NAME
Test::Aggregate - Aggregate *.t
tests to make them run faster.
VERSION
Version 0.370
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Aggregate;
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new( {
dirs => $aggregate_test_dir,
} );
$tests->run;
ok $some_data, 'Test::Aggregate also re-exports Test::More functions';
DESCRIPTION
WARNING: this is ALPHA code. The interface is not guaranteed to be stable. Further, check out Test::Aggregate::Nested (included with this distribution). It's a more robust implementation which does not have the same limitations as Test::Aggregate
.
A common problem with many test suites is that they can take a long time to run. The longer they run, the less likely you are to run the tests. This module borrows a trick from Apache::Registry
to load up your tests at once, create a separate package for each test and wraps each package in a method named run_the_tests
. This allows us to load perl only once and related modules only once. If you have modules which are expensive to load, this can dramatically speed up a test suite.
DEPRECATION
For a whole variety of reasons, tests run in BEGIN/CHECK/INIT/INIT blocks are now deprecated. They cause all sorts of test sequence headaches. Plus, they break the up-coming nested TAP work. You will have a problem if you use this common idiom:
BEGIN {
use_ok 'My::Module' or die;
}
Instead, just use
the module and put the use_ok
tests in a t/load.t file or something similar and don't aggregate it. See the following for more information: http://use.perl.org/~Ovid/journal/38974.
USAGE
Create a separate directory for your tests. This should not be a subdirectory of your regular test directory. Write a small driver program and put it in your regular test directory (t/
is the standard):
use Test::Aggregate;
my $other_test_dir = 'aggregate_tests';
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new( {
dirs => $other_test_dir
});
$tests->run;
ok $some_data, 'Test::Aggregate also re-exports Test::More functions';
Take your simplest tests and move them, one by one, into the new test directory and keep running the Test::Aggregate
program. You'll find some tests will not run in a shared environment like this. You can either fix the tests or simply leave them in your regular test directory. See how this distribution's tests are organized for an example.
Note that Test::Aggregate
also exports all exported functions from Test::More
, allowing you to run other tests after the aggregated tests have run.
use Test::Aggregate;
my $other_test_dir = 'aggregate_tests';
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new( {
dirs => $other_test_dir
});
$tests->run;
ok !(-f 't/data/tmp.txt'), '... and our temp file should be deleted';
Some tests cannot run in an aggregate environment. These may include test for this with the $ENV{TEST_AGGREGATE}
variable:
package Some::Package;
BEGIN {
die __PACKAGE__ ." cannot run in aggregated tests"
if $ENV{TEST_AGGREGATE};
}
METHODS
new
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new(
{
dirs => 'aggtests',
verbose => 1, # optional, but recommended
dump => 'dump.t', # optional
shuffle => 1, # optional
matching => qr/customer/, # optional
set_filenames => 0, # optional and not recommended
tidy => 1, # optional and experimental
test_nowarnings => 0, # optional and experimental
}
);
Creates a new Test::Aggregate
instance. Accepts a hashref with the following keys:
dirs
(either this ortests
is mandatory)The directories to look in for the aggregated tests. This may be a scalar value of a single directory or an array refernce of multiple directories.
tests
(either this ordirs
is mandatory)Instead of providing directories for the aggregated tests, you may supply an array reference with a list of tests to aggregate. If both are supplied, these tests will be appended to the list of tests found in
dirs
.The
matching
parameter does not apply to test files identified with this key.verbose
(optional, but strongly recommended)If set with a true value, each test programs success or failure will be indicated with a diagnostic output. The output below means that
aggtests/slow_load.t
was an aggregated test which failed. This means it's much easier to determine which aggregated tests are causing problems.t/aggregate.........2/? # ok - aggtests/boilerplate.t # ok - aggtests/00-load.t # not ok - aggtests/subs.t # ok - aggtests/slow_load.t t/aggregate.........ok t/pod-coverage......ok t/pod...............ok
Note that three possible values are allowed for
verbose
:0
(default)No individual test program success or failure will be displayed.
1
Only failing test programs will have their failure status shown.
2
All test programs will have their success/failure shown.
dump
(optional)You may list the name of a file to dump the aggregated tests to. This is useful if you have test failures and need to debug why the tests failed.
shuffle
(optional)Ordinarily, the tests are sorted by name and run in that order. This allows you to run them in any order.
matching
(optional)If supplied with a regular expression (requires the
qr
operator), will only run tests whose filename matches the regular expression.set_filenames
(optional)If supplied with a true value, this will cause the following to be added for each test:
local $0 = $test_filename;
This is the default behavior.
findbin
(optional)If supplied with a true value, this will cause FindBin::again() to be called before each test file.
This is turned off by default.
Note that older versions of FindBin (pre 1.47) sometimes get confused about where the bin directory is when I set
$0
. I don't know why, but this is a rarely used option and only happens pre 5.8 perl, so I'm not too worried about it. Just keep it in mind.dry
(optional)Just print the tests which will be run and the order they will be run in (obviously the order will be random if
shuffle
is true).tidy
If supplied a true value, attempts to run
Perl::Tidy
on the source code. This is a no-op ifPerl::Tidy
cannot be loaded. This option isexperimental
. Plus, if your tests are terribly convoluted, this could be slow and possibly buggy.If the value of this argument is the name of a file, assumes that this file is a
.perltidyrc
file.test_nowarnings
Disables
Test::NoWarnings
(fails if the module cannot be loaded).This is experimental and somewhat problematic. Let me know if there are any problems.
run
$tests->run;
Attempts to aggregate and run all tests listed in the directories specified in the constructor.
SETUP/TEARDOWN
Since BEGIN
and END
blocks are for the entire aggregated tests and not for each test program (see CAVEATS
), you might find that you need to have setup/teardown functions for tests. These are useful if you need to setup connections to test databases, clear out temp files, or any of a variety of tasks that your test suite might require. Here's a somewhat useless example, pulled from our tests:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use lib 'lib', 't/lib';
use Test::Aggregate;
use Test::More;
my $dump = 'dump.t';
my ( $startup, $shutdown ) = ( 0, 0 );
my ( $setup, $teardown ) = ( 0, 0 );
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new(
{
dirs => 'aggtests',
dump => $dump,
startup => sub { $startup++ },
shutdown => sub { $shutdown++ },
setup => sub { $setup++ },
teardown => sub { $teardown++ },
}
);
$tests->run;
is $startup, 1, 'Startup should be called once';
is $shutdown, 1, '... as should shutdown';
is $setup, 4, 'Setup should be called once for each test program';
is $teardown, 4, '... as should teardown';
Note that you can still dump these to a dump file. This will only work if Data::Dump::Streamer
1.11 or later is installed.
There are four attributes which can be passed to the constructor, each of which expects a code reference:
startup
startup => \&connect_to_database,
This function will be called before any of the tests are run. It is not run in a BEGIN block.
shutdown
shutdown => \&clean_up_temp_files,
This function will be called after all of the tests are run. It will not be called in an END block.
setup
setup => sub { my $filename = shift; # this gets run before each test program. },
The setup function will be run before every test program. The name of the test file will be passed as the first argument.
teardown
teardown => sub { my $filename = shift; # this gets run after every test program. }
The teardown function gets run after every test program. The name of the test file will be passed as the first argument.
GLOBAL VARIABLES
You shouldn't be using global variables and a dependence on them can break your code. However, Perl provides quite a few handy global variables which, unfortunately, can easily break your tests if you change them in one test and another assumes an unchanged value. As a result, we localize many of Perl's most common global variables for you, using the following syntax:
local %ENV = %ENV;
The following global variables are localized for you. Any others must be localized manually per test.
@INC
%ENV
%SIG
$/
$_
$|
CAVEATS
Not all tests can be included with this technique. If you have Test::Class
tests, there is no need to run them with this. Otherwise:
exit
Don't call exit() in your aggregated tests. We now warn very verbosely if this is done, but we still exit on the assumption that further tests cannot run.
__END__
and__DATA__
tokens.These won't work and the tests will call BAIL_OUT() if these tokens are seen. However, this limitation does not apply to Test::Aggregate::Nested.
BEGIN
andEND
blocks.Since all of the tests are aggregated together,
BEGIN
andEND
blocks will be for the scope of the entire set of aggregated tests. If you need setup/teardown facilities, see "TEARDOWN" in SETUP.Syntax errors
Any syntax errors encountered will cause this program to BAIL_OUT(). This is why it's recommended that you move your tests into your new directory one at a time: it makes it easier to figure out which one has caused the problem.
no_plan
Unfortunately, due to how this works, the plan is always
no_plan
. http://groups.google.com/group/perl.qa/browse_thread/thread/d58c49db734844f4/cd18996391acc601?#cd18996391acc601 for more information.Test::NoWarnings
Great module. It loves to break aggregated tests since some might have warnings when others will not. You can disable it like this:
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new( dirs => 'aggtests/', startup => sub { $INC{'Test/NoWarnings.pm'} = 1 }, );
As an alternative, you can also disable it with:
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new({ dirs => 'aggtests', test_nowarnings => 0, });
We do work internally to subtract the extra test added by
Test::NoWarnings
. It's painful and experimental. Good luck.Variable "$x" will not stay shared at (eval ...
Because each test is wrapped in a method call, any of your subs which access a variable in an outer scope will likely throw the above warning. Pass in arguments explicitly to suppress this.
Instead of:
my $x = 17; sub foo { my $y = shift; return $y + $x; }
Write this:
my $x = 17; sub foo { my ( $y, $x ) = @_; return $y + $x; }
However, consider Test::Aggregate::Nested. This warning does not apply with that module.
Singletons
Be very careful of code which loads singletons. Oftimes those singletons in test suites may be altered for testing purposes, but later attempts to use those singletons can fail dramatically as they're not expecting the alterations. (Your author has painfully learned this lesson with database connections).
DEBUGGING AGGREGATE TESTS
Before aggregating tests, make sure that you add tests one at a time to the aggregated test directory. Attempting to add many tests to the directory at once and then experiencing a failure means it will be much harder to track down which tests caused the failure.
Debugging aggregated tests which fail is a multi-step process. Let's say the following fails:
my $tests = Test::Aggregate->new(
{
dump => 'dump.t',
shuffle => 1,
dirs => 'aggtests',
}
);
$tests->run;
Manually run the tests
The first step is to manually run all of the tests in the aggtests
dir.
prove -r aggtests/
If the failures appear the same, fix them just like you would fix any other test failure and then rerun the Test::Aggregate
code.
Sometimes this means that a different number of tests run from what the aggregted tests run. Look for code which ends the program prematurely, such as an exception or an exit
statement.
Run a dump file
If this does not fix your problem, create a dump file by passing dump => $dumpfile
to the constructor (as in the above example). Then try running this dumpfile directly to attempt to replicate the error:
prove -r $dumpfile
Tweaking the dump file
Assuming the error has been replicated, open up the dump file. The beginning of the dump file will have some code which overrides some Test::Builder
internals. After that, you'll see the code which runs the tests. It will look similar to this:
if ( __FILE__ eq 'dump.t' ) {
Test::More::diag("******** running tests for aggtests/boilerplate.t ********")
if $ENV{TEST_VERBOSE};
aggtestsboilerplatet->run_the_tests;
Test::More::diag("******** running tests for aggtests/subs.t ********")
if $ENV{TEST_VERBOSE};
aggtestssubst->run_the_tests;
Test::More::diag("******** running tests for aggtests/00-load.t ********")
if $ENV{TEST_VERBOSE};
aggtests00loadt->run_the_tests;
Test::More::diag("******** running tests for aggtests/slow_load.t ********")
if $ENV{TEST_VERBOSE};
aggtestsslow_loadt->run_the_tests;
}
You can try to narrow down the problem by commenting out all of the run_the_tests
lines and gradually reintroducing them until you can figure out which one is actually causing the failure.
COMMON PITFALLS
My Tests Threw an Exception But Passed Anyway!
This really isn't a Test::Aggregate
problem so much as a general Perl problem. For each test file, Test::Aggregate
wraps the tests in an eval and checks my $error = $@
. Unfortunately, we sometimes get code like this:
$server->ip_address('apple');
And internally, the 'Server' class throws an exception but uses its own evals in a DESTROY
block (or something similar) to trap it. If the code you call uses an eval but fails to localize it, it wipes out your eval. Neat, eh? Thus, you never get a chance to see the error. For various reasons, this tends to impact Test::Aggregate
when a DESTROY
block is triggered and calls code which internally uses eval (e.g., DBIx::Class
). You can often fix this with:
DESTROY {
local $@ = $@; # localize but preserve the value
my $self = shift;
# do whatever you want
}
BEGIN
and END
blocks
Remember that since the tests are now being run at once, these blocks will no longer run on a per-test basis, but will run for the entire aggregated set of tests. You may need to examine these individually to determine the problem.
CHECK
and INIT
blocks.
Sorry, but you can't use these (just as in modperl). See perlmod for more information about them and why they won't work.
Test::NoWarnings
This is a great test module. When aggregating tests together, however, it can cause pain as you'll often discover warnings that you never new existed. For a quick fix, add this before you attempt to run your tests:
$INC{'Test/NoWarnings.pm'} = 1;
That will disable Test::NoWarnings
, but you'll want to go in later to fix them.
Paths
Many tests make assumptions about the paths to files and moving them into a new test directory can break this.
$0
Tests which use $0
can be problematic as the code is run in an eval
through Test::Aggregate
and $0
may not match expectations. This also means that it can behave differently if run directly from a dump file.
As it turns out, you can assign to $0
! We do this by default and set the $0
to the correct filename. If you don't want this behavior, pass set_filenames => 0
to the constructor.
Minimal test case
If you cannot solve the problem, feel free to try and create a minimal test case and send it to me (assuming it's something I can run).
AUTHOR
Curtis Poe, <ovid at cpan.org>
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-test-aggregate at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Test-Aggregate. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Test::Aggregate
You can also find information oneline:
http://metacpan.org/release/Test-Aggregate
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Many thanks to mauzo (http://use.perl.org/~mauzo/ for helping me find the 'skip_all' bug.
Thanks to Johan Lindström for pointing me to Apache::Registry.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2007 Curtis "Ovid" Poe, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.