What is the reason for requiring a test plan by default?
ysth's answer links to a great discussion of this issue which includes comments by Michael Schwern and Ovid who are the Test::More
and Test::Most
maintainers respectively. Apparently this comes up every once in a while on the perl-qa list and is a bit of a contentious issue. Here are the highlights:
Reasons to not use a test plan
- Its annoying and takes time.
- Its not worth the time because test scripts won't die without the test harness noticing except in some rare cases.
Test::More
can count tests as they happen
- If you use a test plan and need to skip tests, then you have the additional pain of needing a
SKIP{}
block.
Reasons to use a test plan
- It only takes a few seconds to do. If it takes longer, your test logic is too complex.
- If there is an exit(0) in the code somewhere, your test will complete successfully without running the remaining test cases. An observant human may notice the screen output doesn't look right, but in an automated test suite it could go unnoticed.
- A developer might accidentally write test logic so that some tests never run.
- You can't really have a progress bar without knowing ahead of time how many tests will be run. This is difficult to do through introspection alone.
The alternative
Test::Simple
, Test::More
, and Test::Most
have a done_testing()
method which should be called at the end of the test script. This is the approach I take currently.
This fixes the problem where code has an exit(0)
in it. It doesn't fix the problem of logic which unintentionally skips tests though.
In short, its safer to use a plan, but the chances of this actually saving the day are low unless your test suites are complicated (and they should not be complicated).
So using done_testing()
is a middle ground. Its probably not a huge deal whatever your preference.
Has this feature been useful to anyone in the real world?
A few people mention that this feature has been useful to them in the real word. This includes Larry Wall. Michael Schwern says the feature originates with Larry, more than 20 years ago.
Do other languages have this feature?
None of the xUnit type testing suites has the test plan feature. I haven't come across any examples of this feature being used in any other programming language.