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PK �*�\�@��� � Tester/Color.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::Tester::Color; use strict; our $VERSION = '1.302135'; require Test::Builder::Tester; =head1 NAME Test::Builder::Tester::Color - turn on colour in Test::Builder::Tester =head1 SYNOPSIS When running a test script perl -MTest::Builder::Tester::Color test.t =head1 DESCRIPTION Importing this module causes the subroutine color in Test::Builder::Tester to be called with a true value causing colour highlighting to be turned on in debug output. The sole purpose of this module is to enable colour highlighting from the command line. =cut sub import { Test::Builder::Tester::color(1); } =head1 AUTHOR Copyright Mark Fowler E<lt>mark@twoshortplanks.comE<gt> 2002. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 BUGS This module will have no effect unless Term::ANSIColor is installed. =head1 SEE ALSO L<Test::Builder::Tester>, L<Term::ANSIColor> =cut 1; PK �*�\���H5 H5 IO/Scalar.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::IO::Scalar; =head1 NAME Test::Builder::IO::Scalar - A copy of IO::Scalar for Test::Builder =head1 DESCRIPTION This is a copy of L<IO::Scalar> which ships with L<Test::Builder> to support scalar references as filehandles on Perl 5.6. Newer versions of Perl simply use C<open()>'s built in support. L<Test::Builder> can not have dependencies on other modules without careful consideration, so its simply been copied into the distribution. =head1 COPYRIGHT and LICENSE This file came from the "IO-stringy" Perl5 toolkit. Copyright (c) 1996 by Eryq. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 1999,2001 by ZeeGee Software Inc. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut # This is copied code, I don't care. ##no critic use Carp; use strict; use vars qw($VERSION @ISA); use IO::Handle; use 5.005; ### The package version, both in 1.23 style *and* usable by MakeMaker: $VERSION = "2.114"; ### Inheritance: @ISA = qw(IO::Handle); #============================== =head2 Construction =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item new [ARGS...] I<Class method.> Return a new, unattached scalar handle. If any arguments are given, they're sent to open(). =cut sub new { my $proto = shift; my $class = ref($proto) || $proto; my $self = bless \do { local *FH }, $class; tie *$self, $class, $self; $self->open(@_); ### open on anonymous by default $self; } sub DESTROY { shift->close; } #------------------------------ =item open [SCALARREF] I<Instance method.> Open the scalar handle on a new scalar, pointed to by SCALARREF. If no SCALARREF is given, a "private" scalar is created to hold the file data. Returns the self object on success, undefined on error. =cut sub open { my ($self, $sref) = @_; ### Sanity: defined($sref) or do {my $s = ''; $sref = \$s}; (ref($sref) eq "SCALAR") or croak "open() needs a ref to a scalar"; ### Setup: *$self->{Pos} = 0; ### seek position *$self->{SR} = $sref; ### scalar reference $self; } #------------------------------ =item opened I<Instance method.> Is the scalar handle opened on something? =cut sub opened { *{shift()}->{SR}; } #------------------------------ =item close I<Instance method.> Disassociate the scalar handle from its underlying scalar. Done automatically on destroy. =cut sub close { my $self = shift; %{*$self} = (); 1; } =back =cut #============================== =head2 Input and output =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item flush I<Instance method.> No-op, provided for OO compatibility. =cut sub flush { "0 but true" } #------------------------------ =item getc I<Instance method.> Return the next character, or undef if none remain. =cut sub getc { my $self = shift; ### Return undef right away if at EOF; else, move pos forward: return undef if $self->eof; substr(${*$self->{SR}}, *$self->{Pos}++, 1); } #------------------------------ =item getline I<Instance method.> Return the next line, or undef on end of string. Can safely be called in an array context. Currently, lines are delimited by "\n". =cut sub getline { my $self = shift; ### Return undef right away if at EOF: return undef if $self->eof; ### Get next line: my $sr = *$self->{SR}; my $i = *$self->{Pos}; ### Start matching at this point. ### Minimal impact implementation! ### We do the fast fast thing (no regexps) if using the ### classic input record separator. ### Case 1: $/ is undef: slurp all... if (!defined($/)) { *$self->{Pos} = length $$sr; return substr($$sr, $i); } ### Case 2: $/ is "\n": zoom zoom zoom... elsif ($/ eq "\012") { ### Seek ahead for "\n"... yes, this really is faster than regexps. my $len = length($$sr); for (; $i < $len; ++$i) { last if ord (substr ($$sr, $i, 1)) == 10; } ### Extract the line: my $line; if ($i < $len) { ### We found a "\n": $line = substr ($$sr, *$self->{Pos}, $i - *$self->{Pos} + 1); *$self->{Pos} = $i+1; ### Remember where we finished up. } else { ### No "\n"; slurp the remainder: $line = substr ($$sr, *$self->{Pos}, $i - *$self->{Pos}); *$self->{Pos} = $len; } return $line; } ### Case 3: $/ is ref to int. Do fixed-size records. ### (Thanks to Dominique Quatravaux.) elsif (ref($/)) { my $len = length($$sr); my $i = ${$/} + 0; my $line = substr ($$sr, *$self->{Pos}, $i); *$self->{Pos} += $i; *$self->{Pos} = $len if (*$self->{Pos} > $len); return $line; } ### Case 4: $/ is either "" (paragraphs) or something weird... ### This is Graham's general-purpose stuff, which might be ### a tad slower than Case 2 for typical data, because ### of the regexps. else { pos($$sr) = $i; ### If in paragraph mode, skip leading lines (and update i!): length($/) or (($$sr =~ m/\G\n*/g) and ($i = pos($$sr))); ### If we see the separator in the buffer ahead... if (length($/) ? $$sr =~ m,\Q$/\E,g ### (ordinary sep) TBD: precomp! : $$sr =~ m,\n\n,g ### (a paragraph) ) { *$self->{Pos} = pos $$sr; return substr($$sr, $i, *$self->{Pos}-$i); } ### Else if no separator remains, just slurp the rest: else { *$self->{Pos} = length $$sr; return substr($$sr, $i); } } } #------------------------------ =item getlines I<Instance method.> Get all remaining lines. It will croak() if accidentally called in a scalar context. =cut sub getlines { my $self = shift; wantarray or croak("can't call getlines in scalar context!"); my ($line, @lines); push @lines, $line while (defined($line = $self->getline)); @lines; } #------------------------------ =item print ARGS... I<Instance method.> Print ARGS to the underlying scalar. B<Warning:> this continues to always cause a seek to the end of the string, but if you perform seek()s and tell()s, it is still safer to explicitly seek-to-end before subsequent print()s. =cut sub print { my $self = shift; *$self->{Pos} = length(${*$self->{SR}} .= join('', @_) . (defined($\) ? $\ : "")); 1; } sub _unsafe_print { my $self = shift; my $append = join('', @_) . $\; ${*$self->{SR}} .= $append; *$self->{Pos} += length($append); 1; } sub _old_print { my $self = shift; ${*$self->{SR}} .= join('', @_) . $\; *$self->{Pos} = length(${*$self->{SR}}); 1; } #------------------------------ =item read BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET] I<Instance method.> Read some bytes from the scalar. Returns the number of bytes actually read, 0 on end-of-file, undef on error. =cut sub read { my $self = $_[0]; my $n = $_[2]; my $off = $_[3] || 0; my $read = substr(${*$self->{SR}}, *$self->{Pos}, $n); $n = length($read); *$self->{Pos} += $n; ($off ? substr($_[1], $off) : $_[1]) = $read; return $n; } #------------------------------ =item write BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET] I<Instance method.> Write some bytes to the scalar. =cut sub write { my $self = $_[0]; my $n = $_[2]; my $off = $_[3] || 0; my $data = substr($_[1], $off, $n); $n = length($data); $self->print($data); return $n; } #------------------------------ =item sysread BUF, LEN, [OFFSET] I<Instance method.> Read some bytes from the scalar. Returns the number of bytes actually read, 0 on end-of-file, undef on error. =cut sub sysread { my $self = shift; $self->read(@_); } #------------------------------ =item syswrite BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET] I<Instance method.> Write some bytes to the scalar. =cut sub syswrite { my $self = shift; $self->write(@_); } =back =cut #============================== =head2 Seeking/telling and other attributes =over 4 =cut #------------------------------ =item autoflush I<Instance method.> No-op, provided for OO compatibility. =cut sub autoflush {} #------------------------------ =item binmode I<Instance method.> No-op, provided for OO compatibility. =cut sub binmode {} #------------------------------ =item clearerr I<Instance method.> Clear the error and EOF flags. A no-op. =cut sub clearerr { 1 } #------------------------------ =item eof I<Instance method.> Are we at end of file? =cut sub eof { my $self = shift; (*$self->{Pos} >= length(${*$self->{SR}})); } #------------------------------ =item seek OFFSET, WHENCE I<Instance method.> Seek to a given position in the stream. =cut sub seek { my ($self, $pos, $whence) = @_; my $eofpos = length(${*$self->{SR}}); ### Seek: if ($whence == 0) { *$self->{Pos} = $pos } ### SEEK_SET elsif ($whence == 1) { *$self->{Pos} += $pos } ### SEEK_CUR elsif ($whence == 2) { *$self->{Pos} = $eofpos + $pos} ### SEEK_END else { croak "bad seek whence ($whence)" } ### Fixup: if (*$self->{Pos} < 0) { *$self->{Pos} = 0 } if (*$self->{Pos} > $eofpos) { *$self->{Pos} = $eofpos } return 1; } #------------------------------ =item sysseek OFFSET, WHENCE I<Instance method.> Identical to C<seek OFFSET, WHENCE>, I<q.v.> =cut sub sysseek { my $self = shift; $self->seek (@_); } #------------------------------ =item tell I<Instance method.> Return the current position in the stream, as a numeric offset. =cut sub tell { *{shift()}->{Pos} } #------------------------------ =item use_RS [YESNO] I<Instance method.> B<Deprecated and ignored.> Obey the current setting of $/, like IO::Handle does? Default is false in 1.x, but cold-welded true in 2.x and later. =cut sub use_RS { my ($self, $yesno) = @_; carp "use_RS is deprecated and ignored; \$/ is always consulted\n"; } #------------------------------ =item setpos POS I<Instance method.> Set the current position, using the opaque value returned by C<getpos()>. =cut sub setpos { shift->seek($_[0],0) } #------------------------------ =item getpos I<Instance method.> Return the current position in the string, as an opaque object. =cut *getpos = \&tell; #------------------------------ =item sref I<Instance method.> Return a reference to the underlying scalar. =cut sub sref { *{shift()}->{SR} } #------------------------------ # Tied handle methods... #------------------------------ # Conventional tiehandle interface: sub TIEHANDLE { ((defined($_[1]) && UNIVERSAL::isa($_[1], __PACKAGE__)) ? $_[1] : shift->new(@_)); } sub GETC { shift->getc(@_) } sub PRINT { shift->print(@_) } sub PRINTF { shift->print(sprintf(shift, @_)) } sub READ { shift->read(@_) } sub READLINE { wantarray ? shift->getlines(@_) : shift->getline(@_) } sub WRITE { shift->write(@_); } sub CLOSE { shift->close(@_); } sub SEEK { shift->seek(@_); } sub TELL { shift->tell(@_); } sub EOF { shift->eof(@_); } sub FILENO { -1 } #------------------------------------------------------------ 1; __END__ =back =cut =head1 WARNINGS Perl's TIEHANDLE spec was incomplete prior to 5.005_57; it was missing support for C<seek()>, C<tell()>, and C<eof()>. Attempting to use these functions with an IO::Scalar will not work prior to 5.005_57. IO::Scalar will not have the relevant methods invoked; and even worse, this kind of bug can lie dormant for a while. If you turn warnings on (via C<$^W> or C<perl -w>), and you see something like this... attempt to seek on unopened filehandle ...then you are probably trying to use one of these functions on an IO::Scalar with an old Perl. The remedy is to simply use the OO version; e.g.: $SH->seek(0,0); ### GOOD: will work on any 5.005 seek($SH,0,0); ### WARNING: will only work on 5.005_57 and beyond =head1 VERSION $Id: Scalar.pm,v 1.6 2005/02/10 21:21:53 dfs Exp $ =head1 AUTHORS =head2 Primary Maintainer David F. Skoll (F<dfs@roaringpenguin.com>). =head2 Principal author Eryq (F<eryq@zeegee.com>). President, ZeeGee Software Inc (F<http://www.zeegee.com>). =head2 Other contributors The full set of contributors always includes the folks mentioned in L<IO::Stringy/"CHANGE LOG">. But just the same, special thanks to the following individuals for their invaluable contributions (if I've forgotten or misspelled your name, please email me!): I<Andy Glew,> for contributing C<getc()>. I<Brandon Browning,> for suggesting C<opened()>. I<David Richter,> for finding and fixing the bug in C<PRINTF()>. I<Eric L. Brine,> for his offset-using read() and write() implementations. I<Richard Jones,> for his patches to massively improve the performance of C<getline()> and add C<sysread> and C<syswrite>. I<B. K. Oxley (binkley),> for stringification and inheritance improvements, and sundry good ideas. I<Doug Wilson,> for the IO::Handle inheritance and automatic tie-ing. =head1 SEE ALSO L<IO::String>, which is quite similar but which was designed more-recently and with an IO::Handle-like interface in mind, so you could mix OO- and native-filehandle usage without using tied(). I<Note:> as of version 2.x, these classes all work like their IO::Handle counterparts, so we have comparable functionality to IO::String. =cut PK �*�\%��|9 9 TodoDiag.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::TodoDiag; use strict; use warnings; our $VERSION = '1.302135'; BEGIN { require Test2::Event::Diag; our @ISA = qw(Test2::Event::Diag) } sub diagnostics { 0 } sub facet_data { my $self = shift; my $out = $self->SUPER::facet_data(); $out->{info}->[0]->{debug} = 0; return $out; } 1; __END__ =pod =encoding UTF-8 =head1 NAME Test::Builder::TodoDiag - Test::Builder subclass of Test2::Event::Diag =head1 DESCRIPTION This is used to encapsulate diag messages created inside TODO. =head1 SYNOPSIS You do not need to use this directly. =head1 SOURCE The source code repository for Test2 can be found at F<http://github.com/Test-More/test-more/>. =head1 MAINTAINERS =over 4 =item Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt> =back =head1 AUTHORS =over 4 =item Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt> =back =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2018 Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt>. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See F<http://dev.perl.org/licenses/> =cut PK �*�\��{�sF sF Tester.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::Tester; use strict; our $VERSION = '1.302135'; use Test::Builder; use Symbol; use Carp; =head1 NAME Test::Builder::Tester - test testsuites that have been built with Test::Builder =head1 SYNOPSIS use Test::Builder::Tester tests => 1; use Test::More; test_out("not ok 1 - foo"); test_fail(+1); fail("foo"); test_test("fail works"); =head1 DESCRIPTION A module that helps you test testing modules that are built with L<Test::Builder>. The testing system is designed to be used by performing a three step process for each test you wish to test. This process starts with using C<test_out> and C<test_err> in advance to declare what the testsuite you are testing will output with L<Test::Builder> to stdout and stderr. You then can run the test(s) from your test suite that call L<Test::Builder>. At this point the output of L<Test::Builder> is safely captured by L<Test::Builder::Tester> rather than being interpreted as real test output. The final stage is to call C<test_test> that will simply compare what you predeclared to what L<Test::Builder> actually outputted, and report the results back with a "ok" or "not ok" (with debugging) to the normal output. =cut #### # set up testing #### my $t = Test::Builder->new; ### # make us an exporter ### use Exporter; our @ISA = qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT = qw(test_out test_err test_fail test_diag test_test line_num); sub import { my $class = shift; my(@plan) = @_; my $caller = caller; $t->exported_to($caller); $t->plan(@plan); my @imports = (); foreach my $idx ( 0 .. $#plan ) { if( $plan[$idx] eq 'import' ) { @imports = @{ $plan[ $idx + 1 ] }; last; } } __PACKAGE__->export_to_level( 1, __PACKAGE__, @imports ); } ### # set up file handles ### # create some private file handles my $output_handle = gensym; my $error_handle = gensym; # and tie them to this package my $out = tie *$output_handle, "Test::Builder::Tester::Tie", "STDOUT"; my $err = tie *$error_handle, "Test::Builder::Tester::Tie", "STDERR"; #### # exported functions #### # for remembering that we're testing and where we're testing at my $testing = 0; my $testing_num; my $original_is_passing; # remembering where the file handles were originally connected my $original_output_handle; my $original_failure_handle; my $original_todo_handle; my $original_formatter; my $original_harness_env; # function that starts testing and redirects the filehandles for now sub _start_testing { # Hack for things that conditioned on Test-Stream being loaded $INC{'Test/Stream.pm'} ||= 'fake' if $INC{'Test/Moose/More.pm'}; # even if we're running under Test::Harness pretend we're not # for now. This needed so Test::Builder doesn't add extra spaces $original_harness_env = $ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} || 0; $ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} = 0; my $hub = $t->{Hub} || ($t->{Stack} ? $t->{Stack}->top : Test2::API::test2_stack->top); $original_formatter = $hub->format; unless ($original_formatter && $original_formatter->isa('Test::Builder::Formatter')) { my $fmt = Test::Builder::Formatter->new; $hub->format($fmt); } # remember what the handles were set to $original_output_handle = $t->output(); $original_failure_handle = $t->failure_output(); $original_todo_handle = $t->todo_output(); # switch out to our own handles $t->output($output_handle); $t->failure_output($error_handle); $t->todo_output($output_handle); # clear the expected list $out->reset(); $err->reset(); # remember that we're testing $testing = 1; $testing_num = $t->current_test; $t->current_test(0); $original_is_passing = $t->is_passing; $t->is_passing(1); # look, we shouldn't do the ending stuff $t->no_ending(1); } =head2 Functions These are the six methods that are exported as default. =over 4 =item test_out =item test_err Procedures for predeclaring the output that your test suite is expected to produce until C<test_test> is called. These procedures automatically assume that each line terminates with "\n". So test_out("ok 1","ok 2"); is the same as test_out("ok 1\nok 2"); which is even the same as test_out("ok 1"); test_out("ok 2"); Once C<test_out> or C<test_err> (or C<test_fail> or C<test_diag>) have been called, all further output from L<Test::Builder> will be captured by L<Test::Builder::Tester>. This means that you will not be able perform further tests to the normal output in the normal way until you call C<test_test> (well, unless you manually meddle with the output filehandles) =cut sub test_out { # do we need to do any setup? _start_testing() unless $testing; $out->expect(@_); } sub test_err { # do we need to do any setup? _start_testing() unless $testing; $err->expect(@_); } =item test_fail Because the standard failure message that L<Test::Builder> produces whenever a test fails will be a common occurrence in your test error output, and because it has changed between Test::Builder versions, rather than forcing you to call C<test_err> with the string all the time like so test_err("# Failed test ($0 at line ".line_num(+1).")"); C<test_fail> exists as a convenience function that can be called instead. It takes one argument, the offset from the current line that the line that causes the fail is on. test_fail(+1); This means that the example in the synopsis could be rewritten more simply as: test_out("not ok 1 - foo"); test_fail(+1); fail("foo"); test_test("fail works"); =cut sub test_fail { # do we need to do any setup? _start_testing() unless $testing; # work out what line we should be on my( $package, $filename, $line ) = caller; $line = $line + ( shift() || 0 ); # prevent warnings # expect that on stderr $err->expect("# Failed test ($filename at line $line)"); } =item test_diag As most of the remaining expected output to the error stream will be created by L<Test::Builder>'s C<diag> function, L<Test::Builder::Tester> provides a convenience function C<test_diag> that you can use instead of C<test_err>. The C<test_diag> function prepends comment hashes and spacing to the start and newlines to the end of the expected output passed to it and adds it to the list of expected error output. So, instead of writing test_err("# Couldn't open file"); you can write test_diag("Couldn't open file"); Remember that L<Test::Builder>'s diag function will not add newlines to the end of output and test_diag will. So to check Test::Builder->new->diag("foo\n","bar\n"); You would do test_diag("foo","bar") without the newlines. =cut sub test_diag { # do we need to do any setup? _start_testing() unless $testing; # expect the same thing, but prepended with "# " local $_; $err->expect( map { "# $_" } @_ ); } =item test_test Actually performs the output check testing the tests, comparing the data (with C<eq>) that we have captured from L<Test::Builder> against what was declared with C<test_out> and C<test_err>. This takes name/value pairs that effect how the test is run. =over =item title (synonym 'name', 'label') The name of the test that will be displayed after the C<ok> or C<not ok>. =item skip_out Setting this to a true value will cause the test to ignore if the output sent by the test to the output stream does not match that declared with C<test_out>. =item skip_err Setting this to a true value will cause the test to ignore if the output sent by the test to the error stream does not match that declared with C<test_err>. =back As a convenience, if only one argument is passed then this argument is assumed to be the name of the test (as in the above examples.) Once C<test_test> has been run test output will be redirected back to the original filehandles that L<Test::Builder> was connected to (probably STDOUT and STDERR,) meaning any further tests you run will function normally and cause success/errors for L<Test::Harness>. =cut sub test_test { # END the hack delete $INC{'Test/Stream.pm'} if $INC{'Test/Stream.pm'} && $INC{'Test/Stream.pm'} eq 'fake'; # decode the arguments as described in the pod my $mess; my %args; if( @_ == 1 ) { $mess = shift } else { %args = @_; $mess = $args{name} if exists( $args{name} ); $mess = $args{title} if exists( $args{title} ); $mess = $args{label} if exists( $args{label} ); } # er, are we testing? croak "Not testing. You must declare output with a test function first." unless $testing; my $hub = $t->{Hub} || Test2::API::test2_stack->top; $hub->format($original_formatter); # okay, reconnect the test suite back to the saved handles $t->output($original_output_handle); $t->failure_output($original_failure_handle); $t->todo_output($original_todo_handle); # restore the test no, etc, back to the original point $t->current_test($testing_num); $testing = 0; $t->is_passing($original_is_passing); # re-enable the original setting of the harness $ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} = $original_harness_env; # check the output we've stashed unless( $t->ok( ( $args{skip_out} || $out->check ) && ( $args{skip_err} || $err->check ), $mess ) ) { # print out the diagnostic information about why this # test failed local $_; $t->diag( map { "$_\n" } $out->complaint ) unless $args{skip_out} || $out->check; $t->diag( map { "$_\n" } $err->complaint ) unless $args{skip_err} || $err->check; } } =item line_num A utility function that returns the line number that the function was called on. You can pass it an offset which will be added to the result. This is very useful for working out the correct text of diagnostic functions that contain line numbers. Essentially this is the same as the C<__LINE__> macro, but the C<line_num(+3)> idiom is arguably nicer. =cut sub line_num { my( $package, $filename, $line ) = caller; return $line + ( shift() || 0 ); # prevent warnings } =back In addition to the six exported functions there exists one function that can only be accessed with a fully qualified function call. =over 4 =item color When C<test_test> is called and the output that your tests generate does not match that which you declared, C<test_test> will print out debug information showing the two conflicting versions. As this output itself is debug information it can be confusing which part of the output is from C<test_test> and which was the original output from your original tests. Also, it may be hard to spot things like extraneous whitespace at the end of lines that may cause your test to fail even though the output looks similar. To assist you C<test_test> can colour the background of the debug information to disambiguate the different types of output. The debug output will have its background coloured green and red. The green part represents the text which is the same between the executed and actual output, the red shows which part differs. The C<color> function determines if colouring should occur or not. Passing it a true or false value will enable or disable colouring respectively, and the function called with no argument will return the current setting. To enable colouring from the command line, you can use the L<Text::Builder::Tester::Color> module like so: perl -Mlib=Text::Builder::Tester::Color test.t Or by including the L<Test::Builder::Tester::Color> module directly in the PERL5LIB. =cut my $color; sub color { $color = shift if @_; $color; } =back =head1 BUGS Test::Builder::Tester does not handle plans well. It has never done anything special with plans. This means that plans from outside Test::Builder::Tester will effect Test::Builder::Tester, worse plans when using Test::Builder::Tester will effect overall testing. At this point there are no plans to fix this bug as people have come to depend on it, and Test::Builder::Tester is now discouraged in favor of C<Test2::API::intercept()>. See L<https://github.com/Test-More/test-more/issues/667> Calls C<< Test::Builder->no_ending >> turning off the ending tests. This is needed as otherwise it will trip out because we've run more tests than we strictly should have and it'll register any failures we had that we were testing for as real failures. The color function doesn't work unless L<Term::ANSIColor> is compatible with your terminal. Additionally, L<Win32::Console::ANSI> must be installed on windows platforms for color output. Bugs (and requests for new features) can be reported to the author though GitHub: L<https://github.com/Test-More/test-more/issues> =head1 AUTHOR Copyright Mark Fowler E<lt>mark@twoshortplanks.comE<gt> 2002, 2004. Some code taken from L<Test::More> and L<Test::Catch>, written by Michael G Schwern E<lt>schwern@pobox.comE<gt>. Hence, those parts Copyright Micheal G Schwern 2001. Used and distributed with permission. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 MAINTAINERS =over 4 =item Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt> =back =head1 NOTES Thanks to Richard Clamp E<lt>richardc@unixbeard.netE<gt> for letting me use his testing system to try this module out on. =head1 SEE ALSO L<Test::Builder>, L<Test::Builder::Tester::Color>, L<Test::More>. =cut 1; #################################################################### # Helper class that is used to remember expected and received data package Test::Builder::Tester::Tie; ## # add line(s) to be expected sub expect { my $self = shift; my @checks = @_; foreach my $check (@checks) { $check = $self->_account_for_subtest($check); $check = $self->_translate_Failed_check($check); push @{ $self->{wanted} }, ref $check ? $check : "$check\n"; } } sub _account_for_subtest { my( $self, $check ) = @_; my $hub = $t->{Stack}->top; my $nesting = $hub->isa('Test2::Hub::Subtest') ? $hub->nested : 0; return ref($check) ? $check : (' ' x $nesting) . $check; } sub _translate_Failed_check { my( $self, $check ) = @_; if( $check =~ /\A(.*)# (Failed .*test) \((.*?) at line (\d+)\)\Z(?!\n)/ ) { $check = "/\Q$1\E#\\s+\Q$2\E.*?\\n?.*?\Qat $3\E line \Q$4\E.*\\n?/"; } return $check; } ## # return true iff the expected data matches the got data sub check { my $self = shift; # turn off warnings as these might be undef local $^W = 0; my @checks = @{ $self->{wanted} }; my $got = $self->{got}; foreach my $check (@checks) { $check = "\Q$check\E" unless( $check =~ s,^/(.*)/$,$1, or ref $check ); return 0 unless $got =~ s/^$check//; } return length $got == 0; } ## # a complaint message about the inputs not matching (to be # used for debugging messages) sub complaint { my $self = shift; my $type = $self->type; my $got = $self->got; my $wanted = join '', @{ $self->wanted }; # are we running in colour mode? if(Test::Builder::Tester::color) { # get color eval { require Term::ANSIColor }; unless($@) { eval { require Win32::Console::ANSI } if 'MSWin32' eq $^O; # support color on windows platforms # colours my $green = Term::ANSIColor::color("black") . Term::ANSIColor::color("on_green"); my $red = Term::ANSIColor::color("black") . Term::ANSIColor::color("on_red"); my $reset = Term::ANSIColor::color("reset"); # work out where the two strings start to differ my $char = 0; $char++ while substr( $got, $char, 1 ) eq substr( $wanted, $char, 1 ); # get the start string and the two end strings my $start = $green . substr( $wanted, 0, $char ); my $gotend = $red . substr( $got, $char ) . $reset; my $wantedend = $red . substr( $wanted, $char ) . $reset; # make the start turn green on and off $start =~ s/\n/$reset\n$green/g; # make the ends turn red on and off $gotend =~ s/\n/$reset\n$red/g; $wantedend =~ s/\n/$reset\n$red/g; # rebuild the strings $got = $start . $gotend; $wanted = $start . $wantedend; } } my @got = split "\n", $got; my @wanted = split "\n", $wanted; $got = ""; $wanted = ""; while (@got || @wanted) { my $g = shift @got || ""; my $w = shift @wanted || ""; if ($g ne $w) { if($g =~ s/(\s+)$/ |> /g) { $g .= ($_ eq ' ' ? '_' : '\t') for split '', $1; } if($w =~ s/(\s+)$/ |> /g) { $w .= ($_ eq ' ' ? '_' : '\t') for split '', $1; } $g = "> $g"; $w = "> $w"; } else { $g = " $g"; $w = " $w"; } $got = $got ? "$got\n$g" : $g; $wanted = $wanted ? "$wanted\n$w" : $w; } return "$type is:\n" . "$got\nnot:\n$wanted\nas expected"; } ## # forget all expected and got data sub reset { my $self = shift; %$self = ( type => $self->{type}, got => '', wanted => [], ); } sub got { my $self = shift; return $self->{got}; } sub wanted { my $self = shift; return $self->{wanted}; } sub type { my $self = shift; return $self->{type}; } ### # tie interface ### sub PRINT { my $self = shift; $self->{got} .= join '', @_; } sub TIEHANDLE { my( $class, $type ) = @_; my $self = bless { type => $type }, $class; $self->reset; return $self; } sub READ { } sub READLINE { } sub GETC { } sub FILENO { } 1; PK �*�\Un��W W Module.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::Module; use strict; use Test::Builder; require Exporter; our @ISA = qw(Exporter); our $VERSION = '1.302135'; =head1 NAME Test::Builder::Module - Base class for test modules =head1 SYNOPSIS # Emulates Test::Simple package Your::Module; my $CLASS = __PACKAGE__; use parent 'Test::Builder::Module'; @EXPORT = qw(ok); sub ok ($;$) { my $tb = $CLASS->builder; return $tb->ok(@_); } 1; =head1 DESCRIPTION This is a superclass for L<Test::Builder>-based modules. It provides a handful of common functionality and a method of getting at the underlying L<Test::Builder> object. =head2 Importing Test::Builder::Module is a subclass of L<Exporter> which means your module is also a subclass of Exporter. @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, etc... all act normally. A few methods are provided to do the C<< use Your::Module tests => 23 >> part for you. =head3 import Test::Builder::Module provides an C<import()> method which acts in the same basic way as L<Test::More>'s, setting the plan and controlling exporting of functions and variables. This allows your module to set the plan independent of L<Test::More>. All arguments passed to C<import()> are passed onto C<< Your::Module->builder->plan() >> with the exception of C<< import =>[qw(things to import)] >>. use Your::Module import => [qw(this that)], tests => 23; says to import the functions C<this()> and C<that()> as well as set the plan to be 23 tests. C<import()> also sets the C<exported_to()> attribute of your builder to be the caller of the C<import()> function. Additional behaviors can be added to your C<import()> method by overriding C<import_extra()>. =cut sub import { my($class) = shift; Test2::API::test2_load() unless Test2::API::test2_in_preload(); # Don't run all this when loading ourself. return 1 if $class eq 'Test::Builder::Module'; my $test = $class->builder; my $caller = caller; $test->exported_to($caller); $class->import_extra( \@_ ); my(@imports) = $class->_strip_imports( \@_ ); $test->plan(@_); local $Exporter::ExportLevel = $Exporter::ExportLevel + 1; $class->Exporter::import(@imports); } sub _strip_imports { my $class = shift; my $list = shift; my @imports = (); my @other = (); my $idx = 0; while( $idx <= $#{$list} ) { my $item = $list->[$idx]; if( defined $item and $item eq 'import' ) { push @imports, @{ $list->[ $idx + 1 ] }; $idx++; } else { push @other, $item; } $idx++; } @$list = @other; return @imports; } =head3 import_extra Your::Module->import_extra(\@import_args); C<import_extra()> is called by C<import()>. It provides an opportunity for you to add behaviors to your module based on its import list. Any extra arguments which shouldn't be passed on to C<plan()> should be stripped off by this method. See L<Test::More> for an example of its use. B<NOTE> This mechanism is I<VERY ALPHA AND LIKELY TO CHANGE> as it feels like a bit of an ugly hack in its current form. =cut sub import_extra { } =head2 Builder Test::Builder::Module provides some methods of getting at the underlying Test::Builder object. =head3 builder my $builder = Your::Class->builder; This method returns the L<Test::Builder> object associated with Your::Class. It is not a constructor so you can call it as often as you like. This is the preferred way to get the L<Test::Builder> object. You should I<not> get it via C<< Test::Builder->new >> as was previously recommended. The object returned by C<builder()> may change at runtime so you should call C<builder()> inside each function rather than store it in a global. sub ok { my $builder = Your::Class->builder; return $builder->ok(@_); } =cut sub builder { return Test::Builder->new; } 1; PK �*�\��,'� � Formatter.pmnu �[��� package Test::Builder::Formatter; use strict; use warnings; our $VERSION = '1.302135'; BEGIN { require Test2::Formatter::TAP; our @ISA = qw(Test2::Formatter::TAP) } use Test2::Util::HashBase qw/no_header no_diag/; BEGIN { *OUT_STD = Test2::Formatter::TAP->can('OUT_STD'); *OUT_ERR = Test2::Formatter::TAP->can('OUT_ERR'); my $todo = OUT_ERR() + 1; *OUT_TODO = sub() { $todo }; } sub init { my $self = shift; $self->SUPER::init(@_); $self->{+HANDLES}->[OUT_TODO] = $self->{+HANDLES}->[OUT_STD]; } sub plan_tap { my ($self, $f) = @_; return if $self->{+NO_HEADER}; return $self->SUPER::plan_tap($f); } sub debug_tap { my ($self, $f, $num) = @_; return if $self->{+NO_DIAG}; my @out = $self->SUPER::debug_tap($f, $num); $self->redirect(\@out) if @out && $f->{about}->{package} eq 'Test::Builder::TodoDiag'; return @out; } sub info_tap { my ($self, $f) = @_; return if $self->{+NO_DIAG}; my @out = $self->SUPER::info_tap($f); $self->redirect(\@out) if @out && $f->{about}->{package} eq 'Test::Builder::TodoDiag'; return @out; } sub redirect { my ($self, $out) = @_; $_->[0] = OUT_TODO for @$out; } sub no_subtest_space { 1 } 1; __END__ =pod =encoding UTF-8 =head1 NAME Test::Builder::Formatter - Test::Builder subclass of Test2::Formatter::TAP =head1 DESCRIPTION This is what takes events and turns them into TAP. =head1 SYNOPSIS use Test::Builder; # Loads Test::Builder::Formatter for you =head1 SOURCE The source code repository for Test2 can be found at F<http://github.com/Test-More/test-more/>. =head1 MAINTAINERS =over 4 =item Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt> =back =head1 AUTHORS =over 4 =item Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt> =back =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2018 Chad Granum E<lt>exodist@cpan.orgE<gt>. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See F<http://dev.perl.org/licenses/> =cut PK �*�\�@��� � Tester/Color.pmnu �[��� PK �*�\���H5 H5 IO/Scalar.pmnu �[��� PK �*�\%��|9 9 �9 TodoDiag.pmnu �[��� PK �*�\��{�sF sF >