#!./perl # We suppose that perl _mostly_ works at this moment, so may use # sophisticated testing. BEGIN { chdir 't' if -d 't'; @INC = '../lib'; # pick up only this build's lib $ENV{PERL5LIB} = '../lib'; # so children will see it too } my $torture; # torture testing? use Test::Harness; use strict; $Test::Harness::switches = ""; # Too much noise otherwise $Test::Harness::Verbose++ while @ARGV && $ARGV[0] eq '-v' && shift; if ($ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0] eq '-torture') { shift; $torture = 1; } # Let tests know they're running in the perl core. Useful for modules # which live dual lives on CPAN. $ENV{PERL_CORE} = 1; #fudge DATA for now. my %datahandle = qw( lib/bigint.t 1 lib/bigintpm.t 1 lib/bigfloat.t 1 lib/bigfloatpm.t 1 op/gv.t 1 lib/complex.t 1 lib/ph.t 1 lib/soundex.t 1 op/misc.t 1 op/runlevel.t 1 op/tie.t 1 op/lex_assign.t 1 ); foreach (keys %datahandle) { unlink "$_.t"; } my (@tests, $re); # [.VMS]TEST.COM calls harness with empty arguments, so clean-up @ARGV @ARGV = grep $_ && length( $_ ) => @ARGV; sub _populate_hash { return map {$_, 1} split /\s+/, $_[0]; } # Generate T::H schedule rules that run the contents of each directory # sequentially. sub _seq_dir_rules { my @tests = @_; my %dir; for (@tests) { s{[^/]+$}{\*}; $dir{$_}++; } return { par => [ map { { seq => $_ } } sort keys %dir ] }; } sub _extract_tests; sub _extract_tests { # This can probably be done more tersely with a map, but I doubt that it # would be as clear my @results; foreach (@_) { my $ref = ref $_; if ($ref) { if ($ref eq 'ARRAY') { push @results, _extract_tests @$_; } elsif ($ref eq 'HASH') { push @results, _extract_tests values %$_; } else { die "Unknown reference type $ref"; } } else { push @results, glob $_; } } @results; } if ($ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0]=~/^-re/) { if ($ARGV[0]!~/=/) { shift; $re=join "|",@ARGV; @ARGV=(); } else { (undef,$re)=split/=/,shift; } } my $jobs = $ENV{TEST_JOBS}; my ($fork, $rules, $state); if ($ENV{HARNESS_OPTIONS}) { for my $opt ( split /:/, $ENV{HARNESS_OPTIONS} ) { if ( $opt =~ /^j(\d*)$/ ) { $jobs ||= $1 || 9; } elsif ( $opt eq 'f' ) { $fork = 1; } elsif ( $opt eq 'c' ) { # $args->{color} = 1; } else { die "Unknown HARNESS_OPTIONS item: $opt\n"; } } } if (@ARGV) { # If you want these run in speed order, just use prove if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') { @tests = map(glob($_),@ARGV); } else { @tests = @ARGV; } } else { # Ideally we'd get somewhere close to Tux's Oslo rules # my $rules = { # par => [ # { seq => '../ext/DB_File/t/*' }, # { seq => '../ext/IO_Compress_Zlib/t/*' }, # { seq => '../lib/CPANPLUS/*' }, # { seq => '../lib/ExtUtils/t/*' }, # '*' # ] # }; # but for now, run all directories in sequence. In particular, it would be # nice to get the tests in t/op/*.t able to run in parallel. unless (@tests) { my @seq = ; my @next = qw(comp cmd run io op uni mro lib); push @next, 'japh' if $torture; push @next, 'win32' if $^O eq 'MSWin32'; # Hopefully TAP::Parser::Scheduler will support this syntax soon. # my $next = { par => '{' . join (',', @next) . '}/*.t' }; my $next = { par => [ map { "$_/*.t" } @next ] }; @tests = _extract_tests ($next); # This is a bit of a game, because we only want to sort these tests in # speed order. base/*.t wants to run first, and ext,lib etc last and in # MANIFEST order if ($jobs) { require App::Prove::State; $state = App::Prove::State->new({ store => 'test_state' }); $state->apply_switch('slow', 'save'); # For some reason get_tests returns *all* the tests previously run, # (in the right order), not simply the selection in @tests # (in the right order). Not sure if this is a bug or a feature. # Whatever, *we* are only interested in the ones that are in @tests my %seen; @seen{@tests} = (); @tests = grep {exists $seen{$_} } $state->get_tests(0, @tests); } @tests = (@seq, @tests); push @seq, $next; my @last; use Config; my %skip; { my %extensions = _populate_hash $Config{'extensions'}; my %known_extensions = _populate_hash $Config{'known_extensions'}; foreach (keys %known_extensions) { $skip{$_}++ unless $extensions{$_}; } } use File::Spec; my $updir = File::Spec->updir; my $mani = File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->updir, "MANIFEST"); if (open(MANI, $mani)) { my @manitests = (); my $ext_pat = $^O eq 'MSWin32' ? '(?:win32/)?ext' : 'ext'; while () { # similar code in t/TEST if (m!^($ext_pat/(\S+)/+(?:[^/\s]+\.t|test\.pl)|lib/\S+?(?:\.t|test\.pl))\s!) { my ($test, $extension) = ($1, $2); if (defined $extension) { $extension =~ s!/t$!!; # XXX Do I want to warn that I'm skipping these? next if $skip{$extension}; } push @manitests, File::Spec->catfile($updir, $test); } } close MANI; # Sort the list of test files read from MANIFEST into a sensible # order instead of using the order in which they are listed there push @last, sort { lc $a cmp lc $b } @manitests; } else { warn "$0: cannot open $mani: $!\n"; } push @last, ; push @last, ; push @last, ; push @tests, @last; push @seq, _seq_dir_rules @last; $rules = { seq => \@seq }; } } if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') { s,\\,/,g for @tests; } @tests=grep /$re/, @tests if $re; if ($jobs) { eval 'use TAP::Harness 3.13; 1' or die $@; # Test::Harness parses $ENV{HARNESS_OPTIONS}, TAP::Harness does not local $ENV{HARNESS_OPTIONS}; my $h = TAP::Harness->new({ jobs => $jobs, rules => $rules, ($fork ? (fork => $fork) : ())}); if ($state) { $h->callback( after_test => sub { $state->observe_test(@_); } ); } $h->runtests(@tests); } else { Test::Harness::runtests @tests; } exit(0);