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

NAME

       Test::LectroTest::TestRunner - Configurable TAP-compatible engine for running LectroTest
       property checks

VERSION

       version 0.5001

SYNOPSIS

        use Test::LectroTest::TestRunner;

        my @args = trials => 1_000, retries => 20_000;
        my $runner = Test::LectroTest::TestRunner->new( @args );

        # test a single property and print details upon failure
        my $result = $runner->run( $a_single_lectrotest_property );
        print $result->details unless $result->success;

        # test a suite of properties, w/ Test::Harness::TAP output
        my $num_successful = $runner->run_suite( @properties );
        print "# All passed!" if $num_successful == @properties;

DESCRIPTION

       STOP! If you just want to write and run simple tests, see Test::LectroTest.  If you really
       want to learn about the property-checking apparatus or turn its control knobs, read on.

       This module provides Test::LectroTest::TestRunner, a class of objects that tests
       properties by running repeated random trials.  Create a TestRunner, configure it, and then
       call its "run" or "run_suite" methods to test properties individually or in groups.

METHODS

       The following methods are available.

   new(named-params)
         my $runner = new Test::LectroTest::TestRunner(
           trials      => 1_000,
           retries     => 20_000,
           scalefn     => sub { $_[0] / 2 + 1 },
           verbose     => 1,
           regressions => "/path/to/regression_suite.txt",
         );

       Creates a new Test::LectroTest::TestRunner and configures it with the given named
       parameters, if any.  Typically, you need only provide the "trials" parameter because the
       other values are reasonable for almost all situations.  Here is what each parameter means:

       trials
           The number of trials to run against each property checked.  The default is 1_000.

       retries
           The number of times to allow a property to retry trials (via "$tcon->retry") during
           the entire property check before aborting the check.  This is used to prevent infinite
           looping, should the property retry every attempt.

       scalefn
           A subroutine that scales the sizing guidance given to input generators.

           The TestRunner starts with an initial guidance of 1 at the beginning of a property
           check.  For each trial (or retry) of the property, the guidance value is incremented.
           This causes successive trials to be tried using successively more complex inputs.  The
           "scalefn" subroutine gets to adjust this guidance on the way to the input generators.
           Typically, you would change the "scalefn" subroutine if you wanted to change the rate
           and which inputs grow during the course of the trials.

       verbose
           If this parameter is set to true (the default) the TestRunner will use verbose output
           that includes things like label frequencies and counterexamples.  Otherwise, only one-
           line summaries will be output.  Unless you have a good reason to do otherwise, leave
           this parameter alone because verbose output is almost always what you want.

       record_failures
           If this parameter is set to a file's pathname (or a FailureRecorder object), the
           TestRunner will record property-check failures to the file (or recorder).  (This is an
           easy way to build a regression-testing suite.)  If the file cannot be created or
           written to, this parameter will be ignored.  Set this parameter to "undef" (the
           default) to turn off recording.

       playback_failures
           If this parameter is set to a file's pathname (or a FailureRecorder object), the
           TestRunner will load previously recorded failures from the file (or recorder) and use
           them as additional test cases when checking properties.  If the file cannot be read,
           this option will be ignored.  Set this parameter to "undef" (the default) to turn off
           recording.

       regressions
           If this parameter is set to a file's pathname (or a FailureRecorder object), the
           TestRunner will load failures from and record failures to the file (or recorder).
           Setting this parameter is a shortcut for, and exactly equivalent to, setting
           record_failures and <playback_failures> to the same value, which is typically what you
           want when managing a persistent suite of regression tests.

           This is a write-only accessor.

       You can also set and get the values of the configuration properties using accessors of the
       same name.  For example:

         $runner->trials( 10_000 );

   run(property)
         $results = $runner->run( $a_property );
         print $results->summary, "\n";
         if ($results->success) {
             # celebrate!
         }

       Checks whether the given property holds by running repeated random trials.  The result is
       a Test::LectroTest::TestRunner::results object, which you can query for fined-grained
       information about the outcome of the check.

       The "run" method takes an optional second argument which gives the test number.  If it is
       not provided (usually the case), the next number available from the TestRunner's internal
       counter is used.

         $results = $runner->run( $third_property, 3 );

       Additionally, if the TestRunner's playback_failures parameter is defined, this method will
       play back any relevant failure cases from the given playback file (or FailureRecorder).

       Additionally, if the TestRunner's record_failures parameter is defined, this method will
       record any new failures to the given file (or FailureRecorder).

   run_suite(properties...)
         my $num_successful = $runner->run_suite( @properties );
         if ($num_successful == @properties) {
             # celebrate most jubilantly!
         }

       Checks a suite of properties, sending the results of each property checked to "STDOUT" in
       a form that is compatible with Test::Harness::TAP.  For example:

         1..5
         ok 1 - Property->new disallows use of 'tcon' in bindings
         ok 2 - magic Property syntax disallows use of 'tcon' in bindings
         ok 3 - exceptions are caught and reported as failures
         ok 4 - pre-flight check catches new w/ no args
         ok 5 - pre-flight check catches unbalanced arguments list

       By default, labeling statistics and counterexamples (if any) are included in the output if
       the TestRunner's "verbose" property is true.  You may override the default by passing the
       "verbose" named parameter after all of the properties in the argument list:

         my $num_successes = $runner->run_suite( @properties,
                                                 verbose => 1 );
         my $num_failed = @properties - $num_successes;

HELPER OBJECTS

       There are two kinds of objects that TestRunner uses as helpers.  Neither is meant to be
       created by you.  Rather, a TestRunner will create them on your behalf when they are
       needed.

       The objects are described in the following subsections.

   Test::LectroTest::TestRunner::results
         my $results = $runner->run( $a_property );
         print "Property name: ", $results->name, ": ";
         print $results->success ? "Winner!" : "Loser!";

       This is the object that you get back from "run".  It contains all of the information
       available about the outcome of a property check and provides the following methods:

       success
           Boolean value:  True if the property checked out successfully; false otherwise.

       summary
           Returns a one line summary of the property-check outcome.  It does not end with a
           newline.  Example:

             ok 1 - Property->new disallows use of 'tcon' in bindings

       details
           Returns all relevant information about the property-check outcome as a series of
           lines.  The last line is terminated with a newline.  The details are identical to the
           summary (except for the terminating newline) unless label frequencies are present or a
           counterexample is present, in which case the details will have these extras (the
           summary does not).  Example:

             1..1
             not ok 1 - 'my_sqrt meets defn of sqrt' falsified in 1 attempts
             # Counterexample:
             # $x = '0.546384454460178';

       name
           Returns the name of the property to which the results pertain.

       number
           The number assigned to the property that was checked.

       counterexample
           Returns the counterexample that "broke" the code being tested, if there is one.
           Otherwise, returns an empty string.  If any notes have been attached to the failing
           trial, they will be included.

       labels
           Label counts.  If any labels were applied to trials during the property check, this
           value will be a reference to a hash mapping each combination of labels to the count of
           trials that had that particular combination.  Otherwise, it will be undefined.

           Note that each trial is counted only once -- for the most-specific combination of
           labels that was applied to it.  For example, consider the following labeling logic:

             Property {
               ##[ x <- Int ]##
               $tcon->label("negative") if $x < 0;
               $tcon->label("odd")      if $x % 2;
               1;
             }, name => "negative/odd labeling example";

           For a particular trial, if x was 2 (positive and even), the trial would receive no
           labels.  If x was 3 (positive and odd), the trial would be labeled "odd".  If x was -2
           (negative and even), the trial would be labeled "negative".  If x was -3 (negative and
           odd), the trial would be labeled "negative & odd".

       label_frequencies
           Returns a string containing a line-by-line accounting of labels applied during the
           series of trials:

             print $results->label_frequencies;

           The corresponding output looks like this:

             25% negative
             25% negative & odd
             25% odd

           If no labels were applied, an empty string is returned.

       exception
           Returns the text of the exception or error that caused the series of trials to be
           aborted, if the trials were aborted because an exception or error was intercepted by
           LectroTest.  Otherwise, returns an empty string.

       attempts
           Returns the count of trials performed.

       incomplete
           In the event that the series of trials was halted before it was completed (such as
           when the retry count was exhausted), this method will return the reason.  Otherwise,
           it returns an empty string.

           Note that a series of trials is complete if a counterexample was found.

   Test::LectroTest::TestRunner::testcontroller
       During a live property-check trial, the variable $tcon is available to your Properties.
       It lets you label the current trial or request that it be re-tried with new inputs.

       The following methods are available.

       retry
               Property {
                 ##[ x <- Int ]##
                 return $tcon->retry if $x == 0;
               }, ... ;

           Stops the current trial and tells the TestRunner to re-try it with new inputs.
           Typically used to reject a particular case of inputs that doesn't make for a good or
           valid test.  While not required, you will probably want to call "$tcon->retry" as part
           of a "return" statement to prevent further execution of your property's logic, the
           results of which will be thrown out should it run to completion.

           The return value of "$tcon->retry" is itself meaningless; it is the side-effect of
           calling it that causes the current trial to be thrown out and re-tried.

       label(string)
               Property {
                 ##[ x <- Int ]##
                 $tcon->label("negative") if $x < 0;
                 $tcon->label("odd")      if $x % 2;
               }, ... ;

           Applies a label to the current trial.  At the end of the trial, all of the labels are
           gathered together, and the trial is dropped into a bucket bearing the combined label.
           See the discussion of "labels" for more.

       trivial
               Property {
                 ##[ x <- Int ]##
                 $tcon->trivial if $x == 0;
               }, ... ;

           Applies the label "trivial" to the current trial.  It is identical to calling "label"
           with "trivial" as the argument.

       note(string...)
               Property {
                 ##[ s <- String( charset=>"A-Za-z0-9" ) ]##
                 my $s_enc     = encode($s);
                 my $s_enc_dec = decode($s_enc);
                 $tcon->note("s_enc     = $s_enc",
                             "s_enc_dec = $s_enc_dec");
                 $s eq $s_enc_dec;
               }, name => "decode is encode's inverse" ;

           Adds a note (or notes) to the current trial.  In the event that the trial fails, these
           notes will be emitted as part of the counterexample.  For example:

               1..1
               not ok 1 - property 'decode is encode's inverse' \
                   falsified in 68 attempts
               #     Counterexample:
               #     $s = "0";
               #     Notes:
               #     $s_enc     = "";
               #     $s_enc_dec = "";

           Notes can help you debug your code when something goes wrong.  Use them as debugging
           hints to yourself.  For example, you can use notes to record the output of each stage
           of a multi-stage test.  That way, if the test fails, you can see what happened in each
           stage without having to plug the counterexample into your code under a debugger.

           If you want to include complicated values or data structures in your notes, see the
           "dump" method, next, which may be more appropriate.

       dump(value, name)
               Property {
                 ##[ s <- String ]##
                 my $s_enc     = encode($s);
                 my $s_enc_dec = decode($s_enc);
                 $tcon->dump($s_enc, "s_enc");
                 $tcon->dump($s_enc_dec, "s_enc_dec");
                 $s eq $s_enc_dec;
               }, name => "decode is encode's inverse" ;

           Adds a note to the current trial in which the given value is dumped.  The value will
           be dumped via Data::Dumper and thus may be complex and contain weird control
           characters and so on.  If you supply a name, it will be used to name the dumped value.
           Returns value as its result.

           In the event that the trial fails, the note (and any others) will be emitted as part
           of the counterexample.

           See "note" above for more.

SEE ALSO

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

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

       Test::Harness:TAP documents the Test Anything Protocol, Perl's simple text-based interface
       between testing modules such as Test::LectroTest and the test harness Test::Harness.

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) 2004-13 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.