/usr/bin/pg_prove is in libtap-parser-sourcehandler-pgtap-perl 3.29-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o755.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -w -S $0 ${1+"$@"}'
if 0; # not running under some shell
use strict;
use App::Prove;
use Getopt::Long;
our $VERSION = '3.29';
$|++;
Getopt::Long::Configure(qw(no_ignore_case bundling pass_through));
my $opts = { color => 1, comments => 1 };
Getopt::Long::GetOptions(
'psql-bin|b=s' => \$opts->{psql},
'dbname|d=s' => \$opts->{dbname},
'username|U=s' => \$opts->{username},
'host|h=s' => \$opts->{host},
'port|p=s' => \$opts->{port},
'pset|P=s%' => \$opts->{pset},
'set|S=s%' => \$opts->{set},
'runtests|R' => \$opts->{runtests},
'schema|s=s' => \$opts->{schema},
'match|x=s' => \$opts->{match},
'timer|t!' => \$opts->{timer},
'version|V' => \$opts->{version},
'ext=s@' => \$opts->{ext},
'comments|o!' => \$opts->{comments},
'help|H|?' => \$opts->{help},
'man|m' => \$opts->{man},
) or require Pod::Usage && Pod::Usage::pod2usage(2);
if ($opts->{version}) {
print 'pg_prove ', main->VERSION, $/;
exit;
}
if ( $opts->{help} or $opts->{man} ) {
require Pod::Usage;
Pod::Usage::pod2usage(
'-sections' => $opts->{man} ? '.+' : '(?i:(Usage|Options))',
'-verbose' => 99,
'-exitval' => 0,
)
}
if ($opts->{version}) {
print 'pg_prove ', main->VERSION, $/;
exit;
}
my $prove_class = 'App::Prove';
my $runtests_call;
# --schema and --match assume --runtests.
if ($opts->{runtests} || $opts->{schema} || $opts->{match}) {
# We're just going to call `runtests()`.
$prove_class .= '::pgTAP';
my @args;
for my $key (qw(schema match)) {
next unless $opts->{$key};
(my $arg = $opts->{$key}) =~ s/'/\\'/g;
# Gotta cast the arguments.
push @args, "'$arg'::" . ($key eq 'schema' ? 'name' : 'text');
}
$runtests_call = 'runtests(' . join( ', ', @args ) . ');'
}
my $app = $prove_class->new;
$app->process_args(
@ARGV,
(map { ('--ext' => $_) } @{ $opts->{ext} || ['.pg'] }),
qw(--source pgTAP),
($opts->{comments} ? ('--comments') : ()),
($opts->{timer} ? ('--timer') : ()),
(map {
('--pgtap-option' => "$_=$opts->{$_}")
} grep {
$opts->{$_}
} qw(psql dbname username host port)),
(map {
('--pgtap-option' => "pset=$_=$opts->{pset}{$_}")
} keys %{ $opts->{pset} }),
(map {
('--pgtap-option' => "set=$_=$opts->{set}{$_}")
} keys %{ $opts->{set} })
);
exit($app->run ? 0 : 1);
PGPROVE: {
package # Hide from indexer.
App::Prove::pgTAP;
use base 'App::Prove';
sub _get_tests {
return [
"pgsql: SELECT * FROM $runtests_call",
$runtests_call,
]
}
}
__END__
=encoding utf8
=head1 Name
pg_prove - A command-line tool for running and harnessing pgTAP tests
=head1 Usage
pg_prove tests/
pg_prove --dbname template1 test*.sql
pg_prove -d testdb --runtests
=head1 Description
C<pg_prove> is a command-line application to run one or more
L<pgTAP|http://pgtap.org/> tests in a PostgreSQL database. The output of the
tests is harvested and processed by L<TAP::Harness|TAP::Harness> in order to
summarize the results of the test.
Tests can be written and run in one of two ways, as SQL scripts or as
xUnit-style database functions.
=head2 Test Scripts
pgTAP test scripts should consist of a series of SQL statements that output
TAP. Here’s a simple example that assumes that the pgTAP functions have been
installed in the database:
-- Start transaction and plan the tests.
BEGIN;
SELECT plan(1);
-- Run the tests.
SELECT pass( 'My test passed, w00t!' );
-- Finish the tests and clean up.
SELECT * FROM finish();
ROLLBACK;
Now run the tests by passing the list of SQL script names or the name of a
test directory to C<pg_prove>. Here’s what it looks like when the pgTAP tests
are run with C<pg_prove>
% pg_prove -U postgres tests/
tests/coltap.....ok
tests/hastap.....ok
tests/moretap....ok
tests/pg73.......ok
tests/pktap......ok
All tests successful.
Files=5, Tests=216, 1 wallclock secs ( 0.06 usr 0.02 sys + 0.08 cusr 0.07 csys = 0.23 CPU)
Result: PASS
=head2 xUnit Test Functions
pgTAP test functions should return a set of text, and then simply return the
values returned by pgTAP functions, like so:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION setup_insert(
) RETURNS SETOF TEXT AS $$
RETURN NEXT is( MAX(nick), NULL, 'Should have no users') FROM users;
INSERT INTO users (nick) VALUES ('theory');
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Create OR REPLACE FUNCTION test_user(
) RETURNS SETOF TEXT AS $$
SELECT is( nick, 'theory', 'Should have nick') FROM users;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE sql;
Once you have these functions defined in your database, you can run them with
C<pg_prove> by using the C<--runtests> option.
% pg_prove --dbname mydb --runtests
runtests()....ok
All tests successful.
Files=1, Tests=32, 0 wallclock secs ( 0.02 usr 0.01 sys + 0.01 cusr 0.00 csys = 0.04 CPU)
Result: PASS
Be sure to pass the C<--schema> option if your test functions are all in one
schema, and the C<--match> option if they have names that don’t start with
“test”. For example, if you have all of your test functions in the “test”
schema and I<ending> with “test,” run the tests like so:
pg_prove --dbname mydb --schema test --match 'test$'
=head1 Options
-b --psql-bin PSQL Location of the C<psql> client.
-d, --dbname DBNAME Database to which to connect.
-U, --username USERNAME User with which to connect.
-h, --host HOST Host to which to connect.
-p, --port PORT Port to which to connect.
-P, --pset OPTION=VALUE Set psql key/value printing option.
-S, --set VAR=VALUE Set variables for psql session.
-R --runtests Run xUnit test using C<runtests()>.
-s, --schema SCHEMA Schema in which to find xUnit tests.
-x, --match REGEX Regular expression to find xUnit tests.
--ext Set the extension for tests (default F<.pg>)
-r, --recurse Recursively descend into directories.
--ignore-exit Ignore exit status from test scripts.
--trap Trap C<Ctrl-C> and print summary on interrupt.
--harness Define test harness to use.
-j, --jobs N Run N test jobs in parallel (try 9.)
--rc RCFILE Process options from rcfile
--norc Don't process default F<.proverc>
--state OPTION=VALUE Set persistent state options.
-v, --verbose Print all test lines.
-f, --failures Show failed tests.
-o, --comments Show comments and diagnostics.
--directives Only show results with TODO or SKIP directives.
-q, --quiet Suppress some test output while running tests.
-Q, --QUIET Only print summary results.
--parse Show full list of TAP parse errors, if any.
--normalize Normalize TAP output in verbose output
-D --dry Dry run. Show test that would have run.
--merge Merge test scripts' C<STDERR> and C<STDOUT>.
-t --timer Print elapsed time after each test.
-c, --color Colored test output (default).
--nocolor Do not color test output.
--shuffle Run the tests in random order.
--reverse Run the tests in reverse order.
-a, --archive FILENAME Store the resulting TAP in an archive file.
--formatter Result formatter to use.
--count Show X/Y test count when not verbose (default)
--nocount Disable the X/Y test count.
-H, --help Print a usage statement and exit.
-?, Print a usage statement and exit.
-m, --man Print the complete documentation and exit.
-V, --version Print the version number and exit.
=head1 Options Details
=head2 Database Options
=over
=item C<-b>
=item C<--psql-bin>
pg_prove --psql-bin /usr/local/pgsql/bin/psql
pg_prove -b /usr/local/bin/psql
Path to the C<psql> program, which will be used to actually run the tests.
Defaults to F<psql>, which should work well, when it is in your path.
=item C<-d>
=item C<--dbname>
pg_prove --dbname try
pg_prove -d postgres
The name of database to which to connect. Defaults to the value of the
C<$PGDATABASE> environment variable or to the system username.
=item C<-U>
=item C<--username>
pg_prove --username foo
pg_prove -U postgres
PostgreSQL user name to connect as. Defaults to the value of the C<$PGUSER>
environment variable or to the operating system name of the user running the
application.
=item C<-h>
=item C<--host>
pg_prove --host pg.example.com
pg_prove -h dev.local
Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is running. If the
value begins with a slash, it is used as the directory for the Unix-domain
socket. Defaults to the value of the C<$PGHOST> environment variable or
localhost.
=item C<-p>
=item C<--port>
pg_prove --port 1234
pg_prove -p 666
Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix-domain socket file extension on which
the server is listening for connections. Defaults to the value of the
C<$PGPORT> environment variable or, if not set, to the port specified at
compile time, usually 5432.
=item C<-P>
=item C<--pset>
pg_prove --pset tuples_only=0
pg_prove -P null=[NULL]
Specifies printing options in the style of C<\pset> in the C<psql> program.
See L<http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-psql.html> for details
on the supported options.
=item C<-S>
=item C<--set>
pg_prove --set MY_CONTRACT=321
pg_prove -S TEST_SEARCH_PATH=test,public
Sets local variables for psql in the style of C<\set> in the C<psql> program.
See L<http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-psql.html> for details
on the supported options.
=item C<--runtests>
pg_prove --runtests
pg_prove -r
Don’t run any test scripts, but just use the C<runtests()> pgTAP function to
run xUnit tests. This ends up looking like a single test script has been run,
when in fact no test scripts have been run. Instead, C<pg_prove> tells C<psql>
to run something like:
psql --command 'SELECT * FROM runtests()'
You should use this option when you've written your tests in xUnit style,
where they’re all defined in test functions already loaded in the database.
=item C<-s>
=item C<--schema>
pg_prove --schema test
pg_prove -s mytest
Used with C<--runtests>, and, in fact, implicitly forces C<--runtests> to be
true. This option can be used to specify the name of a schema in which to find
xUnit functions to run. Basically, it tells C<psql> to run something like:
psql --command "SELECT * FROM runtests('test'::name)"
=item C<-x>
=item C<--match>
pg_prove --match 'test$'
pg_prove -x _test_
Used with C<--runtests>, and, in fact, implicitly forces C<--runtests> to be
true. This option can be used to specify a POSIX regular expression that will
be used to search for xUnit functions to run. Basically, it tells C<psql> to
run something like:
psql --command "SELECT * FROM runtests('_test_'::text)"
This will run any visible functions with the string “_test_” in their names.
This can be especially useful if you just want to run a single test in a
given schema. For example, this:
pg_prove --schema testing --match '^test_widgets$'
Will have C<psql> execute the C<runtests()> function like so:
SELECT * FROM runtests('testing'::name, '^test_widgets$'::text);
=back
=head2 Behavioral Options
=over
=item C<--ext>
pg_prove --ext .sql tests/
Set the extension for test files (default F<.pg>). May be specified multiple
times if you have test scripts with multiple extensions:
pg_prove --ext .sql --ext .pg --ext .pgt
=item C<-r>
=item C<--recurse>
pg_prove --recurse tests/
pg_prove --recurse sql/
Recursively descend into directories when searching for tests. Not relevant
with C<--runtests>.
=item C<--ignore-exit>
pg_prove --ignore-exit
Ignore exit status from test scripts. Normally if a script triggers a database
exception, C<psql> will exit with an error code and, even if all tests passed,
the test will be considered a failure. Use C<--ignore-exit> to ignore such
situations (at your own peril).
=item C<--trap>
pg_prove --trap
Trap C<Ctrl-C> and print a summary on interrupt.
=item C<--harness>
pg_prove --harness TAP::Harness::Color
Specify a subclass of L<TAP::Harness> to use for the test harness. Defaults to
TAP::Harness (unless C<--archive> is specified, in which case it uses
L<TAP::Harness::Archive>).
=item C<-j>
=item C<-jobs>
Run N test jobs in parallel (try 9.)
=item C<--rc>
pg_prove --rc pg_prove.rc
Process options from the specified configuration file.
If C<--rc> is not specified and F<./.proverc> or F<~/.proverc> exist, they
will be read and any options they contain processed before the command line
options. Options in configuration files are specified in the same way as
command line options:
# .proverc
--state=hot,fast,save
-j9
Under Windows and VMS the option file is named F<_proverc> rather than
F<.proverc> and is sought only in the current directory.
=item C<--norc>
Do not process F<./.proverc> or F<~/.proverc>.
=item C<--state>
You can ask C<pg_prove> to remember the state of previous test runs and select
and/or order the tests to be run based on that saved state.
The C<--state> switch requires an argument which must be a comma separated
list of one or more of the following options.
=over
=item C<last>
Run the same tests as the last time the state was saved. This makes it
possible, for example, to recreate the ordering of a shuffled test.
# Run all tests in random order
pg_prove --state save --shuffle
# Run them again in the same order
pg_prove --state last
=item C<failed>
Run only the tests that failed on the last run.
# Run all tests
pg_prove --state save
# Run failures
pg_prove --state failed
If you also specify the C<save> option newly passing tests will be
excluded from subsequent runs.
# Repeat until no more failures
pg_prove --state failed,save
=item C<passed>
Run only the passed tests from last time. Useful to make sure that no new
problems have been introduced.
=item C<all>
Run all tests in normal order. Multiple options may be specified, so to run
all tests with the failures from last time first:
pg_prove --state failed,all,save
=item C<hot>
Run the tests that most recently failed first. The last failure time of each
test is stored. The C<hot> option causes tests to be run in most-recent-
failure order.
pg_prove --state hot,save
Tests that have never failed will not be selected. To run all tests with the
most recently failed first use
pg_prove --state hot,all,save
This combination of options may also be specified thus
pg_prove --state adrian
=item C<todo>
Run any tests with todos.
=item C<slow>
Run the tests in slowest to fastest order. This is useful in conjunction with
the C<-j> parallel testing switch to ensure that your slowest tests start
running first.
pg_prove --state slow -j9
=item C<fast>
Run test tests in fastest to slowest order.
=item C<new>
Run the tests in newest to oldest order based on the modification times of the
test scripts.
=item C<old>
Run the tests in oldest to newest order.
=item C<fresh>
Run those test scripts that have been modified since the last test run.
=item C<save>
Save the state on exit. The state is stored in a file called F<.pg_prove>
(F<_pg_prove> on Windows and VMS) in the current directory.
=back
The C<--state> switch may be used more than once.
pg_prove --state hot --state all,save
=back
=head2 Display Options
=over
=item C<-v>
=item C<--verbose>
pg_prove --verbose
pg_prove -v
Display standard output of test scripts while running them. This behavior can
also be triggered by setting the C<$TEST_VERBOSE> environment variable to a
true value.
=item C<-f>
=item C<--failures>
pg_prove --failures
pg_prove -f
Show failed tests.
=item C<-o>
=item C<--comments>
Show comments, such as diagnostics output by C<diag()>. Enabled by default.
use C<--no-comments> to disable.
=item C<--directives>
pg_prove --directives
Only show results with TODO or SKIP directives.
=item C<-q>
=item C<--quiet>
pg_prove --quiet
pg_prove -q
Suppress some test output while running tests.
=item C<-Q>
=item C<--QUIET>
pg_prove --QUIET
pg_prove -Q
Only print summary results.
=item C<--parse>
pg_prove --parse
Enables the display of any TAP parsing errors as tests run. Useful for
debugging new TAP emitters.
=item C<--normalize>
pg_prove --normalize
Normalize TAP output in verbose output. Errors in the harnessed TAP corrected
by the parser will be corrected.
=item C<--dry>
=item C<-D>
pg_prove --dry tests/
pg_prove -D
Dry run. Just outputs a list of the tests that would have been run.
=item C<--merge>
Merge test scripts' C<STDERR> with their C<STDOUT>. Not really relevant to
pgTAP tests, which only print to C<STDERR> when an exception is thrown.
=item C<-t>
=item C<--timer>
pg_prove --timer
pg_prove -t
Print elapsed time after each test file.
=item C<-c>
=item C<--color>
pg_prove --color
pg_prove -c
Display test results in color. Colored test output is the default, but if
output is not to a terminal, color is disabled.
Requires L<Term::ANSIColor|Term::ANSIColor> on Unix-like platforms and
L<Win32::Console|Win32::Console> on Windows. If the necessary module is not
installed colored output will not be available.
=item C<--nocolor>
Do not display test results in color.
=item C<--shuffle>
pg_prove --shuffle tests/
Test scripts are normally run in alphabetical order. Use C<--reverse> to run
them in in random order. Not relevant when used with C<--runtests>.
=item C<--reverse>
pg_prove --reverse tests/
Test scripts are normally run in alphabetical order. Use C<--reverse> to run
them in reverse order. Not relevant when used with C<--runtests>.
=item C<-a>
=item C<--archive>
pg_prove --archive tap.tar.gz
pg_prove -a test_output.tar
=item C<-f>
=item C<--formatter>
pg_prove --formatter TAP::Formatter::File
pg_prove -f TAP::Formatter::Console
The name of the class to use to format output. The default is
L<TAP::Formatter::Console|TAP::Formatter::Console>, or
L<TAP::Formatter::File|TAP::Formatter::File> if the output isn't a TTY.
=item C<--count>
pg_prove --count
Show the X/Y test count as tests run when not verbose (default).
=item C<--nocount>
pg_prove --nocount
Disable the display of the X/Y test count as tests run.
Send the TAP output to a TAP archive file as well as to the normal output
destination. The archive formats supported are F<.tar> and F<.tar.gz>.
=back
=head2 Metadata Options
=over
=item C<-H>
=item C<-?>
=item C<--help>
pg_prove --help
pg_prove -H
Outputs a brief description of the options supported by C<pg_prove> and exits.
=item C<-m>
=item C<--man>
pg_prove --man
pg_prove -m
Outputs this documentation and exits.
=item C<-V>
=item C<--version>
pg_prove --version
pg_prove -V
Outputs the program name and version and exits.
=back
=head1 Author
David E. Wheeler <dwheeler@cpan.org>
=head1 Copyright
Copyright (c) 2008-2012 David E. Wheeler. Some Rights Reserved.
=cut
|