# -*- Mode: cperl; cperl-indent-level: 4 -*- # $Id: Straps.pm,v 1.35 2003/12/31 02:34:22 andy Exp $ package Test::Harness::Straps; use strict; use vars qw($VERSION); use Config; $VERSION = '0.19'; use Test::Harness::Assert; use Test::Harness::Iterator; # Flags used as return values from our methods. Just for internal # clarification. my $TRUE = (1==1); my $FALSE = !$TRUE; my $YES = $TRUE; my $NO = $FALSE; =head1 NAME Test::Harness::Straps - detailed analysis of test results =head1 SYNOPSIS use Test::Harness::Straps; my $strap = Test::Harness::Straps->new; # Various ways to interpret a test my %results = $strap->analyze($name, \@test_output); my %results = $strap->analyze_fh($name, $test_filehandle); my %results = $strap->analyze_file($test_file); # UNIMPLEMENTED my %total = $strap->total_results; # Altering the behavior of the strap UNIMPLEMENTED my $verbose_output = $strap->dump_verbose(); $strap->dump_verbose_fh($output_filehandle); =head1 DESCRIPTION B in that the interface is subject to change in incompatible ways. It is otherwise stable. Test::Harness is limited to printing out its results. This makes analysis of the test results difficult for anything but a human. To make it easier for programs to work with test results, we provide Test::Harness::Straps. Instead of printing the results, straps provide them as raw data. You can also configure how the tests are to be run. The interface is currently incomplete. I contact the author if you'd like a feature added or something change or just have comments. =head1 Construction =head2 C my $strap = Test::Harness::Straps->new; Initialize a new strap. =cut sub new { my($proto) = shift; my($class) = ref $proto || $proto; my $self = bless {}, $class; $self->_init; return $self; } =head2 C<_init> $strap->_init; Initialize the internal state of a strap to make it ready for parsing. =cut sub _init { my($self) = shift; $self->{_is_vms} = ( $^O eq 'VMS' ); $self->{_is_win32} = ( $^O =~ /^(MS)?Win32$/ ); $self->{_is_macos} = ( $^O eq 'MacOS' ); } =head1 Analysis =head2 C my %results = $strap->analyze($name, \@test_output); Analyzes the output of a single test, assigning it the given C<$name> for use in the total report. Returns the C<%results> of the test. See L. C<@test_output> should be the raw output from the test, including newlines. =cut sub analyze { my($self, $name, $test_output) = @_; my $it = Test::Harness::Iterator->new($test_output); return $self->_analyze_iterator($name, $it); } sub _analyze_iterator { my($self, $name, $it) = @_; $self->_reset_file_state; $self->{file} = $name; my %totals = ( max => 0, seen => 0, ok => 0, todo => 0, skip => 0, bonus => 0, details => [] ); # Set them up here so callbacks can have them. $self->{totals}{$name} = \%totals; while( defined(my $line = $it->next) ) { $self->_analyze_line($line, \%totals); last if $self->{saw_bailout}; } $totals{skip_all} = $self->{skip_all} if defined $self->{skip_all}; my $passed = ($totals{max} == 0 && defined $totals{skip_all}) || ($totals{max} && $totals{seen} && $totals{max} == $totals{seen} && $totals{max} == $totals{ok}); $totals{passing} = $passed ? 1 : 0; return %totals; } sub _analyze_line { my($self, $line, $totals) = @_; my %result = (); $self->{line}++; my $type; if( $self->_is_header($line) ) { $type = 'header'; $self->{saw_header}++; $totals->{max} += $self->{max}; } elsif( $self->_is_test($line, \%result) ) { $type = 'test'; $totals->{seen}++; $result{number} = $self->{'next'} unless $result{number}; # sometimes the 'not ' and the 'ok' are on different lines, # happens often on VMS if you do: # print "not " unless $test; # print "ok $num\n"; if( $self->{saw_lone_not} && ($self->{lone_not_line} == $self->{line} - 1) ) { $result{ok} = 0; } my $pass = $result{ok}; $result{type} = 'todo' if $self->{todo}{$result{number}}; if( $result{type} eq 'todo' ) { $totals->{todo}++; $pass = 1; $totals->{bonus}++ if $result{ok} } elsif( $result{type} eq 'skip' ) { $totals->{skip}++; $pass = 1; } $totals->{ok}++ if $pass; if( $result{number} > 100000 && $result{number} > $self->{max} ) { warn "Enormous test number seen [test $result{number}]\n"; warn "Can't detailize, too big.\n"; } else { $totals->{details}[$result{number} - 1] = {$self->_detailize($pass, \%result)}; } # XXX handle counter mismatch } elsif ( $self->_is_bail_out($line, \$self->{bailout_reason}) ) { $type = 'bailout'; $self->{saw_bailout} = 1; } else { $type = 'other'; } $self->{callback}->($self, $line, $type, $totals) if $self->{callback}; $self->{'next'} = $result{number} + 1 if $type eq 'test'; } =head2 C my %results = $strap->analyze_fh($name, $test_filehandle); Like C, but it reads from the given filehandle. =cut sub analyze_fh { my($self, $name, $fh) = @_; my $it = Test::Harness::Iterator->new($fh); $self->_analyze_iterator($name, $it); } =head2 C my %results = $strap->analyze_file($test_file); Like C, but it runs the given C<$test_file> and parses its results. It will also use that name for the total report. =cut sub analyze_file { my($self, $file) = @_; unless( -e $file ) { $self->{error} = "$file does not exist"; return; } unless( -r $file ) { $self->{error} = "$file is not readable"; return; } local $ENV{PERL5LIB} = $self->_INC2PERL5LIB; # *sigh* this breaks under taint, but open -| is unportable. my $line = $self->_command_line($file); unless( open(FILE, "$line|") ) { print "can't run $file. $!\n"; return; } my %results = $self->analyze_fh($file, \*FILE); my $exit = close FILE; $results{'wait'} = $?; if( $? && $self->{_is_vms} ) { eval q{use vmsish "status"; $results{'exit'} = $?}; } else { $results{'exit'} = _wait2exit($?); } $results{passing} = 0 unless $? == 0; $self->_restore_PERL5LIB(); return %results; } eval { require POSIX; &POSIX::WEXITSTATUS(0) }; if( $@ ) { *_wait2exit = sub { $_[0] >> 8 }; } else { *_wait2exit = sub { POSIX::WEXITSTATUS($_[0]) } } =head2 C<_command_line( $file )> my $command_line = $self->_command_line(); Returns the full command line that will be run to test I<$file>. =cut sub _command_line { my $self = shift; my $file = shift; my $command = $self->_command(); my $switches = $self->_switches($file); $file = qq["$file"] if ($file =~ /\s/) && ($file !~ /^".*"$/); my $line = "$command $switches $file"; return $line; } =head2 C<_command> my $command = $self->_command(); Returns the command that runs the test. Combine this with _switches() to build a command line. Typically this is C<$^X>, but you can set C<$ENV{HARNESS_COMMAND}> to use a different Perl than what you're running the harness under. This might be to run a threaded Perl, for example. You can also overload this method if you've built your own strap subclass, such as a PHP interpreter for a PHP-based strap. =cut sub _command { my $self = shift; return $ENV{HARNESS_PERL} if defined $ENV{HARNESS_PERL}; return "MCR $^X" if $self->{_is_vms}; return Win32::GetShortPathName($^X) if $self->{_is_win32}; return $^X; } =head2 C<_switches> my $switches = $self->_switches($file); Formats and returns the switches necessary to run the test. =cut sub _switches { my($self, $file) = @_; my @existing_switches = $self->_cleaned_switches( $Test::Harness::Switches, $ENV{HARNESS_PERL_SWITCHES} ); my @derived_switches; local *TEST; open(TEST, $file) or print "can't open $file. $!\n"; my $shebang = ; close(TEST) or print "can't close $file. $!\n"; my $taint = ( $shebang =~ /^#!.*\bperl.*\s-\w*([Tt]+)/ ); push( @derived_switches, "-$1" ) if $taint; # When taint mode is on, PERL5LIB is ignored. So we need to put # all that on the command line as -Is. # MacPerl's putenv is broken, so it will not see PERL5LIB, tainted or not. if ( $taint || $self->{_is_macos} ) { my @inc = $self->_filtered_INC; push @derived_switches, map { "-I$_" } @inc; } # Quote the argument if there's any whitespace in it, or if # we're VMS, since VMS requires all parms quoted. Also, don't quote # it if it's already quoted. for ( @derived_switches ) { $_ = qq["$_"] if ((/\s/ || $self->{_is_vms}) && !/^".*"$/ ); } return join( " ", @existing_switches, @derived_switches ); } =head2 C<_cleaned_switches> my @switches = $self->_cleaned_switches( @switches_from_user ); Returns only defined, non-blank, trimmed switches from the parms passed. =cut sub _cleaned_switches { my $self = shift; local $_; my @switches; for ( @_ ) { my $switch = $_; next unless defined $switch; $switch =~ s/^\s+//; $switch =~ s/\s+$//; push( @switches, $switch ) if $switch ne ""; } return @switches; } =head2 C<_INC2PERL5LIB> local $ENV{PERL5LIB} = $self->_INC2PERL5LIB; Takes the current value of C<@INC> and turns it into something suitable for putting onto C. =cut sub _INC2PERL5LIB { my($self) = shift; $self->{_old5lib} = $ENV{PERL5LIB}; return join $Config{path_sep}, $self->_filtered_INC; } =head2 C<_filtered_INC> my @filtered_inc = $self->_filtered_INC; Shortens C<@INC> by removing redundant and unnecessary entries. Necessary for OSes with limited command line lengths, like VMS. =cut sub _filtered_INC { my($self, @inc) = @_; @inc = @INC unless @inc; if( $self->{_is_vms} ) { # VMS has a 255-byte limit on the length of %ENV entries, so # toss the ones that involve perl_root, the install location @inc = grep !/perl_root/i, @inc; } elsif ( $self->{_is_win32} ) { # Lose any trailing backslashes in the Win32 paths s/[\\\/+]$// foreach @inc; } my %dupes; @inc = grep !$dupes{$_}++, @inc; return @inc; } =head2 C<_restore_PERL5LIB> $self->_restore_PERL5LIB; This restores the original value of the C environment variable. Necessary on VMS, otherwise a no-op. =cut sub _restore_PERL5LIB { my($self) = shift; return unless $self->{_is_vms}; if (defined $self->{_old5lib}) { $ENV{PERL5LIB} = $self->{_old5lib}; } } =head1 Parsing Methods for identifying what sort of line you're looking at. =head2 C<_is_comment> my $is_comment = $strap->_is_comment($line, \$comment); Checks if the given line is a comment. If so, it will place it into C<$comment> (sans #). =cut sub _is_comment { my($self, $line, $comment) = @_; if( $line =~ /^\s*\#(.*)/ ) { $$comment = $1; return $YES; } else { return $NO; } } =head2 C<_is_header> my $is_header = $strap->_is_header($line); Checks if the given line is a header (1..M) line. If so, it places how many tests there will be in C<< $strap->{max} >>, a list of which tests are todo in C<< $strap->{todo} >> and if the whole test was skipped C<< $strap->{skip_all} >> contains the reason. =cut # Regex for parsing a header. Will be run with /x my $Extra_Header_Re = <<'REGEX'; ^ (?: \s+ todo \s+ ([\d \t]+) )? # optional todo set (?: \s* \# \s* ([\w:]+\s?) (.*) )? # optional skip with optional reason REGEX sub _is_header { my($self, $line) = @_; if( my($max, $extra) = $line =~ /^1\.\.(\d+)(.*)/ ) { $self->{max} = $max; assert( $self->{max} >= 0, 'Max # of tests looks right' ); if( defined $extra ) { my($todo, $skip, $reason) = $extra =~ /$Extra_Header_Re/xo; $self->{todo} = { map { $_ => 1 } split /\s+/, $todo } if $todo; if( $self->{max} == 0 ) { $reason = '' unless defined $skip and $skip =~ /^Skip/i; } $self->{skip_all} = $reason; } return $YES; } else { return $NO; } } =head2 C<_is_test> my $is_test = $strap->_is_test($line, \%test); Checks if the $line is a test report (ie. 'ok/not ok'). Reports the result back in C<%test> which will contain: ok did it succeed? This is the literal 'ok' or 'not ok'. name name of the test (if any) number test number (if any) type 'todo' or 'skip' (if any) reason why is it todo or skip? (if any) If will also catch lone 'not' lines, note it saw them C<< $strap->{saw_lone_not} >> and the line in C<< $strap->{lone_not_line} >>. =cut my $Report_Re = <<'REGEX'; ^ (not\ )? # failure? ok\b (?:\s+(\d+))? # optional test number \s* (.*) # and the rest REGEX my $Extra_Re = <<'REGEX'; ^ (.*?) (?:(?:[^\\]|^)# (.*))? $ REGEX sub _is_test { my($self, $line, $test) = @_; # We pulverize the line down into pieces in three parts. if( my($not, $num, $extra) = $line =~ /$Report_Re/ox ) { my ($name, $control) = $extra ? split(/(?:[^\\]|^)#/, $extra) : (); my ($type, $reason) = $control ? $control =~ /^\s*(\S+)(?:\s+(.*))?$/ : (); $test->{number} = $num; $test->{ok} = $not ? 0 : 1; $test->{name} = $name; if( defined $type ) { $test->{type} = $type =~ /^TODO$/i ? 'todo' : $type =~ /^Skip/i ? 'skip' : 0; } else { $test->{type} = ''; } $test->{reason} = $reason; return $YES; } else{ # Sometimes the "not " and "ok" will be on separate lines on VMS. # We catch this and remember we saw it. if( $line =~ /^not\s+$/ ) { $self->{saw_lone_not} = 1; $self->{lone_not_line} = $self->{line}; } return $NO; } } =head2 C<_is_bail_out> my $is_bail_out = $strap->_is_bail_out($line, \$reason); Checks if the line is a "Bail out!". Places the reason for bailing (if any) in $reason. =cut sub _is_bail_out { my($self, $line, $reason) = @_; if( $line =~ /^Bail out!\s*(.*)/i ) { $$reason = $1 if $1; return $YES; } else { return $NO; } } =head2 C<_reset_file_state> $strap->_reset_file_state; Resets things like C<< $strap->{max} >> , C<< $strap->{skip_all} >>, etc. so it's ready to parse the next file. =cut sub _reset_file_state { my($self) = shift; delete @{$self}{qw(max skip_all todo)}; $self->{line} = 0; $self->{saw_header} = 0; $self->{saw_bailout}= 0; $self->{saw_lone_not} = 0; $self->{lone_not_line} = 0; $self->{bailout_reason} = ''; $self->{'next'} = 1; } =head1 Results The C<%results> returned from C contain the following information: passing true if the whole test is considered a pass (or skipped), false if its a failure exit the exit code of the test run, if from a file wait the wait code of the test run, if from a file max total tests which should have been run seen total tests actually seen skip_all if the whole test was skipped, this will contain the reason. ok number of tests which passed (including todo and skips) todo number of todo tests seen bonus number of todo tests which unexpectedly passed skip number of tests skipped So a successful test should have max == seen == ok. There is one final item, the details. details an array ref reporting the result of each test looks like this: $results{details}[$test_num - 1] = { ok => is the test considered ok? actual_ok => did it literally say 'ok'? name => name of the test (if any) type => 'skip' or 'todo' (if any) reason => reason for the above (if any) }; Element 0 of the details is test #1. I tried it with element 1 being #1 and 0 being empty, this is less awkward. =head2 C<_detailize> my %details = $strap->_detailize($pass, \%test); Generates the details based on the last test line seen. C<$pass> is true if it was considered to be a passed test. C<%test> is the results of the test you're summarizing. =cut sub _detailize { my($self, $pass, $test) = @_; my %details = ( ok => $pass, actual_ok => $test->{ok} ); assert( !(grep !defined $details{$_}, keys %details), 'test contains the ok and actual_ok info' ); # We don't want these to be undef because they are often # checked and don't want the checker to have to deal with # uninitialized vars. foreach my $piece (qw(name type reason)) { $details{$piece} = defined $test->{$piece} ? $test->{$piece} : ''; } return %details; } =head1 EXAMPLES See F for an example of use. =head1 AUTHOR Michael G Schwern C<< >>, currently maintained by Andy Lester C<< >>. =head1 SEE ALSO L =cut 1;