Provided by: libio-async-perl_0.61-1_all bug

NAME

       "IO::Async::LoopTests" - acceptance testing for "IO::Async::Loop" subclasses

SYNOPSIS

        use IO::Async::LoopTests;
        run_tests( 'IO::Async::Loop::Shiney', 'io' );

DESCRIPTION

       This module contains a collection of test functions for running acceptance tests on
       IO::Async::Loop subclasses. It is provided as a facility for authors of such subclasses to
       ensure that the code conforms to the Loop API required by "IO::Async".

TIMING

       Certain tests require the use of timers or timed delays. Normally these are counted in
       units of seconds. By setting the environment variable "TEST_QUICK_TIMERS" to some true
       value, these timers run 10 times quicker, being measured in units of 0.1 seconds instead.
       This value may be useful when running the tests interactively, to avoid them taking too
       long. The slower timers are preferred on automated smoke-testing machines, to help guard
       against false negatives reported simply because of scheduling delays or high system load
       while testing.

        TEST_QUICK_TIMERS=1 ./Build test

FUNCTIONS

   run_tests( $class, @tests )
       Runs a test or collection of tests against the loop subclass given. The class being tested
       is loaded by this function; the containing script does not need to "require" or "use" it
       first.

       This function runs "Test::More::plan" to output its expected test count; the containing
       script should not do this.

TEST SUITES

       The following test suite names exist, to be passed as a name in the @tests argument to
       "run_tests":

   io
       Tests the Loop's ability to watch filehandles for IO readiness

   timer
       Tests the Loop's ability to handle timer events

   signal
       Tests the Loop's ability to watch POSIX signals

   idle
       Tests the Loop's support for idle handlers

   child
       Tests the Loop's support for watching child processes by PID

   control
       Tests that the "run", "stop", "loop_once" and "loop_forever" methods behave correctly

AUTHOR

       Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>