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Current Path : /usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/TAP/Parser/SourceHandler/ |
Current File : //usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/TAP/Parser/SourceHandler/Executable.pm |
package TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable; use strict; use warnings; use TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory (); use TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process (); use base 'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler'; TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory->register_handler(__PACKAGE__); =head1 NAME TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable - Stream output from an executable TAP source =head1 VERSION Version 3.42 =cut our $VERSION = '3.42'; =head1 SYNOPSIS use TAP::Parser::Source; use TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable; my $source = TAP::Parser::Source->new->raw(['/usr/bin/ruby', 'mytest.rb']); $source->assemble_meta; my $class = 'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable'; my $vote = $class->can_handle( $source ); my $iter = $class->make_iterator( $source ); =head1 DESCRIPTION This is an I<executable> L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler> - it has 2 jobs: 1. Figure out if the L<TAP::Parser::Source> it's given is an executable command (L</can_handle>). 2. Creates an iterator for executable commands (L</make_iterator>). Unless you're writing a plugin or subclassing L<TAP::Parser>, you probably won't need to use this module directly. =head1 METHODS =head2 Class Methods =head3 C<can_handle> my $vote = $class->can_handle( $source ); Only votes if $source looks like an executable file. Casts the following votes: 0.9 if it's a hash with an 'exec' key 0.8 if it's a .bat file 0.75 if it's got an execute bit set =cut sub can_handle { my ( $class, $src ) = @_; my $meta = $src->meta; if ( $meta->{is_file} ) { my $file = $meta->{file}; return 0.85 if $file->{execute} && $file->{binary}; return 0.8 if $file->{lc_ext} eq '.bat'; return 0.25 if $file->{execute}; } elsif ( $meta->{is_hash} ) { return 0.9 if $src->raw->{exec}; } return 0; } =head3 C<make_iterator> my $iterator = $class->make_iterator( $source ); Returns a new L<TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process> for the source. C<$source-E<gt>raw> must be in one of the following forms: { exec => [ @exec ] } [ @exec ] $file C<croak>s on error. =cut sub make_iterator { my ( $class, $source ) = @_; my $meta = $source->meta; my @command; if ( $meta->{is_hash} ) { @command = @{ $source->raw->{exec} || [] }; } elsif ( $meta->{is_scalar} ) { @command = ${ $source->raw }; } elsif ( $meta->{is_array} ) { @command = @{ $source->raw }; } $class->_croak('No command found in $source->raw!') unless @command; $class->_autoflush( \*STDOUT ); $class->_autoflush( \*STDERR ); push @command, @{ $source->test_args || [] }; return $class->iterator_class->new( { command => \@command, merge => $source->merge } ); } =head3 C<iterator_class> The class of iterator to use, override if you're sub-classing. Defaults to L<TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process>. =cut use constant iterator_class => 'TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process'; # Turns on autoflush for the handle passed sub _autoflush { my ( $class, $flushed ) = @_; my $old_fh = select $flushed; $| = 1; select $old_fh; } 1; =head1 SUBCLASSING Please see L<TAP::Parser/SUBCLASSING> for a subclassing overview. =head2 Example package MyRubySourceHandler; use strict; use Carp qw( croak ); use TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable; use base 'TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable'; # expect $handler->(['mytest.rb', 'cmdline', 'args']); sub make_iterator { my ($self, $source) = @_; my @test_args = @{ $source->test_args }; my $rb_file = $test_args[0]; croak("error: Ruby file '$rb_file' not found!") unless (-f $rb_file); return $self->SUPER::raw_source(['/usr/bin/ruby', @test_args]); } =head1 SEE ALSO L<TAP::Object>, L<TAP::Parser>, L<TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory>, L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler>, L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Perl>, L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::File>, L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Handle>, L<TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::RawTAP> =cut