ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages

 

This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles.

For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).



Test::Simple(3pm)                     Perl Programmers Reference Guide                     Test::Simple(3pm)



NAME
       Test::Simple - Basic utilities for writing tests.

SYNOPSIS
         use Test::Simple tests => 1;

         ok( $foo eq $bar, 'foo is bar' );

DESCRIPTION
       ** If you are unfamiliar with testing read Test::Tutorial first! **

       This is an extremely simple, extremely basic module for writing tests suitable for CPAN modules and
       other pursuits.  If you wish to do more complicated testing, use the Test::More module (a drop-in
       replacement for this one).

       The basic unit of Perl testing is the ok.  For each thing you want to test your program will print
       out an "ok" or "not ok" to indicate pass or fail.  You do this with the ok() function (see below).

       The only other constraint is you must pre-declare how many tests you plan to run.  This is in case
       something goes horribly wrong during the test and your test program aborts, or skips a test or what-ever. whatever.
       ever.  You do this like so:

           use Test::Simple tests => 23;

       You must have a plan.

       ok
             ok( $foo eq $bar, $name );
             ok( $foo eq $bar );

           ok() is given an expression (in this case "$foo eq $bar").  If it's true, the test passed.  If
           it's false, it didn't.  That's about it.

           ok() prints out either "ok" or "not ok" along with a test number (it keeps track of that for
           you).

             # This produces "ok 1 - Hell not yet frozen over" (or not ok)
             ok( get_temperature($hell) > 0, 'Hell not yet frozen over' );

           If you provide a $name, that will be printed along with the "ok/not ok" to make it easier to find
           your test when if fails (just search for the name).  It also makes it easier for the next guy to
           understand what your test is for.  It's highly recommended you use test names.

           All tests are run in scalar context.  So this:

               ok( @stuff, 'I have some stuff' );

           will do what you mean (fail if stuff is empty)

       Test::Simple will start by printing number of tests run in the form "1..M" (so "1..5" means you're
       going to run 5 tests).  This strange format lets Test::Harness know how many tests you plan on run-ning running
       ning in case something goes horribly wrong.

       If all your tests passed, Test::Simple will exit with zero (which is normal).  If anything failed it
       will exit with how many failed.  If you run less (or more) tests than you planned, the missing (or
       extras) will be considered failures.  If no tests were ever run Test::Simple will throw a warning and
       exit with 255.  If the test died, even after having successfully completed all its tests, it will
       still be considered a failure and will exit with 255.

       So the exit codes are...

           0                   all tests successful
           255                 test died or all passed but wrong # of tests run
           any other number    how many failed (including missing or extras)

       If you fail more than 254 tests, it will be reported as 254.

       This module is by no means trying to be a complete testing system.  It's just to get you started.
       Once you're off the ground its recommended you look at Test::More.

EXAMPLE
       Here's an example of a simple .t file for the fictional Film module.

           use Test::Simple tests => 5;

           use Film;  # What you're testing.

           my $btaste = Film->new({ Title    => 'Bad Taste',
                                    Director => 'Peter Jackson',
                                    Rating   => 'R',
                                    NumExplodingSheep => 1
                                  });
           ok( defined($btaste) && ref $btaste eq 'Film,     'new() works' );

           ok( $btaste->Title      eq 'Bad Taste',     'Title() get'    );
           ok( $btaste->Director   eq 'Peter Jackson', 'Director() get' );
           ok( $btaste->Rating     eq 'R',             'Rating() get'   );
           ok( $btaste->NumExplodingSheep == 1,        'NumExplodingSheep() get' );

       It will produce output like this:

           1..5
           ok 1 - new() works
           ok 2 - Title() get
           ok 3 - Director() get
           not ok 4 - Rating() get
           #   Failed test 'Rating() get'
           #   in t/film.t at line 14.
           ok 5 - NumExplodingSheep() get
           # Looks like you failed 1 tests of 5

       Indicating the Film::Rating() method is broken.

CAVEATS
       Test::Simple will only report a maximum of 254 failures in its exit code.  If this is a problem, you
       probably have a huge test script.  Split it into multiple files.  (Otherwise blame the Unix folks for
       using an unsigned short integer as the exit status).

       Because VMS's exit codes are much, much different than the rest of the universe, and perl does horri-ble horrible
       ble mangling to them that gets in my way, it works like this on VMS.

           0     SS$_NORMAL        all tests successful
           4     SS$_ABORT         something went wrong

       Unfortunately, I can't differentiate any further.

NOTES
       Test::Simple is explicitly tested all the way back to perl 5.004.

       Test::Simple is thread-safe in perl 5.8.0 and up.

HISTORY
       This module was conceived while talking with Tony Bowden in his kitchen one night about the problems
       I was having writing some really complicated feature into the new Testing module.  He observed that
       the main problem is not dealing with these edge cases but that people hate to write tests at all.
       What was needed was a dead simple module that took all the hard work out of testing and was really,
       really easy to learn.  Paul Johnson simultaneously had this idea (unfortunately, he wasn't in Tony's
       kitchen).  This is it.

SEE ALSO
       Test::More
           More testing functions!  Once you outgrow Test::Simple, look at Test::More.  Test::Simple is 100%
           forward compatible with Test::More (i.e. you can just use Test::More instead of Test::Simple in
           your programs and things will still work).

       Test
           The original Perl testing module.

       Test::Unit
           Elaborate unit testing.

       Test::Inline, SelfTest
           Embed tests in your code!

       Test::Harness
           Interprets the output of your test program.

AUTHORS
       Idea by Tony Bowden and Paul Johnson, code by Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>, wardrobe by
       Calvin Klein.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2001, 2002, 2004 by Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.

       See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html



perl v5.8.8                                      2001-09-21                                Test::Simple(3pm)

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.