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

6       Test::Some - test a subset of tests
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VERSION

9       version 0.2.1
10

SYNOPSIS

12           use Test::More;
13
14           use Test::Some 'foo';
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16           plant tests => 3;
17
18           subtest foo => sub { pass };
19
20           # will be skipped
21           subtest bar => sub { fail };
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DESCRIPTION

24       This module allows to run a subset of the 'subtest' tests given in a
25       test file.
26
27       The module declaration takes a whitelist of the subtests we want to
28       run.  Any subtest that doesn't match any of the whitelist items will be
29       skipped (or potentially bypassed).
30
31       The test files don't even need to be modified, as the module can also
32       be invoked from the command-line. E.g.,
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34           $ perl -MTest::Some=foo t/tests.t
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36       If no argument is given to the module declaration, the environment
37       variable "TEST_SOME" will be used as the defaults. For example, this is
38       equivalent to the example above:
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40           $ export TEST_SOME=foo
41           $ perl -MTest::Some t/tests.t
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43   Whitelist items
44       '~'
45
46       Tells Test::Some to bypass the non-whitelisted tests instead of
47       skipping them. That makes for a smaller output, but the test file would
48       now fail if it has a "plan tests =" $n> line (as we'll only report on
49       "$n - bypassed" tests).
50
51       Subtest name
52
53       At its most simple, the names of the subtests we want to run can be
54       passed.
55
56           # run subtests 'foo' and 'bar'
57           use Test::Some 'foo', 'bar';
58
59       Negation
60
61       An item prefixed with a bang (!) is negated.
62
63           use Test::Some '!foo';  # run all tests but 'foo'
64
65       Note that a subtest is run if it matches any item in the whitelist, so
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67           use Test::Some '!foo', '!bar';
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69       will run all tests as `foo` is not `bar` and vice versa.
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71       Regular expression
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73       A string beginning with a slash (/), or a regular expression object
74       will be considered to be a regular expression to be compared against
75       the subtest name
76
77           use Test::Some '/foo';  # only tests with 'foo' in their name
78
79           # equivalent to
80           use Test::Some qr/foo/;
81
82       Tags
83
84       Strings prefixed with a colon (:) are considered to be tags.
85
86           # run all tests with the 'basic' tag
87           use Test::Some ':basic';
88
89       Tags can be assigned to a subtest by putting them after the coderef.
90       E.g.,
91
92           subtest foo, sub {
93               ...
94           }, 'tag1', 'tag2';
95
96       Test::More's subtest ignore those trailing arguments, so they be put
97       there without breaking backward compatibility. If you want to give more
98       visibility to those tags, you can also do
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100           subtest foo => $_, 'tag1', 'tag2', for sub {
101               ...;
102           };
103
104       (that neat trick, incidentally, was pointed out by aristotle)
105
106       Code
107
108       A coderef can be passed. It'll have the subtest name and its tags
109       passed in as $_ and %_, respectively.
110
111           # run tests with tags 'important' *and* 'auth'
112           use Test::Some sub {
113               $_{important} and $_{auth}
114           };
115

SEE ALSO

117       * <http://techblog.babyl.ca/entry/test-some> - introduction blog entry
118

AUTHOR

120       Yanick Champoux <yanick@cpan.org>
121
123       This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Yanick Champoux.
124
125       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
126       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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130perl v5.34.0                      2022-01-21                     Test::Some(3)
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