Test::Class::Moose - Serious testing for serious Perl
version 0.99
package TestsFor::DateTime;
use Test::Class::Moose;
use DateTime;
# methods that begin with test_ are test methods.
sub test_constructor {
my $test = shift;
$test->test_report->plan(3); # strictly optional
can_ok 'DateTime', 'new';
my %args = (
year => 1967,
month => 6,
day => 20,
);
isa_ok my $date = DateTime->new(%args), 'DateTime';
is $date->year, $args{year}, '... and the year should be correct';
}
1;
See the Test::Class::Moose home page for a summary.
Test::Class::Moose
is a powerful testing framework for Perl. Out of the box
you get:
- Reporting
- Extensibility
- Tagging tests
- Parallel testing
- Test inheritance
- Write your tests using Moose
- All the testing functions and behavior from Test::Most
- Event handlers for startup, setup, teardown, and shutdown of test classes
Better docs will come later. You should already know how to use Moose and Test::Class.
Just use Test::Class::Moose
. That's all. You'll get all Test::Most test
functions, too, along with strict
and warnings
. You can use all Moose
behavior, too.
When you use Test::Class::Moose
it inserts itself as a parent class for
your test class. This means that if you try to use extends
in your test
class you will break things unless you include Test::Class::Moose
as a
parent. We recommend that you use roles in your test classes instead.
All method names that begin with test_
are test methods. Methods that do
not are not test methods.
sub test_this_is_a_method {
my $test = shift;
$test->this_is_not_a_test_method;
ok 1, 'whee!';
}
sub this_is_not_a_test_method {
my $test = shift;
# but you can, of course, call it like normal
}
You may specify Test
and Tests
method attributes, just like in
Test::Class and the method will automatically be a test method, even if
does not start with test_
:
sub this_is_a_test : Test {
pass 'we have a single test';
}
sub another_test_method : Tests { # like "no_plan"
# a bunch of tests
}
sub yet_another_test_method : Tests(7) { # sets plan to 7 tests
...
}
Note: Prior to version 0.51, this feature only worked if you had the
optional Sub::Attribute
installed.
No plans needed. The test suite declares a plan of the number of test classes.
Each test class is a subtest declaring a plan of the number of test methods.
Each test method relies on an implicit done_testing
call.
If you prefer, you can declare a plan in a test method:
sub test_something {
my $test = shift;
$test->test_report->plan($num_tests);
...
}
Or with a Tests
attribute:
sub test_something : Tests(3) {
my $test = shift;
...
}
You may call plan()
multiple times for a given test method. Each call to
plan()
will add that number of tests to the plan. For example, with a
method modifier:
before 'test_something' => sub {
my $test = shift;
$test->test_report->plan($num_extra_tests);
# more tests
};
Please note that if you call plan
, the plan will still show up at the end
of the subtest run, but you'll get the desired failure if the number of tests
run does not match the plan.
List it as the extends
in the import list. If the base class does not use
(or extend) Test::Class::Moose, then a compile-time error is thrown.
package TestsFor::Some::Class::Subclass;
use Test::Class::Moose extends => 'TestsFor::Some::Class';
sub test_me {
my $test = shift;
my $class = $test->test_class;
ok 1, "I overrode my parent! ($class)";
}
before 'test_this_baby' => sub {
my $test = shift;
my $class = $test->test_class;
pass "This should run before my parent method ($class)";
};
sub this_should_not_run {
my $test = shift;
fail "We should never see this test";
}
sub test_this_should_be_run {
for ( 1 .. 5 ) {
pass "This is test number $_ in this method";
}
}
1;
By default, when you use Test::Class::Moose
in your own test class, it
exports all the subs from Test::Most into your class. If you'd prefer to
import a different set of test tools, you can pass bare => 1
when using
Test::Class::Moose
:
use Test::Class::Moose bare => 1;
When you pass this, Test::Class::Moose
will not export Test::Most's subs
into your class. You will have to explicitly import something like
Test::More or Test2::Tools::Compare in order to actually perform tests.
If you'd like to provide a custom set of test modules to all of your test classes, this is easily done with Import::Into:
package MM::Test::Class::Moose;
use strict;
use warnings;
use namespace::autoclean ();
use Import::Into;
use Test::Class::Moose ();
use Test::Fatal;
use Test::More;
sub import {
my @imports = qw(
Test::Class::Moose
namespace::autoclean
Test::Fatal
Test::More
);
my $caller_level = 1;
$_->import::into($caller_level) for @imports;
}
You could also create a kit in a separate module like My::Test::Kit
using
Test::Kit and then simply export that from your My::Test::Class::Moose
module with Import::Into.
The test control methods are there to ensure that your tests are running with all of the resources they need. For example, database transactions might be started before a test method and rolled back after the test method. Fixtures needed for every test might be loaded and cleaned up. However you use them, it's important to understand when and how they're run.
-
test_startup
— Runs once when the test class starts up
-
test_setup
- Runs before each test method
-
test_teardown
- Runs after each test method
-
test_shutdown
- Runs once when the test class shuts down
Important: Do not run tests in test control methods. This will cause the test control method to fail (this is a feature, not a bug). If a test control method fails, the class/method will fail and testing for that class should stop.
The available test control methods are:
sub test_startup {
my $test = shift;
$test->next::method; # run this before your test_startup code
# more startup
}
Runs at the start of each test class. Quite often the base class that you
inherit from will have its own test_startup
code running (such as starting
a database transaction or connecting to an external resource). You almost
always want to call $test->next::method
before your own setup code.
This ensures that the environment is set up to safely run your code. For
example, if the parent test_startup
starts a database transaction with the
expectation that the test_teardown
will end the database transactions, you
can safely load database fixtures after that is run.
If you need to know the name of the class you're running this in (though
usually you shouldn't), use $test->test_class
, or you can do this:
sub test_startup {
my $test = shift;
my $report = $test->test_report;
my $instance = $report->current_instance->name;
my $upcoming_test_method = $report->current_method->name;
...
}
The $test->test_report
object is a Test::Class::Moose::Report::Instance
object.
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
$test->next::method; # run this before your test_setup code
# more setup
}
Runs at the start of each test method. If you must know the name of the test you're about to run, you can do this:
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
$test->next::method;
my $test_method = $test->test_report->current_method->name;
# do something with it
}
sub test_teardown {
my $test = shift;
# more teardown
$test->next::method; # run this after your test_teardown code
}
Runs at the end of each test method.
By default, this is not run if the test class is skipped entirely. You can
override the run_control_methods_on_skip
in your class to return a true
value in order to force this method to be run when the class is skipped.
sub test_shutdown {
my $test = shift;
# more teardown
$test->next::method; # run this after your test_shutdown code
}
Runs at the end of each test class.
By default, this is not run if the test class is skipped entirely. You can
override the run_control_methods_on_skip
in your class to return a true
value in order to force this method to be run when the class is skipped.
To override a test control method, just remember that this is OO:
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
$test->next::method; # call parent test_setup
# more setup code here
}
This feature is still considered experimental.
By default, each test class you create will be instantiated once. However, you can tell the Test::Class::Moose::Runner to create multiple instances of a test class.
To do this, simply consume the
Test::Class::Moose::Role::ParameterizedInstances role in your test
class. This role requires you to implement a _constructor_parameter_sets
method in your test class. That method will be called as a class method. It
is expected to return a list of key/value pairs. The keys are the name of the
instance and the values are hashrefs of attributes to be passed to your test
class's constructor. Here's a really dumb example:
package TestsFor::PlainAndFancy;
use Test::Class::Moose;
with 'Test::Class::Moose::Role::ParameterizedInstances';
has is_fancy => (
is => 'ro',
isa => 'Bool',
required => 1,
);
sub _constructor_parameter_sets {
my $class = shift;
return (
"$class - plain" => { is_fancy => 0 },
"$class - fancy" => { is_fancy => 1 },
);
}
sub test_something { ... }
The test runner will run all the test methods in your class once per
instance, and each instance will be run in its own subtest. You can
dynamically decide to skip your test class completely by having
_constructor_parameter_sets
return an empty list.
Note that this feature has great potential for abuse, so use it cautiously. That said, there are cases where this feature can greatly simplify your test code.
See the docs for Test::Class::Moose::Runner for details on running your test suite. If you'd like to get up and running quickly, here's a very simple test file you can use:
use Test::Class::Moose::CLI;
Test::Class::Moose::CLI->new_with_options->run;
Put this in a file like t/run-test-class.t
. When you run it with prove it
will load all the test classes defined in t/lib
and run them sequentially.
See the documentation for Test::Class::Moose::CLI on the options you can pass when running tests.
If you wish to skip a class, set the reason in the test_startup
method.
sub test_startup {
my $test = shift;
$test->test_skip("I don't want to run this class");
}
If you are using test class instances, you
can also make _constructor_parameter_sets
return an empty list,
which will result in the class being skipped.
Note that if you run test_skip
, the test_shutdown
method will also be
skipped. This is due to the assumption that you might not have run any setup
code and thus you don't need shutdown code. However, if you do need to run
shutdown, you can override the run_control_methods_on_skip
method to return
true:
sub run_control_methods_on_skip {1}
If you wish to skip an individual method, do so in the test_setup
method.
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
my $test_method = $test->test_report->current_method;
if ( 'test_time_travel' eq $test_method->name ) {
$test->test_skip("Time travel not yet available");
}
}
If you're comfortable with Test::Class, you know that test methods methods are
declared in Test::Class with Test
(for a method with a single test) or
Tests
, for a method with multiple tests. This also works for
Test::Class::Moose
. Test methods declared this way do not need to start
with test_
.
sub something_we_want_to_check : Test {
# this method may have only one test
}
sub something_else_to_check : Tests {
# this method may have multiple tests
}
sub another_test_method : Tests(3) {
# this method must have exactly 3 tests
}
If a test method overrides a parent test method and calls it, their plans will be added together:
package TestsFor::Parent;
use Test::Class::Moose;
sub some_test : Tests(3) {
# three tests
}
And later:
package TestsFor::Child;
use Test::Class::Moose extends => 'TestsFor::Parent';
sub some_test : Tests(2) {
my $test = shift;
$test->next::method;
# 2 tests here
}
In the above example, TestsFor::Parent::some_test
will run three tests, but
TestsFor::Child::some_test
will run five tests (two tests, plus the
three from the parent).
Note that if a plan is explicitly declared, any modifiers or overriding
methods calling the original method will also have to assert the number of
tests to ensure the plan is correct. The above TestsFor::Parent
and
TestsFor::Child
code would fail if the child's some_test
method
attribute was Tests
without the number of tests asserted.
Do not use Test
or Tests
with test control methods because you don't run
tests in those.
Sometimes you want to be able to assign metadata to help you better manage your test suite. You can do this with tags:
sub test_save_poll_data : Tags(api network) {
...
}
Tags are strictly optional and you can provide one or more tags for each test
method with a space separated list of tags. You can use this to filter your
tests suite, if desired. For example, if your network goes down and all tests
which rely on a network are tagged with network
, you can skip those tests
with this:
Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new( exclude_tags => 'network' )->runtests;
Or maybe you want to run all api
and database
tests, but skip those
marked deprecated
:
Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new(
include_tags => [qw/api database/],
exclude_tags => 'deprecated',
)->runtests;
You can also inspect tags within your test classes:
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
my $method_to_run = $test->test_report->current_method;
if ( $method_to_run->has_tag('db') ) {
$test->load_database_fixtures;
}
}
Tagging support relies on Sub::Attribute. If this module is not available,
include_tags
and exclude_tags
will be ignored, but a warning will be
issued if those are seen. Prior to version 0.51, Sub::Attribute
was
optional. Now it's mandatory, so those features should always work.
... but probably shouldn't.
As a general rule, methods beginning with /^test_/
are reserved for
Test::Class::Moose. This makes it easier to remember what you can and
cannot override. However, any test with Test
or Tests
are test methods
regardless of their names.
my $report = $test->test_report;
Returns the Test::Class::Moose::Report object. Useful if you want to do
your own reporting and not rely on the default output provided with the
statistics
boolean option.
You can also call it in test classes (most useful in the test_setup()
method):
sub test_setup {
my $test = shift;
$self->next::method;
my $report = $test->test_report;
my $instance = $test->current_instance;
my $method = $test->current_method; # the test method we're about to run
if ( $method->name =~ /customer/ ) {
$test->load_customer_fixture;
}
# or better still
if ( $method->has_tag('customer') ) {
$test->load_customer_fixture;
}
}
my $class = $test->test_class;
Returns the name for this test class. Useful if you rebless an object (such as applying a role at runtime) and don't want to lose the original class name.
You may override this in a subclass. Currently returns all methods in a test
class that start with test_
(except for the test control methods).
Please note that the behavior for include
and exclude
is also contained
in this method. If you override it, you will need to account for those
yourself.
Sadly, we have an import
method. This is used to automatically provide you
with all of the Test::Most behavior.
We use nested tests (subtests) at each level:
1..2
#
# Executing tests for TestsFor::Basic::Subclass
#
1..3
# TestsFor::Basic::Subclass->test_me()
ok 1 - I overrode my parent! (TestsFor::Basic::Subclass)
1..1
ok 1 - test_me
# TestsFor::Basic::Subclass->test_this_baby()
ok 1 - This should run before my parent method (TestsFor::Basic::Subclass)
ok 2 - whee! (TestsFor::Basic::Subclass)
1..2
ok 2 - test_this_baby
# TestsFor::Basic::Subclass->test_this_should_be_run()
ok 1 - This is test number 1 in this method
ok 2 - This is test number 2 in this method
ok 3 - This is test number 3 in this method
ok 4 - This is test number 4 in this method
ok 5 - This is test number 5 in this method
1..5
ok 3 - test_this_should_be_run
ok 1 - TestsFor::Basic::Subclass
#
# Executing tests for TestsFor::Basic
#
1..2
# TestsFor::Basic->test_me()
ok 1 - test_me() ran (TestsFor::Basic)
ok 2 - this is another test (TestsFor::Basic)
1..2
ok 1 - test_me
# TestsFor::Basic->test_this_baby()
ok 1 - whee! (TestsFor::Basic)
1..1
ok 2 - test_this_baby
ok 2 - TestsFor::Basic
# Test classes: 2
# Test methods: 5
# Total tests run: 11
ok
All tests successful.
Files=1, Tests=2, 2 wallclock secs ( 0.03 usr 0.00 sys + 0.27 cusr 0.01 csys = 0.31 CPU)
Result: PASS
See Test::Class::Moose::Report for more detailed information on reporting.
Reporting features are subject to change.
Sometimes you want more information about your test classes, it's time to do some reporting. Maybe you even want some tests for your reporting. If you do that, run the test suite in a subtest (because the plans will otherwise be wrong).
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use lib 'lib';
use Test::Most;
use Test::Class::Moose::Load qw(t/lib);
use Test::Class::Moose::Runner;
my $test_suite = Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new;
subtest 'run the test suite' => sub {
$test_suite->runtests;
};
my $report = $test_suite->test_report;
foreach my $class ( $report->all_test_instances ) {
my $class_name = $class->name;
ok !$class->is_skipped, "$class_name was not skipped";
ok $class->passed, "$class_name passed";
subtest "$class_name methods" => sub {
foreach my $method ( $class->all_test_methods ) {
my $method_name = $method->name;
ok $method->passed, "$method_name passed";
ok !$method->is_skipped, "$method_name was not skipped";
cmp_ok $method->num_tests, '>', 0,
'... and some tests should have been run';
diag "Run time for $method_name: ".$method->time->duration;
}
};
my $time = $class->time;
diag "Run time for $class_name: ".$class->time->duration;
my $real = $time->real;
my $user = $time->user;
my $system = $time->system;
# do with these as you will
}
diag "Number of test classes: " . $report->num_test_classes;
diag "Number of test instances: " . $report->num_test_instances;
diag "Number of test methods: " . $report->num_test_methods;
diag "Number of tests: " . $report->num_tests;
done_testing;
If you just want to output reporting information, you do not need to run the test suite in a subtest:
my $test_suite = Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new->runtests;
my $report = $test_suite->test_report;
...
Or even shorter:
my $report = Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new->runtests->test_report;
If you would like Test::Class::Moose to take care of loading your classes for you, see Test::Class::Moose::Role::AutoUse in this distribution.
- The Test::Class::Moose::Config class's
args
method is now deprecated. This was a holdover from when Test::Class::Moose was both a parent class for your test classes and the test class runner.
- The passing of the report object as an argument to test methods and test
control methods is now deprecated. You can get the report from the test class
object itself via the
$test->test_report
method. - The
Test::Class::Moose->runtests
method has been removed. Use Test::Class::Moose::Runner to run your test classes. - The
Test::Class::Moose::Role::Parallel
role has been removed. This has not done anything except issue a warning since version 0.55.
- The
test_teardown method
is no longer run when a test is skipped unlessrun_control_methods_on_skip
returns a true value. Thetest_teardown
method was never intended to be run unconditionally. - Parallel testing now parallelizes test classes rather than individual test instances. This is only relevant if your test suite contains parameterized test classes. This is slightly less efficient, but made the internal test running code much simpler and made it possible to fix reporting for parallel test runs.
- The Test::Class::Moose::Config
builder
method has been removed. - The Test::Class::Moose::Runner
builder
method has been removed.
-
The Test::Class::Moose::Report class's
all_test_classes
method is un-deprecatedThis method now returns a list of Test::Class::Moose::Report::Class objects. A class report contains one or more instance reports.
-
Removed the Test::Class::Moose::Report::Instance's error attribute. Contrary to the documentation, this attribute was never populated.
-
Renamed the Test::Class::Moose::Report::Method
instance_report
method toinstance
. This is a better match for other report-related methods, which don't include a "_report" suffix. -
Removed the long-deprecated
tests_run
methods from Test::Class::Moose::Report and Test::Class::Moose::Report::Method. -
Removed the long-deprecated
Test::Class::Moose::Report::Method->add_to_plan method
.
-
Running tests with Test::Class::Moose is deprecated - use Test::Class::Moose::Runner
As of version 0.55, running tests and being a test class have been separated. Your test classes should continue to
use Test::Class::Moose
, but your test runner script should use Test::Class::Moose::Runner:use Test::Class::Moose::Load 't/lib'; use Test::Class::Moose::Runner; Test::Class::Moose::Runner->new->runtests;
Calling
Test::Class::Moose->new->runtests
still works, but is deprecated and will issue a warning. -
Parallel testing is totally different
The
Test::Class::Moose::Role::Parallel
role won't do anything other than issue a warning. See the Test::Class::Moose::Runner docs for details on running tests in parallel. -
The Test::Class::Moose::Report
all_test_classes
method is deprecatedThis has been replaced with the
all_test_instances
method. Theall_test_classes
method is still present for backwards compatibility, but it simply callsall_test_instances
under the hood. -
The
Test::Class::Moose::Report::Class
class is goneIt has been replaced by the
Test::Class::Moose::Report::Instance
class, which has the same API. -
The
Test::Class::Moose::Report::Method
class_report
method has been renamedThis is now called
instance_report
.
-
test_reporting
As of version 0.40, the long deprecated method
test_reporting
has now been removed. -
$report
argument to methods deprecatedPrior to version 0.40, you used to have a second argument to all test methods and test control methods:
sub test_something { my ( $test, $report ) = @_; ... }
This was annoying. It was doubly annoying in test control methods in case you forgot it:
sub test_setup { my ( $test, $report ) = @_; $test->next::method; # oops, needed $report ... }
That second argument is still passed, but it's deprecated. It's now recommended that you call the
$test->test_report
method to get that. Instead of this:sub test_froblinator { my ( $test, $report ) = @_; $report->plan(7); ... }
You write this:
sub test_froblinator { my $test = shift; $test->test_report->plan(7); ... }
- Callbacks for tags (for example, 'critical' tags could bailout)
- New test phases - start and end suite, not just start and end class/method
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Test::Class::Moose
You can also look for information at:
-
CPAN Ratings
-
MetaCPAN
-
I always pointed people to this when they would ask about Test::Class + Moose, but I would always hear "that's not quite what I'm looking for". I don't quite understand what the reasoning was, but I strongly encourage you to take a look at Test::Routine.
-
Test::Routine, but with Moo instead of Moose.
-
xUnit-style testing in Perl.
Bugs may be submitted at https://github.com/houseabsolute/test-class-moose/issues.
I am also usually active on IRC as 'autarch' on irc://irc.perl.org
.
The source code repository for Test-Class-Moose can be found at https://github.com/houseabsolute/test-class-moose.
- Curtis "Ovid" Poe [email protected]
- Dave Rolsky [email protected]
- Andy Jack [email protected]
- Christopher Layne [email protected]
- Chuck Adams <[email protected]>
- Denny de la Haye [email protected]
- Desmond Daignault [email protected]
- Doug Bell [email protected]
- Gregory Oschwald [email protected]
- Harald Jörg [email protected]
- Iain Loasby [email protected]
- Jeremy Krieg [email protected]
- Jonathan C. Otsuka [email protected]
- Jonathan Stowe [email protected]
- jrubinator <[email protected]>
- Karen Etheridge [email protected]
- Larry Leszczynski [email protected]
- mark-5 [email protected]
- mephinet [email protected]
- Neil Bowers [email protected]
- Olaf Alders [email protected]
- Paul Boyd [email protected]
- Paul Williams [email protected]
- Petrea Corneliu Stefan [email protected]
- Steven Humphrey [email protected]
- Stuckdownawell [email protected]
- Tim Vroom [email protected]
- Tom Beresford [email protected]
- Tom Heady [email protected]
- Udo Oji [email protected]
This software is copyright (c) 2012 - 2021 by Curtis "Ovid" Poe.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the
LICENSE
file included with this distribution.