NAME

Test::Able::Runner - use Test::Able without a bunch of boilerplate

VERSION

version 1.002

SYNOPSIS

use Test::Able::Runner;

use_test_packages
    -base_package => 'My::Project::Test';

run;

DESCRIPTION

I like Test::Able. I really don't like having to copy my boilerplate test runner and modify it when I use it in a new project. This provides a basic test runner for your testable tests that takes care of the basics for you. You can extend it a bit to customize things if you like as well. Let me know if you want this to do something else.

This mostly assumes that you want to run several tests as a group within a single Perl interpreter. If this is not what you want, then you probably don't want this module.

METHODS

use_test_packages

The first thing your test runner needs to do is call this method to tell it what packages need to be included in your test.

COMMON CASES

Before describing the options, here are some examples of how to use this subroutine.

EXAMPLE 1

use_test_packages
    -base_package => 'My::Project::Test',
    -test_path    => 't/lib';

This is pretty much the simplest case. This will load and run all the packages starting with the name "My::Project::Test" found in the project's t/lib directory. I show the -test_path option here, but in this case it's redundant. Your test path is assumed to be t/lib in the usual case.

EXAMPLE 2

use_test_packages
    -test_packages => [ qw(
        My::Project::Test::One
        My::Project::Test::Two
        My::Project::Test::Three
    ) ];

Rather than searching for any test packages you might have in your test folder, you might prefer to explicitly list them.

OPTIONS

-base_package

This is the package namespace to search for classes within. Any class found under this namespace (within any directory included in -test_path) will be run in your tests. If you want to include classes under this base package namespace that are not tests (test roles or base classes or whatever), you may place a global package variable within the package named $NOT_A_TEST and set it to a true value:

package My::Project::Test::Base;
use Test::Able;

our $NOT_A_TEST = 1;

You may use this option or the -test_packages option. This may be a single scalar package name

-test_packages

This is the list of test packages to load and run. It is always given as an array of package names.

-test_path

This is the search path for test classes. This lists additional paths that should be added to @INC to search for tests before loading the tests. These paths are added to the front of @INC.

It can be given as a single scalar or as an array of paths:

use_test_packages
    -base_package => 'My::Project::Test',
    -test_path    => [ 't/online', 't/offline' ];

init_meta

Sets up your test runner package.

run

This invokes the test runner for all the tests you've requested.

COOKBOOK

Here are some other things you might like to try.

Test Runner Tests

The test runner itself may have tests if you want. The test runner classes uses the usual Test::Able bits, so this works. Similarly, you can do setup, teardown, and all the rest in your runner.

use Test::Able::Runner;

use_test_packages
    -base_package => 'Foo::Test';

test plan => 1, test_something => sub {
    ok(1);
};

run;

AUTHOR

Andrew Sterling Hanenkamp <hanenkamp@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2010 Qubling Software LLC.

This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.