Keep Intel C++ from claiming that it is gcc.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Test / More.pm
CommitLineData
3f2ec160 1package Test::More;
2
d020a79a 3use 5.004;
3f2ec160 4
d020a79a 5use strict;
3f2ec160 6
33459055 7
8# Can't use Carp because it might cause use_ok() to accidentally succeed
9# even though the module being used forgot to use Carp. Yes, this
10# actually happened.
11sub _carp {
12 my($file, $line) = (caller(1))[1,2];
a9153838 13 warn @_, " at $file line $line\n";
3f2ec160 14}
15
33459055 16
17
33459055 18use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT %EXPORT_TAGS $TODO);
68938d83 19$VERSION = '0.63';
7483b81c 20$VERSION = eval $VERSION; # make the alpha version come out as a number
21
b1ddf169 22use Test::Builder::Module;
23@ISA = qw(Test::Builder::Module);
3f2ec160 24@EXPORT = qw(ok use_ok require_ok
a9153838 25 is isnt like unlike is_deeply
26 cmp_ok
27 skip todo todo_skip
3f2ec160 28 pass fail
de2dd90a 29 eq_array eq_hash eq_set
d020a79a 30 $TODO
31 plan
32 can_ok isa_ok
a9153838 33 diag
b1ddf169 34 BAIL_OUT
3f2ec160 35 );
36
3f2ec160 37
38=head1 NAME
39
40Test::More - yet another framework for writing test scripts
41
42=head1 SYNOPSIS
43
44 use Test::More tests => $Num_Tests;
45 # or
46 use Test::More qw(no_plan);
47 # or
d020a79a 48 use Test::More skip_all => $reason;
3f2ec160 49
50 BEGIN { use_ok( 'Some::Module' ); }
51 require_ok( 'Some::Module' );
52
53 # Various ways to say "ok"
54 ok($this eq $that, $test_name);
55
56 is ($this, $that, $test_name);
57 isnt($this, $that, $test_name);
a9153838 58
59 # Rather than print STDERR "# here's what went wrong\n"
60 diag("here's what went wrong");
61
62 like ($this, qr/that/, $test_name);
63 unlike($this, qr/that/, $test_name);
64
65 cmp_ok($this, '==', $that, $test_name);
3f2ec160 66
33459055 67 is_deeply($complex_structure1, $complex_structure2, $test_name);
68
d020a79a 69 SKIP: {
70 skip $why, $how_many unless $have_some_feature;
71
3f2ec160 72 ok( foo(), $test_name );
73 is( foo(42), 23, $test_name );
d020a79a 74 };
75
76 TODO: {
77 local $TODO = $why;
3f2ec160 78
3f2ec160 79 ok( foo(), $test_name );
80 is( foo(42), 23, $test_name );
d020a79a 81 };
82
83 can_ok($module, @methods);
84 isa_ok($object, $class);
3f2ec160 85
86 pass($test_name);
87 fail($test_name);
88
b1ddf169 89 BAIL_OUT($why);
3f2ec160 90
d020a79a 91 # UNIMPLEMENTED!!!
b1ddf169 92 my @status = Test::More::status;
d020a79a 93
3f2ec160 94
95=head1 DESCRIPTION
96
a9153838 97B<STOP!> If you're just getting started writing tests, have a look at
d020a79a 98Test::Simple first. This is a drop in replacement for Test::Simple
99which you can switch to once you get the hang of basic testing.
3f2ec160 100
a9153838 101The purpose of this module is to provide a wide range of testing
102utilities. Various ways to say "ok" with better diagnostics,
103facilities to skip tests, test future features and compare complicated
104data structures. While you can do almost anything with a simple
105C<ok()> function, it doesn't provide good diagnostic output.
3f2ec160 106
107
108=head2 I love it when a plan comes together
109
110Before anything else, you need a testing plan. This basically declares
111how many tests your script is going to run to protect against premature
112failure.
113
4bd4e70a 114The preferred way to do this is to declare a plan when you C<use Test::More>.
3f2ec160 115
116 use Test::More tests => $Num_Tests;
117
118There are rare cases when you will not know beforehand how many tests
119your script is going to run. In this case, you can declare that you
120have no plan. (Try to avoid using this as it weakens your test.)
121
122 use Test::More qw(no_plan);
123
30e302f8 124B<NOTE>: using no_plan requires a Test::Harness upgrade else it will
b1ddf169 125think everything has failed. See L<CAVEATS and NOTES>).
30e302f8 126
3f2ec160 127In some cases, you'll want to completely skip an entire testing script.
128
d020a79a 129 use Test::More skip_all => $skip_reason;
3f2ec160 130
d020a79a 131Your script will declare a skip with the reason why you skipped and
132exit immediately with a zero (success). See L<Test::Harness> for
133details.
3f2ec160 134
33459055 135If you want to control what functions Test::More will export, you
136have to use the 'import' option. For example, to import everything
137but 'fail', you'd do:
138
139 use Test::More tests => 23, import => ['!fail'];
140
141Alternatively, you can use the plan() function. Useful for when you
142have to calculate the number of tests.
143
144 use Test::More;
145 plan tests => keys %Stuff * 3;
146
147or for deciding between running the tests at all:
148
149 use Test::More;
150 if( $^O eq 'MacOS' ) {
4bd4e70a 151 plan skip_all => 'Test irrelevant on MacOS';
33459055 152 }
153 else {
154 plan tests => 42;
155 }
156
157=cut
158
159sub plan {
b1ddf169 160 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
7483b81c 161
b1ddf169 162 $tb->plan(@_);
33459055 163}
164
7483b81c 165
b1ddf169 166# This implements "use Test::More 'no_diag'" but the behavior is
167# deprecated.
168sub import_extra {
169 my $class = shift;
170 my $list = shift;
7483b81c 171
b1ddf169 172 my @other = ();
7483b81c 173 my $idx = 0;
b1ddf169 174 while( $idx <= $#{$list} ) {
175 my $item = $list->[$idx];
176
177 if( defined $item and $item eq 'no_diag' ) {
178 $class->builder->no_diag(1);
7483b81c 179 }
180 else {
b1ddf169 181 push @other, $item;
7483b81c 182 }
183
184 $idx++;
185 }
186
b1ddf169 187 @$list = @other;
33459055 188}
189
3f2ec160 190
191=head2 Test names
192
193By convention, each test is assigned a number in order. This is
6686786d 194largely done automatically for you. However, it's often very useful to
3f2ec160 195assign a name to each test. Which would you rather see:
196
197 ok 4
198 not ok 5
199 ok 6
200
201or
202
203 ok 4 - basic multi-variable
204 not ok 5 - simple exponential
205 ok 6 - force == mass * acceleration
206
207The later gives you some idea of what failed. It also makes it easier
208to find the test in your script, simply search for "simple
209exponential".
210
6686786d 211All test functions take a name argument. It's optional, but highly
3f2ec160 212suggested that you use it.
213
214
215=head2 I'm ok, you're not ok.
216
217The basic purpose of this module is to print out either "ok #" or "not
218ok #" depending on if a given test succeeded or failed. Everything
219else is just gravy.
220
221All of the following print "ok" or "not ok" depending on if the test
222succeeded or failed. They all also return true or false,
223respectively.
224
225=over 4
226
227=item B<ok>
228
229 ok($this eq $that, $test_name);
230
231This simply evaluates any expression (C<$this eq $that> is just a
232simple example) and uses that to determine if the test succeeded or
233failed. A true expression passes, a false one fails. Very simple.
234
235For example:
236
237 ok( $exp{9} == 81, 'simple exponential' );
238 ok( Film->can('db_Main'), 'set_db()' );
239 ok( $p->tests == 4, 'saw tests' );
240 ok( !grep !defined $_, @items, 'items populated' );
241
242(Mnemonic: "This is ok.")
243
244$test_name is a very short description of the test that will be printed
245out. It makes it very easy to find a test in your script when it fails
246and gives others an idea of your intentions. $test_name is optional,
247but we B<very> strongly encourage its use.
248
249Should an ok() fail, it will produce some diagnostics:
250
251 not ok 18 - sufficient mucus
b1ddf169 252 # Failed test 'sufficient mucus'
253 # in foo.t at line 42.
3f2ec160 254
255This is actually Test::Simple's ok() routine.
256
257=cut
258
33459055 259sub ok ($;$) {
260 my($test, $name) = @_;
b1ddf169 261 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
262
263 $tb->ok($test, $name);
33459055 264}
3f2ec160 265
266=item B<is>
267
268=item B<isnt>
269
270 is ( $this, $that, $test_name );
271 isnt( $this, $that, $test_name );
272
d020a79a 273Similar to ok(), is() and isnt() compare their two arguments
274with C<eq> and C<ne> respectively and use the result of that to
275determine if the test succeeded or failed. So these:
3f2ec160 276
277 # Is the ultimate answer 42?
278 is( ultimate_answer(), 42, "Meaning of Life" );
279
280 # $foo isn't empty
281 isnt( $foo, '', "Got some foo" );
282
283are similar to these:
284
285 ok( ultimate_answer() eq 42, "Meaning of Life" );
286 ok( $foo ne '', "Got some foo" );
287
288(Mnemonic: "This is that." "This isn't that.")
289
290So why use these? They produce better diagnostics on failure. ok()
291cannot know what you are testing for (beyond the name), but is() and
292isnt() know what the test was and why it failed. For example this
d020a79a 293test:
3f2ec160 294
295 my $foo = 'waffle'; my $bar = 'yarblokos';
296 is( $foo, $bar, 'Is foo the same as bar?' );
297
298Will produce something like this:
299
300 not ok 17 - Is foo the same as bar?
b1ddf169 301 # Failed test 'Is foo the same as bar?'
302 # in foo.t at line 139.
3f2ec160 303 # got: 'waffle'
304 # expected: 'yarblokos'
305
306So you can figure out what went wrong without rerunning the test.
307
308You are encouraged to use is() and isnt() over ok() where possible,
309however do not be tempted to use them to find out if something is
310true or false!
311
30e302f8 312 # XXX BAD!
313 is( exists $brooklyn{tree}, 1, 'A tree grows in Brooklyn' );
3f2ec160 314
30e302f8 315This does not check if C<exists $brooklyn{tree}> is true, it checks if
3f2ec160 316it returns 1. Very different. Similar caveats exist for false and 0.
317In these cases, use ok().
318
30e302f8 319 ok( exists $brooklyn{tree}, 'A tree grows in Brooklyn' );
3f2ec160 320
d020a79a 321For those grammatical pedants out there, there's an C<isn't()>
322function which is an alias of isnt().
3f2ec160 323
324=cut
325
326sub is ($$;$) {
b1ddf169 327 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
328
329 $tb->is_eq(@_);
3f2ec160 330}
331
332sub isnt ($$;$) {
b1ddf169 333 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
334
335 $tb->isnt_eq(@_);
3f2ec160 336}
337
338*isn't = \&isnt;
339
340
341=item B<like>
342
343 like( $this, qr/that/, $test_name );
344
345Similar to ok(), like() matches $this against the regex C<qr/that/>.
346
347So this:
348
349 like($this, qr/that/, 'this is like that');
350
351is similar to:
352
353 ok( $this =~ /that/, 'this is like that');
354
355(Mnemonic "This is like that".)
356
357The second argument is a regular expression. It may be given as a
4bd4e70a 358regex reference (i.e. C<qr//>) or (for better compatibility with older
3f2ec160 359perls) as a string that looks like a regex (alternative delimiters are
360currently not supported):
361
362 like( $this, '/that/', 'this is like that' );
363
364Regex options may be placed on the end (C<'/that/i'>).
365
366Its advantages over ok() are similar to that of is() and isnt(). Better
367diagnostics on failure.
368
369=cut
370
371sub like ($$;$) {
b1ddf169 372 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
373
374 $tb->like(@_);
3f2ec160 375}
376
a9153838 377
378=item B<unlike>
379
380 unlike( $this, qr/that/, $test_name );
381
382Works exactly as like(), only it checks if $this B<does not> match the
383given pattern.
384
385=cut
386
30e302f8 387sub unlike ($$;$) {
b1ddf169 388 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
389
390 $tb->unlike(@_);
a9153838 391}
392
393
394=item B<cmp_ok>
395
396 cmp_ok( $this, $op, $that, $test_name );
397
398Halfway between ok() and is() lies cmp_ok(). This allows you to
399compare two arguments using any binary perl operator.
400
401 # ok( $this eq $that );
402 cmp_ok( $this, 'eq', $that, 'this eq that' );
403
404 # ok( $this == $that );
405 cmp_ok( $this, '==', $that, 'this == that' );
406
407 # ok( $this && $that );
30e302f8 408 cmp_ok( $this, '&&', $that, 'this && that' );
a9153838 409 ...etc...
410
411Its advantage over ok() is when the test fails you'll know what $this
412and $that were:
413
414 not ok 1
b1ddf169 415 # Failed test in foo.t at line 12.
a9153838 416 # '23'
417 # &&
418 # undef
419
6686786d 420It's also useful in those cases where you are comparing numbers and
a9153838 421is()'s use of C<eq> will interfere:
422
423 cmp_ok( $big_hairy_number, '==', $another_big_hairy_number );
424
425=cut
426
427sub cmp_ok($$$;$) {
b1ddf169 428 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
429
430 $tb->cmp_ok(@_);
a9153838 431}
432
433
d020a79a 434=item B<can_ok>
435
436 can_ok($module, @methods);
437 can_ok($object, @methods);
438
439Checks to make sure the $module or $object can do these @methods
440(works with functions, too).
441
442 can_ok('Foo', qw(this that whatever));
443
444is almost exactly like saying:
445
446 ok( Foo->can('this') &&
447 Foo->can('that') &&
448 Foo->can('whatever')
449 );
450
451only without all the typing and with a better interface. Handy for
452quickly testing an interface.
453
a9153838 454No matter how many @methods you check, a single can_ok() call counts
455as one test. If you desire otherwise, use:
456
457 foreach my $meth (@methods) {
458 can_ok('Foo', $meth);
459 }
460
d020a79a 461=cut
462
463sub can_ok ($@) {
464 my($proto, @methods) = @_;
89c1e84a 465 my $class = ref $proto || $proto;
b1ddf169 466 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
d020a79a 467
68938d83 468 unless( $class ) {
469 my $ok = $tb->ok( 0, "->can(...)" );
470 $tb->diag(' can_ok() called with empty class or reference');
471 return $ok;
472 }
473
a9153838 474 unless( @methods ) {
b1ddf169 475 my $ok = $tb->ok( 0, "$class->can(...)" );
476 $tb->diag(' can_ok() called with no methods');
a9153838 477 return $ok;
478 }
479
d020a79a 480 my @nok = ();
481 foreach my $method (@methods) {
a9153838 482 local($!, $@); # don't interfere with caller's $@
483 # eval sometimes resets $!
89c1e84a 484 eval { $proto->can($method) } || push @nok, $method;
d020a79a 485 }
486
487 my $name;
6686786d 488 $name = @methods == 1 ? "$class->can('$methods[0]')"
d020a79a 489 : "$class->can(...)";
490
b1ddf169 491 my $ok = $tb->ok( !@nok, $name );
d020a79a 492
b1ddf169 493 $tb->diag(map " $class->can('$_') failed\n", @nok);
d020a79a 494
33459055 495 return $ok;
d020a79a 496}
497
498=item B<isa_ok>
499
33459055 500 isa_ok($object, $class, $object_name);
a9153838 501 isa_ok($ref, $type, $ref_name);
d020a79a 502
30e302f8 503Checks to see if the given C<< $object->isa($class) >>. Also checks to make
d020a79a 504sure the object was defined in the first place. Handy for this sort
505of thing:
506
507 my $obj = Some::Module->new;
508 isa_ok( $obj, 'Some::Module' );
509
510where you'd otherwise have to write
511
512 my $obj = Some::Module->new;
513 ok( defined $obj && $obj->isa('Some::Module') );
514
515to safeguard against your test script blowing up.
516
a9153838 517It works on references, too:
518
519 isa_ok( $array_ref, 'ARRAY' );
520
33459055 521The diagnostics of this test normally just refer to 'the object'. If
522you'd like them to be more specific, you can supply an $object_name
523(for example 'Test customer').
524
d020a79a 525=cut
526
33459055 527sub isa_ok ($$;$) {
528 my($object, $class, $obj_name) = @_;
b1ddf169 529 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
d020a79a 530
531 my $diag;
33459055 532 $obj_name = 'The object' unless defined $obj_name;
533 my $name = "$obj_name isa $class";
d020a79a 534 if( !defined $object ) {
33459055 535 $diag = "$obj_name isn't defined";
d020a79a 536 }
537 elsif( !ref $object ) {
33459055 538 $diag = "$obj_name isn't a reference";
d020a79a 539 }
a9153838 540 else {
541 # We can't use UNIVERSAL::isa because we want to honor isa() overrides
542 local($@, $!); # eval sometimes resets $!
543 my $rslt = eval { $object->isa($class) };
544 if( $@ ) {
545 if( $@ =~ /^Can't call method "isa" on unblessed reference/ ) {
546 if( !UNIVERSAL::isa($object, $class) ) {
547 my $ref = ref $object;
6686786d 548 $diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'";
a9153838 549 }
550 } else {
551 die <<WHOA;
552WHOA! I tried to call ->isa on your object and got some weird error.
553This should never happen. Please contact the author immediately.
554Here's the error.
555$@
556WHOA
557 }
558 }
559 elsif( !$rslt ) {
560 my $ref = ref $object;
6686786d 561 $diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'";
a9153838 562 }
d020a79a 563 }
a9153838 564
565
d020a79a 566
33459055 567 my $ok;
d020a79a 568 if( $diag ) {
b1ddf169 569 $ok = $tb->ok( 0, $name );
570 $tb->diag(" $diag\n");
d020a79a 571 }
572 else {
b1ddf169 573 $ok = $tb->ok( 1, $name );
d020a79a 574 }
33459055 575
576 return $ok;
d020a79a 577}
578
579
3f2ec160 580=item B<pass>
581
582=item B<fail>
583
584 pass($test_name);
585 fail($test_name);
586
587Sometimes you just want to say that the tests have passed. Usually
588the case is you've got some complicated condition that is difficult to
589wedge into an ok(). In this case, you can simply use pass() (to
590declare the test ok) or fail (for not ok). They are synonyms for
591ok(1) and ok(0).
592
593Use these very, very, very sparingly.
594
595=cut
596
d020a79a 597sub pass (;$) {
b1ddf169 598 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
599 $tb->ok(1, @_);
3f2ec160 600}
601
d020a79a 602sub fail (;$) {
b1ddf169 603 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
604 $tb->ok(0, @_);
3f2ec160 605}
606
607=back
608
a9153838 609
3f2ec160 610=head2 Module tests
611
612You usually want to test if the module you're testing loads ok, rather
613than just vomiting if its load fails. For such purposes we have
614C<use_ok> and C<require_ok>.
615
616=over 4
617
618=item B<use_ok>
619
3f2ec160 620 BEGIN { use_ok($module); }
d020a79a 621 BEGIN { use_ok($module, @imports); }
622
623These simply use the given $module and test to make sure the load
89c1e84a 624happened ok. It's recommended that you run use_ok() inside a BEGIN
d020a79a 625block so its functions are exported at compile-time and prototypes are
626properly honored.
627
628If @imports are given, they are passed through to the use. So this:
629
630 BEGIN { use_ok('Some::Module', qw(foo bar)) }
631
632is like doing this:
633
634 use Some::Module qw(foo bar);
3f2ec160 635
30e302f8 636Version numbers can be checked like so:
637
638 # Just like "use Some::Module 1.02"
639 BEGIN { use_ok('Some::Module', 1.02) }
640
641Don't try to do this:
a344be10 642
643 BEGIN {
644 use_ok('Some::Module');
645
646 ...some code that depends on the use...
647 ...happening at compile time...
648 }
649
30e302f8 650because the notion of "compile-time" is relative. Instead, you want:
a344be10 651
652 BEGIN { use_ok('Some::Module') }
653 BEGIN { ...some code that depends on the use... }
654
3f2ec160 655
656=cut
657
d020a79a 658sub use_ok ($;@) {
659 my($module, @imports) = @_;
660 @imports = () unless @imports;
b1ddf169 661 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
3f2ec160 662
30e302f8 663 my($pack,$filename,$line) = caller;
3f2ec160 664
a9153838 665 local($@,$!); # eval sometimes interferes with $!
30e302f8 666
667 if( @imports == 1 and $imports[0] =~ /^\d+(?:\.\d+)?$/ ) {
668 # probably a version check. Perl needs to see the bare number
669 # for it to work with non-Exporter based modules.
670 eval <<USE;
3f2ec160 671package $pack;
30e302f8 672use $module $imports[0];
3f2ec160 673USE
30e302f8 674 }
675 else {
676 eval <<USE;
677package $pack;
678use $module \@imports;
679USE
680 }
3f2ec160 681
b1ddf169 682 my $ok = $tb->ok( !$@, "use $module;" );
3f2ec160 683
684 unless( $ok ) {
0cd946aa 685 chomp $@;
30e302f8 686 $@ =~ s{^BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at .*$}
687 {BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at $filename line $line.}m;
b1ddf169 688 $tb->diag(<<DIAGNOSTIC);
a9153838 689 Tried to use '$module'.
690 Error: $@
3f2ec160 691DIAGNOSTIC
692
693 }
694
695 return $ok;
696}
697
d020a79a 698=item B<require_ok>
699
700 require_ok($module);
7483b81c 701 require_ok($file);
d020a79a 702
7483b81c 703Like use_ok(), except it requires the $module or $file.
d020a79a 704
705=cut
3f2ec160 706
707sub require_ok ($) {
708 my($module) = shift;
b1ddf169 709 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
3f2ec160 710
711 my $pack = caller;
712
7483b81c 713 # Try to deterine if we've been given a module name or file.
714 # Module names must be barewords, files not.
715 $module = qq['$module'] unless _is_module_name($module);
716
a9153838 717 local($!, $@); # eval sometimes interferes with $!
3f2ec160 718 eval <<REQUIRE;
719package $pack;
720require $module;
721REQUIRE
722
b1ddf169 723 my $ok = $tb->ok( !$@, "require $module;" );
3f2ec160 724
725 unless( $ok ) {
0cd946aa 726 chomp $@;
b1ddf169 727 $tb->diag(<<DIAGNOSTIC);
a9153838 728 Tried to require '$module'.
729 Error: $@
3f2ec160 730DIAGNOSTIC
731
732 }
733
734 return $ok;
735}
736
7483b81c 737
738sub _is_module_name {
739 my $module = shift;
740
741 # Module names start with a letter.
742 # End with an alphanumeric.
743 # The rest is an alphanumeric or ::
744 $module =~ s/\b::\b//g;
5143c659 745 $module =~ /^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/;
7483b81c 746}
747
d020a79a 748=back
3f2ec160 749
b1ddf169 750
751=head2 Complex data structures
752
753Not everything is a simple eq check or regex. There are times you
754need to see if two data structures are equivalent. For these
755instances Test::More provides a handful of useful functions.
756
757B<NOTE> I'm not quite sure what will happen with filehandles.
758
759=over 4
760
761=item B<is_deeply>
762
763 is_deeply( $this, $that, $test_name );
764
765Similar to is(), except that if $this and $that are references, it
766does a deep comparison walking each data structure to see if they are
767equivalent. If the two structures are different, it will display the
768place where they start differing.
769
770is_deeply() compares the dereferenced values of references, the
771references themselves (except for their type) are ignored. This means
772aspects such as blessing and ties are not considered "different".
773
845d7e37 774is_deeply() current has very limited handling of function reference
775and globs. It merely checks if they have the same referent. This may
776improve in the future.
777
b1ddf169 778Test::Differences and Test::Deep provide more in-depth functionality
779along these lines.
780
781=cut
782
783use vars qw(@Data_Stack %Refs_Seen);
784my $DNE = bless [], 'Does::Not::Exist';
785sub is_deeply {
786 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
787
788 unless( @_ == 2 or @_ == 3 ) {
789 my $msg = <<WARNING;
790is_deeply() takes two or three args, you gave %d.
791This usually means you passed an array or hash instead
792of a reference to it
793WARNING
794 chop $msg; # clip off newline so carp() will put in line/file
795
796 _carp sprintf $msg, scalar @_;
797
798 return $tb->ok(0);
799 }
800
801 my($this, $that, $name) = @_;
802
803 $tb->_unoverload_str(\$that, \$this);
804
805 my $ok;
806 if( !ref $this and !ref $that ) { # neither is a reference
807 $ok = $tb->is_eq($this, $that, $name);
808 }
809 elsif( !ref $this xor !ref $that ) { # one's a reference, one isn't
810 $ok = $tb->ok(0, $name);
811 $tb->diag( _format_stack({ vals => [ $this, $that ] }) );
812 }
813 else { # both references
814 local @Data_Stack = ();
815 if( _deep_check($this, $that) ) {
816 $ok = $tb->ok(1, $name);
817 }
818 else {
819 $ok = $tb->ok(0, $name);
820 $tb->diag(_format_stack(@Data_Stack));
821 }
822 }
823
824 return $ok;
825}
826
827sub _format_stack {
828 my(@Stack) = @_;
829
830 my $var = '$FOO';
831 my $did_arrow = 0;
832 foreach my $entry (@Stack) {
833 my $type = $entry->{type} || '';
834 my $idx = $entry->{'idx'};
835 if( $type eq 'HASH' ) {
836 $var .= "->" unless $did_arrow++;
837 $var .= "{$idx}";
838 }
839 elsif( $type eq 'ARRAY' ) {
840 $var .= "->" unless $did_arrow++;
841 $var .= "[$idx]";
842 }
843 elsif( $type eq 'REF' ) {
844 $var = "\${$var}";
845 }
846 }
847
848 my @vals = @{$Stack[-1]{vals}}[0,1];
849 my @vars = ();
850 ($vars[0] = $var) =~ s/\$FOO/ \$got/;
851 ($vars[1] = $var) =~ s/\$FOO/\$expected/;
852
853 my $out = "Structures begin differing at:\n";
854 foreach my $idx (0..$#vals) {
855 my $val = $vals[$idx];
856 $vals[$idx] = !defined $val ? 'undef' :
857 $val eq $DNE ? "Does not exist" :
858 ref $val ? "$val" :
859 "'$val'";
860 }
861
862 $out .= "$vars[0] = $vals[0]\n";
863 $out .= "$vars[1] = $vals[1]\n";
864
865 $out =~ s/^/ /msg;
866 return $out;
867}
868
869
870sub _type {
871 my $thing = shift;
872
873 return '' if !ref $thing;
874
845d7e37 875 for my $type (qw(ARRAY HASH REF SCALAR GLOB CODE Regexp)) {
b1ddf169 876 return $type if UNIVERSAL::isa($thing, $type);
877 }
878
879 return '';
880}
881
882=back
883
884
885=head2 Diagnostics
886
887If you pick the right test function, you'll usually get a good idea of
888what went wrong when it failed. But sometimes it doesn't work out
889that way. So here we have ways for you to write your own diagnostic
890messages which are safer than just C<print STDERR>.
891
892=over 4
893
894=item B<diag>
895
896 diag(@diagnostic_message);
897
898Prints a diagnostic message which is guaranteed not to interfere with
899test output. Like C<print> @diagnostic_message is simply concatenated
900together.
901
902Handy for this sort of thing:
903
904 ok( grep(/foo/, @users), "There's a foo user" ) or
905 diag("Since there's no foo, check that /etc/bar is set up right");
906
907which would produce:
908
909 not ok 42 - There's a foo user
910 # Failed test 'There's a foo user'
911 # in foo.t at line 52.
912 # Since there's no foo, check that /etc/bar is set up right.
913
914You might remember C<ok() or diag()> with the mnemonic C<open() or
915die()>.
916
917B<NOTE> The exact formatting of the diagnostic output is still
918changing, but it is guaranteed that whatever you throw at it it won't
919interfere with the test.
920
921=cut
922
923sub diag {
924 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
925
926 $tb->diag(@_);
927}
928
929
930=back
931
932
3f2ec160 933=head2 Conditional tests
934
935Sometimes running a test under certain conditions will cause the
936test script to die. A certain function or method isn't implemented
937(such as fork() on MacOS), some resource isn't available (like a
d020a79a 938net connection) or a module isn't available. In these cases it's
939necessary to skip tests, or declare that they are supposed to fail
3f2ec160 940but will work in the future (a todo test).
941
a9153838 942For more details on the mechanics of skip and todo tests see
943L<Test::Harness>.
d020a79a 944
945The way Test::More handles this is with a named block. Basically, a
946block of tests which can be skipped over or made todo. It's best if I
947just show you...
3f2ec160 948
949=over 4
950
d020a79a 951=item B<SKIP: BLOCK>
952
953 SKIP: {
954 skip $why, $how_many if $condition;
3f2ec160 955
d020a79a 956 ...normal testing code goes here...
957 }
3f2ec160 958
a344be10 959This declares a block of tests that might be skipped, $how_many tests
960there are, $why and under what $condition to skip them. An example is
961the easiest way to illustrate:
3f2ec160 962
d020a79a 963 SKIP: {
a344be10 964 eval { require HTML::Lint };
3f2ec160 965
a344be10 966 skip "HTML::Lint not installed", 2 if $@;
d020a79a 967
a344be10 968 my $lint = new HTML::Lint;
60ffb308 969 isa_ok( $lint, "HTML::Lint" );
3f2ec160 970
a344be10 971 $lint->parse( $html );
60ffb308 972 is( $lint->errors, 0, "No errors found in HTML" );
a344be10 973 }
d020a79a 974
a344be10 975If the user does not have HTML::Lint installed, the whole block of
976code I<won't be run at all>. Test::More will output special ok's
977which Test::Harness interprets as skipped, but passing, tests.
0257f296 978
a344be10 979It's important that $how_many accurately reflects the number of tests
980in the SKIP block so the # of tests run will match up with your plan.
0257f296 981If your plan is C<no_plan> $how_many is optional and will default to 1.
a9153838 982
a344be10 983It's perfectly safe to nest SKIP blocks. Each SKIP block must have
984the label C<SKIP>, or Test::More can't work its magic.
a9153838 985
986You don't skip tests which are failing because there's a bug in your
a344be10 987program, or for which you don't yet have code written. For that you
988use TODO. Read on.
3f2ec160 989
990=cut
991
d020a79a 992#'#
1af51bd3 993sub skip {
d020a79a 994 my($why, $how_many) = @_;
b1ddf169 995 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
33459055 996
997 unless( defined $how_many ) {
d020a79a 998 # $how_many can only be avoided when no_plan is in use.
33459055 999 _carp "skip() needs to know \$how_many tests are in the block"
b1ddf169 1000 unless $tb->has_plan eq 'no_plan';
d020a79a 1001 $how_many = 1;
1002 }
1003
1004 for( 1..$how_many ) {
b1ddf169 1005 $tb->skip($why);
d020a79a 1006 }
1007
1008 local $^W = 0;
1009 last SKIP;
3f2ec160 1010}
1011
3f2ec160 1012
d020a79a 1013=item B<TODO: BLOCK>
3f2ec160 1014
d020a79a 1015 TODO: {
a9153838 1016 local $TODO = $why if $condition;
3f2ec160 1017
d020a79a 1018 ...normal testing code goes here...
1019 }
3f2ec160 1020
d020a79a 1021Declares a block of tests you expect to fail and $why. Perhaps it's
1022because you haven't fixed a bug or haven't finished a new feature:
3f2ec160 1023
d020a79a 1024 TODO: {
1025 local $TODO = "URI::Geller not finished";
3f2ec160 1026
d020a79a 1027 my $card = "Eight of clubs";
1028 is( URI::Geller->your_card, $card, 'Is THIS your card?' );
3f2ec160 1029
d020a79a 1030 my $spoon;
1031 URI::Geller->bend_spoon;
1032 is( $spoon, 'bent', "Spoon bending, that's original" );
1033 }
1034
1035With a todo block, the tests inside are expected to fail. Test::More
1036will run the tests normally, but print out special flags indicating
1037they are "todo". Test::Harness will interpret failures as being ok.
1038Should anything succeed, it will report it as an unexpected success.
a344be10 1039You then know the thing you had todo is done and can remove the
1040TODO flag.
d020a79a 1041
1042The nice part about todo tests, as opposed to simply commenting out a
4bd4e70a 1043block of tests, is it's like having a programmatic todo list. You know
d020a79a 1044how much work is left to be done, you're aware of what bugs there are,
1045and you'll know immediately when they're fixed.
1046
1047Once a todo test starts succeeding, simply move it outside the block.
1048When the block is empty, delete it.
1049
30e302f8 1050B<NOTE>: TODO tests require a Test::Harness upgrade else it will
b1ddf169 1051treat it as a normal failure. See L<CAVEATS and NOTES>).
30e302f8 1052
d020a79a 1053
a9153838 1054=item B<todo_skip>
1055
1056 TODO: {
1057 todo_skip $why, $how_many if $condition;
1058
1059 ...normal testing code...
1060 }
1061
89c1e84a 1062With todo tests, it's best to have the tests actually run. That way
a9153838 1063you'll know when they start passing. Sometimes this isn't possible.
1064Often a failing test will cause the whole program to die or hang, even
1065inside an C<eval BLOCK> with and using C<alarm>. In these extreme
1066cases you have no choice but to skip over the broken tests entirely.
1067
1068The syntax and behavior is similar to a C<SKIP: BLOCK> except the
1069tests will be marked as failing but todo. Test::Harness will
1070interpret them as passing.
1071
1072=cut
1073
1074sub todo_skip {
1075 my($why, $how_many) = @_;
b1ddf169 1076 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
a9153838 1077
1078 unless( defined $how_many ) {
1079 # $how_many can only be avoided when no_plan is in use.
1080 _carp "todo_skip() needs to know \$how_many tests are in the block"
b1ddf169 1081 unless $tb->has_plan eq 'no_plan';
a9153838 1082 $how_many = 1;
1083 }
1084
1085 for( 1..$how_many ) {
b1ddf169 1086 $tb->todo_skip($why);
a9153838 1087 }
1088
1089 local $^W = 0;
1090 last TODO;
1091}
1092
a344be10 1093=item When do I use SKIP vs. TODO?
1094
1095B<If it's something the user might not be able to do>, use SKIP.
1096This includes optional modules that aren't installed, running under
1097an OS that doesn't have some feature (like fork() or symlinks), or maybe
1098you need an Internet connection and one isn't available.
1099
1100B<If it's something the programmer hasn't done yet>, use TODO. This
1101is for any code you haven't written yet, or bugs you have yet to fix,
1102but want to put tests in your testing script (always a good idea).
1103
a9153838 1104
d020a79a 1105=back
3f2ec160 1106
3f2ec160 1107
b1ddf169 1108=head2 Test control
3f2ec160 1109
1110=over 4
1111
b1ddf169 1112=item B<BAIL_OUT>
33459055 1113
b1ddf169 1114 BAIL_OUT($reason);
33459055 1115
68938d83 1116Indicates to the harness that things are going so badly all testing
b1ddf169 1117should terminate. This includes the running any additional test scripts.
33459055 1118
b1ddf169 1119This is typically used when testing cannot continue such as a critical
1120module failing to compile or a necessary external utility not being
1121available such as a database connection failing.
33459055 1122
b1ddf169 1123The test will exit with 255.
33459055 1124
b1ddf169 1125=cut
33459055 1126
b1ddf169 1127sub BAIL_OUT {
1128 my $reason = shift;
1129 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
33459055 1130
b1ddf169 1131 $tb->BAIL_OUT($reason);
33459055 1132}
1133
b1ddf169 1134=back
0257f296 1135
1136
5143c659 1137=head2 Discouraged comparison functions
1138
1139The use of the following functions is discouraged as they are not
1140actually testing functions and produce no diagnostics to help figure
1141out what went wrong. They were written before is_deeply() existed
1142because I couldn't figure out how to display a useful diff of two
1143arbitrary data structures.
1144
1145These functions are usually used inside an ok().
1146
1147 ok( eq_array(\@this, \@that) );
1148
1149C<is_deeply()> can do that better and with diagnostics.
1150
1151 is_deeply( \@this, \@that );
1152
1153They may be deprecated in future versions.
1154
b1ddf169 1155=over 4
5143c659 1156
3f2ec160 1157=item B<eq_array>
1158
5143c659 1159 my $is_eq = eq_array(\@this, \@that);
3f2ec160 1160
1161Checks if two arrays are equivalent. This is a deep check, so
1162multi-level structures are handled correctly.
1163
1164=cut
1165
1166#'#
7483b81c 1167sub eq_array {
1168 local @Data_Stack;
5143c659 1169 _deep_check(@_);
7483b81c 1170}
1171
1172sub _eq_array {
3f2ec160 1173 my($a1, $a2) = @_;
7483b81c 1174
0257f296 1175 if( grep !_type($_) eq 'ARRAY', $a1, $a2 ) {
7483b81c 1176 warn "eq_array passed a non-array ref";
1177 return 0;
1178 }
1179
3f2ec160 1180 return 1 if $a1 eq $a2;
1181
1182 my $ok = 1;
33459055 1183 my $max = $#$a1 > $#$a2 ? $#$a1 : $#$a2;
1184 for (0..$max) {
1185 my $e1 = $_ > $#$a1 ? $DNE : $a1->[$_];
1186 my $e2 = $_ > $#$a2 ? $DNE : $a2->[$_];
1187
1188 push @Data_Stack, { type => 'ARRAY', idx => $_, vals => [$e1, $e2] };
3f2ec160 1189 $ok = _deep_check($e1,$e2);
33459055 1190 pop @Data_Stack if $ok;
1191
3f2ec160 1192 last unless $ok;
1193 }
7483b81c 1194
3f2ec160 1195 return $ok;
1196}
1197
1198sub _deep_check {
1199 my($e1, $e2) = @_;
b1ddf169 1200 my $tb = Test::More->builder;
1201
3f2ec160 1202 my $ok = 0;
1203
5143c659 1204 # Effectively turn %Refs_Seen into a stack. This avoids picking up
1205 # the same referenced used twice (such as [\$a, \$a]) to be considered
1206 # circular.
1207 local %Refs_Seen = %Refs_Seen;
1208
d020a79a 1209 {
4bd4e70a 1210 # Quiet uninitialized value warnings when comparing undefs.
d020a79a 1211 local $^W = 0;
1212
b1ddf169 1213 $tb->_unoverload_str(\$e1, \$e2);
7483b81c 1214
1215 # Either they're both references or both not.
1216 my $same_ref = !(!ref $e1 xor !ref $e2);
5143c659 1217 my $not_ref = (!ref $e1 and !ref $e2);
7483b81c 1218
1219 if( defined $e1 xor defined $e2 ) {
1220 $ok = 0;
1221 }
1222 elsif ( $e1 == $DNE xor $e2 == $DNE ) {
1223 $ok = 0;
1224 }
1225 elsif ( $same_ref and ($e1 eq $e2) ) {
d020a79a 1226 $ok = 1;
3f2ec160 1227 }
5143c659 1228 elsif ( $not_ref ) {
1229 push @Data_Stack, { type => '', vals => [$e1, $e2] };
1230 $ok = 0;
1231 }
3f2ec160 1232 else {
5143c659 1233 if( $Refs_Seen{$e1} ) {
1234 return $Refs_Seen{$e1} eq $e2;
1235 }
1236 else {
1237 $Refs_Seen{$e1} = "$e2";
1238 }
1239
0257f296 1240 my $type = _type($e1);
5143c659 1241 $type = 'DIFFERENT' unless _type($e2) eq $type;
0257f296 1242
5143c659 1243 if( $type eq 'DIFFERENT' ) {
1244 push @Data_Stack, { type => $type, vals => [$e1, $e2] };
0257f296 1245 $ok = 0;
1246 }
1247 elsif( $type eq 'ARRAY' ) {
7483b81c 1248 $ok = _eq_array($e1, $e2);
d020a79a 1249 }
0257f296 1250 elsif( $type eq 'HASH' ) {
7483b81c 1251 $ok = _eq_hash($e1, $e2);
d020a79a 1252 }
0257f296 1253 elsif( $type eq 'REF' ) {
5143c659 1254 push @Data_Stack, { type => $type, vals => [$e1, $e2] };
33459055 1255 $ok = _deep_check($$e1, $$e2);
1256 pop @Data_Stack if $ok;
1257 }
0257f296 1258 elsif( $type eq 'SCALAR' ) {
33459055 1259 push @Data_Stack, { type => 'REF', vals => [$e1, $e2] };
1260 $ok = _deep_check($$e1, $$e2);
7483b81c 1261 pop @Data_Stack if $ok;
33459055 1262 }
845d7e37 1263 elsif( $type ) {
1264 push @Data_Stack, { type => $type, vals => [$e1, $e2] };
1265 $ok = 0;
1266 }
5143c659 1267 else {
1268 _whoa(1, "No type in _deep_check");
1269 }
3f2ec160 1270 }
1271 }
d020a79a 1272
3f2ec160 1273 return $ok;
1274}
1275
1276
5143c659 1277sub _whoa {
1278 my($check, $desc) = @_;
1279 if( $check ) {
1280 die <<WHOA;
1281WHOA! $desc
1282This should never happen! Please contact the author immediately!
1283WHOA
1284 }
1285}
1286
1287
3f2ec160 1288=item B<eq_hash>
1289
5143c659 1290 my $is_eq = eq_hash(\%this, \%that);
3f2ec160 1291
1292Determines if the two hashes contain the same keys and values. This
1293is a deep check.
1294
1295=cut
1296
1297sub eq_hash {
7483b81c 1298 local @Data_Stack;
5143c659 1299 return _deep_check(@_);
7483b81c 1300}
1301
1302sub _eq_hash {
3f2ec160 1303 my($a1, $a2) = @_;
7483b81c 1304
0257f296 1305 if( grep !_type($_) eq 'HASH', $a1, $a2 ) {
7483b81c 1306 warn "eq_hash passed a non-hash ref";
1307 return 0;
1308 }
1309
3f2ec160 1310 return 1 if $a1 eq $a2;
1311
1312 my $ok = 1;
33459055 1313 my $bigger = keys %$a1 > keys %$a2 ? $a1 : $a2;
1314 foreach my $k (keys %$bigger) {
1315 my $e1 = exists $a1->{$k} ? $a1->{$k} : $DNE;
1316 my $e2 = exists $a2->{$k} ? $a2->{$k} : $DNE;
1317
1318 push @Data_Stack, { type => 'HASH', idx => $k, vals => [$e1, $e2] };
3f2ec160 1319 $ok = _deep_check($e1, $e2);
33459055 1320 pop @Data_Stack if $ok;
1321
3f2ec160 1322 last unless $ok;
1323 }
1324
1325 return $ok;
1326}
1327
1328=item B<eq_set>
1329
5143c659 1330 my $is_eq = eq_set(\@this, \@that);
3f2ec160 1331
1332Similar to eq_array(), except the order of the elements is B<not>
1333important. This is a deep check, but the irrelevancy of order only
1334applies to the top level.
1335
5143c659 1336 ok( eq_set(\@this, \@that) );
1337
1338Is better written:
1339
1340 is_deeply( [sort @this], [sort @that] );
1341
3c4b39be 1342B<NOTE> By historical accident, this is not a true set comparison.
60ffb308 1343While the order of elements does not matter, duplicate elements do.
1344
b1ddf169 1345B<NOTE> eq_set() does not know how to deal with references at the top
1346level. The following is an example of a comparison which might not work:
1347
1348 eq_set([\1, \2], [\2, \1]);
1349
5143c659 1350Test::Deep contains much better set comparison functions.
1351
3f2ec160 1352=cut
1353
3f2ec160 1354sub eq_set {
1355 my($a1, $a2) = @_;
1356 return 0 unless @$a1 == @$a2;
1357
1358 # There's faster ways to do this, but this is easiest.
7483b81c 1359 local $^W = 0;
1360
b1ddf169 1361 # It really doesn't matter how we sort them, as long as both arrays are
1362 # sorted with the same algorithm.
1363 #
1364 # Ensure that references are not accidentally treated the same as a
1365 # string containing the reference.
1366 #
7483b81c 1367 # Have to inline the sort routine due to a threading/sort bug.
1368 # See [rt.cpan.org 6782]
b1ddf169 1369 #
1370 # I don't know how references would be sorted so we just don't sort
1371 # them. This means eq_set doesn't really work with refs.
7483b81c 1372 return eq_array(
b1ddf169 1373 [grep(ref, @$a1), sort( grep(!ref, @$a1) )],
1374 [grep(ref, @$a2), sort( grep(!ref, @$a2) )],
7483b81c 1375 );
3f2ec160 1376}
1377
3f2ec160 1378=back
1379
d020a79a 1380
a9153838 1381=head2 Extending and Embedding Test::More
d020a79a 1382
a9153838 1383Sometimes the Test::More interface isn't quite enough. Fortunately,
1384Test::More is built on top of Test::Builder which provides a single,
1385unified backend for any test library to use. This means two test
1386libraries which both use Test::Builder B<can be used together in the
1387same program>.
1388
1389If you simply want to do a little tweaking of how the tests behave,
1390you can access the underlying Test::Builder object like so:
3f2ec160 1391
d020a79a 1392=over 4
1393
a9153838 1394=item B<builder>
d020a79a 1395
a9153838 1396 my $test_builder = Test::More->builder;
d020a79a 1397
a9153838 1398Returns the Test::Builder object underlying Test::More for you to play
1399with.
1400
d020a79a 1401
a9153838 1402=back
3f2ec160 1403
d020a79a 1404
30e302f8 1405=head1 EXIT CODES
1406
1407If all your tests passed, Test::Builder will exit with zero (which is
1408normal). If anything failed it will exit with how many failed. If
1409you run less (or more) tests than you planned, the missing (or extras)
1410will be considered failures. If no tests were ever run Test::Builder
1411will throw a warning and exit with 255. If the test died, even after
1412having successfully completed all its tests, it will still be
1413considered a failure and will exit with 255.
1414
1415So the exit codes are...
1416
1417 0 all tests successful
b1ddf169 1418 255 test died or all passed but wrong # of tests run
30e302f8 1419 any other number how many failed (including missing or extras)
1420
1421If you fail more than 254 tests, it will be reported as 254.
1422
5143c659 1423B<NOTE> This behavior may go away in future versions.
1424
30e302f8 1425
7483b81c 1426=head1 CAVEATS and NOTES
a9153838 1427
7483b81c 1428=over 4
d020a79a 1429
7483b81c 1430=item Backwards compatibility
1431
1432Test::More works with Perls as old as 5.004_05.
1433
1434
1435=item Overloaded objects
1436
b1ddf169 1437String overloaded objects are compared B<as strings> (or in cmp_ok()'s
1438case, strings or numbers as appropriate to the comparison op). This
1439prevents Test::More from piercing an object's interface allowing
1440better blackbox testing. So if a function starts returning overloaded
1441objects instead of bare strings your tests won't notice the
1442difference. This is good.
7483b81c 1443
1444However, it does mean that functions like is_deeply() cannot be used to
1445test the internals of string overloaded objects. In this case I would
1446suggest Test::Deep which contains more flexible testing functions for
1447complex data structures.
a9153838 1448
a9153838 1449
30e302f8 1450=item Threads
1451
1452Test::More will only be aware of threads if "use threads" has been done
1453I<before> Test::More is loaded. This is ok:
1454
1455 use threads;
1456 use Test::More;
1457
1458This may cause problems:
1459
1460 use Test::More
1461 use threads;
1462
d020a79a 1463
30e302f8 1464=item Test::Harness upgrade
3f2ec160 1465
d020a79a 1466no_plan and todo depend on new Test::Harness features and fixes. If
a9153838 1467you're going to distribute tests that use no_plan or todo your
1468end-users will have to upgrade Test::Harness to the latest one on
1469CPAN. If you avoid no_plan and TODO tests, the stock Test::Harness
1470will work fine.
d020a79a 1471
30e302f8 1472Installing Test::More should also upgrade Test::Harness.
d020a79a 1473
1474=back
3f2ec160 1475
3f2ec160 1476
1477=head1 HISTORY
1478
1479This is a case of convergent evolution with Joshua Pritikin's Test
4bd4e70a 1480module. I was largely unaware of its existence when I'd first
3f2ec160 1481written my own ok() routines. This module exists because I can't
1482figure out how to easily wedge test names into Test's interface (along
1483with a few other problems).
1484
1485The goal here is to have a testing utility that's simple to learn,
1486quick to use and difficult to trip yourself up with while still
1487providing more flexibility than the existing Test.pm. As such, the
1488names of the most common routines are kept tiny, special cases and
1489magic side-effects are kept to a minimum. WYSIWYG.
1490
1491
1492=head1 SEE ALSO
1493
1494L<Test::Simple> if all this confuses you and you just want to write
89c1e84a 1495some tests. You can upgrade to Test::More later (it's forward
3f2ec160 1496compatible).
1497
a9153838 1498L<Test> is the old testing module. Its main benefit is that it has
1499been distributed with Perl since 5.004_05.
3f2ec160 1500
1501L<Test::Harness> for details on how your test results are interpreted
1502by Perl.
1503
30e302f8 1504L<Test::Differences> for more ways to test complex data structures.
1505And it plays well with Test::More.
1506
1507L<Test::Class> is like XUnit but more perlish.
1508
1509L<Test::Deep> gives you more powerful complex data structure testing.
1510
1511L<Test::Unit> is XUnit style testing.
3f2ec160 1512
4bd4e70a 1513L<Test::Inline> shows the idea of embedded testing.
3f2ec160 1514
30e302f8 1515L<Bundle::Test> installs a whole bunch of useful test modules.
3f2ec160 1516
4bd4e70a 1517
1518=head1 AUTHORS
1519
a9153838 1520Michael G Schwern E<lt>schwern@pobox.comE<gt> with much inspiration
1521from Joshua Pritikin's Test module and lots of help from Barrie
7483b81c 1522Slaymaker, Tony Bowden, blackstar.co.uk, chromatic, Fergal Daly and
1523the perl-qa gang.
1524
1525
1526=head1 BUGS
1527
1528See F<http://rt.cpan.org> to report and view bugs.
4bd4e70a 1529
1530
1531=head1 COPYRIGHT
1532
7483b81c 1533Copyright 2001, 2002, 2004 by Michael G Schwern E<lt>schwern@pobox.comE<gt>.
4bd4e70a 1534
1535This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
1536modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
1537
a9153838 1538See F<http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
4bd4e70a 1539
3f2ec160 1540=cut
1541
15421;