1Test::Mojibake(3)     User Contributed Perl Documentation    Test::Mojibake(3)
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NAME

6       Test::Mojibake - check your source for encoding misbehavior.
7

VERSION

9       version 0.3
10

SYNOPSIS

12           # Test::Mojibake lets you check for inconsistencies in source/documentation encoding, and report its results in standard Test::Simple fashion.
13
14           use Test::Mojibake;
15           file_encoding_ok($file, 'Valid encoding');
16           done_testing($num_tests);
17

DESCRIPTION

19       Many modern text editors automatically save files using UTF-8
20       codification, however, perl interpreter does not expects it by default.
21       Whereas this does not represent a big deal on (most) backend-oriented
22       programs, Web framework (Catalyst <http://www.catalystframework.org/>,
23       Mojolicious <http://mojolicio.us/>) based applications will suffer of
24       so-called Mojibake <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojibake> (lit.
25       "unintelligible sequence of characters").
26
27       Even worse: if an editor saves BOM (Byte Order Mark, "U+FEFF" character
28       in Unicode) at the start of the script with executable bit set (on Unix
29       systems), it won't execute at all, due to shebang corruption.
30
31       Avoiding codification problems is quite simple:
32
33       ·   Always "use utf8"/"use common::sense" when saving source as UTF-8;
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35       ·   Always specify "=encoding utf8" when saving POD as UTF-8;
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37       ·   Do neither of above when saving as ISO-8859-1;
38
39       ·   Never save BOM (not that it's wrong; just avoid it as you'll barely
40           notice it's presence when in trouble).
41
42       However, if you find yourself upgrading old code to use UTF-8 or trying
43       to standardize a big project with many developers each one using a
44       different platform/editor, reviewing all files manually can be quite
45       painful. Specially in cases when some files have multiple encodings
46       (note: it all started when I realized that Gedit & derivatives are
47       unable to open files with character conversion tables).
48
49       Enter the Test::Mojibake ";)"
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FUNCTIONS

52   file_encoding_ok( FILENAME[, TESTNAME ] )
53       Validates the codification of "FILENAME".
54
55       When it fails, "file_encoding_ok()" will report the probable cause.
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57       The optional second argument "TESTNAME" is the name of the test.  If it
58       is omitted, "file_encoding_ok()" chooses a default test name "Mojibake
59       test for FILENAME".
60
61   all_files_encoding_ok( [@entries] )
62       Validates codification of all the files under @entries. It runs
63       "all_files()" on directories and assumes everything else to be a file
64       to be tested. It calls the "plan()" function for you (one test for each
65       file), so you can't have already called "plan".
66
67       If @entries is empty or not passed, the function finds all
68       source/documentation files in files in the blib directory if it exists,
69       or the lib directory if not. A source/documentation file is one that
70       ends with .pod, .pl and .pm, or any file where the first line looks
71       like a shebang line.
72
73   all_files( [@dirs] )
74       Returns a list of all the Perl files in @dirs and in directories below.
75       If no directories are passed, it defaults to blib if blib exists, or
76       else lib if not. Skips any files in CVS, .svn, .git and similar
77       directories. See %Test::Mojibake::ignore_dirs for a list of them.
78
79       A Perl file is:
80
81       ·   Any file that ends in .PL, .pl, .pm, .pod, or .t;
82
83       ·   Any file that has a first line with a shebang and "perl" on it;
84
85       ·   Any file that ends in .bat and has a first line with "--*-Perl-*--"
86           on it.
87
88       The order of the files returned is machine-dependent.  If you want them
89       sorted, you'll have to sort them yourself.
90
91   _detect_utf8( \$string )
92       Detects presence of UTF-8 encoded characters in a referenced octet
93       stream.
94
95       Return codes:
96
97       ·   0 - 8-bit characters detected, does not validate as UTF-8;
98
99       ·   1 - only 7-bit characters;
100
101       ·   2 - 8-bit characters detected, validates as UTF-8.
102
103       Unicode::CheckUTF8 is highly recommended, however, it is optional and
104       this function will fallback to the Pure Perl implementation of the
105       following PHP code:
106       http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.utf8-encode.php#85293
107       <http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.utf8-encode.php#85293>
108

SAMPLE TEST SCRIPT

110       Module authors can include the following in a t/mojibake.t file and
111       have Test::Mojibake automatically find and check all source files in a
112       module distribution:
113
114           #!perl -T
115           use strict;
116
117           BEGIN {
118               unless ($ENV{RELEASE_TESTING}) {
119                   require Test::More;
120                   Test::More::plan(skip_all => 'these tests are for release candidate testing');
121               }
122           }
123
124           use Test::More;
125
126           eval 'use Test::Mojibake';
127           plan skip_all => 'Test::Mojibake required for source encoding testing' if $@;
128
129           all_files_encoding_ok();
130

OPERATION

132       Test::Mojibake validates codification of both source (Perl code) and
133       documentation (POD). Both are assumed to be encoded in ISO-8859-1 (aka
134       latin1). Perl switches to UTF-8 through the statement:
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136        use utf8;
137
138       or:
139
140        use common::sense;
141
142       Similarly, POD encoding can be changed via:
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144        =encoding utf8
145
146       Correspondingly, "no utf8"/"=encoding latin1" put Perl back into
147       ISO-8859-1 mode.
148
149       Actually, Test::Mojibake only cares about UTF-8, as it is roughly safe
150       to be detected. So, when UTF-8 characters are detected without
151       preceding declaration, an error is reported. On the other way,
152       non-UTF-8 characters in UTF-8 mode are wrong, either.
153
154       If present, Unicode::CheckUTF8 module (XS wrapper) will be used to
155       validate UTF-8 strings, note that it is 30 times faster and a lot more
156       Unicode Consortium compliant than the built-in Pure Perl
157       implementation!
158
159       UTF-8 BOM (Byte Order Mark) is also detected as an error. While Perl is
160       OK handling BOM, your OS probably isn't. Check out:
161
162        ./bom.pl: line 1: $'\357\273\277#!/usr/bin/perl': command not found
163
164   Caveats
165       Whole-line source comments, like:
166
167        # this is a whole-line comment...
168        print "### hello world ###\n"; # ...and this os not
169
170       are not checked at all. This is mainly because many scripts/modules do
171       contain authors' names in headers, before the proper encoding
172       specification. So, if you happen to have some acutes/umlauts in your
173       name and your editor sign your code in the similar way, you probably
174       won't be happy with Test::Mojibake flooding you with (false) error
175       messages.
176
177       If you are wondering why only whole-line comments are stripped, check
178       the second line of the above example.
179

SEE ALSO

181       ·   common::sense
182
183       ·   Dist::Zilla::Plugin::MojibakeTests
184
185       ·   Test::Perl::Critic
186
187       ·   Test::Pod
188
189       ·   Test::Pod::Coverage
190
191       ·   Test::Kwalitee
192

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

194       This module is based on Test::Pod.
195
196       Thanks to Andy Lester, David Wheeler, Paul Miller and Peter Edwards for
197       contributions and to "brian d foy" for the original code.
198

AUTHOR

200       Stanislaw Pusep <stas@sysd.org>
201
203       This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Stanislaw Pusep.
204
205       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
206       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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210perl v5.12.4                      2011-05-23                 Test::Mojibake(3)
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