() so that the tests generated
above will be executed:
tests => {
TESTS => "t/*.t t/30_loops/*/*.t",
}
CLEANING UP¶
Makefiles will not clean up files that aren't present in the MANIFEST. This
includes tests generated at install time. If this bothers you, you'll need to
add directives to include the generated tests in the "clean" and
"distclean" targets.
clean => {
FILES => "t/30_loops/*/* t/30_loops/*",
}
This assumes the "t/30_loops" directory contains only generated tests.
It's recommended that generated and hand-coded tests not coexist in the same
directory.
It seems like a good idea to delete the deeper directories and files before
their parents.
Skipping Network Tests¶
Some generated tests require a network to be present and accessible. Those tests
will be skipped unless the file "run_network_tests" is present in
the main distribution directory. You can include that file in your
distribution's tarball, but it's better create it at install time after asking
the user. Here's how POE does it. Naturally you're free to do it some other
way.
# Switch to default behavior if STDIN isn't a tty.
unless (-t STDIN) {
warn(
"\n",
"=============================================\n\n",
"STDIN is not a terminal. Assuming --default.\n\n",
"=============================================\n\n",
);
push @ARGV, "--default";
}
# Remind the user she can use --default.
unless (grep /^--default$/, @ARGV) {
warn(
"\n",
"================================================\n\n",
"Prompts may be bypassed with the --default flag.\n\n",
"================================================\n\n",
);
}
# Should we run the network tests?
my $prompt = (
"Some of POE's tests require a functional network.\n" .
"You can skip these tests if you'd like.\n\n" .
"Would you like to skip the network tests?"
);
my $ret = "n";
if (grep /^--default$/, @ARGV) {
print $prompt, " [$ret] $ret\n\n";
}
else {
$ret = prompt($prompt, "n");
}
my $marker = 'run_network_tests';
unlink $marker;
unless ($ret =~ /^Y$/i) {
open(TOUCH,"+>$marker") and close TOUCH;
}
print "\n";
Skipping Other Tests¶
POE's loop tests will enable or disable tests based on the event loop's
capabilities. Distributions and event loops may set these variables to signal
which tests are okay to run.
POE_LOOP_USES_POLL¶
Some platforms do not support
poll() on certain kinds of filehandles.
Event loops that use
poll() should set this environment variable to a
true value. It will cause the tests to skip this troublesome combination.
PODDITIES¶
Previous versions of POE::Test::Loops documented "=for poe_tests"
sections terminated by =cut and containing blank lines. This is incorrect POD
syntax, and it's the reason the
skip_tests() functions showed up in
perldoc and on search.cpan.org. The following syntax is wrong and should not
have been used. I'm so sorry.
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests { ... }
=cut
The proper syntax is to terminate "=for poe_tests" with a blank line:
=for poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
...
}
Multi-line tests containing blank lines can be specified using POD's
"=begin poe_tests" terminated by "=end poe_tests".
=begin poe_tests
sub skip_tests {
...
}
=end poe_tests
All three syntaxes above are supported as of POE::Test::Loops version 1.034. The
incorrect =for syntax is deprecated and will be removed in some future
release.
SEE ALSO¶
POE::Test::Loops, POE::Loop, perlpod.
BUG TRACKER¶
https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Status=Active&Queue=POE-Test-Loops
REPOSITORY¶
https://poe.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/poe/trunk/poe-test-loops
OTHER RESOURCES¶
http://search.cpan.org/dist/POE-Test-Loops/
AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT¶
Rocco Caputo <rcaputo@cpan.org>. Benjamin Smith <bsmith@cpan.org>.
Countless other people.
These tests are Copyright 1998-2009 by Rocco Caputo, Benjamin Smith, and
countless contributors. All rights are reserved. These tests are free
software; you may redistribute them and/or modify them under the same terms as
Perl itself.
Thanks to Martijn van Beers for beta testing and suggestions.