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Test::Perl::Critic - Use Perl::Critic in test programs
Test one file:
use Test::Perl::Critic;
use Test::More tests => 1;
critic_ok($file);
Or test all files in one or more directories:
use Test::Perl::Critic;
all_critic_ok($dir_1, $dir_2, $dir_N );
Or test all files in a distribution:
use Test::Perl::Critic;
all_critic_ok();
Recommended usage for CPAN distributions:
use strict;
use warnings;
use File::Spec;
use Test::More;
use English qw(-no_match_vars);
if ( not $ENV{TEST_AUTHOR} ) {
my $msg = 'Author test. Set $ENV{TEST_AUTHOR} to a true value to run.';
plan( skip_all => $msg );
}
eval { require Test::Perl::Critic; };
if ( $EVAL_ERROR ) {
my $msg = 'Test::Perl::Critic required to criticise code';
plan( skip_all => $msg );
}
my $rcfile = File::Spec->catfile( 't', 'perlcriticrc' );
Test::Perl::Critic->import( -profile => $rcfile );
all_critic_ok();
Test::Perl::Critic wraps the Perl::Critic engine in a convenient
subroutine suitable for test programs written using the Test::More
framework. This makes it easy to integrate coding-standards
enforcement into the build process. For ultimate convenience (at the
expense of some flexibility), see the criticism pragma.
If you'd like to try Perl::Critic without installing anything,
there is a web-service available at http://perlcritic.com. The
web-service does not yet support all the configuration features that
are available in the native Perl::Critic API, but it should give you a
good idea of what it does. You can also invoke the perlcritic
web-service from the command line by doing an HTTP-post, such as one
of these:
$> POST http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl < MyModule.pm
$> lwp-request -m POST http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl < MyModule.pm
$> wget -q -O - --post-file=MyModule.pm http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl
Please note that the perlcritic web-service is still alpha code. The
URL and interface to the service are subject to change.
- critic_ok( $FILE [, $TEST_NAME ] )
-
Okays the test if Perl::Critic does not find any violations in $FILE.
If it does, the violations will be reported in the test diagnostics.
The optional second argument is the name of test, which defaults to
"Perl::Critic test for $FILE".
If you use this form, you should emit your own Test::More plan first.
- all_critic_ok( [ @DIRECTORIES ] )
-
Runs critic_ok() for all Perl files beneath the given list of
@DIRECTORIES. If @DIRECTORIES is empty or not given, this
function tries to find all Perl files in the blib/ directory. If
the blib/ directory does not exist, then it tries the lib/
directory. Returns true if all files are okay, or false if any file
fails.
This subroutine emits its own Test::More plan, so you do not need
to specify an expected number of tests yourself.
- all_code_files ( [@DIRECTORIES] )
-
DEPRECATED: Use the all_perl_files subroutine that is exported
by Perl::Critic::Utils instead.
Returns a list of all the Perl files found beneath each DIRECTORY, If
@DIRECTORIES is an empty list, defaults to blib/. If blib/ does
not exist, it tries lib/. Skips any files in CVS or Subversion
directories.
A Perl file is:
- * Any file that ends in .PL, .pl, .pm, or .t
-
- * Any file that has a first line with a shebang containing 'perl'
-
Perl::Critic is highly configurable. By default,
Test::Perl::Critic invokes Perl::Critic with it's default
configuration. But if you have developed your code against a custom
Perl::Critic configuration, you will want to configure
Test::Perl::Critic to do the same.
Any arguments given to the use pragma will be passed into the
Perl::Critic constructor. So if you have developed your code using
a custom ~/.perlcriticrc file, you can direct Test::Perl::Critic to
use a custom file too.
use Test::Perl::Critic (-profile => 't/perlcriticrc');
all_critic_ok();
Now place a copy of your own ~/.perlcriticrc file in the distribution
as t/perlcriticrc. Then, critic_ok() will be run on all Perl
files in this distribution using this same Perl::Critic configuration.
See the Perl::Critic documentation for details on the
.perlcriticrc file format.
Any argument that is supported by the Perl::Critic constructor can
be passed through this interface. For example, you can also set the
minimum severity level, or include & exclude specific policies like
this:
use Test::Perl::Critic (-severity => 2, -exclude => ['RequireRcsKeywords']);
all_critic_ok();
See the Perl::Critic documentation for complete details on it's
options and arguments.
By default, Test::Perl::Critic displays basic information about each
Policy violation in the diagnostic output of the test. You can
customize the format and content of this information by using the
-verbose option. This behaves exactly like the -verbose switch
on the perlcritic program. For example:
use Test::Perl::Critic (-verbose => 6);
#or...
use Test::Perl::Critic (-verbose => '%f: %m at %l');
If given a number, Test::Perl::Critic reports violations using one of
the predefined formats described below. If given a string, it is
interpreted to be an actual format specification. If the -verbose
option is not specified, it defaults to 3.
Verbosity Format Specification
----------- -------------------------------------------------------------
1 "%f:%l:%c:%m\n",
2 "%f: (%l:%c) %m\n",
3 "%m at %f line %l\n",
4 "%m at line %l, column %c. %e. (Severity: %s)\n",
5 "%f: %m at line %l, column %c. %e. (Severity: %s)\n",
6 "%m at line %l, near '%r'. (Severity: %s)\n",
7 "%f: %m at line %l near '%r'. (Severity: %s)\n",
8 "[%p] %m at line %l, column %c. (Severity: %s)\n",
9 "[%p] %m at line %l, near '%r'. (Severity: %s)\n",
10 "%m at line %l, column %c.\n %p (Severity: %s)\n%d\n",
11 "%m at line %l, near '%r'.\n %p (Severity: %s)\n%d\n"
Formats are a combination of literal and escape characters similar to
the way sprintf works. See String::Format for a full explanation
of the formatting capabilities. Valid escape characters are:
Escape Meaning
------- ----------------------------------------------------------------
%c Column number where the violation occurred
%d Full diagnostic discussion of the violation
%e Explanation of violation or page numbers in PBP
%f Name of the file where the violation occurred.
%l Line number where the violation occurred
%m Brief description of the violation
%P Name of the Policy module that created the violation
%p Name of the Policy without the Perl::Critic::Policy:: prefix
%r The string of source code that caused the violation
%s The severity level of the violation
Despite the convenience of using a test script to enforce your coding
standards, there are some inherent risks when distributing those tests
to others. Since you don't know which version of Perl::Critic the
end-user has and whether they have installed any additional Policy
modules, you can't really be sure that your code will pass the
Test::Perl::Critic tests on another machine.
For these reasons, we strongly advise you to make your perlcritic
tests optional, or exclude them from the distribution entirely.
The recommended usage in the "SYNOPSIS" section illustrates one way
to make your perlcritic.t test optional. Also, you should not
list Test::Perl::Critic as a requirement in your build script. These
tests are only relevant to the author and should not be a prerequisite
for end-use.
See http://www.chrisdolan.net/talk/index.php/2005/11/14/private-regression-tests/
for an interesting discussion about Test::Perl::Critic and other types
of author-only regression tests.
critic_ok()
all_critic_ok()
If you want a small performance boost, you can tell PPI to cache
results from previous parsing runs. Most of the processing time is in
Perl::Critic, not PPI, so the speedup is not huge (only about 20%).
Nonetheless, if your distribution is large, it's worth the effort.
Add a block of code like the following to your test program, probably
just before the call to all_critic_ok(). Be sure to adjust the
path to the temp directory appropriately for your system.
use File::Spec;
my $cache_path = File::Spec->catdir(File::Spec->tmpdir,
"test-perl-critic-cache-$ENV{USER}");
if (!-d $cache_path) {
mkdir $cache_path, oct 700;
}
require PPI::Cache;
PPI::Cache->import(path => $cache_path);
We recommend that you do NOT use this technique for tests that will go
out to end-users. They're probably going to only run the tests once,
so they will not see the benefit of the caching but will still have
files stored in their temp directory.
If you find any bugs, please submit them to
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Perl-Critic. Thanks.
Module::Starter::PBP
Perl::Critic
Test::More
Andy Lester, whose Test::Pod module provided most of the code and
documentation for Test::Perl::Critic. Thanks, Andy.
Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <thaljef@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2005-2006 Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license
can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.