use strict;
use warnings;
-use base qw/Test::Builder::Module Exporter/;
-use Data::Dumper;
-use Carp;
+use base qw(Test::Builder::Module Exporter);
use Test::Builder;
-use Test::Deep qw(eq_deeply);
+use Test::Deep ();
+use SQL::Abstract::Tree;
+
+{
+ my $class;
+ if ($class = $ENV{SQL_ABSTRACT_TEST_AGAINST}) {
+ my $mod = join('/', split '::', $class).".pm";
+ require $mod;
+ eval qq{sub SQL::Abstract () { "\Q${class}\E" }; 1}
+ or die "Failed to create const sub for ${class}: $@";
+ }
+ if ($ENV{SQL_ABSTRACT_TEST_EXPAND_STABILITY}) {
+ $class ||= do { require SQL::Abstract; 'SQL::Abstract' };
+ my $orig = $class->can('expand_expr');
+ require Data::Dumper::Concise;
+ my $wrapped = sub {
+ my ($self, @args) = @_;
+ my $e1 = $self->$orig(@args);
+ return $e1 if our $Stab_Check_Rec;
+ local $Stab_Check_Rec = 1;
+ my $e2 = $self->$orig($e1);
+ my ($d1, $d2) = map Data::Dumper::Concise::Dumper($_), $e1, $e2;
+ (our $tb)->is_eq(
+ $d2, $d1,
+ 'expand_expr stability ok'
+ ) or do {
+ require Path::Tiny;
+ Path::Tiny->new('e1')->spew($d1);
+ Path::Tiny->new('e2')->spew($d2);
+ system('diff -u e1 e2 1>&2');
+ die "Differences between e1 and e2, bailing out";
+ };
+ return $e1;
+ };
+ no strict 'refs'; no warnings 'redefine';
+ *{"${class}::expand_expr"} = $wrapped;
+ }
+}
-our @EXPORT_OK = qw/&is_same_sql_bind &is_same_sql &is_same_bind
- &eq_sql_bind &eq_sql &eq_bind
- $case_sensitive $sql_differ/;
+our @EXPORT_OK = qw(
+ is_same_sql_bind is_same_sql is_same_bind
+ eq_sql_bind eq_sql eq_bind dumper diag_where
+ $case_sensitive $sql_differ
+);
+
+my $sqlat = SQL::Abstract::Tree->new;
our $case_sensitive = 0;
our $parenthesis_significant = 0;
+our $order_by_asc_significant = 0;
+
our $sql_differ; # keeps track of differing portion between SQLs
our $tb = __PACKAGE__->builder;
-# Parser states for _recurse_parse()
-use constant PARSE_TOP_LEVEL => 0;
-use constant PARSE_IN_EXPR => 1;
-use constant PARSE_IN_PARENS => 2;
-use constant PARSE_RHS => 3;
-
-# These SQL keywords always signal end of the current expression (except inside
-# of a parenthesized subexpression).
-# Format: A list of strings that will be compiled to extended syntax (ie.
-# /.../x) regexes, without capturing parentheses. They will be automatically
-# anchored to word boundaries to match the whole token).
-my @expression_terminator_sql_keywords = (
- 'SELECT',
- 'FROM',
- '(?:
- (?:
- (?: \b (?: LEFT | RIGHT | FULL ) \s+ )?
- (?: \b (?: CROSS | INNER | OUTER ) \s+ )?
- )?
- JOIN
- )',
- 'ON',
- 'WHERE',
- 'GROUP \s+ BY',
- 'HAVING',
- 'ORDER \s+ BY',
- 'LIMIT',
- 'OFFSET',
- 'FOR',
- 'UNION',
- 'INTERSECT',
- 'EXCEPT',
-);
+sub _unpack_arrayrefref {
-# These are binary operator keywords always a single LHS and RHS
-# * AND/OR are handled separately as they are N-ary
-# * BETWEEN without paranthesis around the ANDed arguments (which
-# makes it a non-binary op) is detected and accomodated in
-# _recurse_parse()
-my @binary_op_keywords = (
- (map { "\Q$_\E" } (qw/< > != = <= >=/)),
- '(?: NOT \s+)? LIKE',
- '(?: NOT \s+)? BETWEEN',
-);
+ my @args;
+ for (1,2) {
+ my $chunk = shift @_;
-my $tokenizer_re_str = join("\n\t|\n",
- ( map { '\b' . $_ . '\b' } @expression_terminator_sql_keywords, 'AND', 'OR' ),
- ( map { q! (?<= [\w\s\`\'\)] ) ! . $_ . q! (?= [\w\s\`\'\(] ) ! } @binary_op_keywords ),
-);
+ if (ref $chunk eq 'REF' and ref $$chunk eq 'ARRAY') {
+ my ($sql, @bind) = @$$chunk;
+ push @args, ($sql, \@bind);
+ }
+ else {
+ push @args, $chunk, shift @_;
+ }
+
+ }
-my $tokenizer_re = qr/ \s* ( \( | \) | \? | $tokenizer_re_str ) \s* /xi;
+ # maybe $msg and ... stuff
+ push @args, @_;
-# All of these keywords allow their parameters to be specified with or without parenthesis without changing the semantics
-my @unrollable_ops = (
- 'ON',
- 'WHERE',
- 'GROUP \s+ BY',
- 'HAVING',
- 'ORDER \s+ BY',
-);
+ @args;
+}
sub is_same_sql_bind {
- my ($sql1, $bind_ref1, $sql2, $bind_ref2, $msg) = @_;
+ my ($sql1, $bind_ref1, $sql2, $bind_ref2, $msg) = &_unpack_arrayrefref;
# compare
my $same_sql = eq_sql($sql1, $sql2);
my ($sql1, $sql2, $msg) = @_;
# compare
- my $same_sql = eq_sql($sql1, $sql2);
+ my $same_sql = eq_sql($sql1, $sql2);
# call Test::Builder::ok
my $ret = $tb->ok($same_sql, $msg);
return $ret;
}
+sub dumper {
+ # FIXME
+ # if we save the instance, we will end up with $VARx references
+ # no time to figure out how to avoid this (Deepcopy is *not* an option)
+ require Data::Dumper;
+ Data::Dumper->new([])->Terse(1)->Indent(1)->Useqq(1)->Deparse(1)->Quotekeys(0)->Sortkeys(1)->Maxdepth(0)
+ ->Values([@_])->Dump;
+}
+
+sub diag_where{
+ $tb->diag("Search term:\n" . &dumper);
+}
+
sub _sql_differ_diag {
- my ($sql1, $sql2) = @_;
+ my $sql1 = shift || '';
+ my $sql2 = shift || '';
+
+ if (my $profile = $ENV{SQL_ABSTRACT_TEST_TREE_PROFILE}) {
+ my $sqlat = SQL::Abstract::Tree->new(profile => $profile);
+ $_ = $sqlat->format($_) for ($sql1, $sql2);
+ }
- $tb->diag("SQL expressions differ\n"
- ." got: $sql1\n"
- ."expected: $sql2\n"
- ."differing in :\n$sql_differ\n"
- );
+ $tb->${\($tb->in_todo ? 'note' : 'diag')} (
+ "SQL expressions differ\n"
+ ." got: $sql1\n"
+ ."want: $sql2\n"
+ ."\nmismatch around\n$sql_differ\n"
+ );
}
sub _bind_differ_diag {
my ($bind_ref1, $bind_ref2) = @_;
- $tb->diag("BIND values differ\n"
- ." got: " . Dumper($bind_ref1)
- ."expected: " . Dumper($bind_ref2)
- );
+ $tb->${\($tb->in_todo ? 'note' : 'diag')} (
+ "BIND values differ " . dumper({ got => $bind_ref1, want => $bind_ref2 })
+ );
}
sub eq_sql_bind {
- my ($sql1, $bind_ref1, $sql2, $bind_ref2) = @_;
+ my ($sql1, $bind_ref1, $sql2, $bind_ref2) = &_unpack_arrayrefref;
return eq_sql($sql1, $sql2) && eq_bind($bind_ref1, $bind_ref2);
}
-sub eq_bind {
- my ($bind_ref1, $bind_ref2) = @_;
-
- return eq_deeply($bind_ref1, $bind_ref2);
-}
+sub eq_bind { goto &Test::Deep::eq_deeply };
sub eq_sql {
my ($sql1, $sql2) = @_;
# parse
- my $tree1 = parse($sql1);
- my $tree2 = parse($sql2);
+ my $tree1 = $sqlat->parse($sql1);
+ my $tree2 = $sqlat->parse($sql2);
+ undef $sql_differ;
return 1 if _eq_sql($tree1, $tree2);
}
my ($left, $right) = @_;
# one is defined the other not
- if ( (defined $left) xor (defined $right) ) {
+ if ((defined $left) xor (defined $right)) {
+ $sql_differ = sprintf ("[%s] != [%s]\n", map { defined $_ ? $sqlat->unparse($_) : 'N/A' } ($left, $right) );
return 0;
}
+
# one is undefined, then so is the other
elsif (not defined $left) {
return 1;
}
+
+ # both are empty
+ elsif (@$left == 0 and @$right == 0) {
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ # one is empty
+ if (@$left == 0 or @$right == 0) {
+ $sql_differ = sprintf ("left: %s\nright: %s\n", map { @$_ ? $sqlat->unparse($_) : 'N/A'} ($left, $right) );
+ return 0;
+ }
+
# one is a list, the other is an op with a list
elsif (ref $left->[0] xor ref $right->[0]) {
- $sql_differ = sprintf ("left: %s\nright: %s\n", map { unparse ($_) } ($left, $right) );
+ $sql_differ = sprintf ("[%s] != [%s]\nleft: %s\nright: %s\n", map
+ { ref $_ ? $sqlat->unparse($_) : $_ }
+ ($left->[0], $right->[0], $left, $right)
+ );
return 0;
}
- # one is a list, so is the other
+
+ # both are lists
elsif (ref $left->[0]) {
for (my $i = 0; $i <= $#$left or $i <= $#$right; $i++ ) {
- return 0 if (not _eq_sql ($left->[$i], $right->[$i]) );
+ if (not _eq_sql ($left->[$i], $right->[$i]) ) {
+ if (! $sql_differ or $sql_differ !~ /left\:\s .+ right:\s/xs) {
+ $sql_differ ||= '';
+ $sql_differ .= "\n" unless $sql_differ =~ /\n\z/;
+ $sql_differ .= sprintf ("left: %s\nright: %s\n", map { $sqlat->unparse($_) } ($left, $right) );
+ }
+ return 0;
+ }
}
return 1;
}
- # both are an op-list combo
+
+ # both are ops
else {
# unroll parenthesis if possible/allowed
- _parenthesis_unroll ($_) for ($left, $right);
+ unless ($parenthesis_significant) {
+ $sqlat->_parenthesis_unroll($_) for $left, $right;
+ }
+
+ # unroll ASC order by's
+ unless ($order_by_asc_significant) {
+ $sqlat->_strip_asc_from_order_by($_) for $left, $right;
+ }
- # if operators are different
if ($left->[0] ne $right->[0]) {
$sql_differ = sprintf "OP [$left->[0]] != [$right->[0]] in\nleft: %s\nright: %s\n",
- unparse($left),
- unparse($right);
+ $sqlat->unparse($left),
+ $sqlat->unparse($right)
+ ;
return 0;
}
- # elsif operators are identical, compare operands
- else {
- if ($left->[0] eq 'EXPR' ) { # unary operator
- (my $l = " $left->[1][0] " ) =~ s/\s+/ /g;
- (my $r = " $right->[1][0] ") =~ s/\s+/ /g;
- my $eq = $case_sensitive ? $l eq $r : uc($l) eq uc($r);
- $sql_differ = "[$l] != [$r]\n" if not $eq;
- return $eq;
- }
- else {
- my $eq = _eq_sql($left->[1], $right->[1]);
- $sql_differ ||= sprintf ("left: %s\nright: %s\n", map { unparse ($_) } ($left, $right) ) if not $eq;
- return $eq;
- }
- }
- }
-}
-
-sub parse {
- my $s = shift;
-
- # tokenize string, and remove all optional whitespace
- my $tokens = [];
- foreach my $token (split $tokenizer_re, $s) {
- $token =~ s/\s+/ /g;
- $token =~ s/\s+([^\w\s])/$1/g;
- $token =~ s/([^\w\s])\s+/$1/g;
- push @$tokens, $token if length $token;
- }
-
- my $tree = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_TOP_LEVEL);
- return $tree;
-}
-
-sub _recurse_parse {
- my ($tokens, $state) = @_;
-
- my $left;
- while (1) { # left-associative parsing
-
- my $lookahead = $tokens->[0];
- if ( not defined($lookahead)
- or
- ($state == PARSE_IN_PARENS && $lookahead eq ')')
- or
- ($state == PARSE_IN_EXPR && grep { $lookahead =~ /^ $_ $/xi } ('\)', @expression_terminator_sql_keywords ) )
- or
- ($state == PARSE_RHS && grep { $lookahead =~ /^ $_ $/xi } ('\)', @expression_terminator_sql_keywords, @binary_op_keywords, 'AND', 'OR' ) )
- ) {
- return $left;
- }
-
- my $token = shift @$tokens;
- # nested expression in ()
- if ($token eq '(') {
- my $right = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_IN_PARENS);
- $token = shift @$tokens or croak "missing closing ')' around block " . unparse ($right);
- $token eq ')' or croak "unexpected token '$token' terminating block " . unparse ($right);
- $left = $left ? [@$left, [PAREN => [$right] ]]
- : [PAREN => [$right] ];
+ # literals have a different arg-sig
+ elsif ($left->[0] eq '-LITERAL') {
+ (my $l = " $left->[1][0] " ) =~ s/\s+/ /g;
+ (my $r = " $right->[1][0] ") =~ s/\s+/ /g;
+ my $eq = $case_sensitive ? $l eq $r : uc($l) eq uc($r);
+ $sql_differ = "[$l] != [$r]\n" if not $eq;
+ return $eq;
}
- # AND/OR
- elsif ($token =~ /^ (?: OR | AND ) $/xi ) {
- my $op = uc $token;
- my $right = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_IN_EXPR);
-
- # Merge chunks if logic matches
- if (ref $right and $op eq $right->[0]) {
- $left = [ (shift @$right ), [$left, map { @$_ } @$right] ];
- }
- else {
- $left = [$op => [$left, $right]];
- }
- }
- # binary operator keywords
- elsif (grep { $token =~ /^ $_ $/xi } @binary_op_keywords ) {
- my $op = uc $token;
- my $right = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_RHS);
-
- # A between with a simple EXPR for a 1st RHS argument needs a
- # rerun of the search to (hopefully) find the proper AND construct
- if ($op eq 'BETWEEN' and $right->[0] eq 'EXPR') {
- unshift @$tokens, $right->[1][0];
- $right = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_IN_EXPR);
- }
- $left = [$op => [$left, $right] ];
- }
- # expression terminator keywords (as they start a new expression)
- elsif (grep { $token =~ /^ $_ $/xi } @expression_terminator_sql_keywords ) {
- my $op = uc $token;
- my $right = _recurse_parse($tokens, PARSE_IN_EXPR);
- $left = $left ? [@$left, [$op => [$right] ]]
- : [[ $op => [$right] ]];
- }
- # leaf expression
+ # if operators are identical, compare operands
else {
- $left = $left ? [@$left, [EXPR => [$token] ] ]
- : [ EXPR => [$token] ];
- }
- }
-}
-
-sub _parenthesis_unroll {
- my $ast = shift;
-
- return if $parenthesis_significant;
- return unless (ref $ast and ref $ast->[1]);
-
- my $changes;
- do {
- my @children;
- $changes = 0;
-
- for my $child (@{$ast->[1]}) {
- if (not ref $child or not $child->[0] eq 'PAREN') {
- push @children, $child;
- next;
- }
-
- # unroll nested parenthesis
- while ($child->[1][0][0] eq 'PAREN') {
- $child = $child->[1][0];
- $changes++;
- }
-
- # if the parenthesis are wrapped around an AND/OR matching the parent AND/OR - open the parenthesis up and merge the list
- if (
- ( $ast->[0] eq 'AND' or $ast->[0] eq 'OR')
- and
- $child->[1][0][0] eq $ast->[0]
- ) {
- push @children, @{$child->[1][0][1]};
- $changes++;
- }
-
- # if the parent operator explcitly allows it nuke the parenthesis
- elsif ( grep { $ast->[0] =~ /^ $_ $/xi } @unrollable_ops ) {
- push @children, $child->[1][0];
- $changes++;
- }
-
- # only one element in the parenthesis which is a binary op with two EXPR sub-children
- elsif (
- @{$child->[1]} == 1
- and
- grep { $child->[1][0][0] =~ /^ $_ $/xi } (@binary_op_keywords)
- and
- $child->[1][0][1][0][0] eq 'EXPR'
- and
- $child->[1][0][1][1][0] eq 'EXPR'
- ) {
- push @children, $child->[1][0];
- $changes++;
- }
-
- # otherwise no more mucking for this pass
- else {
- push @children, $child;
- }
+ my $eq = _eq_sql($left->[1], $right->[1]);
+ $sql_differ ||= sprintf ("left: %s\nright: %s\n", map { $sqlat->unparse($_) } ($left, $right) ) if not $eq;
+ return $eq;
}
-
- $ast->[1] = \@children;
-
- } while ($changes);
-
-}
-
-sub unparse {
- my $tree = shift;
-
- if (not $tree ) {
- return '';
- }
- elsif (ref $tree->[0]) {
- return join (" ", map { unparse ($_) } @$tree);
- }
- elsif ($tree->[0] eq 'EXPR') {
- return $tree->[1][0];
- }
- elsif ($tree->[0] eq 'PAREN') {
- return sprintf '(%s)', join (" ", map {unparse($_)} @{$tree->[1]});
- }
- elsif ($tree->[0] eq 'OR' or $tree->[0] eq 'AND' or (grep { $tree->[0] =~ /^ $_ $/xi } @binary_op_keywords ) ) {
- return join (" $tree->[0] ", map {unparse($_)} @{$tree->[1]});
- }
- else {
- return sprintf '%s %s', $tree->[0], unparse ($tree->[1]);
}
}
-
+sub parse { $sqlat->parse(@_) }
1;
is_same_sql_bind is_same_sql is_same_bind
eq_sql_bind eq_sql eq_bind
/];
-
+
my ($sql, @bind) = SQL::Abstract->new->select(%args);
- is_same_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
+ is_same_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
$expected_sql, \@expected_bind, $test_msg);
is_same_sql($given_sql, $expected_sql, $test_msg);
is_same_bind(\@given_bind, \@expected_bind, $test_msg);
- my $is_same = eq_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
+ my $is_same = eq_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
$expected_sql, \@expected_bind);
my $sql_same = eq_sql($given_sql, $expected_sql);
Therefore the tests will pass as long as the semantics
is preserved, even if the surface syntax has changed.
-B<Disclaimer> : this is only a half-cooked semantic equivalence;
-parsing is simple-minded, and comparison of SQL abstract syntax trees
-ignores commutativity or associativity of AND/OR operators, Morgan
-laws, etc.
+B<Disclaimer> : the semantic equivalence handling is pretty limited.
+A lot of effort goes into distinguishing significant from
+non-significant parenthesis, including AND/OR operator associativity.
+Currently this module does not support commutativity and more
+intelligent transformations like L<De Morgan's laws
+|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Morgan's_laws>, etc.
+
+For a good overview of what this test framework is currently capable of refer
+to C<t/10test.t>
=head1 FUNCTIONS
=head2 is_same_sql_bind
- is_same_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
- $expected_sql, \@expected_bind, $test_msg);
-
-Compares given and expected pairs of C<($sql, \@bind)>, and calls
-L<Test::Builder/ok> on the result, with C<$test_msg> as message. If the test
-fails, a detailed diagnostic is printed. For clients which use L<Test::More>,
-this is the one of the three functions (L</is_same_sql_bind>, L</is_same_sql>,
-L</is_same_bind>) that needs to be imported.
+ is_same_sql_bind(
+ $given_sql, \@given_bind,
+ $expected_sql, \@expected_bind,
+ $test_msg
+ );
+
+ is_same_sql_bind(
+ \[$given_sql, @given_bind],
+ \[$expected_sql, @expected_bind],
+ $test_msg
+ );
+
+ is_same_sql_bind(
+ $dbic_rs->as_query
+ $expected_sql, \@expected_bind,
+ $test_msg
+ );
+
+Compares given and expected pairs of C<($sql, \@bind)> by unpacking C<@_>
+as shown in the examples above and passing the arguments to L</eq_sql> and
+L</eq_bind>. Calls L<Test::Builder/ok> with the combined result, with
+C<$test_msg> as message.
+If the test fails, a detailed diagnostic is printed.
=head2 is_same_sql
- is_same_sql($given_sql, $expected_sql, $test_msg);
+ is_same_sql(
+ $given_sql,
+ $expected_sql,
+ $test_msg
+ );
-Compares given and expected SQL statements, and calls L<Test::Builder/ok> on
-the result, with C<$test_msg> as message. If the test fails, a detailed
-diagnostic is printed. For clients which use L<Test::More>, this is the one of
-the three functions (L</is_same_sql_bind>, L</is_same_sql>, L</is_same_bind>)
-that needs to be imported.
+Compares given and expected SQL statements via L</eq_sql>, and calls
+L<Test::Builder/ok> on the result, with C<$test_msg> as message.
+If the test fails, a detailed diagnostic is printed.
=head2 is_same_bind
- is_same_bind(\@given_bind, \@expected_bind, $test_msg);
+ is_same_bind(
+ \@given_bind,
+ \@expected_bind,
+ $test_msg
+ );
-Compares given and expected bind values, and calls L<Test::Builder/ok> on the
-result, with C<$test_msg> as message. If the test fails, a detailed diagnostic
-is printed. For clients which use L<Test::More>, this is the one of the three
-functions (L</is_same_sql_bind>, L</is_same_sql>, L</is_same_bind>) that needs
-to be imported.
+Compares given and expected bind values via L</eq_bind>, and calls
+L<Test::Builder/ok> on the result, with C<$test_msg> as message.
+If the test fails, a detailed diagnostic is printed.
=head2 eq_sql_bind
- my $is_same = eq_sql_bind($given_sql, \@given_bind,
- $expected_sql, \@expected_bind);
+ my $is_same = eq_sql_bind(
+ $given_sql, \@given_bind,
+ $expected_sql, \@expected_bind,
+ );
-Compares given and expected pairs of C<($sql, \@bind)>. Similar to
-L</is_same_sql_bind>, but it just returns a boolean value and does not print
-diagnostics or talk to L<Test::Builder>.
+ my $is_same = eq_sql_bind(
+ \[$given_sql, @given_bind],
+ \[$expected_sql, @expected_bind],
+ );
+
+ my $is_same = eq_sql_bind(
+ $dbic_rs->as_query
+ $expected_sql, \@expected_bind,
+ );
+
+Unpacks C<@_> depending on the given arguments and calls L</eq_sql> and
+L</eq_bind>, returning their combined result.
=head2 eq_sql
=head2 $parenthesis_significant
If true, SQL comparison will preserve and report difference in nested
-parenthesis. Useful for testing the C<-nest> modifier. Defaults to false;
+parenthesis. Useful while testing C<IN (( x ))> vs C<IN ( x )>.
+Defaults to false;
+
+=head2 $order_by_asc_significant
+
+If true SQL comparison will consider C<ORDER BY foo ASC> and
+C<ORDER BY foo> to be different. Default is false;
=head2 $sql_differ
C<$sql_differ> contains the SQL portion
where a difference was encountered.
-
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<SQL::Abstract>, L<Test::More>, L<Test::Builder>.
=head1 AUTHORS
-Laurent Dami, E<lt>laurent.dami AT etat geneve chE<gt>
+Laurent Dami <laurent.dami AT etat geneve ch>
Norbert Buchmuller <norbi@nix.hu>
Copyright 2008 by Laurent Dami.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-it under the same terms as Perl itself.
+it under the same terms as Perl itself.