Test::Harness - Run Perl standard test scripts with statistics
Version 2.64
- use Test::Harness;
- runtests(@test_files);
STOP! If all you want to do is write a test script, consider using Test::Simple. Test::Harness is the module that reads the output from Test::Simple, Test::More and other modules based on Test::Builder. You don't need to know about Test::Harness to use those modules.
Test::Harness runs tests and expects output from the test in a certain format. That format is called TAP, the Test Anything Protocol. It is defined in Test::Harness::TAP.
Test::Harness::runtests(@tests)
runs all the testscripts named
as arguments and checks standard output for the expected strings
in TAP format.
The prove utility is a thin wrapper around Test::Harness.
Test::Harness will honor the -T
or -t
in the #! line on your
test files. So if you begin a test with:
- #!perl -T
the test will be run with taint mode on.
These variables can be used to configure the behavior of Test::Harness. They are exported on request.
$Test::Harness::Verbose
The package variable $Test::Harness::Verbose
is exportable and can be
used to let runtests()
display the standard output of the script
without altering the behavior otherwise. The prove utility's -v
flag will set this.
$Test::Harness::switches
The package variable $Test::Harness::switches
is exportable and can be
used to set perl command line options used for running the test
script(s). The default value is -w
. It overrides HARNESS_PERL_SWITCHES
.
$Test::Harness::Timer
If set to true, and Time::HiRes
is available, print elapsed seconds
after each test file.
When tests fail, analyze the summary report:
- t/base..............ok
- t/nonumbers.........ok
- t/ok................ok
- t/test-harness......ok
- t/waterloo..........dubious
- Test returned status 3 (wstat 768, 0x300)
- DIED. FAILED tests 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19
- Failed 10/20 tests, 50.00% okay
- Failed Test Stat Wstat Total Fail List of Failed
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- t/waterloo.t 3 768 20 10 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19
- Failed 1/5 test scripts, 80.00% okay. 10/44 subtests failed, 77.27% okay.
Everything passed but t/waterloo.t. It failed 10 of 20 tests and exited with non-zero status indicating something dubious happened.
The columns in the summary report mean:
The test file which failed.
If the test exited with non-zero, this is its exit status.
The wait status of the test.
Total number of tests expected to run.
Number which failed, either from "not ok" or because they never ran.
A list of the tests which failed. Successive failures may be abbreviated (ie. 15-20 to indicate that tests 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 failed).
The following functions are available.
This runs all the given @test_files and divines whether they passed or failed based on their output to STDOUT (details above). It prints out each individual test which failed along with a summary report and a how long it all took.
It returns true if everything was ok. Otherwise it will die()
with
one of the messages in the DIAGNOSTICS section.
Runs all the given @test_files
(just like runtests()
) but
doesn't generate the final report. During testing, progress
information will be written to the currently selected output
filehandle (usually STDOUT
), or to the filehandle given by the
out
parameter. The out is optional.
Returns a list of two values, $total
and $failed
, describing the
results. $total
is a hash ref summary of all the tests run. Its
keys and values are this:
- bonus Number of individual todo tests unexpectedly passed
- max Number of individual tests ran
- ok Number of individual tests passed
- sub_skipped Number of individual tests skipped
- todo Number of individual todo tests
- files Number of test files ran
- good Number of test files passed
- bad Number of test files failed
- tests Number of test files originally given
- skipped Number of test files skipped
If $total->{bad} == 0
and $total->{max} > 0
, you've
got a successful test.
$failed
is a hash ref of all the test scripts that failed. Each key
is the name of a test script, each value is another hash representing
how that script failed. Its keys are these:
- name Name of the test which failed
- estat Script's exit value
- wstat Script's wait status
- max Number of individual tests
- failed Number which failed
- canon List of tests which failed (as string).
$failed
should be empty if everything passed.
- my($leader, $ml) = _mk_leader($test_file, $width);
Generates the 't/foo........' leader for the given $test_file
as well
as a similar version which will overwrite the current line (by use of
\r and such). $ml
may be empty if Test::Harness doesn't think you're
on TTY.
The $width
is the width of the "yada/blah.." string.
- my($width) = _leader_width(@test_files);
Calculates how wide the leader should be based on the length of the longest test name.
&runtests
is exported by Test::Harness by default.
&execute_tests
, $verbose
, $switches
and $debug
are
exported upon request.
All tests successful.\nFiles=%d, Tests=%d, %s
If all tests are successful some statistics about the performance are printed.
FAILED tests %s\n\tFailed %d/%d tests, %.2f%% okay.
For any single script that has failing subtests statistics like the above are printed.
Test returned status %d (wstat %d)
Scripts that return a non-zero exit status, both $? >> 8
and $?
are printed in a message similar to the above.
Failed 1 test, %.2f%% okay. %s
Failed %d/%d tests, %.2f%% okay. %s
If not all tests were successful, the script dies with one of the above messages.
FAILED--Further testing stopped: %s
If a single subtest decides that further testing will not make sense, the script dies with this message.
Test::Harness sets these before executing the individual tests.
HARNESS_ACTIVE
This is set to a true value. It allows the tests to determine if they are being executed through the harness or by any other means.
HARNESS_VERSION
This is the version of Test::Harness.
HARNESS_COLUMNS
This value will be used for the width of the terminal. If it is not
set then it will default to COLUMNS
. If this is not set, it will
default to 80. Note that users of Bourne-sh based shells will need to
export COLUMNS
for this module to use that variable.
HARNESS_COMPILE_TEST
When true it will make harness attempt to compile the test using
perlcc
before running it.
NOTE This currently only works when sitting in the perl source directory!
HARNESS_DEBUG
If true, Test::Harness will print debugging information about itself as
it runs the tests. This is different from HARNESS_VERBOSE
, which prints
the output from the test being run. Setting $Test::Harness::Debug
will
override this, or you can use the -d
switch in the prove utility.
HARNESS_FILELEAK_IN_DIR
When set to the name of a directory, harness will check after each test whether new files appeared in that directory, and report them as
- LEAKED FILES: scr.tmp 0 my.db
If relative, directory name is with respect to the current directory at
the moment runtests() was called. Putting absolute path into
HARNESS_FILELEAK_IN_DIR
may give more predictable results.
HARNESS_NOTTY
When set to a true value, forces it to behave as though STDOUT were not a console. You may need to set this if you don't want harness to output more frequent progress messages using carriage returns. Some consoles may not handle carriage returns properly (which results in a somewhat messy output).
HARNESS_PERL
Usually your tests will be run by $^X
, the currently-executing Perl.
However, you may want to have it run by a different executable, such as
a threading perl, or a different version.
If you're using the prove utility, you can use the --perl
switch.
HARNESS_PERL_SWITCHES
Its value will be prepended to the switches used to invoke perl on
each test. For example, setting HARNESS_PERL_SWITCHES
to -W
will
run all tests with all warnings enabled.
HARNESS_TIMER
Setting this to true will make the harness display the number of
milliseconds each test took. You can also use prove's --timer
switch.
HARNESS_VERBOSE
If true, Test::Harness will output the verbose results of running
its tests. Setting $Test::Harness::verbose
will override this,
or you can use the -v
switch in the prove utility.
If true, Test::Harness will output the verbose results of running
its tests. Setting $Test::Harness::verbose
will override this,
or you can use the -v
switch in the prove utility.
HARNESS_STRAP_CLASS
Defines the Test::Harness::Straps subclass to use. The value may either be a filename or a class name.
If HARNESS_STRAP_CLASS is a class name, the class must be in @INC
like any other class.
If HARNESS_STRAP_CLASS is a filename, the .pm file must return the name of the class, instead of the canonical "1".
Here's how Test::Harness tests itself
- $ cd ~/src/devel/Test-Harness
- $ perl -Mblib -e 'use Test::Harness qw(&runtests $verbose);
- $verbose=0; runtests @ARGV;' t/*.t
- Using /home/schwern/src/devel/Test-Harness/blib
- t/base..............ok
- t/nonumbers.........ok
- t/ok................ok
- t/test-harness......ok
- All tests successful.
- Files=4, Tests=24, 2 wallclock secs ( 0.61 cusr + 0.41 csys = 1.02 CPU)
The included prove utility for running test scripts from the command line, Test and Test::Simple for writing test scripts, Benchmark for the underlying timing routines, and Devel::Cover for test coverage analysis.
Provide a way of running tests quietly (ie. no printing) for automated validation of tests. This will probably take the form of a version of runtests() which rather than printing its output returns raw data on the state of the tests. (Partially done in Test::Harness::Straps)
Document the format.
Fix HARNESS_COMPILE_TEST without breaking its core usage.
Figure a way to report test names in the failure summary.
Rework the test summary so long test names are not truncated as badly. (Partially done with new skip test styles)
Add option for coverage analysis.
Trap STDERR.
Implement Straps total_results()
Remember exit code
Completely redo the print summary code.
Straps->analyze_file() not taint clean, don't know if it can be
Fix that damned VMS nit.
Add a test for verbose.
Change internal list of test results to a hash.
Fix stats display when there's an overrun.
Fix so perls with spaces in the filename work.
Keeping whittling away at _run_all_tests()
Clean up how the summary is printed. Get rid of those damned formats.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
bug-test-harness at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Test-Harness.
I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
your bug as I make changes.
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
- perldoc Test::Harness
You can get docs for prove with
- prove --man
You can also look for information at:
The source code repository for Test::Harness is at http://svn.perl.org/modules/Test-Harness.
Either Tim Bunce or Andreas Koenig, we don't know. What we know for sure is, that it was inspired by Larry Wall's TEST script that came with perl distributions for ages. Numerous anonymous contributors exist. Andreas Koenig held the torch for many years, and then Michael G Schwern.
Current maintainer is Andy Lester <andy at petdance.com>
.
Copyright 2002-2006
by Michael G Schwern <schwern at pobox.com>
,
Andy Lester <andy at petdance.com>
.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.