Perl::Critic::TestUtils - Utility functions for testing new Policies.
This is considered to be a public module. Any changes to its interface will go through a deprecation cycle.
use Perl::Critic::TestUtils qw(critique pcritique fcritique);
my $code = '<<END_CODE';
package Foo::Bar;
$foo = frobulator();
$baz = $foo ** 2;
1;
END_CODE
# Critique code against all loaded policies...
my $perl_critic_config = { -severity => 2 };
my $violation_count = critique( \$code, $perl_critic_config);
# Critique code against one policy...
my $custom_policy = 'Miscellanea::ProhibitFrobulation'
my $violation_count = pcritique( $custom_policy, \$code );
# Critique code against one filename-related policy...
my $custom_policy = 'Modules::RequireFilenameMatchesPackage'
my $violation_count = fcritique( $custom_policy, \$code, 'Foo/Bar.pm' );
This module is used by Perl::Critic only for self-testing. It provides a few handy subroutines for testing new Perl::Critic::Policy modules. Look at the test programs that ship with Perl::Critic for more examples of how to use these subroutines.
Asserts that the $version
passed matches the version of Perl::Critic.
If a user has a ~/.perlcriticrc file, this can interfere with testing. This handy method disables the search for that file -- simply call it at the top of your .t program. Note that this is not easily reversible, but that should not matter.
Test a block of code against the specified Perl::Critic::Config instance (or undef
for the default). Returns the violations that occurred.
Test a block of code against the specified Perl::Critic::Config instance (or undef
for the default). Returns the number of violations that occurred.
Like critique_with_violations()
, but tests only a single policy instead of the whole bunch.
Like critique()
, but tests only a single policy instead of the whole bunch.
Like pcritique_with_violations()
, but pretends that the code was loaded from the specified filename. This is handy for testing policies like Modules::RequireFilenameMatchesPackage
which care about the filename that the source derived from.
The $filename
parameter must be a relative path, not absolute. The file and all necessary subdirectories will be created via File::Temp and will be automatically deleted.
Like pcritique()
, but pretends that the code was loaded from the specified filename. This is handy for testing policies like Modules::RequireFilenameMatchesPackage
which care about the filename that the source derived from.
The $filename
parameter must be a relative path, not absolute. The file and all necessary subdirectories will be created via File::Temp and will be automatically deleted.
Searches the specified directory recursively for .run files. Each one found is parsed and a hash-of-list-of-hashes is returned. The outer hash is keyed on policy short name, like Modules::RequireEndWithOne
. The inner hash specifies a single test to be handed to pcritique()
or fcritique()
, including the code string, test name, etc. See below for the syntax of the .run files.
Answers whether author tests should run.
Returns a string containing the message that should be emitted when a test is skipped due to it being an author test when author tests are not enabled.
Returns a list of the directories contain code that needs to be tested when it is desired that the examples be included.
Returns a list of Policy packages that come bundled with this package. This functions by searching MANIFEST for lib/Perl/Critic/Policy/*.pm and converts the results to package names.
Returns a list of the packages of policies that are willing to function on the current system using the specified configuration.
Testing a policy follows a very simple pattern:
* Policy name
* Subtest name
* Optional parameters
* Number of failures expected
* Optional exception expected
* Optional filename for code
Each of the subtests for a policy is collected in a single .run file, with test properties as comments in front of each code block that describes how we expect Perl::Critic to react to the code. For example, say you have a policy called Variables::ProhibitVowels:
(In file t/Variables/ProhibitVowels.run)
## name Basics
## failures 1
## cut
my $vrbl_nm = 'foo'; # Good, vowel-free name
my $wango = 12; # Bad, pronouncable name
## name Sometimes Y
## failures 1
## cut
my $yllw = 0; # "y" not a vowel here
my $rhythm = 12; # But here it is
These are called "subtests", and two are shown above. The beauty of incorporating multiple subtests in a file is that the .run is itself a (mostly) valid Perl file, and not hidden in a HEREDOC, so your editor's color-coding still works, and it is much easier to work with the code and the POD.
If you need to pass any configuration parameters for your subtest, do so like this:
## parms { allow_y => '0' }
Note that all the values in this hash must be strings because that's what Perl::Critic will hand you from a .perlcriticrc.
If it's a TODO subtest (probably because of some weird corner of PPI that we exercised that Adam is getting around to fixing, right?), then make a ##TODO
entry.
## TODO Should pass when PPI 1.xxx comes out
If the code is expected to trigger an exception in the policy, indicate that like so:
## error 1
If you want to test the error message, mark it with /.../
to indicate a like()
test:
## error /Can't load Foo::Bar/
If the policy you are testing cares about the filename of the code, you can indicate that fcritique
should be used like so (see fcritique
for more details):
## filename lib/Foo/Bar.pm
The value of parms
will get eval
ed and passed to pcritique()
, so be careful.
In general, a subtest document runs from the ## cut
that starts it to either the next ## name
or the end of the file. In very rare circumstances you may need to end the test document earlier. A second ## cut
will do this. The only known need for this is in t/Miscellanea/RequireRcsKeywords.run, where it is used to prevent the RCS keywords in the file footer from producing false positives or negatives in the last test.
Note that nowhere within the .run file itself do you specify the policy that you're testing. That's implicit within the filename.
Test that we have a t/*/*.run for each lib/*/*.pm
Allow us to specify the nature of the failures, and which one. If there are 15 lines of code, and six of them fail, how do we know they're the right six?
Chris Dolan <cdolan@cpan.org> and the rest of the Perl::Critic team.
Copyright (c) 2005-2023 Chris Dolan.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.