oracular (3) WWW::Search::Test.3pm.gz

Provided by: libwww-search-perl_2.51.90+~cs6.78-2_all bug

NAME

       WWW::Search::Test - utilities to aid in testing WWW::Search backends

SYNOPSIS

         $oTest = new WWW::Search::Test('HotBot,Yahoo,Excite');
         $oTest->test('HotBot', 'Kingpin', 'one', $sQuery, $TEST_RANGE, 1, 10);

DESCRIPTION

       See file test.pl in the WWW-Search-HotBot distribution for a detailed "real-world" example.

METHODS AND FUNCTIONS

   find_websearch
       Returns the full path of an executable WebSearch program, or undef if none can be found.

   new
       Create a new WWW::Search::Test object.  All arguments are strings, names of backends that this object
       will be able to test.  If no arguments are given, will be able to test all backends.

   mode
       Set / get the test mode of this object.  If an argument is given, sets the mode to that value.  Returns
       the current (or newly set) value.

       There are three test modes available.  They are:

         $MODE_INTERNAL: parse URLs out of saved pages (as a sanity check or regression test);
         $MODE_EXTERNAL: send the query to the search engine "live", parse the results, and compare them to the previously saved results;
       and
         $MODE_UPDATE: send the query to the search engine "live", parse the results, and save them for future testing.

   relevant_test
       Given the name of a backend, returns true if this Test object is able to test that backend.

   eval_test
       Given the name of a backend, grabs the $TEST_CASES variable from that backend and evaluates it.

   test
       Run test(s) for a backend.  Arguments are, in order: name of a backend to test (string, required); name
       of backend maintainer (string, if undef $backend::MAINTAINER will be used); filename for results
       storage/comparison (string, required); query to be sent to backend (string, required); test method
       (required, one of the following).

       Several test methods are possible:

         $TEST_EXACTLY: list of URLs must match exactly (line for line, in order);
         $TEST_BY_COUNTING: test passes if number of resulting URLs is equal;
         $TEST_GREATER_THAN: test passes if we get more than N result URLs;
       and
         $TEST_RANGE: like $TEST_GREATER_THAN but constrained on both ends.

   no_test
       Prints a message stating that this backend does not have a test suite.  Takes two arguments, the backend
       name and the name of the maintainer.

   not_working
       Prints a message stating that this backend is known to be broken.  Takes two arguments, the backend name
       and the name of the maintainer.

   not_working_with_tests
       Prints a message stating that this backend is known to be broken even though it has a test suite.  Takes
       two arguments, the backend name and the name of the maintainer.

   not_working_and_abandoned
       Prints a message stating that this backend is known to be broken and is not being actively maintained.
       Takes two arguments, the backend name and the name of the maintainer.

   reset_error_count
       Reset the counter of errors to zero.  You probably want to call this before each call to test() or
       eval_test().

   wc_l (private, not a method)
       Given a filename, count the number of lines of text contained within the file.  (I.e. simulate running
       UNIX command "wc -l" on a file)

   diff (private, not a method)
       Given two files, returns TRUE if contents are line-by-line different, or FALSE if contents are line-by-
       line same.  (I.e. like the UNIX command diff, but just reports true or false)

   Shortcuts for running backend tests
       WWW::Search::Test keeps its own count of test numbers, so if you want to mix-and-match these functions
       with your own tests, use the $WWW::Search::Test::iTest counter.

   new_engine
       One argument: the name of a backend suitable to be passed to WWW::Search::new().  Prints 'ok' or 'not ok'
       and the test number.  Creates a WWW::Search object internally, to be used for all subsequent calls to
       run_test and run_gui_test (see below).

   tm_new_engine
       Same as new_engine(), but uses Test::More instead of just printing 'ok'.

   run_test
       Three arguments: a query string, NOT escaped; a minimum number of expected results; and a maximum number
       of expected results.  Optional fourth argument: integer value to be used as the search_debug.  Optional
       fifth argument: send any true value to dump the search results.  Optional sixth argument: reference to
       hash of search options (see backend documentation).  Optional seventh argument: send any true value to
       NOT escape the query string.

       If the minimum is undef, assumes zero.  If the maximum is undef, does not check.

       Prints 'ok' or 'not ok' and the test number.

   run_gui_test
       Same as run_test(), but calls gui_query() instead of native_query().

   tm_run_test
       Same as run_test(), but uses Test::More rather than just printing 'ok'.

       Note: If you use this function inside a TODO block, you must set global variable $TODO rather than a
       local $TODO, and you must set the global $TODO back to empty-string (or undef) at the end of your TODO
       block.  For example:

         TODO:
           {
           $TODO = 'I have not fixed this yet';
           tm_run_test(...);
           $TODO = '';
           } # end of TODO block

   tm_run_test_no_approx
       Same as tm_run_test, but does NOT check the approximate_result_count.

   count_results
       Run a query, and return the actual (not approximate) number of hits.  Required first argument determines
       which backend query method to call: 'gui' to call gui_query(), anything else to call native_query().
       Remaining arguments are same as all the run_test() arguments.

   skip_test
       You can call this function instead of run_test() or run_gui_test() if the current test must be skipped
       for any reason.

   test_most_results
       Given an arrayref of things to test, runs all those things against all the results of the most-recently
       executed test search.