Apache::Test - Test.pm wrapper with helpers for testing Apache
use Apache::Test;
Apache::Test is a wrapper around the standard "Test.pm" with
helpers for testing an Apache server.
- plan
- This function is a wrapper around "Test::plan":
plan tests => 3;
just like using Test.pm, plan 3 tests.
If the first argument is an object, such as an
"Apache::RequestRec" object, "STDOUT" will be tied to
it. The "Test.pm" global state will also be refreshed by calling
"Apache::Test::test_pm_refresh". For example:
plan $r, tests => 7;
ties STDOUT to the request object $r.
If there is a last argument that doesn't belong to "Test::plan"
(which expects a balanced hash), it's used to decide whether to continue
with the test or to skip it all-together. This last argument can be:
- •
- a "SCALAR"
the test is skipped if the scalar has a false value. For example:
plan tests => 5, 0;
But this won't hint the reason for skipping therefore it's better to use
need():
plan tests => 5,
need 'LWP',
{ "not Win32" => sub { $^O eq 'MSWin32'} };
see "need()" for more info.
- •
- an "ARRAY" reference
need_module() is called for each value in this array. The test is
skipped if need_module() returns false (which happens when at least
one C or Perl module from the list cannot be found).
Watch out for case insensitive file systems or duplicate modules with the
same name. I.E. If you mean mod_env.c
need_module('mod_env.c') Not
need_module('env')
- •
- a "CODE" reference
the tests will be skipped if the function returns a false value. For
example:
plan tests => 5, need_lwp;
the test will be skipped if LWP is not available
All other arguments are passed through to
Test::plan as is.
- ok
- Same as Test::ok, see Test.pm
documentation.
- sok
- Allows one to skip a sub-test, controlled from the command
line. The argument to sok() is a CODE reference or a BLOCK whose
return value will be passed to ok(). By default behaves like
ok(). If all sub-tests of the same test are written using
sok(), and a test is executed as:
% ./t/TEST -v skip_subtest 1 3
only sub-tests 1 and 3 will be run, the rest will be skipped.
- skip
- Same as Test::skip, see Test.pm
documentation.
- test_pm_refresh
- Normally called by Apache::Test::plan, this function
will refresh the global state maintained by Test.pm, allowing
"plan" and friends to be called more than once per-process. This
function is not exported.
Functions that can be used as a last argument to the extended
plan().
Note that for each "need_*" function there is a "have_*"
equivalent that performs the exact same function except that it is designed to
be used outside of "plan()". "need_*" functions have the
side effect of generating skip messages, if the test is skipped.
"have_*" functions don't have this side effect. In other words, use
"need_apache()" with "plan()" to decide whether a test
will run, but "have_apache()" within test logic to adjust
expectations based on older or newer server versions.
- need_http11
-
plan tests => 5, need_http11;
Require HTTP/1.1 support.
- need_ssl
-
plan tests => 5, need_ssl;
Require SSL support.
Not exported by default.
- need_lwp
-
plan tests => 5, need_lwp;
Require LWP support.
- need_cgi
-
plan tests => 5, need_cgi;
Requires mod_cgi or mod_cgid to be installed.
- need_cache_disk
-
plan tests => 5, need_cache_disk
Requires mod_cache_disk or mod_disk_cache to be installed.
- need_php
-
plan tests => 5, need_php;
Requires a PHP module to be installed (version 4 or 5).
- need_php4
-
plan tests => 5, need_php4;
Requires a PHP version 4 module to be installed.
- need_imagemap
-
plan tests => 5, need_imagemap;
Requires a mod_imagemap or mod_imap be installed
- need_apache
-
plan tests => 5, need_apache 2;
Requires Apache 2nd generation httpd-2.x.xx
plan tests => 5, need_apache 1;
Requires Apache 1st generation (apache-1.3.xx)
See also "need_min_apache_version()".
- need_min_apache_version
- Used to require a minimum version of Apache.
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_min_apache_version("2.0.40");
requires Apache 2.0.40 or higher.
- need_apache_version
- Used to require a specific version of Apache.
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_apache_version("2.0.40");
requires Apache 2.0.40.
- need_min_apache_fix
- Used to require a particular micro version from
corresponding minor release
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_min_apache_fix("2.0.40", "2.2.30", "2.4.18");
requires Apache 2.0.40 or higher.
- need_apache_mpm
- Used to require a specific Apache Multi-Processing Module.
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_apache_mpm('prefork');
requires the prefork MPM.
- need_perl
-
plan tests => 5, need_perl 'iolayers';
plan tests => 5, need_perl 'ithreads';
Requires a perl extension to be present, or perl compiled with certain
capabilities.
The first example tests whether "PerlIO" is available, the second
whether:
$Config{useithread} eq 'define';
- need_min_perl_version
- Used to require a minimum version of Perl.
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_min_perl_version("5.008001");
requires Perl 5.8.1 or higher.
- need_fork
- Requires the perl built-in function "fork" to be
implemented.
- need_module
-
plan tests => 5, need_module 'CGI';
plan tests => 5, need_module qw(CGI Find::File);
plan tests => 5, need_module ['CGI', 'Find::File', 'cgid'];
Requires Apache C and Perl modules. The function accept a list of arguments
or a reference to a list.
In case of C modules, depending on how the module name was passed it may
pass through the following completions:
- 1 need_module 'proxy_http.c'
- If there is the .c extension, the module name will
be looked up as is, i.e. 'proxy_http.c'.
- 2 need_module 'mod_cgi'
- The .c extension will be appended before the lookup,
turning it into 'mod_cgi.c'.
- 3 need_module 'cgi'
- The .c extension and mod_ prefix will be
added before the lookup, turning it into 'mod_cgi.c'.
- need_min_module_version
- Used to require a minimum version of a module
For example:
plan tests => 5, need_min_module_version(CGI => 2.81);
requires "CGI.pm" version 2.81 or higher.
Currently works only for perl modules.
- need
-
plan tests => 5,
need 'LWP',
{ "perl >= 5.8.0 and w/ithreads is required" =>
($Config{useperlio} && $] >= 5.008) },
{ "not Win32" => sub { $^O eq 'MSWin32' },
"foo is disabled" => \&is_foo_enabled,
},
'cgid';
need() is more generic function which can impose multiple
requirements at once. All requirements must be satisfied.
need()'s argument is a list of things to test. The list can include
scalars, which are passed to need_module(), and hash references. If
hash references are used, the keys, are strings, containing a reason for a
failure to satisfy this particular entry, the values are the condition,
which are satisfaction if they return true. If the value is 0 or 1, it
used to decide whether the requirements very satisfied, so you can mix
special "need_*()" functions that return 0 or 1. For example:
plan tests => 1, need 'Compress::Zlib', 'deflate',
need_min_apache_version("2.0.49");
If the scalar value is a string, different from 0 or 1, it's passed to
need_module(). If the value is a code
reference, it gets executed at the time of check and its return value is
used to check the condition. If the condition check fails, the provided
(in a key) reason is used to tell user why the test was skipped.
In the presented example, we require the presence of the "LWP"
Perl module, "mod_cgid", that we run under perl >= 5.7.3 on
Win32.
It's possible to put more than one requirement into a single hash reference,
but be careful that the keys will be different.
It's also important to mention to avoid using:
plan tests => 1, requirement1 && requirement2;
technique. While test-wise that technique is equivalent to:
plan tests => 1, need requirement1, requirement2;
since the test will be skipped, unless all the rules are satisfied, it's not
equivalent for the end users. The second technique, deploying
"need()" and a list of requirements, always runs all the
requirement checks and reports all the missing requirements. In the case
of the first technique, if the first requirement fails, the second is not
run, and the missing requirement is not reported. So let's say all the
requirements are missing Apache modules, and a user wants to satisfy all
of these and run the test suite again. If all the unsatisfied requirements
are reported at once, she will need to rebuild Apache once. If only one
requirement is reported at a time, she will have to rebuild Apache as many
times as there are elements in the "&&" statement.
Also see plan().
- under_construction
-
plan tests => 5, under_construction;
skip all tests, noting that the tests are under construction
- skip_reason
-
plan tests => 5, skip_reason('my custom reason');
skip all tests. the reason you specify will be given at runtime. if no
reason is given a default reason will be used.
- basic_config
-
my $basic_cfg = Apache::Test::basic_config();
$basic_cfg->write_perlscript($file, $content);
"basic_config()" is similar to "config()", but doesn't
contain any httpd-specific information and should be used for operations
that don't require any httpd-specific knowledge.
- config
-
my $cfg = Apache::Test::config();
my $server_rev = $cfg->{server}->{rev};
...
"config()" gives an access to the configuration object.
- vars
-
my $serverroot = Apache::Test::vars->{serverroot};
my $serverroot = Apache::Test::vars('serverroot');
my($top_dir, $t_dir) = Apache::Test::vars(qw(top_dir t_dir));
"vars()" gives an access to the configuration variables, otherwise
accessible as:
$vars = Apache::Test::config()->{vars};
If no arguments are passed, the reference to the variables hash is returned.
If one or more arguments are passed the corresponding values are
returned.
There are a few caveats if you want to use
Apache::Test with
Test::More instead of the default
Test backend. The first is
that
Test::More requires you to use its own "plan()" function
and not the one that ships with
Apache::Test.
Test::More also
defines "ok()" and "skip()" functions that are different,
and simply "use"ing both modules in your test script will lead to
redefined warnings for these subroutines.
To assist
Test::More users we have created a special
Apache::Test
import tag, ":withtestmore", which will export all of the standard
Apache::Test symbols into your namespace except the ones that collide
with
Test::More.
use Apache::Test qw(:withtestmore);
use Test::More;
plan tests => 1; # Test::More::plan()
ok ('yes', 'testing ok'); # Test::More::ok()
Now, while this works fine for standard client-side tests (such as
"t/basic.t"), the more advanced features of
Apache::Test
require using
Test::More as the sole driver behind the scenes.
Should you choose to use
Test::More as the backend for server-based tests
(such as "t/response/TestMe/basic.pm") you will need to use the
"-withtestmore" action tag:
use Apache::Test qw(-withtestmore);
sub handler {
my $r = shift;
plan $r, tests => 1; # Test::More::plan() with
# Apache::Test features
ok ('yes', 'testing ok'); # Test::More::ok()
}
"-withtestmore" tells
Apache::Test to use
Test::More
instead of
Test.pm behind the scenes. Note that you are not required to
"use Test::More" yourself with the "-withtestmore" option
and that the "use Test::More tests => 1" syntax may have
unexpected results.
Note that
Test::More version 0.49, available within the
Test::Simple 0.49 distribution on CPAN, or greater is required to use
this feature.
Because
Apache:Test was initially developed using
Test as the
framework driver, complete
Test::More integration is considered
experimental at this time - it is supported as best as possible but is not
guaranteed to be as stable as the default
Test interface at this time.
The
Apache::TestToString class is used to capture
Test.pm output
into a string. Example:
Apache::TestToString->start;
plan tests => 4;
ok $data eq 'foo';
...
# $tests will contain the Test.pm output: 1..4\nok 1\n...
my $tests = Apache::TestToString->finish;
The Apache-Test tutorial:
<
http://perl.apache.org/docs/general/testing/testing.html>.
Apache::TestRequest subclasses LWP::UserAgent and exports a number of useful
functions for sending request to the Apache test server. You can then test the
results of those requests.
Use Apache::TestMM in your
Makefile.PL to set up your distribution for
testing.
Doug MacEachern with contributions from Geoffrey Young, Philippe M. Chiasson,
Stas Bekman and others.
Questions can be asked at the test-dev <at> httpd.apache.org list For more
information see:
http://httpd.apache.org/test/.