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# TODO: # package Test::Base; use 5.006001; use Spiffy 0.30 -Base; use Spiffy ':XXX'; our $VERSION = '0.55'; my @test_more_exports; BEGIN { @test_more_exports = qw( ok isnt like unlike is_deeply cmp_ok skip todo_skip pass fail eq_array eq_hash eq_set plan can_ok isa_ok diag use_ok $TODO ); } use Test::More import => \@test_more_exports; use Carp; our @EXPORT = (@test_more_exports, qw( is no_diff blocks next_block first_block delimiters spec_file spec_string filters filters_delay filter_arguments run run_compare run_is run_is_deeply run_like run_unlike WWW XXX YYY ZZZ tie_output no_diag_on_only find_my_self default_object croak carp cluck confess )); field '_spec_file'; field '_spec_string'; field _filters => [qw(norm trim)]; field _filters_map => {}; field spec => -init => '$self->_spec_init'; field block_list => -init => '$self->_block_list_init'; field _next_list => []; field block_delim => -init => '$self->block_delim_default'; field data_delim => -init => '$self->data_delim_default'; field _filters_delay => 0; field _no_diag_on_only => 0; field block_delim_default => '==='; field data_delim_default => '---'; my $default_class; my $default_object; my $reserved_section_names = {}; sub default_object { $default_object ||= $default_class->new; return $default_object; } my $import_called = 0; sub import() { $import_called = 1; my $class = (grep /^-base$/i, @_) ? scalar(caller) : $_[0]; if (not defined $default_class) { $default_class = $class; } # else { # croak "Can't use $class after using $default_class" # unless $default_class->isa($class); # } unless (grep /^-base$/i, @_) { my @args; for (my $ii = 1; $ii <= $#_; ++$ii) { if ($_[$ii] eq '-package') { ++$ii; } else { push @args, $_[$ii]; } } Test::More->import(import => \@test_more_exports, @args) if @args; } _strict_warnings(); goto &Spiffy::import; } # Wrap Test::Builder::plan my $plan_code = \&Test::Builder::plan; my $Have_Plan = 0; { no warnings 'redefine'; *Test::Builder::plan = sub { $Have_Plan = 1; goto &$plan_code; }; } my $DIED = 0; $SIG{__DIE__} = sub { $DIED = 1; die @_ }; sub block_class { $self->find_class('Block') } sub filter_class { $self->find_class('Filter') } sub find_class { my $suffix = shift; my $class = ref($self) . "::$suffix"; return $class if $class->can('new'); $class = __PACKAGE__ . "::$suffix"; return $class if $class->can('new'); eval "require $class"; return $class if $class->can('new'); die "Can't find a class for $suffix"; } sub check_late { if ($self->{block_list}) { my $caller = (caller(1))[3]; $caller =~ s/.*:://; croak "Too late to call $caller()" } } sub find_my_self() { my $self = ref($_[0]) eq $default_class ? splice(@_, 0, 1) : default_object(); return $self, @_; } sub blocks() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); croak "Invalid arguments passed to 'blocks'" if @_ > 1; croak sprintf("'%s' is invalid argument to blocks()", shift(@_)) if @_ && $_[0] !~ /^[a-zA-Z]\w*$/; my $blocks = $self->block_list; my $section_name = shift || ''; my @blocks = $section_name ? (grep { exists $_->{$section_name} } @$blocks) : (@$blocks); return scalar(@blocks) unless wantarray; return (@blocks) if $self->_filters_delay; for my $block (@blocks) { $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; } return (@blocks); } sub next_block() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); my $list = $self->_next_list; if (@$list == 0) { $list = [@{$self->block_list}, undef]; $self->_next_list($list); } my $block = shift @$list; if (defined $block and not $block->is_filtered) { $block->run_filters; } return $block; } sub first_block() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_next_list([]); $self->next_block; } sub filters_delay() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_filters_delay(defined $_[0] ? shift : 1); } sub no_diag_on_only() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_no_diag_on_only(defined $_[0] ? shift : 1); } sub delimiters() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->check_late; my ($block_delimiter, $data_delimiter) = @_; $block_delimiter ||= $self->block_delim_default; $data_delimiter ||= $self->data_delim_default; $self->block_delim($block_delimiter); $self->data_delim($data_delimiter); return $self; } sub spec_file() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->check_late; $self->_spec_file(shift); return $self; } sub spec_string() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->check_late; $self->_spec_string(shift); return $self; } sub filters() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); if (ref($_[0]) eq 'HASH') { $self->_filters_map(shift); } else { my $filters = $self->_filters; push @$filters, @_; } return $self; } sub filter_arguments() { $Test::Base::Filter::arguments; } sub have_text_diff { eval { require Text::Diff; 1 } && $Text::Diff::VERSION >= 0.35 && $Algorithm::Diff::VERSION >= 1.15; } sub is($$;$) { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); my ($actual, $expected, $name) = @_; local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1; if ($ENV{TEST_SHOW_NO_DIFFS} or not defined $actual or not defined $expected or $actual eq $expected or not($self->have_text_diff) or $expected !~ /\n./s ) { Test::More::is($actual, $expected, $name); } else { $name = '' unless defined $name; ok $actual eq $expected, $name . "\n" . Text::Diff::diff(\$expected, \$actual); } } sub run(&;$) { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); my $callback = shift; for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; &{$callback}($block); } } my $name_error = "Can't determine section names"; sub _section_names { return @_ if @_ == 2; my $block = $self->first_block or croak $name_error; my @names = grep { $_ !~ /^(ONLY|LAST|SKIP)$/; } @{$block->{_section_order}[0] || []}; croak "$name_error. Need two sections in first block" unless @names == 2; return @names; } sub _assert_plan { plan('no_plan') unless $Have_Plan; } sub END { run_compare() unless $Have_Plan or $DIED or not $import_called; } sub run_compare() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_assert_plan; my ($x, $y) = $self->_section_names(@_); local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1; for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { next unless exists($block->{$x}) and exists($block->{$y}); $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; if (ref $block->$x) { is_deeply($block->$x, $block->$y, $block->name ? $block->name : ()); } elsif (ref $block->$y eq 'Regexp') { my $regexp = ref $y ? $y : $block->$y; like($block->$x, $regexp, $block->name ? $block->name : ()); } else { is($block->$x, $block->$y, $block->name ? $block->name : ()); } } } sub run_is() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_assert_plan; my ($x, $y) = $self->_section_names(@_); local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1; for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { next unless exists($block->{$x}) and exists($block->{$y}); $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; is($block->$x, $block->$y, $block->name ? $block->name : () ); } } sub run_is_deeply() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_assert_plan; my ($x, $y) = $self->_section_names(@_); for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { next unless exists($block->{$x}) and exists($block->{$y}); $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; is_deeply($block->$x, $block->$y, $block->name ? $block->name : () ); } } sub run_like() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_assert_plan; my ($x, $y) = $self->_section_names(@_); for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { next unless exists($block->{$x}) and defined($y); $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; my $regexp = ref $y ? $y : $block->$y; like($block->$x, $regexp, $block->name ? $block->name : () ); } } sub run_unlike() { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); $self->_assert_plan; my ($x, $y) = $self->_section_names(@_); for my $block (@{$self->block_list}) { next unless exists($block->{$x}) and defined($y); $block->run_filters unless $block->is_filtered; my $regexp = ref $y ? $y : $block->$y; unlike($block->$x, $regexp, $block->name ? $block->name : () ); } } sub _pre_eval { my $spec = shift; return $spec unless $spec =~ s/\A\s*<<<(.*?)>>>\s*$//sm; my $eval_code = $1; eval "package main; $eval_code"; croak $@ if $@; return $spec; } sub _block_list_init { my $spec = $self->spec; $spec = $self->_pre_eval($spec); my $cd = $self->block_delim; my @hunks = ($spec =~ /^(\Q${cd}\E.*?(?=^\Q${cd}\E|\z))/msg); my $blocks = $self->_choose_blocks(@hunks); $self->block_list($blocks); # Need to set early for possible filter use my $seq = 1; for my $block (@$blocks) { $block->blocks_object($self); $block->seq_num($seq++); } return $blocks; } sub _choose_blocks { my $blocks = []; for my $hunk (@_) { my $block = $self->_make_block($hunk); if (exists $block->{ONLY}) { diag "I found ONLY: maybe you're debugging?" unless $self->_no_diag_on_only; return [$block]; } next if exists $block->{SKIP}; push @$blocks, $block; if (exists $block->{LAST}) { return $blocks; } } return $blocks; } sub _check_reserved { my $id = shift; croak "'$id' is a reserved name. Use something else.\n" if $reserved_section_names->{$id} or $id =~ /^_/; } sub _make_block { my $hunk = shift; my $cd = $self->block_delim; my $dd = $self->data_delim; my $block = $self->block_class->new; $hunk =~ s/\A\Q${cd}\E[ \t]*(.*)\s+// or die; my $name = $1; my @parts = split /^\Q${dd}\E +\(?(\w+)\)? *(.*)?\n/m, $hunk; my $description = shift @parts; $description ||= ''; unless ($description =~ /\S/) { $description = $name; } $description =~ s/\s*\z//; $block->set_value(description => $description); my $section_map = {}; my $section_order = []; while (@parts) { my ($type, $filters, $value) = splice(@parts, 0, 3); $self->_check_reserved($type); $value = '' unless defined $value; $filters = '' unless defined $filters; if ($filters =~ /:(\s|\z)/) { croak "Extra lines not allowed in '$type' section" if $value =~ /\S/; ($filters, $value) = split /\s*:(?:\s+|\z)/, $filters, 2; $value = '' unless defined $value; $value =~ s/^\s*(.*?)\s*$/$1/; } $section_map->{$type} = { filters => $filters, }; push @$section_order, $type; $block->set_value($type, $value); } $block->set_value(name => $name); $block->set_value(_section_map => $section_map); $block->set_value(_section_order => $section_order); return $block; } sub _spec_init { return $self->_spec_string if $self->_spec_string; local $/; my $spec; if (my $spec_file = $self->_spec_file) { open FILE, $spec_file or die $!; $spec = <FILE>; close FILE; } else { $spec = do { package main; no warnings 'once'; <DATA>; }; } return $spec; } sub _strict_warnings() { require Filter::Util::Call; my $done = 0; Filter::Util::Call::filter_add( sub { return 0 if $done; my ($data, $end) = ('', ''); while (my $status = Filter::Util::Call::filter_read()) { return $status if $status < 0; if (/^__(?:END|DATA)__\r?$/) { $end = $_; last; } $data .= $_; $_ = ''; } $_ = "use strict;use warnings;$data$end"; $done = 1; } ); } sub tie_output() { my $handle = shift; die "No buffer to tie" unless @_; tie $handle, 'Test::Base::Handle', $_[0]; } sub no_diff { $ENV{TEST_SHOW_NO_DIFFS} = 1; } package Test::Base::Handle; sub TIEHANDLE() { my $class = shift; bless \ $_[0], $class; } sub PRINT { $$self .= $_ for @_; } #=============================================================================== # Test::Base::Block # # This is the default class for accessing a Test::Base block object. #=============================================================================== package Test::Base::Block; our @ISA = qw(Spiffy); our @EXPORT = qw(block_accessor); sub AUTOLOAD { return; } sub block_accessor() { my $accessor = shift; no strict 'refs'; return if defined &$accessor; *$accessor = sub { my $self = shift; if (@_) { Carp::croak "Not allowed to set values for '$accessor'"; } my @list = @{$self->{$accessor} || []}; return wantarray ? (@list) : $list[0]; }; } block_accessor 'name'; block_accessor 'description'; Spiffy::field 'seq_num'; Spiffy::field 'is_filtered'; Spiffy::field 'blocks_object'; Spiffy::field 'original_values' => {}; sub set_value { no strict 'refs'; my $accessor = shift; block_accessor $accessor unless defined &$accessor; $self->{$accessor} = [@_]; } sub run_filters { my $map = $self->_section_map; my $order = $self->_section_order; Carp::croak "Attempt to filter a block twice" if $self->is_filtered; for my $type (@$order) { my $filters = $map->{$type}{filters}; my @value = $self->$type; $self->original_values->{$type} = $value[0]; for my $filter ($self->_get_filters($type, $filters)) { $Test::Base::Filter::arguments = $filter =~ s/=(.*)$// ? $1 : undef; my $function = "main::$filter"; no strict 'refs'; if (defined &$function) { local $_ = join '', @value; my $old = $_; @value = &$function(@value); if (not(@value) or @value == 1 and $value[0] =~ /\A(\d+|)\z/ ) { if ($value[0] && $_ eq $old) { Test::Base::diag("Filters returning numbers are supposed to do munging \$_: your filter '$function' apparently doesn't."); } @value = ($_); } } else { my $filter_object = $self->blocks_object->filter_class->new; die "Can't find a function or method for '$filter' filter\n" unless $filter_object->can($filter); $filter_object->current_block($self); @value = $filter_object->$filter(@value); } # Set the value after each filter since other filters may be # introspecting. $self->set_value($type, @value); } } $self->is_filtered(1); } sub _get_filters { my $type = shift; my $string = shift || ''; $string =~ s/\s*(.*?)\s*/$1/; my @filters = (); my $map_filters = $self->blocks_object->_filters_map->{$type} || []; $map_filters = [ $map_filters ] unless ref $map_filters; my @append = (); for ( @{$self->blocks_object->_filters}, @$map_filters, split(/\s+/, $string), ) { my $filter = $_; last unless length $filter; if ($filter =~ s/^-//) { @filters = grep { $_ ne $filter } @filters; } elsif ($filter =~ s/^\+//) { push @append, $filter; } else { push @filters, $filter; } } return @filters, @append; } { %$reserved_section_names = map { ($_, 1); } keys(%Test::Base::Block::), qw( new DESTROY ); } __DATA__ =encoding utf8 =head1 NAME Test::Base - A Data Driven Testing Framework =head1 SYNOPSIS A new test module: # lib/MyProject/Test.pm package MyProject::Test; use Test::Base -Base; use MyProject; package MyProject::Test::Filter; use Test::Base::Filter -base; sub my_filter { return MyProject->do_something(shift); } A sample test: # t/sample.t use MyProject::Test; plan tests => 1 * blocks; run_is input => 'expected'; sub local_filter { s/my/your/; } __END__ === Test one (the name of the test) --- input my_filter local_filter my input lines --- expected expected output === Test two This is an optional description of this particular test. --- input my_filter other input lines --- expected other expected output =head1 DESCRIPTION Testing is usually the ugly part of Perl module authoring. Perl gives you a standard way to run tests with Test::Harness, and basic testing primitives with Test::More. After that you are pretty much on your own to develop a testing framework and philosophy. Test::More encourages you to make your own framework by subclassing Test::Builder, but that is not trivial. Test::Base gives you a way to write your own test framework base class that I<is> trivial. In fact it is as simple as two lines: package MyTestFramework; use Test::Base -Base; A module called C<MyTestFramework.pm> containing those two lines, will give all the power of Test::More and all the power of Test::Base to every test file that uses it. As you build up the capabilities of C<MyTestFramework>, your tests will have all of that power as well. C<MyTestFramework> becomes a place for you to put all of your reusable testing bits. As you write tests, you will see patterns and duplication, and you can "upstream" them into C<MyTestFramework>. Of course, you don't have to subclass Test::Base at all. You can use it directly in many applications, including everywhere you would use Test::More. Test::Base concentrates on offering reusable data driven patterns, so that you can write tests with a minimum of code. At the heart of all testing you have inputs, processes and expected outputs. Test::Base provides some clean ways for you to express your input and expected output data, so you can spend your time focusing on that rather than your code scaffolding. =head1 EXPORTED FUNCTIONS Test::Base extends Test::More and exports all of its functions. So you can basically write your tests the same as Test::More. Test::Base also exports many functions of its own: =head2 is(actual, expected, [test-name]) This is the equivalent of Test::More's C<is> function with one interesting twist. If your actual and expected results differ and the output is multi-line, this function will show you a unified diff format of output. Consider the benefit when looking for the one character that is different in hundreds of lines of output! Diff output requires the optional C<Text::Diff> CPAN module. If you don't have this module, the C<is()> function will simply give you normal Test::More output. To disable diffing altogether, set the C<TEST_SHOW_NO_DIFFS> environment variable (or C<$ENV{TEST_SHOW_NO_DIFFS}>) to a true value. You can also call the C<no_diff> function as a shortcut. =head2 blocks( [data-section-name] ) The most important function is C<blocks>. In list context it returns a list of C<Test::Base::Block> objects that are generated from the test specification in the C<DATA> section of your test file. In scalar context it returns the number of objects. This is useful to calculate your Test::More plan. Each Test::Base::Block object has methods that correspond to the names of that object's data sections. There is also a C<name> and a C<description> method for accessing those parts of the block if they were specified. The C<blocks> function can take an optional single argument, that indicates to only return the blocks that contain a particular named data section. Otherwise C<blocks> returns all blocks. my @all_of_my_blocks = blocks; my @just_the_foo_blocks = blocks('foo'); =head2 next_block() You can use the next_block function to iterate over all the blocks. while (my $block = next_block) { ... } It returns undef after all blocks have been iterated over. It can then be called again to reiterate. =head2 first_block() Returns the first block or undef if there are none. It resets the iterator to the C<next_block> function. =head2 run(&subroutine) There are many ways to write your tests. You can reference each block individually or you can loop over all the blocks and perform a common operation. The C<run> function does the looping for you, so all you need to do is pass it a code block to execute for each block. The C<run> function takes a subroutine as an argument, and calls the sub one time for each block in the specification. It passes the current block object to the subroutine. run { my $block = shift; is(process($block->foo), $block->bar, $block->name); }; =head2 run_is([data_name1, data_name2]) Many times you simply want to see if two data sections are equivalent in every block, probably after having been run through one or more filters. With the C<run_is> function, you can just pass the names of any two data sections that exist in every block, and it will loop over every block comparing the two sections. run_is 'foo', 'bar'; If no data sections are given C<run_is> will try to detect them automatically. NOTE: Test::Base will silently ignore any blocks that don't contain both sections. =head2 run_is_deeply([data_name1, data_name2]) Like C<run_is> but uses C<is_deeply> for complex data structure comparison. =head2 run_like([data_name, regexp | data_name]); The C<run_like> function is similar to C<run_is> except the second argument is a regular expression. The regexp can either be a C<qr{}> object or a data section that has been filtered into a regular expression. run_like 'foo', qr{<html.*}; run_like 'foo', 'match'; =head2 run_unlike([data_name, regexp | data_name]); The C<run_unlike> function is similar to C<run_like>, except the opposite. run_unlike 'foo', qr{<html.*}; run_unlike 'foo', 'no_match'; =head2 run_compare(data_name1, data_name2) The C<run_compare> function is like the C<run_is>, C<run_is_deeply> and the C<run_like> functions all rolled into one. It loops over each relevant block and determines what type of comparison to do. NOTE: If you do not specify either a plan, or run any tests, the C<run_compare> function will automatically be run. =head2 delimiters($block_delimiter, $data_delimiter) Override the default delimiters of C<===> and C<--->. =head2 spec_file($file_name) By default, Test::Base reads its input from the DATA section. This function tells it to get the spec from a file instead. =head2 spec_string($test_data) By default, Test::Base reads its input from the DATA section. This function tells it to get the spec from a string that has been prepared somehow. =head2 filters( @filters_list or $filters_hashref ) Specify a list of additional filters to be applied to all blocks. See L<FILTERS> below. You can also specify a hash ref that maps data section names to an array ref of filters for that data type. filters { xxx => [qw(chomp lines)], yyy => ['yaml'], zzz => 'eval', }; If a filters list has only one element, the array ref is optional. =head2 filters_delay( [1 | 0] ); By default Test::Base::Block objects are have all their filters run ahead of time. There are testing situations in which it is advantageous to delay the filtering. Calling this function with no arguments or a true value, causes the filtering to be delayed. use Test::Base; filters_delay; plan tests => 1 * blocks; for my $block (blocks) { ... $block->run_filters; ok($block->is_filtered); ... } In the code above, the filters are called manually, using the C<run_filters> method of Test::Base::Block. In functions like C<run_is>, where the tests are run automatically, filtering is delayed until right before the test. =head2 filter_arguments() Return the arguments after the equals sign on a filter. sub my_filter { my $args = filter_arguments; # is($args, 'whazzup'); ... } __DATA__ === A test --- data my_filter=whazzup =head2 tie_output() You can capture STDOUT and STDERR for operations with this function: my $out = ''; tie_output(*STDOUT, $buffer); print "Hey!\n"; print "Che!\n"; untie *STDOUT; is($out, "Hey!\nChe!\n"); =head2 no_diff() Turn off diff support for is() in a test file. =head2 default_object() Returns the default Test::Base object. This is useful if you feel the need to do an OO operation in otherwise functional test code. See L<OO> below. =head2 WWW() XXX() YYY() ZZZ() These debugging functions are exported from the Spiffy.pm module. See L<Spiffy> for more info. =head2 croak() carp() cluck() confess() You can use the functions from the Carp module without needing to import them. Test::Base does it for you by default. =head1 TEST SPECIFICATION Test::Base allows you to specify your test data in an external file, the DATA section of your program or from a scalar variable containing all the text input. A I<test specification> is a series of text lines. Each test (or block) is separated by a line containing the block delimiter and an optional test C<name>. Each block is further subdivided into named sections with a line containing the data delimiter and the data section name. A C<description> of the test can go on lines after the block delimiter but before the first data section. Here is the basic layout of a specification: === <block name 1> <optional block description lines> --- <data section name 1> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> --- <data section name 2> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> --- <data section name n> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> === <block name 2> <optional block description lines> --- <data section name 1> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> --- <data section name 2> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> --- <data section name n> <filter-1> <filter-2> <filter-n> <test data lines> Here is a code example: use Test::Base; delimiters qw(### :::); # test code here __END__ ### Test One We want to see if foo and bar are really the same... ::: foo a foo line another foo line ::: bar a bar line another bar line ### Test Two ::: foo some foo line some other foo line ::: bar some bar line some other bar line ::: baz some baz line some other baz line This example specifies two blocks. They both have foo and bar data sections. The second block has a baz component. The block delimiter is C<###> and the data delimiter is C<:::>. The default block delimiter is C<===> and the default data delimiter is C<--->. There are some special data section names used for control purposes: --- SKIP --- ONLY --- LAST A block with a SKIP section causes that test to be ignored. This is useful to disable a test temporarily. A block with an ONLY section causes only that block to be used. This is useful when you are concentrating on getting a single test to pass. If there is more than one block with ONLY, the first one will be chosen. Because ONLY is very useful for debugging and sometimes you forgot to remove the ONLY flag before commiting to the VCS or uploading to CPAN, Test::Base by default gives you a diag message saying I<I found ONLY ... maybe you're debugging?>. If you don't like it, use C<no_diag_on_only>. A block with a LAST section makes that block the last one in the specification. All following blocks will be ignored. =head1 FILTERS The real power in writing tests with Test::Base comes from its filtering capabilities. Test::Base comes with an ever growing set of useful generic filters than you can sequence and apply to various test blocks. That means you can specify the block serialization in the most readable format you can find, and let the filters translate it into what you really need for a test. It is easy to write your own filters as well. Test::Base allows you to specify a list of filters to each data section of each block. The default filters are C<norm> and C<trim>. These filters will be applied (in order) to the data after it has been parsed from the specification and before it is set into its Test::Base::Block object. You can add to the default filter list with the C<filters> function. You can specify additional filters to a specific block by listing them after the section name on a data section delimiter line. Example: use Test::Base; filters qw(foo bar); filters { perl => 'strict' }; sub upper { uc(shift) } __END__ === Test one --- foo trim chomp upper ... --- bar -norm ... --- perl eval dumper my @foo = map { - $_; } 1..10; \ @foo; Putting a C<-> before a filter on a delimiter line, disables that filter. =head2 Scalar vs List Each filter can take either a scalar or a list as input, and will return either a scalar or a list. Since filters are chained together, it is important to learn which filters expect which kind of input and return which kind of output. For example, consider the following filter list: norm trim lines chomp array dumper eval The data always starts out as a single scalar string. C<norm> takes a scalar and returns a scalar. C<trim> takes a list and returns a list, but a scalar is a valid list. C<lines> takes a scalar and returns a list. C<chomp> takes a list and returns a list. C<array> takes a list and returns a scalar (an anonymous array reference containing the list elements). C<dumper> takes a list and returns a scalar. C<eval> takes a scalar and creates a list. A list of exactly one element works fine as input to a filter requiring a scalar, but any other list will cause an exception. A scalar in list context is considered a list of one element. Data accessor methods for blocks will return a list of values when used in list context, and the first element of the list in scalar context. This is usually "the right thing", but be aware. =head2 The Stock Filters Test::Base comes with large set of stock filters. They are in the C<Test::Base::Filter> module. See L<Test::Base::Filter> for a listing and description of these filters. =head2 Rolling Your Own Filters Creating filter extensions is very simple. You can either write a I<function> in the C<main> namespace, or a I<method> in the C<Test::Base::Filter> namespace or a subclass of it. In either case the text and any extra arguments are passed in and you return whatever you want the new value to be. Here is a self explanatory example: use Test::Base; filters 'foo', 'bar=xyz'; sub foo { transform(shift); } sub Test::Base::Filter::bar { my $self = shift; # The Test::Base::Filter object my $data = shift; my $args = $self->current_arguments; my $current_block_object = $self->block; # transform $data in a barish manner return $data; } If you use the method interface for a filter, you can access the block internals by calling the C<block> method on the filter object. Normally you'll probably just use the functional interface, although all the builtin filters are methods. Note that filters defined in the C<main> namespace can look like: sub filter9 { s/foo/bar/; } since Test::Base automatically munges the input string into $_ variable and checks the return value of the function to see if it looks like a number. If you must define a filter that returns just a single number, do it in a different namespace as a method. These filters don't allow the simplistic $_ munging. =head1 OO Test::Base has a nice functional interface for simple usage. Under the hood everything is object oriented. A default Test::Base object is created and all the functions are really just method calls on it. This means if you need to get fancy, you can use all the object oriented stuff too. Just create new Test::Base objects and use the functions as methods. use Test::Base; my $blocks1 = Test::Base->new; my $blocks2 = Test::Base->new; $blocks1->delimiters(qw(!!! @@@))->spec_file('test1.txt'); $blocks2->delimiters(qw(### $$$))->spec_string($test_data); plan tests => $blocks1->blocks + $blocks2->blocks; # ... etc =head1 THE C<Test::Base::Block> CLASS In Test::Base, blocks are exposed as Test::Base::Block objects. This section lists the methods that can be called on a Test::Base::Block object. Of course, each data section name is also available as a method. =head2 name() This is the optional short description of a block, that is specified on the block separator line. =head2 description() This is an optional long description of the block. It is the text taken from between the block separator and the first data section. =head2 seq_num() Returns a sequence number for this block. Sequence numbers begin with 1. =head2 blocks_object() Returns the Test::Base object that owns this block. =head2 run_filters() Run the filters on the data sections of the blocks. You don't need to use this method unless you also used the C<filters_delay> function. =head2 is_filtered() Returns true if filters have already been run for this block. =head2 original_values() Returns a hash of the original, unfiltered values of each data section. =head1 SUBCLASSING One of the nicest things about Test::Base is that it is easy to subclass. This is very important, because in your personal project, you will likely want to extend Test::Base with your own filters and other reusable pieces of your test framework. Here is an example of a subclass: package MyTestStuff; use Test::Base -Base; our @EXPORT = qw(some_func); sub some_func { (my ($self), @_) = find_my_self(@_); ... } package MyTestStuff::Block; use base 'Test::Base::Block'; sub desc { $self->description(@_); } package MyTestStuff::Filter; use base 'Test::Base::Filter'; sub upper { $self->assert_scalar(@_); uc(shift); } Note that you don't have to re-Export all the functions from Test::Base. That happens automatically, due to the powers of Spiffy. The first line in C<some_func> allows it to be called as either a function or a method in the test code. =head1 DISTRIBUTION SUPPORT You might be thinking that you do not want to use Test::Base in you modules, because it adds an installation dependency. Fear not. Module::Install takes care of that. Just write a Makefile.PL that looks something like this: use inc::Module::Install; name 'Foo'; all_from 'lib/Foo.pm'; use_test_base; WriteAll; The line with C<use_test_base> will automatically bundle all the code the user needs to run Test::Base based tests. =head1 OTHER COOL FEATURES Test::Base automatically adds: use strict; use warnings; to all of your test scripts and Test::Base subclasses. A Spiffy feature indeed. =head1 HISTORY This module started its life with the horrible and ridicule inducing name C<Test::Chunks>. It was renamed to C<Test::Base> with the hope that it would be seen for the very useful module that it has become. If you are switching from C<Test::Chunks> to C<Test::Base>, simply substitute the concept and usage of C<chunks> to C<blocks>. =head1 AUTHOR Ingy döt Net <ingy@cpan.org> =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2006, 2008. Ingy döt Net. Copyright (c) 2005. Brian Ingerson. 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 =cut