NAME¶
Test::Class::Load - Load "Test::Class" classes automatically.
VERSION¶
Version 0.02
SYNOPSIS¶
use Test::Class::Load qw(t/tests t/lib);
Test::Class->runtests;
EXPORT¶
None.
DESCRIPTION¶
"Test::Class" typically uses a helper script to load the test classes.
It often looks something like this:
#!/usr/bin/perl -T
use strict;
use warnings;
use lib 't/tests';
use MyTest::Foo;
use MyTest::Foo::Bar;
use MyTest::Foo::Baz;
Test::Class->runtests;
This causes a problem, though. When you're writing a test class, it's easy to
forget to add it to the helper script. Then you run your huge test suite and
see that all tests pass, even though you don't notice that it didn't run your
new test class. Or you delete a test class and you forget to remove it from
the helper script.
"Test::Class::Load" automatically finds and loads your test classes
for you. There is no longer a need to list them individually.
BASIC USAGE¶
Using "Test::Class::Load" is as simple as this:
#!/usr/bin/perl -T
use strict;
use warnings;
use Test::Class::Load 't/tests';
Test::Class->runtests;
That will search through all files in the "t/tests" directory and
automatically load anything which ends in ".pm". You should only put
test classes in those directories.
If you have test classes in more than one directory, that's OK. Just list all of
them in the import list.
use Test::Class::Load qw<
t/customer
t/order
t/inventory
>;
Test::Class->runtests;
ADVANCED USAGE¶
Here's some examples of advanced usage of "Test::Class::Load".
FILTER LOADED CLASSES¶
You can redefine the filtering criteria, that is, decide what classes are picked
up and what others are not. You do this simply by subclassing
"Test::Class::Load" overriding the "is_test_class()"
method. You might want to do this to only load modules which inherit from
"Test::Class", or anything else for that matter.
- is_test_class
-
$is_test_class = $class->is_test_class( $file, $directory )
Returns true if $file in $directory should be considered a test class and be
loaded by Test::Class::Load. The default filter simply returns true if
$file ends with ".pm"
For example:
use strict;
use warnings;
package My::Loader;
use base qw( Test::Class::Load );
# Overriding this selects what test classes
# are considered by T::C::Load
sub is_test_class {
my ( $class, $file, $dir ) = @_;
# return unless it's a .pm (the default)
return unless $class->SUPER:is_test_class( $file, $dir );
# and only allow .pm files with "Good" in their filename
return $file =~ m{Good};
}
1;
CUSTOMIZING TEST RUNS¶
One problem with this style of testing is that you run
all of the tests
every time you need to test something. If you want to run only one test class,
it's problematic. The easy way to do this is to change your helper script by
deleting the "runtests" call:
#!/usr/bin/perl -T
use strict;
use warnings;
use Test::Class::Load 't/tests';
Then, just make sure that all of your test classes inherit from your own base
class which runs the tests for you. It might looks something like this:
package My::Test::Class;
use strict;
use warnings;
use base 'Test::Class';
INIT { Test::Class->runtests } # here's the magic!
1;
Then you can run an individual test class by using the "prove"
utility, tell it the directory of the test classes and the name of the test
package you wish to run:
prove -lv -It/tests Some::Test::Class
You can even automate this by binding it to a key in "vim":
noremap ,t :!prove -lv -It/tests %<CR>
Then you can just type ",t" ('comma', 'tee') and it will run the tests
for your test class or the tests for your test script (if you're using a
traditional "Test::More" style script).
Of course, you can still run your helper script with "prove",
"make test" or "./Build test" to run all of your test
classes.
If you do that, you'll have to make sure that the "-I" switches point
to your test class directories.
SECURITY¶
"Test::Class::Load" is taint safe. Because we're reading the class
names from the directory structure, they're marked as tainted when running
under taint mode. We use the following ultra-paranoid bit of code to untaint
them. Please file a bug report if this is too restrictive.
my ($package) = $_package =~ /^([[:word:]]+(?:::[[:word:]]+)*)$/;
AUTHOR¶
Curtis "Ovid" Poe, "<ovid@cpan.org>"
BUGS¶
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
"bug-test-class-load@rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Test-Class-Load
<
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Test-Class-Load>. I will
be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug
as I make changes.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS¶
Thanks to David Wheeler for the idea and Adrian Howard for
"Test::Class".
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright 2006 Curtis "Ovid" Poe, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.