Writing Tests
=============
Here's how to write tests.
1. Create a new file in the t directory, called foo.t. Start with
the following lines:
require 't/test.pl';
package OddMuse;
use Test::More tests => $num
clear_pages();
This will load the testing library, make all its functions
available to you, announce that you plan to make $num tests, and
clear all the pages from the test wiki.
The test wiki will be created in /tmp/oddmuse.
2. The wiki is accessed via the command line only. You don't need to
have your code installed on a webserver! Just run the test from
the parent directory:
perl t/foo.t
3. Write $num tests. :)
4. To examine the situation after having run some tests, you can
also call the script from the command line. The only problem is
that the tests use a specific data directory that you need to
provide via an environment variable:
WikiDataDir=test-data perl wiki.pl action=index raw=1
add_module, remove_module, and remove_rule
------------------------------------------
Load a module before you run any tests:
add_module('usemod.pl');
If the module has important setup code, you might have to add the
following:
InitVariables();
The reason is this: If you add a module and the run the script
again, you're fine. But if you run tests that don't invoke another
copy of the script, then the init code will not have run.
Modules and rules need rarely be removed, since every *.t file
starts in a new process. If you then want to run additional tests
without the module you added (in the same *.t file!), then remove
both the module and the rules it added. You'll have to do this
manually, unfortunately.
remove_module('usemod.pl');
remove_rule(\&UsemodRule);
update_page
-----------
$page = update_page($pagename, $content);
update_page($pagename, $content, $summary, $minor, $admin, @rest);
@rest is a list of parameter=value string pairs:
@rest = ('username=joe', 'ns=Moore');
If updating the page resultet in a redirect, the redirect is stored
in the variable $redirect, and you still get the result page
returned.
test_page($redirect, split('\n',<<'EOT'));
banned text
wiki administrator
matched
See .*BannedContent.* for more information
EOT
You can even create pages containing file uploads directly:
$page = update_page('alex pic', "#FILE image/png\niVBORw0KGgoAAAA");
get_page
--------
$page = get_page('action=calendar');
$page = get_page('action=rc all=1 showedit=1');
$page = get_page('action=rc', 'all=1', 'showedit=1');
test_page(get_page('action=all'),
'restricted to administrators');
Return the text of the page. The parameters are the parameters
available to you from the command line when using the CGI library:
keyword1 keyword2 keyword3
keyword1+keyword2+keyword3
name1=value1 name2=value2
name1=value1&name2=value2
"name1='I am a long value'" "name2=two\ words"
/your/path/here?name1=value1&name2=value2
run_tests
---------
Takes a list of alternating input and output strings, applies rules
(and thus @MyRules) to input and compares it to the output. If you
have html attributes in the output you want to test, use
xpath_run_tests, because the order of the attributes is not
guaranteed and varies with CGI library version.
run_tests(q{"Get lost!", they say.},
q{“Get lost!”, they say.});
run_tests(split('\n', <<'EOT'));
input1
output1
input2
output2
EOT
Newline excapes \n in the input and output are translated to real
newlines when running the tests.
run_tests(split('\n',<<'EOT'));
* ''one\n** two
EOT
test_page and test_page_negative
--------------------------------
Tests any string for regular expression matches:
test_page($string, $regexp1, $regexp2, ...);
test_page(update_page($pagename, $content), $re1, $re2);
Or make sure that none of the regular expressions match:
test_page_negative($page,
"rollback",
"Rollback",
"EvilPage",
"AnotherEvilPage",
);
xpath_run_tests
---------------
This is the equivalent of run_tests using XPath instead of simple
string comparison. It takes a list of alternating input and xpath
tests, applies rules (and thus @MyRules) to the input and applies
the test to the output.
xpath_run_tests(split('\n',<<'EOT'));
WikiWord
//a[@class="edit"][@title="Click to edit this page"]
This is a [:day for fun and laughter].
//a[@class="anchor"][@name="day_for_fun_and_laughter"]
EOT
XPath is harder to write, but is ideal when the output contains tags
with more than one attribute, since the order of attributes is
undefined. And you don't even have to test for all the attributes.
xpath_test and negative_xpath_test
----------------------------------
The equivalent of test_page, but using xpath instead of exact
matches.
xpath_test(get_page('action=all pwd=foo'),
'//p/a[@href="#HomePage"][text()="HomePage"]',
'//h1/a[@name="foo"][text()="foo"]',
'//a[@class="local"][@href="#bar"][text()="bar"]',
'//h1/a[@name="bar"][text()="bar"]')
And the same thing for negative matches, of course:
negative_xpath_test($page, '//h1/a[not(text())]');
run_macro_tests
---------------
run_macro_tests(split('\n',<<'EOT'));
$input1
$output2
$input2
$output2
EOT
Tests @MyMacros.