Provided by: libtap-parser-sourcehandler-pgtap-perl_3.33-2_all bug

Name

       TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::pgTAP - Stream TAP from pgTAP test scripts

Synopsis

       In Build.PL for your application with pgTAP tests in t/*.pg:

         Module::Build->new(
             module_name        => 'MyApp',
             test_file_exts     => [qw(.t .pg)],
             use_tap_harness    => 1,
             tap_harness_args   => {
                 sources => {
                     Perl  => undef,
                     pgTAP => {
                         dbname   => 'try',
                         username => 'postgres',
                         suffix   => '.pg',
                     },
                 }
             },
             build_requires     => {
                 'Module::Build'                     => '0.30',
                 'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::pgTAP' => '3.19',
             },
         )->create_build_script;

       If you're using "prove":

         prove --source Perl \
               --ext .t --ext .pg \
               --source pgTAP --pgtap-option dbname=try \
                              --pgtap-option username=postgres \
                              --pgtap-option suffix=.pg

       If you have only pgTAP tests, just use "pg_prove":

         pg_prove --dbname try --username postgres

       Direct use:

         use TAP::Parser::Source;
         use TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::pgTAP;

         my $source = TAP::Parser::Source->new->raw(\'mytest.pg');
         $source->config({ pgTAP => {
             dbname   => 'testing',
             username => 'postgres',
             suffix   => '.pg',
         }});
         $source->assemble_meta;

         my $class = 'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::pgTAP';
         my $vote  = $class->can_handle( $source );
         my $iter  = $class->make_iterator( $source );

Description

       This source handler executes pgTAP tests. It does two things:

       1.  Looks at the TAP::Parser::Source passed to it to determine whether or not the source
           in question is in fact a pgTAP test ("can_handle").

       2.  Creates an iterator that will call "psql" to run the pgTAP tests ("make_iterator").

       Unless you're writing a plugin or subclassing TAP::Parser, you probably won't need to use
       this module directly.

   Testing with pgTAP
       If you just want to write tests with pgTAP <http://pgtap.org/>, here's how:

       •   Build your test database, including pgTAP. It's best to install it in its own schema.
           To build it and install it in the schema "tap", do this (assuming your database is
           named "try"):

             make TAPSCHEMA=tap
             make install
             psql -U postgres -d try -f pgtap.sql

       •   Write your tests in files ending in .pg in the t directory, right alongside your
           normal Perl .t tests. Here's a simple pgTAP test to get you started:

             BEGIN;

             SET search_path = public,tap,pg_catalog;

             SELECT plan(1);

             SELECT pass('This should pass!');

             SELECT * FROM finish();
             ROLLBACK;

           Note how "search_path" has been set so that the pgTAP functions can be found in the
           "tap" schema. Consult the extensive pgTAP documentation
           <http://pgtap.org/documentation.html> for a comprehensive list of test functions.

       •   Run your tests with "prove" like so:

             prove --source Perl \
                   --ext .t --ext .pg \
                   --source pgTAP --pgtap-option dbname=try \
                                  --pgtap-option username=postgres \
                                  --pgtap-option suffix=.pg

           This will run both your Perl .t tests and your pgTAP .pg tests all together. You can
           also use pg_prove to run just the pgTAP tests like so:

             pg_prove -d try -U postgres t/

       •   Once you're sure that you've got the pgTAP tests working, modify your Build.PL script
           to allow ./Build test to run both the Perl and the pgTAP tests, like so:

             Module::Build->new(
                 module_name        => 'MyApp',
                 test_file_exts     => [qw(.t .pg)],
                 use_tap_harness    => 1,
                 configure_requires => { 'Module::Build' => '0.30', },
                 tap_harness_args   => {
                     sources => {
                         Perl  => undef,
                         pgTAP => {
                             dbname   => 'try',
                             username => 'postgres',
                             suffix   => '.pg',
                         },
                     }
                 },
                 build_requires     => {
                     'Module::Build'                     => '0.30',
                     'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::pgTAP' => '3.19',
                 },
             )->create_build_script;

           The "use_tap_harness" parameter is optional, since it's implicitly set by the use of
           the "tap_harness_args" parameter. All the other parameters are required as you see
           here. See the documentation for "make_iterator()" for a complete list of options to
           the "pgTAP" key under "sources".

           And that's it. Now get testing!

METHODS

   Class Methods
       "can_handle"

         my $vote = $class->can_handle( $source );

       Looks at the source to determine whether or not it's a pgTAP test and returns a score for
       how likely it is in fact a pgTAP test file. The scores are as follows:

         1    if it's not a file and starts with "pgsql:".
         1    if it has a suffix equal to that in a "suffix" config
         1    if its suffix is ".pg"
         0.8  if its suffix is ".sql"
         0.75 if its suffix is ".s"

       The latter two scores are subject to change, so try to name your pgTAP tests ending in
       ".pg" or specify a suffix in the configuration to be sure.

       "make_iterator"

         my $iterator = $class->make_iterator( $source );

       Returns a new TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process for the source.  "$source->raw" must be
       either a file name or a scalar reference to the file name -- or a string starting with
       "pgsql:", in which case the remainder of the string is assumed to be SQL to be executed
       inside the database.

       The pgTAP tests are run by executing "psql", the PostgreSQL command-line utility. A number
       of arguments are passed to it, many of which you can affect by setting up the source
       source configuration. The configuration must be a hash reference, and supports the
       following keys:

       "psql"
           The path to the "psql" command. Defaults to simply "psql", which should work well
           enough if it's in your path.

       "dbname"
           The database to which to connect to run the tests. Defaults to the value of the
           $PGDATABASE environment variable or, if not set, to the system username.

       "username"
           The PostgreSQL username to use to connect to PostgreSQL. If not specified, no username
           will be used, in which case "psql" will fall back on either the $PGUSER environment
           variable or, if not set, the system username.

       "host"
           Specifies the host name of the machine to which to connect to the PostgreSQL server.
           If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the directory for the Unix-domain
           socket. Defaults to the value of the $PGDATABASE environment variable or, if not set,
           the local host.

       "port"
           Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix-domain socket file extension on which the
           server is listening for connections. Defaults to the value of the $PGPORT environment
           variable or, if not set, to the port specified at the time "psql" was compiled,
           usually 5432.

       "pset"
           Specifies a hash of printing options in the style of "\pset" in the "psql" program.
           See the psql documentation <http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-
           psql.html> for details on the supported options.

See Also

       •   TAP::Object

       •   TAP::Parser

       •   TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Perl

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::File

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Handle

       •   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::RawTAP

       •   pgTAP <http://pgtap.org/>

Support

       This module is managed in an open GitHub repository <https://github.com/theory/tap-parser-
       sourcehandler-pgtap/>.  Feel free to fork and contribute, or to clone
       "git://github.com/theory/tap-parser-sourcehandler-pgtap.git" and send patches!

       Found a bug? Please post <https://github.com/theory/tap-parser-sourcehandler-pgtap/issues>
       or email <mailto:bug-tap-parser-sourcehandler-pgtap@rt.cpan.org> a report!

Author

       David E. Wheeler <dwheeler@cpan.org>

Copyright and License

       Copyright (c) 2010-2016 David E. Wheeler. Some Rights Reserved.

       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.