Provided by: libtest-lectrotest-perl_0.5001-1_all bug

NAME

       Test::LectroTest - Easy, automatic, specification-based tests

VERSION

       version 0.5001

SYNOPSIS

           #!/usr/bin/perl -w

           use MyModule;  # contains code we want to test
           use Test::LectroTest;

           Property {
               ##[ x <- Int, y <- Int ]##
               MyModule::my_function( $x, $y ) >= 0;
           }, name => "my_function output is non-negative" ;

           Property { ... }, name => "yet another property" ;

           # more properties to check here

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides a simple (yet full featured) interface to LectroTest, an automated,
       specification-based testing system for Perl.  To use it, declare properties that specify
       the expected behavior of your software.  LectroTest then checks your software to see
       whether those properties hold.

       Declare properties using the "Property" function, which takes a block of code and promotes
       it to a Test::LectroTest::Property:

           Property {
               ##[ x <- Int, y <- Int ]##
               MyModule::my_function( $x, $y ) >= 0;
           }, name => "my_function output is non-negative" ;

       The first part of the block must contain a generator-binding declaration.  For example:

               ##[  x <- Int, y <- Int  ]##

       (Note the special bracketing, which is required.)  This particular binding says, "For all
       integers x and y."  (By the way, you aren't limited to integers.  LectroTest also gives
       you booleans, strings, lists, hashes, and more, and it lets you define your own generator
       types.  See Test::LectroTest::Generator for more.)

       The second part of the block is simply a snippet of code that makes use of the variables
       we bound earlier to test whether a property holds for the piece of software we are
       testing:

               MyModule::my_function( $x, $y ) >= 0;

       In this case, it asserts that "MyModule::my_function($x,$y)" returns a non-negative
       result.  (Yes, $x and $y refer to the same x and y that we bound to the generators
       earlier.  LectroTest automagically loads these lexically bound Perl variables with values
       behind the scenes.)

       Note: If you want to use testing assertions like "ok" from Test::Simple or "is", "like",
       or "cmp_ok" from Test::More (and the related family of Test::Builder-based testing
       modules), see Test::LectroTest::Compat, which lets you mix and match LectroTest with these
       modules.

       Finally, we give the whole Property a name, in this case "my_function output is non-
       negative."  It's a good idea to use a meaningful name because LectroTest refers to
       properties by name in its output.

       Let's take a look at the finished property specification:

           Property {
               ##[ x <- Int, y <- Int ]##
               MyModule::my_function( $x, $y ) >= 0;
           }, name => "my_function output is non-negative" ;

       It says, "For all integers x and y, we assert that my_function's output is non-negative."

       To check whether this property holds, simply put it in a Perl program that uses the
       Test::LectroTest module.  (See the "SYNOPSIS" for an example.)  When you run the program,
       LectroTest will load the property (and any others in the file) and check it by running
       random trials against the software you're testing.

       Note: If you want to place LectroTest property checks into a test plan managed by
       Test::Builder-based modules such as Test::Simple or Test::More, see
       Test::LectroTest::Compat.

       If LectroTest is able to "break" your software during the property check, it will emit a
       counterexample to your property's assertions and stop.  You can plug the counterexample
       back into your software to debug the problem.  (You might also want to add the
       counterexample to a list of regression tests.)

       A successful LectroTest looks like this:

         1..1
         ok 1 - 'my_function output is non-negative' (1000 attempts)

       On the other hand, if you're not so lucky:

         1..1
         not ok 1 - 'my_function output is non-negative' falsified \
             in 324 attempts
         # Counterexample:
         # $x = -34
         # $y = 0

EXIT CODE

       The exit code returned by running a suite of property checks is the number of failed
       checks.  The code is 0 if all properties passed their checks or N if N properties failed.
       (If more than 254 properties failed, the exit code will be 254.)

ADJUSTING THE TESTING PARAMETERS

       There is one testing parameter (among others) that you might wish to change from time to
       time: the number of trials to run for each property checked.  By default it is 1,000.  If
       you want to try more or fewer trials, pass the "trials=>"N flag:

         use Test::LectroTest trials => 10_000;

TESTING FOR REGRESSIONS AND CORNER CASES

       LectroTest can record failure-causing test cases to a file, and it can play those test
       cases back as part of its normal testing strategy.  The easiest way to take advantage of
       this feature is to set the regressions parameter when you "use" this module:

           use Test::LectroTest
               regressions => "regressions.txt";

       This tells LectroTest to use the file "regressions.txt" for both recording and playing
       back failures.  If you want to record and play back from separate files, or want only to
       record or play back, use the record_failures and/or playback_failures options:

           use Test::LectroTest
               playback_failures => "regression_suite_for_my_module.txt",
               record_failures   => "failures_in_the_field.txt";

       See Test::LectroTest::RegressionTesting for more.

CAVEATS

       When you use this module, it imports all of the generator-building functions from
       Test::LectroTest::Generator into the your code's namespace.  This is almost always what
       you want, but I figured I ought to say something about it here to reduce the possibility
       of surprise.

       A Property specification must appear in the first column, i.e., without any indentation,
       in order for it to be automatically loaded and checked.  If this poses a problem, let me
       know, and this restriction can be lifted.

SEE ALSO

       For a gentle introduction to LectroTest, see Test::LectroTest::Tutorial.  Also, the slides
       from my LectroTest talk for the Pittsburgh Perl Mongers make for a great introduction.
       Download a copy from the LectroTest home (see below).

       Test::LectroTest::RegressionTesting explains how to test for regressions and corner cases
       using LectroTest.

       Test::LectroTest::Compat lets you mix LectroTest with the popular family of
       Test::Builder-based modules such as Test::Simple and Test::More.

       Test::LectroTest::Property explains in detail what you can put inside of your property
       specifications.

       Test::LectroTest::Generator describes the many generators and generator combinators that
       you can use to define the test or condition space that you want LectroTest to search for
       bugs.

       Test::LectroTest::TestRunner describes the objects that check your properties and tells
       you how to turn their control knobs.  You'll want to look here if you're interested in
       customizing the testing procedure.

LECTROTEST HOME

       The LectroTest home is http://community.moertel.com/LectroTest.  There you will find more
       documentation, presentations, mailing-list archives, a wiki, and other helpful LectroTest-
       related resources.  It's also the best place to ask questions.

AUTHOR

       Tom Moertel (tom@moertel.com)

INSPIRATION

       The LectroTest project was inspired by Haskell's QuickCheck module by Koen Claessen and
       John Hughes: http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~rjmh/QuickCheck/.

COPYRIGHT and LICENSE

       Copyright (c) 2004-05 by Thomas G Moertel.  All rights reserved.

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