1Test::Some(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Some(3)
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6 Test::Some - test a subset of tests
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9 version 0.2.1
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12 use Test::More;
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14 use Test::Some 'foo';
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16 plant tests => 3;
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18 subtest foo => sub { pass };
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20 # will be skipped
21 subtest bar => sub { fail };
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24 This module allows to run a subset of the 'subtest' tests given in a
25 test file.
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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).
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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 '~'
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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).
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51 Subtest name
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53 At its most simple, the names of the subtests we want to run can be
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56 # run subtests 'foo' and 'bar'
57 use Test::Some 'foo', 'bar';
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59 Negation
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61 An item prefixed with a bang (!) is negated.
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63 use Test::Some '!foo'; # run all tests but 'foo'
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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
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77 use Test::Some '/foo'; # only tests with 'foo' in their name
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79 # equivalent to
80 use Test::Some qr/foo/;
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82 Tags
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84 Strings prefixed with a colon (:) are considered to be tags.
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86 # run all tests with the 'basic' tag
87 use Test::Some ':basic';
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89 Tags can be assigned to a subtest by putting them after the coderef.
90 E.g.,
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92 subtest foo, sub {
93 ...
94 }, 'tag1', 'tag2';
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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 };
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104 (that neat trick, incidentally, was pointed out by aristotle)
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106 Code
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108 A coderef can be passed. It'll have the subtest name and its tags
109 passed in as $_ and %_, respectively.
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111 # run tests with tags 'important' *and* 'auth'
112 use Test::Some sub {
113 $_{important} and $_{auth}
114 };
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117 * <http://techblog.babyl.ca/entry/test-some> - introduction blog entry
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120 Yanick Champoux <yanick@cpan.org>
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123 This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Yanick Champoux.
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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)