Provided by: libur-perl_0.470+ds-2_all bug

NAME

       ur test callcount - collect callcount data from running tests into one file

SYNOPSIS

        # run tests in a given namespace
        cd my_sandbox/TheApp
        ur test run --recurse --callcount

        ur test callcount --output all_tests.callcount

DESCRIPTION

       Callcount data can be used to find unused subroutines in your code.  When the test suite is run with the
       "callcount" option, then for each *.t file run by the test suite, a corresponding *.callcount file is
       created containing information about how often all the defined subroutines were called.

       The callcount file is a plain text file with three columns:

       1.  The number of times this subroutine was called

       2.  The name of the subroutine

       3.  Where in the code this subroutine is defined

       After a test suite run with sufficient coverage, subroutines with 0 calls are candidates for removal, and
       subs with high call counts are candidates for optimization.

OPTIONS

       --input
           Name the *.callcount input file(s).  When run from the command line, it accepts a list of files
           separated by ','s.  Input files can also be given as plain, unnamed command line arguments
           ("bare_args").  When run as a command module within another program, the "input") property can be an
           arrayref of pathanmes.

           After inputs are determined, any directories given are expanded by searching them recursively for
           files ending in .callcount with File::Find.

           If no inputs in any form are given, then it defaults to '.', the current directory, which means all
           *.callcount files under the current directory are used.

       --output
           The pathname to write the collected data to.  The user may use '-' to print the results to STDOUT.

       --sort
           How the collected results should be sorted before being reported.  The default is 'count', which
           sorts incrementally by call count (the first column).  'sub' performs a string sort by subroutine
           name (column 2).

execute()

       The "execute()" method returns an arrayref of data sorted in the appropriate way.  Each element is itself
       an arrayref of three items: count, sub name, and sub location.