Spaces:
Sleeping
Sleeping
=head1 NAME | |
Test::Tutorial - A tutorial about writing really basic tests | |
=head1 DESCRIPTION | |
I<AHHHHHHH!!!! NOT TESTING! Anything but testing! | |
Beat me, whip me, send me to Detroit, but don't make | |
me write tests!> | |
I<*sob*> | |
I<Besides, I don't know how to write the damned things.> | |
Is this you? Is writing tests right up there with writing | |
documentation and having your fingernails pulled out? Did you open up | |
a test and read | |
######## We start with some black magic | |
and decide that's quite enough for you? | |
It's ok. That's all gone now. We've done all the black magic for | |
you. And here are the tricks... | |
=head2 Nuts and bolts of testing. | |
Here's the most basic test program. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
print "1..1\n"; | |
print 1 + 1 == 2 ? "ok 1\n" : "not ok 1\n"; | |
Because 1 + 1 is 2, it prints: | |
1..1 | |
ok 1 | |
What this says is: C<1..1> "I'm going to run one test." [1] C<ok 1> | |
"The first test passed". And that's about all magic there is to | |
testing. Your basic unit of testing is the I<ok>. For each thing you | |
test, an C<ok> is printed. Simple. L<Test::Harness> interprets your test | |
results to determine if you succeeded or failed (more on that later). | |
Writing all these print statements rapidly gets tedious. Fortunately, | |
there's L<Test::Simple>. It has one function, C<ok()>. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
use Test::Simple tests => 1; | |
ok( 1 + 1 == 2 ); | |
That does the same thing as the previous code. C<ok()> is the backbone | |
of Perl testing, and we'll be using it instead of roll-your-own from | |
here on. If C<ok()> gets a true value, the test passes. False, it | |
fails. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
use Test::Simple tests => 2; | |
ok( 1 + 1 == 2 ); | |
ok( 2 + 2 == 5 ); | |
From that comes: | |
1..2 | |
ok 1 | |
not ok 2 | |
# Failed test (test.pl at line 5) | |
# Looks like you failed 1 tests of 2. | |
C<1..2> "I'm going to run two tests." This number is a I<plan>. It helps to | |
ensure your test program ran all the way through and didn't die or skip some | |
tests. C<ok 1> "The first test passed." C<not ok 2> "The second test failed". | |
Test::Simple helpfully prints out some extra commentary about your tests. | |
It's not scary. Come, hold my hand. We're going to give an example | |
of testing a module. For our example, we'll be testing a date | |
library, L<Date::ICal>. It's on CPAN, so download a copy and follow | |
along. [2] | |
=head2 Where to start? | |
This is the hardest part of testing, where do you start? People often get | |
overwhelmed at the apparent enormity of the task of testing a whole module. | |
The best place to start is at the beginning. L<Date::ICal> is an | |
object-oriented module, and that means you start by making an object. Test | |
C<new()>. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
# assume these two lines are in all subsequent examples | |
use strict; | |
use warnings; | |
use Test::Simple tests => 2; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
my $ical = Date::ICal->new; # create an object | |
ok( defined $ical ); # check that we got something | |
ok( $ical->isa('Date::ICal') ); # and it's the right class | |
Run that and you should get: | |
1..2 | |
ok 1 | |
ok 2 | |
Congratulations! You've written your first useful test. | |
=head2 Names | |
That output isn't terribly descriptive, is it? When you have two tests you can | |
figure out which one is #2, but what if you have 102 tests? | |
Each test can be given a little descriptive name as the second | |
argument to C<ok()>. | |
use Test::Simple tests => 2; | |
ok( defined $ical, 'new() returned something' ); | |
ok( $ical->isa('Date::ICal'), " and it's the right class" ); | |
Now you'll see: | |
1..2 | |
ok 1 - new() returned something | |
ok 2 - and it's the right class | |
=head2 Test the manual | |
The simplest way to build up a decent testing suite is to just test what | |
the manual says it does. [3] Let's pull something out of the | |
L<Date::ICal/SYNOPSIS> and test that all its bits work. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
use Test::Simple tests => 8; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
$ical = Date::ICal->new( year => 1964, month => 10, day => 16, | |
hour => 16, min => 12, sec => 47, | |
tz => '0530' ); | |
ok( defined $ical, 'new() returned something' ); | |
ok( $ical->isa('Date::ICal'), " and it's the right class" ); | |
ok( $ical->sec == 47, ' sec()' ); | |
ok( $ical->min == 12, ' min()' ); | |
ok( $ical->hour == 16, ' hour()' ); | |
ok( $ical->day == 17, ' day()' ); | |
ok( $ical->month == 10, ' month()' ); | |
ok( $ical->year == 1964, ' year()' ); | |
Run that and you get: | |
1..8 | |
ok 1 - new() returned something | |
ok 2 - and it's the right class | |
ok 3 - sec() | |
ok 4 - min() | |
ok 5 - hour() | |
not ok 6 - day() | |
# Failed test (- at line 16) | |
ok 7 - month() | |
ok 8 - year() | |
# Looks like you failed 1 tests of 8. | |
Whoops, a failure! [4] L<Test::Simple> helpfully lets us know on what line the | |
failure occurred, but not much else. We were supposed to get 17, but we | |
didn't. What did we get?? Dunno. You could re-run the test in the debugger | |
or throw in some print statements to find out. | |
Instead, switch from L<Test::Simple> to L<Test::More>. L<Test::More> | |
does everything L<Test::Simple> does, and more! In fact, L<Test::More> does | |
things I<exactly> the way L<Test::Simple> does. You can literally swap | |
L<Test::Simple> out and put L<Test::More> in its place. That's just what | |
we're going to do. | |
L<Test::More> does more than L<Test::Simple>. The most important difference at | |
this point is it provides more informative ways to say "ok". Although you can | |
write almost any test with a generic C<ok()>, it can't tell you what went | |
wrong. The C<is()> function lets us declare that something is supposed to be | |
the same as something else: | |
use Test::More tests => 8; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
$ical = Date::ICal->new( year => 1964, month => 10, day => 16, | |
hour => 16, min => 12, sec => 47, | |
tz => '0530' ); | |
ok( defined $ical, 'new() returned something' ); | |
ok( $ical->isa('Date::ICal'), " and it's the right class" ); | |
is( $ical->sec, 47, ' sec()' ); | |
is( $ical->min, 12, ' min()' ); | |
is( $ical->hour, 16, ' hour()' ); | |
is( $ical->day, 17, ' day()' ); | |
is( $ical->month, 10, ' month()' ); | |
is( $ical->year, 1964, ' year()' ); | |
"Is C<< $ical->sec >> 47?" "Is C<< $ical->min >> 12?" With C<is()> in place, | |
you get more information: | |
1..8 | |
ok 1 - new() returned something | |
ok 2 - and it's the right class | |
ok 3 - sec() | |
ok 4 - min() | |
ok 5 - hour() | |
not ok 6 - day() | |
# Failed test (- at line 16) | |
# got: '16' | |
# expected: '17' | |
ok 7 - month() | |
ok 8 - year() | |
# Looks like you failed 1 tests of 8. | |
Aha. C<< $ical->day >> returned 16, but we expected 17. A | |
quick check shows that the code is working fine, we made a mistake | |
when writing the tests. Change it to: | |
is( $ical->day, 16, ' day()' ); | |
... and everything works. | |
Any time you're doing a "this equals that" sort of test, use C<is()>. | |
It even works on arrays. The test is always in scalar context, so you | |
can test how many elements are in an array this way. [5] | |
is( @foo, 5, 'foo has 5 elements' ); | |
=head2 Sometimes the tests are wrong | |
This brings up a very important lesson. Code has bugs. Tests are | |
code. Ergo, tests have bugs. A failing test could mean a bug in the | |
code, but don't discount the possibility that the test is wrong. | |
On the flip side, don't be tempted to prematurely declare a test | |
incorrect just because you're having trouble finding the bug. | |
Invalidating a test isn't something to be taken lightly, and don't use | |
it as a cop out to avoid work. | |
=head2 Testing lots of values | |
We're going to be wanting to test a lot of dates here, trying to trick | |
the code with lots of different edge cases. Does it work before 1970? | |
After 2038? Before 1904? Do years after 10,000 give it trouble? | |
Does it get leap years right? We could keep repeating the code above, | |
or we could set up a little try/expect loop. | |
use Test::More tests => 32; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
my %ICal_Dates = ( | |
# An ICal string And the year, month, day | |
# hour, minute and second we expect. | |
'19971024T120000' => # from the docs. | |
[ 1997, 10, 24, 12, 0, 0 ], | |
'20390123T232832' => # after the Unix epoch | |
[ 2039, 1, 23, 23, 28, 32 ], | |
'19671225T000000' => # before the Unix epoch | |
[ 1967, 12, 25, 0, 0, 0 ], | |
'18990505T232323' => # before the MacOS epoch | |
[ 1899, 5, 5, 23, 23, 23 ], | |
); | |
while( my($ical_str, $expect) = each %ICal_Dates ) { | |
my $ical = Date::ICal->new( ical => $ical_str ); | |
ok( defined $ical, "new(ical => '$ical_str')" ); | |
ok( $ical->isa('Date::ICal'), " and it's the right class" ); | |
is( $ical->year, $expect->[0], ' year()' ); | |
is( $ical->month, $expect->[1], ' month()' ); | |
is( $ical->day, $expect->[2], ' day()' ); | |
is( $ical->hour, $expect->[3], ' hour()' ); | |
is( $ical->min, $expect->[4], ' min()' ); | |
is( $ical->sec, $expect->[5], ' sec()' ); | |
} | |
Now we can test bunches of dates by just adding them to | |
C<%ICal_Dates>. Now that it's less work to test with more dates, you'll | |
be inclined to just throw more in as you think of them. | |
Only problem is, every time we add to that we have to keep adjusting | |
the C<< use Test::More tests => ## >> line. That can rapidly get | |
annoying. There are ways to make this work better. | |
First, we can calculate the plan dynamically using the C<plan()> | |
function. | |
use Test::More; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
my %ICal_Dates = ( | |
...same as before... | |
); | |
# For each key in the hash we're running 8 tests. | |
plan tests => keys(%ICal_Dates) * 8; | |
...and then your tests... | |
To be even more flexible, use C<done_testing>. This means we're just | |
running some tests, don't know how many. [6] | |
use Test::More; # instead of tests => 32 | |
... # tests here | |
done_testing(); # reached the end safely | |
If you don't specify a plan, L<Test::More> expects to see C<done_testing()> | |
before your program exits. It will warn you if you forget it. You can give | |
C<done_testing()> an optional number of tests you expected to run, and if the | |
number ran differs, L<Test::More> will give you another kind of warning. | |
=head2 Informative names | |
Take a look at the line: | |
ok( defined $ical, "new(ical => '$ical_str')" ); | |
We've added more detail about what we're testing and the ICal string | |
itself we're trying out to the name. So you get results like: | |
ok 25 - new(ical => '19971024T120000') | |
ok 26 - and it's the right class | |
ok 27 - year() | |
ok 28 - month() | |
ok 29 - day() | |
ok 30 - hour() | |
ok 31 - min() | |
ok 32 - sec() | |
If something in there fails, you'll know which one it was and that | |
will make tracking down the problem easier. Try to put a bit of | |
debugging information into the test names. | |
Describe what the tests test, to make debugging a failed test easier | |
for you or for the next person who runs your test. | |
=head2 Skipping tests | |
Poking around in the existing L<Date::ICal> tests, I found this in | |
F<t/01sanity.t> [7] | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
use Test::More tests => 7; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
# Make sure epoch time is being handled sanely. | |
my $t1 = Date::ICal->new( epoch => 0 ); | |
is( $t1->epoch, 0, "Epoch time of 0" ); | |
# XXX This will only work on unix systems. | |
is( $t1->ical, '19700101Z', " epoch to ical" ); | |
is( $t1->year, 1970, " year()" ); | |
is( $t1->month, 1, " month()" ); | |
is( $t1->day, 1, " day()" ); | |
# like the tests above, but starting with ical instead of epoch | |
my $t2 = Date::ICal->new( ical => '19700101Z' ); | |
is( $t2->ical, '19700101Z', "Start of epoch in ICal notation" ); | |
is( $t2->epoch, 0, " and back to ICal" ); | |
The beginning of the epoch is different on most non-Unix operating systems [8]. | |
Even though Perl smooths out the differences for the most part, certain ports | |
do it differently. MacPerl is one off the top of my head. [9] Rather than | |
putting a comment in the test and hoping someone will read the test while | |
debugging the failure, we can explicitly say it's never going to work and skip | |
the test. | |
use Test::More tests => 7; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
# Make sure epoch time is being handled sanely. | |
my $t1 = Date::ICal->new( epoch => 0 ); | |
is( $t1->epoch, 0, "Epoch time of 0" ); | |
SKIP: { | |
skip('epoch to ICal not working on Mac OS', 6) | |
if $^O eq 'MacOS'; | |
is( $t1->ical, '19700101Z', " epoch to ical" ); | |
is( $t1->year, 1970, " year()" ); | |
is( $t1->month, 1, " month()" ); | |
is( $t1->day, 1, " day()" ); | |
# like the tests above, but starting with ical instead of epoch | |
my $t2 = Date::ICal->new( ical => '19700101Z' ); | |
is( $t2->ical, '19700101Z', "Start of epoch in ICal notation" ); | |
is( $t2->epoch, 0, " and back to ICal" ); | |
} | |
A little bit of magic happens here. When running on anything but MacOS, all | |
the tests run normally. But when on MacOS, C<skip()> causes the entire | |
contents of the SKIP block to be jumped over. It never runs. Instead, | |
C<skip()> prints special output that tells L<Test::Harness> that the tests have | |
been skipped. | |
1..7 | |
ok 1 - Epoch time of 0 | |
ok 2 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
ok 3 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
ok 4 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
ok 5 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
ok 6 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
ok 7 # skip epoch to ICal not working on MacOS | |
This means your tests won't fail on MacOS. This means fewer emails | |
from MacPerl users telling you about failing tests that you know will | |
never work. You've got to be careful with skip tests. These are for | |
tests which don't work and I<never will>. It is not for skipping | |
genuine bugs (we'll get to that in a moment). | |
The tests are wholly and completely skipped. [10] This will work. | |
SKIP: { | |
skip("I don't wanna die!"); | |
die, die, die, die, die; | |
} | |
=head2 Todo tests | |
While thumbing through the L<Date::ICal> man page, I came across this: | |
ical | |
$ical_string = $ical->ical; | |
Retrieves, or sets, the date on the object, using any | |
valid ICal date/time string. | |
"Retrieves or sets". Hmmm. I didn't see a test for using C<ical()> to set | |
the date in the Date::ICal test suite. So I wrote one: | |
use Test::More tests => 1; | |
use Date::ICal; | |
my $ical = Date::ICal->new; | |
$ical->ical('20201231Z'); | |
is( $ical->ical, '20201231Z', 'Setting via ical()' ); | |
Run that. I saw: | |
1..1 | |
not ok 1 - Setting via ical() | |
# Failed test (- at line 6) | |
# got: '20010814T233649Z' | |
# expected: '20201231Z' | |
# Looks like you failed 1 tests of 1. | |
Whoops! Looks like it's unimplemented. Assume you don't have the time to fix | |
this. [11] Normally, you'd just comment out the test and put a note in a todo | |
list somewhere. Instead, explicitly state "this test will fail" by wrapping it | |
in a C<TODO> block: | |
use Test::More tests => 1; | |
TODO: { | |
local $TODO = 'ical($ical) not yet implemented'; | |
my $ical = Date::ICal->new; | |
$ical->ical('20201231Z'); | |
is( $ical->ical, '20201231Z', 'Setting via ical()' ); | |
} | |
Now when you run, it's a little different: | |
1..1 | |
not ok 1 - Setting via ical() # TODO ical($ical) not yet implemented | |
# got: '20010822T201551Z' | |
# expected: '20201231Z' | |
L<Test::More> doesn't say "Looks like you failed 1 tests of 1". That '# | |
TODO' tells L<Test::Harness> "this is supposed to fail" and it treats a | |
failure as a successful test. You can write tests even before | |
you've fixed the underlying code. | |
If a TODO test passes, L<Test::Harness> will report it "UNEXPECTEDLY | |
SUCCEEDED". When that happens, remove the TODO block with C<local $TODO> and | |
turn it into a real test. | |
=head2 Testing with taint mode. | |
Taint mode is a funny thing. It's the globalest of all global | |
features. Once you turn it on, it affects I<all> code in your program | |
and I<all> modules used (and all the modules they use). If a single | |
piece of code isn't taint clean, the whole thing explodes. With that | |
in mind, it's very important to ensure your module works under taint | |
mode. | |
It's very simple to have your tests run under taint mode. Just throw | |
a C<-T> into the C<#!> line. L<Test::Harness> will read the switches | |
in C<#!> and use them to run your tests. | |
#!/usr/bin/perl -Tw | |
...test normally here... | |
When you say C<make test> it will run with taint mode on. | |
=head1 FOOTNOTES | |
=over 4 | |
=item 1 | |
The first number doesn't really mean anything, but it has to be 1. | |
It's the second number that's important. | |
=item 2 | |
For those following along at home, I'm using version 1.31. It has | |
some bugs, which is good -- we'll uncover them with our tests. | |
=item 3 | |
You can actually take this one step further and test the manual | |
itself. Have a look at L<Test::Inline> (formerly L<Pod::Tests>). | |
=item 4 | |
Yes, there's a mistake in the test suite. What! Me, contrived? | |
=item 5 | |
We'll get to testing the contents of lists later. | |
=item 6 | |
But what happens if your test program dies halfway through?! Since we | |
didn't say how many tests we're going to run, how can we know it | |
failed? No problem, L<Test::More> employs some magic to catch that death | |
and turn the test into a failure, even if every test passed up to that | |
point. | |
=item 7 | |
I cleaned it up a little. | |
=item 8 | |
Most Operating Systems record time as the number of seconds since a | |
certain date. This date is the beginning of the epoch. Unix's starts | |
at midnight January 1st, 1970 GMT. | |
=item 9 | |
MacOS's epoch is midnight January 1st, 1904. VMS's is midnight, | |
November 17th, 1858, but vmsperl emulates the Unix epoch so it's not a | |
problem. | |
=item 10 | |
As long as the code inside the SKIP block at least compiles. Please | |
don't ask how. No, it's not a filter. | |
=item 11 | |
Do NOT be tempted to use TODO tests as a way to avoid fixing simple | |
bugs! | |
=back | |
=head1 AUTHORS | |
Michael G Schwern E<lt>[email protected]<gt> and the perl-qa dancers! | |
=head1 MAINTAINERS | |
=over 4 | |
=item Chad Granum E<lt>[email protected]<gt> | |
=back | |
=head1 COPYRIGHT | |
Copyright 2001 by Michael G Schwern E<lt>[email protected]<gt>. | |
This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it | |
under the same terms as Perl itself. | |
Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in these files | |
are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and | |
encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun | |
or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving | |
credit would be courteous but is not required. | |
=cut | |