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d442cc9f 1=head1 NAME
2
3ab6187c 3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::08_Testing - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 8: Testing
d442cc9f 4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
4b4d3884 8This is B<Chapter 8 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
d442cc9f 9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
3ab6187c 16L<Introduction|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>
d442cc9f 17
18=item 2
19
3ab6187c 20L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::02_CatalystBasics>
d442cc9f 21
22=item 3
23
3ab6187c 24L<More Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::03_MoreCatalystBasics>
d442cc9f 25
26=item 4
27
3ab6187c 28L<Basic CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::04_BasicCRUD>
d442cc9f 29
30=item 5
31
3ab6187c 32L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::05_Authentication>
d442cc9f 33
34=item 6
35
3ab6187c 36L<Authorization|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::06_Authorization>
d442cc9f 37
38=item 7
39
3ab6187c 40L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::07_Debugging>
d442cc9f 41
42=item 8
43
3ab6187c 44B<08_Testing>
d442cc9f 45
46=item 9
47
3ab6187c 48L<Advanced CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::09_AdvancedCRUD>
3533daff 49
50=item 10
51
3ab6187c 52L<Appendices|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::10_Appendices>
d442cc9f 53
54=back
55
3533daff 56
d442cc9f 57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
4b4d3884 59You may have noticed that the Catalyst Helper scripts automatically
60create basic C<.t> test scripts under the C<t> directory. This
61chapter of the tutorial briefly looks at how these tests can be used
3b1fa91b 62not only to ensure that your application is working correctly at the
4b4d3884 63present time, but also provide automated regression testing as you
64upgrade various pieces of your application over time.
d442cc9f 65
4d63a0d5 66You can check out the source code for this example from the Catalyst
67Subversion repository as per the instructions in
3ab6187c 68L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro>.
1390ef0e 69
3b1fa91b 70For an excellent introduction to learning the many benefits of testing
71your Perl applications and modules, you might want to read 'Perl Testing:
72A Developer's Notebook' by Ian Langworth and chromatic.
73
d442cc9f 74
75=head1 RUNNING THE "CANNED" CATALYST TESTS
76
77There are a variety of ways to run Catalyst and Perl tests (for example,
78C<perl Makefile.PL> and C<make test>), but one of the easiest is with the
79C<prove> command. For example, to run all of the tests in the C<t>
80directory, enter:
81
82 $ prove --lib lib t
83
028b4e1a 84There will be a lot of output because we have the C<-Debug> flag
85enabled in C<lib/MyApp.pm> (see the C<CATALYST_DEBUG=0> tip below for
86a quick and easy way to reduce the clutter). Look for lines like this
87for errors:
3533daff 88
89 # Failed test 'Request should succeed'
3b1fa91b 90 # at t/controller_Books.t line 8.
3533daff 91 # Looks like you failed 1 test of 3.
92
93The redirection used by the Authentication plugins will cause several
94failures in the default tests. You can fix this by making the following
95changes:
96
acbd7bdd 971) Change the line in C<t/01app.t> that reads:
d442cc9f 98
99 ok( request('/')->is_success, 'Request should succeed' );
100
101to:
102
103 ok( request('/login')->is_success, 'Request should succeed' );
104
3b1fa91b 1052) Change the line in C<t/controller_Logout.t> that reads:
106
107 ok( request('/logout')->is_success, 'Request should succeed' );
108
109to:
110
111 ok( request('/logout')->is_redirect, 'Request should succeed' );
112
1133) Change the line in C<t/controller_Books.t> that reads:
114
115 ok( request('/books')->is_success, 'Request should succeed' );
116
117to:
118
119 ok( request('/books')->is_redirect, 'Request should succeed' );
d442cc9f 120
3b1fa91b 1214) Add the following statement to the top of C<t/view_TT.t>:
d442cc9f 122
3b1fa91b 123 use MyApp;
6a72d1bf 124
d442cc9f 125As you can see in the C<prove> command line above, the C<--lib> option
126is used to set the location of the Catalyst C<lib> directory. With this
127command, you will get all of the usual development server debug output,
128something most people prefer to disable while running tests cases.
129Although you can edit the C<lib/MyApp.pm> to comment out the C<-Debug>
130plugin, it's generally easier to simply set the C<CATALYST_DEBUG=0>
131environment variable. For example:
132
133 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 prove --lib lib t
134
ebde193e 135B<Note:> Depending on the versions of various modules you have
136installed, you might get some C<used only once> warnings -- you can
3b1fa91b 137ignore these. If you want to eliminate the warnings, you can
ebde193e 138edit C<Template::Base> to disable and then re-enable warnings
139are the C</usr/lib/perl5/Template/Base.pm> line in C<sub new>.
140You can locate where C<Template::Base> is located with the
141following command (it's probably in a place similar to
142C</usr/lib/perl5/Template/Base.pm>):
143
144 perldoc -l Template::Base
145
146Edit the file and modify C<sub new> to match:
147
148 ...
149 { no strict qw( refs );
150 # Disable warnings
151 no warnings;
152 $argnames = \@{"$class\::BASEARGS"} || [ ];
153 # Turn warnings back on
154 use warnings;
155 }
156 ...
157
d442cc9f 158During the C<t/02pod> and C<t/03podcoverage> tests, you might notice the
159C<all skipped: set TEST_POD to enable this test> warning message. To
160execute the Pod-related tests, add C<TEST_POD=1> to the C<prove>
161command:
162
163 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 TEST_POD=1 prove --lib lib t
164
165If you omitted the Pod comments from any of the methods that were
166inserted, you might have to go back and fix them to get these tests to
167pass. :-)
168
169Another useful option is the C<verbose> (C<-v>) option to C<prove>. It
170prints the name of each test case as it is being run:
171
172 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 TEST_POD=1 prove --lib lib -v t
173
3533daff 174
d442cc9f 175=head1 RUNNING A SINGLE TEST
176
177You can also run a single script by appending its name to the C<prove>
178command. For example:
179
180 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 prove --lib lib t/01app.t
181
3533daff 182Also note that you can also run tests directly from Perl without C<prove>.
d442cc9f 183For example:
184
185 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 perl -Ilib t/01app.t
186
3533daff 187
d442cc9f 188=head1 ADDING YOUR OWN TEST SCRIPT
189
190Although the Catalyst helper scripts provide a basic level of checks
191"for free," testing can become significantly more helpful when you write
192your own script to exercise the various parts of your application. The
193L<Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst|Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst> module
194is very popular for writing these sorts of test cases. This module
195extends L<Test::WWW::Mechanize|Test::WWW::Mechanize> (and therefore
196L<WWW::Mechanize|WWW::Mechanize>) to allow you to automate the action of
197a user "clicking around" inside your application. It gives you all the
198benefits of testing on a live system without the messiness of having to
199use an actual web server, and a real person to do the clicking.
200
201To create a sample test case, open the C<t/live_app01.t> file in your
202editor and enter the following:
203
204 #!/usr/bin/perl
205
206 use strict;
207 use warnings;
208
209 # Load testing framework and use 'no_plan' to dynamically pick up
210 # all tests. Better to replace "'no_plan'" with "tests => 30" so it
211 # knows exactly how many tests need to be run (and will tell you if
212 # not), but 'no_plan' is nice for quick & dirty tests
213
214 use Test::More 'no_plan';
215
216 # Need to specify the name of your app as arg on next line
217 # Can also do:
218 # use Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst "MyApp";
219
220 use ok "Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst" => "MyApp";
221
222 # Create two 'user agents' to simulate two different users ('test01' & 'test02')
223 my $ua1 = Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst->new;
224 my $ua2 = Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst->new;
225
226 # Use a simplified for loop to do tests that are common to both users
227 # Use get_ok() to make sure we can hit the base URL
228 # Second arg = optional description of test (will be displayed for failed tests)
229 # Note that in test scripts you send everything to 'http://localhost'
230 $_->get_ok("http://localhost/", "Check redirect of base URL") for $ua1, $ua2;
231 # Use title_is() to check the contents of the <title>...</title> tags
232 $_->title_is("Login", "Check for login title") for $ua1, $ua2;
233 # Use content_contains() to match on text in the html body
234 $_->content_contains("You need to log in to use this application",
235 "Check we are NOT logged in") for $ua1, $ua2;
236
237 # Log in as each user
238 # Specify username and password on the URL
239 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/login?username=test01&password=mypass", "Login 'test01'");
2a6eb5f9 240 # Could make user2 like user1 above, but use the form to show another way
241 $ua2->submit_form(
242 fields => {
243 username => 'test02',
244 password => 'mypass',
245 });
d442cc9f 246
247 # Go back to the login page and it should show that we are already logged in
248 $_->get_ok("http://localhost/login", "Return to '/login'") for $ua1, $ua2;
249 $_->title_is("Login", "Check for login page") for $ua1, $ua2;
250 $_->content_contains("Please Note: You are already logged in as ",
251 "Check we ARE logged in" ) for $ua1, $ua2;
252
253 # 'Click' the 'Logout' link (see also 'text_regex' and 'url_regex' options)
028b4e1a 254 $_->follow_link_ok({n => 4}, "Logout via first link on page") for $ua1, $ua2;
d442cc9f 255 $_->title_is("Login", "Check for login title") for $ua1, $ua2;
256 $_->content_contains("You need to log in to use this application",
257 "Check we are NOT logged in") for $ua1, $ua2;
258
259 # Log back in
260 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/login?username=test01&password=mypass", "Login 'test01'");
261 $ua2->get_ok("http://localhost/login?username=test02&password=mypass", "Login 'test02'");
262 # Should be at the Book List page... do some checks to confirm
263 $_->title_is("Book List", "Check for book list title") for $ua1, $ua2;
264
265 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/books/list", "'test01' book list");
266 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/login", "Login Page");
267 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/books/list", "'test01' book list");
268
269 $_->content_contains("Book List", "Check for book list title") for $ua1, $ua2;
270 # Make sure the appropriate logout buttons are displayed
fbbb9084 271 $_->content_contains("/logout\">User Logout</a>",
d442cc9f 272 "Both users should have a 'User Logout'") for $ua1, $ua2;
273 $ua1->content_contains("/books/form_create\">Create</a>",
274 "Only 'test01' should have a create link");
275
276 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/books/list", "View book list as 'test01'");
277
278 # User 'test01' should be able to create a book with the "formless create" URL
279 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/books/url_create/TestTitle/2/4",
280 "'test01' formless create");
281 $ua1->title_is("Book Created", "Book created title");
282 $ua1->content_contains("Added book 'TestTitle'", "Check title added OK");
283 $ua1->content_contains("by 'Stevens'", "Check author added OK");
284 $ua1->content_contains("with a rating of 2.", "Check rating added");
285 # Try a regular expression to combine the previous 3 checks & account for whitespace
286 $ua1->content_like(qr/Added book 'TestTitle'\s+by 'Stevens'\s+with a rating of 2./, "Regex check");
287
288 # Make sure the new book shows in the list
289 $ua1->get_ok("http://localhost/books/list", "'test01' book list");
290 $ua1->title_is("Book List", "Check logged in and at book list");
291 $ua1->content_contains("Book List", "Book List page test");
292 $ua1->content_contains("TestTitle", "Look for 'TestTitle'");
293
294 # Make sure the new book can be deleted
295 # Get all the Delete links on the list page
296 my @delLinks = $ua1->find_all_links(text => 'Delete');
297 # Use the final link to delete the last book
298 $ua1->get_ok($delLinks[$#delLinks]->url, 'Delete last book');
299 # Check that delete worked
300 $ua1->content_contains("Book List", "Book List page test");
301 $ua1->content_contains("Book deleted", "Book was deleted");
302
303 # User 'test02' should not be able to add a book
304 $ua2->get_ok("http://localhost/books/url_create/TestTitle2/2/5", "'test02' add");
305 $ua2->content_contains("Unauthorized!", "Check 'test02' cannot add");
306
307The C<live_app.t> test cases uses copious comments to explain each step
308of the process. In addition to the techniques shown here, there are a
309variety of other methods available in
310L<Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst|Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst> (for
311example, regex-based matching). Consult the documentation for more
312detail.
313
314B<TIP>: For I<unit tests> vs. the "full application tests" approach used
315by L<Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst|Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst>, see
316L<Catalyst::Test|Catalyst::Test>.
317
318B<Note:> The test script does not test the C<form_create> and
319C<form_create_do> actions. That is left as an exercise for the reader
320(you should be able to complete that logic using the existing code as a
321template).
322
323To run the new test script, use a command such as:
324
325 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 prove --lib lib -v t/live_app01.t
326
327or
328
329 $ DBIC_TRACE=0 CATALYST_DEBUG=0 prove --lib lib -v t/live_app01.t
330
4b4d3884 331Experiment with the C<DBIC_TRACE>, C<CATALYST_DEBUG> and C<-v>
332settings. If you find that there are errors, use the techniques
333discussed in the "Catalyst Debugging" section (Chapter 7) to isolate
334and fix any problems.
d442cc9f 335
336If you want to run the test case under the Perl interactive debugger,
337try a command such as:
338
339 $ DBIC_TRACE=0 CATALYST_DEBUG=0 perl -d -Ilib t/live_app01.t
340
341Note that although this tutorial uses a single custom test case for
342simplicity, you may wish to break your tests into different files for
343better organization.
344
345B<TIP:> If you have a test case that fails, you will receive an error
346similar to the following:
347
348 # Failed test 'Check we are NOT logged in'
349 # in t/live_app01.t at line 31.
350 # searched: "\x{0a}<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Tran"...
351 # can't find: "You need to log in to use this application."
352
353Unfortunately, this only shows us the first 50 characters of the HTML
354returned by the request -- not enough to determine where the problem
355lies. A simple technique that can be used in such situations is to
356temporarily insert a line similar to the following right after the
357failed test:
358
6daaedc0 359 diag $ua1->content;
d442cc9f 360
361This will cause the full HTML returned by the request to be displayed.
362
fbbb9084 363Another approach to see the full HTML content at the failure point in
364a series of tests would be to insert a "C<$DB::single=1;> right above
365the location of the failure and run the test under the perl debugger
366(with C<-d>) as shown above. Then you can use the debugger to explore
367the state of the application right before or after the failure.
368
d442cc9f 369
370=head1 SUPPORTING BOTH PRODUCTION AND TEST DATABASES
371
372You may wish to leverage the techniques discussed in this tutorial to
373maintain both a "production database" for your live application and a
374"testing database" for your test cases. One advantage to
375L<Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst|Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst> is that
376it runs your full application; however, this can complicate things when
377you want to support multiple databases. One solution is to allow the
378database specification to be overridden with an environment variable.
d0496197 379For example, open C<lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm> in your editor and
d442cc9f 380change the C<__PACKAGE__-E<gt>config(...> declaration to resemble:
381
382 my $dsn = $ENV{MYAPP_DSN} ||= 'dbi:SQLite:myapp.db';
383 __PACKAGE__->config(
d0496197 384 schema_class => 'MyApp::Schema',
d442cc9f 385 connect_info => [
386 $dsn,
d442cc9f 387 ],
388 );
389
390Then, when you run your test case, you can use commands such as:
391
392 $ cp myapp.db myappTEST.db
393 $ CATALYST_DEBUG=0 MYAPP_DSN="dbi:SQLite:myappTEST.db" prove --lib lib -v t/live_app01.t
394
395This will modify the DSN only while the test case is running. If you
396launch your normal application without the C<MYAPP_DSN> environment
397variable defined, it will default to the same C<dbi:SQLite:myapp.db> as
398before.
399
400
401=head1 AUTHOR
402
403Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
404
405Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author. The
406most recent version of the Catalyst Tutorial can be found at
59884771 407L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/Catalyst-Manual/5.80/trunk/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial/>.
d442cc9f 408
45c7830f 409Copyright 2006-2008, Kennedy Clark, under Creative Commons License
8482d557 410(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).
d442cc9f 411