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Test2::Tools::Basic(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Test2::Tools::Basic(3) |
Test2::Tools::Basic - Test2 implementation of the basic testing tools.
This is a Test2 based implementation of the more basic tools originally provided
by Test::More. Not all Test::More tools are provided by this package, only the
basic/simple ones. Some tools have been modified for better diagnostics
capabilities.
use Test2::Tools::Basic;
ok($x, "simple test");
if ($passing) {
pass('a passing test');
}
else {
fail('a failing test');
}
diag "This is a diagnostics message on STDERR";
note "This is a diagnostics message on STDOUT";
{
my $todo = todo "Reason for todo";
ok(0, "this test is todo");
}
ok(1, "this test is not todo");
todo "reason" => sub {
ok(0, "this test is todo");
};
ok(1, "this test is not todo");
SKIP: {
skip "This will wipe your drive";
# This never gets run:
ok(!system('sudo rm -rf /'), "Wipe drive");
}
done_testing;
All subs are exported by default.
- plan($num)
- plan('tests' => $num)
- plan('skip_all' => $reason)
- Set the number of tests that are expected. This must be done first or
last, never in the middle of testing.
For legacy compatibility you can specify 'tests' as the first
argument before the number. You can also use this to skip all with the
'skip_all' prefix, followed by a reason for skipping.
- skip_all($reason)
- Set the plan to 0 with a reason, then exit true. This should be used
before any tests are run.
- done_testing
- Used to mark the end of testing. This is a safe way to have a dynamic or
unknown number of tests.
- bail_out($reason)
- Invoked when something has gone horribly wrong: stop everything, kill all
threads and processes, end the process with a false exit status.
- ok($bool)
- ok($bool, $name)
- ok($bool, $name, @diag)
- Simple assertion. If $bool is true the test
passes, and if it is false the test fails. The test name is optional, and
all arguments after the name are added as diagnostics message if and only
if the test fails. If the test passes all the diagnostics arguments will
be ignored.
- pass()
- pass($name)
- Fire off a passing test (a single Ok event). The name is optional
- fail()
- fail($name)
- fail($name, @diag)
- Fire off a failing test (a single Ok event). The name and diagnostics are
optional.
- diag(@messages)
- Write diagnostics messages. All items in @messages
will be joined into a single string with no separator. When using TAP,
diagnostics are sent to STDERR.
- note(@messages)
- Write note-diagnostics messages. All items in
@messages will be joined into a single string with
no separator. When using TAP, notes are sent to STDOUT.
- $todo = todo($reason)
- todo $reason => sub { ... }
- This is used to mark some results as TODO. TODO means that the test may
fail, but will not cause the overall test suite to fail.
There are two ways to use this. The first is to use a
codeblock, and the TODO will only apply to the codeblock.
ok(1, "before"); # Not TODO
todo 'this will fail' => sub {
# This is TODO, as is any other test in this block.
ok(0, "blah");
};
ok(1, "after"); # Not TODO
The other way is to use a scoped variable. TODO will end when
the variable is destroyed or set to undef.
ok(1, "before"); # Not TODO
{
my $todo = todo 'this will fail';
# This is TODO, as is any other test in this block.
ok(0, "blah");
};
ok(1, "after"); # Not TODO
This is the same thing, but without the
"{...}" scope.
ok(1, "before"); # Not TODO
my $todo = todo 'this will fail';
ok(0, "blah"); # TODO
$todo = undef;
ok(1, "after"); # Not TODO
- skip($why)
- skip($why, $count)
- This is used to skip some tests. This requires you to wrap your tests in a
block labeled "SKIP:". This is somewhat
magical. If no $count is specified then it will
issue a single result. If you specify $count it
will issue that many results.
SKIP: {
skip "This will wipe your drive";
# This never gets run:
ok(!system('sudo rm -rf /'), "Wipe drive");
}
The source code repository for Test2-Suite can be found at
https://github.com/Test-More/Test2-Suite/.
- Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
- Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
Copyright 2018 Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
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