Cmd(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Cmd(3)NAMETest::Cmd - Perl module for portable testing of commands and scripts
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Cmd;
$test = Test::Cmd->new(prog => 'program_or_script_to_test',
interpreter => 'script_interpreter',
string => 'identifier_string',
workdir => '',
subdir => 'dir',
match_sub => $code_ref,
verbose => 1);
$test->verbose(1);
$test->prog('program_or_script_to_test');
$test->basename(@suffixlist);
$test->interpreter('script_interpreter');
$test->string('identifier string');
$test->workdir('prefix');
$test->workpath('subdir', 'file');
$test->subdir('subdir', ...);
$test->subdir(['sub', 'dir'], ...);
$test->write('file', <<'EOF');
contents of file
EOF
$test->write(['subdir', 'file'], <<'EOF');
contents of file
EOF
$test->read(\$contents, 'file');
$test->read(\@lines, 'file');
$test->read(\$contents, ['subdir', 'file']);
$test->read(\@lines, ['subdir', 'file']);
$test->writable('dir');
$test->writable('dir', $rwflag);
$test->writable('dir', $rwflag, \%errors);
$test->preserve(condition, ...);
$test->cleanup(condition);
$test->run(prog => 'program_or_script_to_test',
interpreter => 'script_interpreter',
chdir => 'dir', args => 'arguments', stdin => <<'EOF');
input to program
EOF
$test->pass(condition);
$test->pass(condition, \&func);
$test->fail(condition);
$test->fail(condition, \&func);
$test->fail(condition, \&func, $caller);
$test->no_result(condition);
$test->no_result(condition, \&func);
$test->no_result(condition, \&func, $caller);
$test->stdout;
$test->stdout($run_number);
$test->stderr;
$test->stderr($run_number);
$test->match(\@lines, \@matches);
$test->match($lines, $matches);
$test->match_exact(\@lines, \@matches);
$test->match_exact($lines, $matches);
$test->match_regex(\@lines, \@regexes);
$test->match_regex($lines, $regexes);
$test->diff_exact(\@lines, \@matches, \@output);
$test->diff_exact($lines, $matches, \@output);
$test->diff_regex(\@lines, \@regexes, \@output);
$test->diff_regex($lines, $regexes, \@output);
sub func {
my ($self, $lines, $matches) = @_;
# code to match $lines and $matches
}
$test->match_sub(\&func);
$test->match_sub(sub { code to match $_[1] and $_[2] });
$test->here;
DESCRIPTION
The "Test::Cmd" module provides a low-level framework for portable
automated testing of executable commands and scripts (in any language,
not just Perl), especially commands and scripts that interact with the
file system.
The "Test::Cmd" module makes no assumptions about what constitutes a
successful or failed test. Attempting to read a file that doesn't
exist, for example, may or may not be an error, depending on the
software being tested.
Consequently, no "Test::Cmd" methods (including the "new()" method)
exit, die or throw any other sorts of exceptions (but they all do
return useful error indications). Exceptions or other error status
should be handled by a higher layer: a subclass of "Test::Cmd", or
another testing framework such as the "Test" or "Test::Simple" Perl
modules, or by the test itself.
(That said, see the "Test::Cmd::Common" module if you want a similar
module that provides exception handling, either to use directly in your
own tests, or as an example of how to use "Test::Cmd".)
In addition to running tests and evaluating conditions, the "Test::Cmd"
module manages and cleans up one or more temporary workspace
directories, and provides methods for creating files and directories in
those workspace directories from in-line data (that is, here-
documents), allowing tests to be completely self-contained. When used
in conjunction with another testing framework, the "Test::Cmd" module
can function as a fixture (common startup code for multiple tests) for
simple management of command execution and temporary workspaces.
The "Test::Cmd" module inherits "File::Spec" methods
("file_name_is_absolute()", "catfile()", etc.) to support writing tests
portably across a variety of operating and file systems.
A "Test::Cmd" environment object is created via the usual invocation:
$test = Test::Cmd->new();
Arguments to the "Test::Cmd::new" method are keyword-value pairs that
may be used to initialize the object, typically by invoking the same-
named method as the keyword.
TESTING FRAMEWORKS
As mentioned, because the "Test::Cmd" module makes no assumptions about
what constitutes success or failure of a test, it can be used to
provide temporary workspaces, other file system interaction, or command
execution for a variety of testing frameworks. This section describes
how to use the "Test::Cmd" with several different higher-layer testing
frameworks.
Note that you should not intermix multiple testing frameworks in a
single testing script.
"Test::Harness"
The "Test::Cmd" module may be used in tests that print results in a
format suitable for the standard Perl "Test::Harness" module:
use Test::Cmd;
print "1..5\n";
$test = Test::Cmd->new(prog => 'test_program', workdir => '');
if ($test) { print "ok 1\n"; } else { print "not ok 1\n"; }
$input = <<_EOF;
test_program should process this input
and exit successfully (status 0).
_EOF_
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
if ($wrote_file) { print "ok 2\n"; } else { print "not ok 2\n"; }
$test->run(args => '-x input_file');
if ($? == 0) { print "ok 3\n"; } else { print "not ok 3\n"; }
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
if ($wrote_file) { print "ok 4\n"; } else { print "not ok 4\n"; }
$test->run(args => '-y input_file');
if ($? == 0) { print "ok 5\n"; } else { print "not ok 5\n"; }
Several other Perl modules simplify the use of "Test::Harness" by
eliminating the need to hand-code the "print" statements and test
numbers. The "Test" module, the "Test::Simple" module, and the
"Test::More" module all export an "ok()" subroutine to test conditions.
Here is how the above example would look rewritten to use
"Test::Simple":
use Test::Simple tests => 5;
use Test::Cmd;
$test = Test::Cmd->new(prog => 'test_program', workdir => '');
ok($test, "creating Test::Cmd object");
$input = <<_EOF;
test_program should process this input
and exit successfully (status 0).
_EOF_
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
ok($wrote_file, "writing input_file");
$test->run(args => '-x input_file');
ok($? == 0, "executing test_program -x input_file");
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
ok($wrote_file, "writing input_file");
$test->run(args => '-y input_file');
ok($? == 0, "executing test_program -y input_file");
"Test::Unit"
The Perl "Test::Unit" package provides a procedural testing interface
modeled after a testing framework widely used in the eXtreme
Programming development methodology. The "Test::Cmd" module can
function as part of a "Test::Unit" fixture that can set up workspaces
as needed for a set of tests. This avoids having to repeat code to re-
initialize an input file multiple times:
use Test::Unit;
use Test::Cmd;
my $test;
$input = <<'EOF';
test_program should process this input
and exit successfully (status 0).
EOF
sub set_up {
$test = Test::Cmd->new(prog => 'test_program', workdir => '');
$test->write('input_file', $input);
}
sub test_x {
my $result = $test->run(args => '-x input_file');
assert($result == 0, "failed test_x\n");
}
sub test_y {
my $result = $test->run(args => '-y input_file');
assert($result == 0, "failed test_y\n");
}
create_suite();
run_suite;
Note that, because the "Test::Cmd" module takes care of cleaning up
temporary workspaces on exit, there is no need to remove explicitly the
workspace in a "tear_down" subroutine. (There may, of course, be other
things in the test that need a "tear_down" subroutine.)
Aegis
Alternatively, the "Test::Cmd" module provides "pass()", "fail()", and
"no_result()" methods that can be used to provide an appropriate exit
status and simple printed indication for a test. These methods
terminate the test immediately, reporting "PASSED", "FAILED", or "NO
RESULT" respectively, and exiting with status 0 (success), 1 or 2
respectively.
The separate "fail()" and "no_result()" methods allow for a distinction
between an actual failed test and a test that could not be properly
evaluated because of an external condition (such as a full file system
or incorrect permissions).
The exit status values happen to match the requirements of the Aegis
change management system, and the printed strings are based on existing
Aegis conventions. They are not really Aegis-specific, however, and
provide a simple, useful starting point if you don't already have
another testing framework:
use Test::Cmd;
$test = Test::Cmd->new(prog => 'test_program', workdir => '');
Test::Cmd->no_result(! $test);
$input = <<EOF;
test_program should process this input
and exit successfully (status 0).
EOF
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
$test->no_result(! $wrote_file);
$test->run(args => '-x input_file');
$test->fail($? != 0);
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
$test->no_result(! $wrote_file);
$test->run(args => '-y input_file');
$test->fail($? != 0);
$test->pass;
Note that the separate "Test::Cmd::Common" wrapper module can simplify
the above example even further by taking care of common exception
handling cases within the testing object itself.
use Test::Cmd::Common;
$test = Test::Cmd::Common->new(prog => 'test_program', workdir => '');
$input = <<EOF;
test_program should process this input
and exit successfully (status 0).
EOF
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
$test->run(args => '-x input_file');
$wrote_file = $test->write('input_file', $input);
$test->run(args => '-y input_file');
$test->pass;
See the "Test::Cmd::Common" module for details.
METHODS
Methods supported by the "Test::Cmd" module include:
"new"
Create a new "Test::Cmd" environment. Arguments with which to
initialize the environment are passed in as keyword-value pairs.
Fails if a specified temporary working directory or subdirectory
cannot be created. Does NOT die or exit on failure, but returns
FALSE if the test environment object cannot be created.
"verbose"
Sets the verbose level for the environment object to the specified
value.
"prog"
Specifies the executable program or script to be tested. Returns
the absolute path name of the current program or script.
"basename"
Returns the basename of the current program or script. Any
specified arguments are a list of file suffixes that may be
stripped from the basename.
"interpreter"
Specifies the program to be used to interpret "prog" as a script.
Returns the current value of "interpreter".
"string"
Specifies an identifier string for the functionality being tested
to be printed on failure or no result.
"workdir"
When an argument is specified, creates a temporary working
directory with the specified name. If the argument is a NULL
string (''), the directory is named "testcmd" by default, followed
by the unique ID of the executing process.
Returns the absolute pathname to the temporary working directory,
or FALSE if the directory could not be created.
"workpath"
Returns the absolute path name to a subdirectory or file under the
current temporary working directory by concatenating the temporary
working directory name with the specified arguments.
"subdir"
Creates new subdirectories under the temporary working dir, one for
each argument. An argument may be an array reference, in which
case the array elements are concatenated together using the
"File::Spec-&"catfile> method. Subdirectories multiple levels deep
must be created via a separate argument for each level:
$test->subdir('sub', ['sub', 'dir'], [qw(sub dir ectory)]);
Returns the number of subdirectories actually created.
"write"
Writes the specified text (second argument) to the specified file
name (first argument). The file name may be an array reference, in
which case all the array elements except the last are subdirectory
names to be concatenated together. The file is created under the
temporary working directory. Any subdirectories in the path must
already exist.
"read"
Reads the contents of the specified file name (second argument)
into the scalar or array referred to by the first argument. The
file name may be an array reference, in which case all the array
elements except the last are subdirectory names to be concatenated
together. The file is assumed to be under the temporary working
directory unless it is an absolute path name.
Returns TRUE on successfully opening and reading the file, FALSE
otherwise.
"writable"
Makes every file and directory within the specified directory tree
writable ("rwflag" == TRUE) or not writable ("rwflag" == FALSE).
The default is to make the directory tree writable. Optionally
fills in the supplied hash reference with a hash of path names that
could not have their permissions set appropriately, with the reason
why each could not be set.
"preserve"
Arranges for the temporary working directories for the specified
"Test::Cmd" environment to be preserved for one or more conditions.
If no conditions are specified, arranges for the temporary working
directories to be preserved for all conditions.
"cleanup"
Removes any temporary working directories for the specified
"Test::Cmd" environment. If the environment variable "PRESERVE"
was set when the "Test::Cmd" module was loaded, temporary working
directories are not removed. If any of the environment variables
"PRESERVE_PASS", "PRESERVE_FAIL", or "PRESERVE_NO_RESULT" were set
when the "Test::Cmd" module was loaded, then temporary working
directories are not removed if the test passed, failed, or had no
result, respectively. Temporary working directories are also
preserved for conditions specified via the "preserve" method.
Typically, this method is not called directly, but is used when the
script exits to clean up temporary working directories as
appropriate for the exit status.
"run"
Runs a test of the program or script for the test environment.
Standard output and error output are saved for future retrieval via
the "stdout" and "stderr" methods.
Arguments are supplied as keyword-value pairs:
"args"
Specifies the command-line arguments to be supplied to the
program or script under test for this run:
$test->run(args => 'arg1 arg2');
"chdir"
Changes directory to the path specified as the value argument:
$test->run(chdir => 'xyzzy');
If the specified path is not an absolute path name (begins with
'/' on Unix systems), then the subdirectory is relative to the
temporary working directory for the environment
("$test-&"workdir>). Note that, by default, the "Test::Cmd"
module does NOT chdir to the temporary working directory, so to
execute the test under the temporary working directory, you
must specify an explicit "chdir" to the current directory:
$test->run(chdir => '.'); # Unix-specific
$test->run(chdir => $test->curdir); # portable
"interpreter"
Specifies the program to be used to interpret "prog" as a
script, for this run only. This does not change the
"$test-&"interpreter> value of the test environment.
"prog"
Specifies the executable program or script to be run, for this
run only. This does not change the "$test-&"prog> value of the
test environment.
"stdin"
Pipes the specified value (string or array ref) to the program
or script under test for this run:
$test->run(stdin => <<_EOF_);
input to the program under test
_EOF_
Returns the exit status of the program or script.
"pass"
Exits the test successfully. Reports "PASSED" on the error output
and exits with a status of 0. If a condition is supplied, only
exits the test if the condition evaluates TRUE. If a function
reference is supplied, executes the function before reporting and
exiting.
"fail"
Exits the test unsuccessfully. Reports "FAILED test of {string} at
line {line} of {file}." on the error output and exits with a status
of 1. If a condition is supplied, only exits the test if the
condition evaluates TRUE. If a function reference is supplied,
executes the function before reporting and exiting. If a caller
level is supplied, prints a simple calling trace N levels deep as
part of reporting the failure.
"no_result"
Exits the test with an indeterminate result (the test could not be
performed due to external conditions such as, for example, a full
file system). Reports "NO RESULT for test of {string} at line
{line} of {file}." on the error output and exits with a status of
2. If a condition is supplied, only exits the test if the
condition evaluates TRUE. If a function reference is supplied,
executes the function before reporting and exiting. If a caller
level is supplied, prints a simple calling trace N levels deep as
part of reporting the failure.
"stdout"
Returns the standard output from the specified run number. If
there is no specified run number, then returns the standard output
of the last run. Returns the standard output as either a scalar or
an array of output lines, as appropriate for the calling context.
Returns "undef" if there has been no test run.
"stderr"
Returns the error output from the specified run number. If there
is no specified run number, then returns the error output of the
last run. Returns the error output as either a scalar or an array
of output lines, as apporpriate for the calling context. Returns
"undef" if there has been no test run.
"match"
Matches one or more input lines against an equal number of expected
lines using the currently-registered line-matching function. The
default line-matching function is the "match_regex" method, which
means that the default is to match lines against regular
expressions.
"match_exact"
Compares two arrays of lines for exact matches. The arguments are
passed in as either scalars, in which case each is split on newline
boundaries, or as array references. An unequal number of lines in
the two arrays fails immediately and returns FALSE before any
comparisons are performed.
Returns TRUE if each line matched its corresponding line in the
other array, FALSE otherwise.
"match_regex"
Matches one or more input lines against an equal number of regular
expressions. The arguments are passed in as either scalars, in
which case each is split on newline boundaries, or as array
references. Trailing newlines are stripped from each line and
regular expression. An unequal number of lines and regular
expressions fails immediately and returns FALSE before any
comparisons are performed. Comparison is performed for each entire
line, that is, with each regular expression anchored at both the
start of line (^) and end of line ($).
Returns TRUE if each line matched each regular expression, FALSE
otherwise.
"diff_exact"
Diffs two arrays of lines in a manner similar to the UNIX diff(1)
utility.
If the "Algorithm::DiffOld" package is installed on the local
system, output describing the differences between the input lines
and the matching lines, in diff(1) format, is saved to the $output
array reference. In the diff output, the expected output lines are
considered the "old" (left-hand) file, and the actual output is
considered the "new" (right-hand) file.
If the "Algorithm::DiffOld" package is not installed on the local
system, the Expected and Actual contents are saved as-is to the
$output array reference.
The "lines" and "matches" arguments are passed in as either
scalars, in which case each is split on newline boundaries, or as
array references. Trailing newlines are stripped from each line
and regular expression.
Returns TRUE if each line matched its corresponding line in the
expected matches, FALSE otherwise, in order to conform to the
conventions of the "match" method.
Typical invocation:
if (! $test->diff_exact($test->stdout,
\@expected_lines,
\@diff)) {
print @diff;
}
"diff_regex"
Diffs one or more input lines against one or more regular
expressions in a manner similar to the UNIX diff(1) utility.
If the "Algorithm::DiffOld" package is installed on the local
system, output describing the differences between the input lines
and the matching lines, in diff(1) format, is saved to the $output
array reference. In the diff output, the expected output lines are
considered the "old" (left-hand) file, and the actual output is
considered the "new" (right-hand) file.
If the "Algorithm::DiffOld" package is not installed on the local
system, the Expected and Actual contents are saved as-is to the
$output array reference.
The "lines" and "regexes" arguments are passed in as either
scalars, in which case each is split on newline boundaries, or as
array references. Trailing newlines are stripped from each line
and regular expression. Comparison is performed for each entire
line, that is, with each regular expression anchored at both the
start of line (^) and end of line ($).
Returns TRUE if each line matched each regular expression, FALSE
otherwise, in order to conform to the conventions of the "match"
method.
Typical invocation:
if (! $test->diff_regex($test->stdout,
\@expected_lines,
\@diff)) {
print @diff;
}
"match_sub"
Registers the specified code reference as the line-matching
function to be called by the "match" method. This can be a user-
supplied subroutine, or the "match_exact", "match_regex",
"diff_exact", or "diff_regex" methods supplied by the "Test::Cmd"
module:
$test->match_sub(\&Test::Cmd::match_exact);
$test->match_sub(\&Test::Cmd::match_regex);
$test->match_sub(\&Test::Cmd::diff_exact);
$test->match_sub(\&Test::Cmd::diff_regex);
The "match_exact", "match_regex", "diff_exact" and "diff_regex"
subroutine names are exportable from the "Test::Cmd" module, and
may be specified at object initialization:
use Test::Cmd qw(match_exact match_regex diff_exact diff_regex);
$test_exact = Test::Cmd->new(match_sub => \&match_exact);
$test_regex = Test::Cmd->new(match_sub => \&match_regex);
$test_exact = Test::Cmd->new(match_sub => \&diff_exact);
$test_regex = Test::Cmd->new(match_sub => \&diff_regex);
"here"
Returns the absolute path name of the current working directory.
(This is essentially the same as the "Cwd::cwd" method, except that
the "Test::Cmd::here" method preserves the directory separators
exactly as returned by the underlying operating-system-dependent
method. The "Cwd::cwd" method canonicalizes all directory
separators to '/', which makes for consistent path name
representations within Perl, but may mess up another program or
script to which you try to pass the path name.)
ENVIRONMENT
Several environment variables affect the default values in a newly
created "Test::Cmd" environment object. These environment variables
must be set when the module is loaded, not when the object is created.
"PRESERVE"
If set to a true value, all temporary working directories will be
preserved on exit, regardless of success or failure of the test.
The full path names of all temporary working directories will be
reported on error output.
"PRESERVE_FAIL"
If set to a true value, all temporary working directories will be
preserved on exit from a failed test. The full path names of all
temporary working directories will be reported on error output.
"PRESERVE_NO_RESULT"
If set to a true value, all temporary working directories will be
preserved on exit from a test for which there is no result. The
full path names of all temporary working directories will be
reported on error output.
"PRESERVE_PASS"
If set to a true value, all temporary working directories will be
preserved on exit from a successful test. The full path names of
all temporary working directories will be reported on error output.
"VERBOSE"
When set to a true value, enables verbose reporting of various
internal things (path names, exact command line being executed,
etc.).
PORTABLE TESTS
Although the "Test::Cmd" module is intended to make it easier to write
portable tests for portable utilities that interact with file systems,
it is still very easy to write non-portable tests if you're not
careful.
The best and most comprehensive set of portability guidelines is the
standard "Writing portable Perl" document at:
http://www.perl.com/pub/doc/manual/html/pod/perlport.html
To reiterate one important point from the "WpP" document: Not all Perl
programs have to be portable. If the program or script you're testing
is UNIX-specific, you can (and should) use the "Test::Cmd" module to
write UNIX-specific tests.
That having been said, here are some hints that may help keep your
tests portable, if that's a requirement.
Use the "Test::Cmd-&"here> method for current directory path.
The normal Perl way to fetch the current working directory is to
use the "Cwd::cwd" method. Unfortunately, the "Cwd::cwd" method
canonicalizes the path name it returns, changing the native
directory separators into the forward slashes favored by Perl and
UNIX. For most Perl scripts, this makes a great deal of sense and
keeps code uncluttered.
Passing in a file name that has had its directory separators
altered, however, may confuse the command or script under test, or
make it difficult to compare output from the command or script with
an expected result. The "Test::Cmd::here" method returns the
absolute path name of the current working directory, like
"Cwd::cwd", but does not manipulate the returned path in any way.
Use "File::Spec" methods for manipulating path names.
The "File::Spec" module provides a system-independent interface for
manipulating path names. Because the "Test::Cmd" class is a sub-
class of the "File::Spec" class, you can use these methods directly
as follows:
if (! Test::Cmd->file_name_is_absolute($prog)) {
my $prog = Test::Cmd->catfile(Test::Cmd->here, $prog);
}
For details about the available methods and their use, see the
documentation for the "File::Spec" module and its sub-modules,
especially the "File::Spec::Unix" modules.
Use "Config" for file-name suffixes, where possible.
The standard "Config" module provides values that reflect the file-
name suffixes on the system for which the Perl executable was
built. This provides convenient portability for situations where a
file name may have different extensions on different systems:
$foo_exe = "foo$Config{_exe}";
ok(-f $foo_exe);
(Unfortunately, there is no existing $Config value that specifies
the suffix for a directly-executable Perl script.)
Avoid generating executable programs or scripts.
How to make a file or script executable varies widely from system
to system, some systems using file name extensions to indicate
executability, others using a file permission bit. The differences
are complicated to accomodate in a portable test script. The
easiest way to deal with this complexity is to avoid it if you can.
If your test somehow requires executing a script that you generate
from the test itself, the best way is to generate the script in
Perl and then explicitly feed it to the Perl executable on the
local system. To be maximally portable, use the $^X variable
instead of hard-coding "perl" into the string you execute:
$line = "This is output from the generated perl script.";
$test->write('script', <<EOF);
print STDOUT "$line\\n";
EOF
$output = `$^X script`;
ok($output eq "$line\n");
This completely avoids having to make the "script" file itself
executable. (Since you're writing your test in Perl, it's safe to
assume that Perl itself is executable.)
If you must generate a directly-executable script, then use the
$Config{'startperl'} variable at the start of the script to
generate the appropriate magic that will execute it as a Perl
script:
use Config;
$line = "This is output from the generated perl script.";
$test->write('script', <<EOF);
$Config{'startperl'};
print STDOUT "$line\\n";
EOF
chdir($test->workdir);
chmod(0755, 'script'); # POSIX-SPECIFIC
$output = `script`;
ok($output eq "$line\n");
Addtional hints on writing portable tests are welcome.
SEE ALSOperl(1), Algorithm::DiffOld(3), File::Find(3), File::Spec(3), Test(3),
Test::Cmd::Common(3), Test::Harness(3), Test::More(3), Test::Simple(3),
Test::Unit(3).
A rudimentary page for the "Test::Cmd" module is available at:
http://www.baldmt.com/Test-Cmd/
The most involved example of using the "Test::Cmd" package to test a
real-world application is the "cons-test" testing suite for the Cons
software construction utility. The suite uses a sub-class of
"Test::Cmd::Common" (which in turn is a sub-class of "Test::Cmd") to
provide common, application-specific infrastructure across a large
number of end-to-end application tests. The suite, and other
information about Cons, is available at:
http://www.dsmit.com/cons
AUTHORS
Steven Knight, knight@baldmt.com
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1999-2001 Steven Knight. All rights reserved. This program
is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Greg Spencer for the inspiration to create this package and
the initial draft of its implementation as a specific testing package
for the Cons software construction utility. Information about Cons is
available at:
http://www.dsmit.com/cons/
The general idea of managing temporary working directories in this way,
as well as the test reporting of the "pass", "fail" and "no_result"
methods, come from the testing framework invented by Peter Miller for
his Aegis project change supervisor. Aegis is an excellent bit of work
which integrates creation and execution of regression tests into the
software development process. Information about Aegis is available at:
http://www.tip.net.au/~millerp/aegis.html
Thanks to Michael Schwern for all of the thoughtful work he's put into
Perl's standard testing methodology, including the "Test::Simple" and
"Test::More" modules, and enhancement and maintenance of the "Test" and
"Test::Harness" modules. Thanks also to Christian Lemburg for the
impressively complete "Test::Unit" framework of modules. Ideas from
both have helped keep "Test::Cmd" flexible enough to be useful in
multiple testing frameworks.
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
below:
Around line 1609:
=back doesn't take any parameters, but you said =back 4
perl v5.14.0 2001-09-05 Cmd(3)