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I'm using Eclipse EPIC IDE to write some Perl CGI scripts which call some Perl modules that I have also written. The EPIC IDE lets me configure a Perl CGI "run configuration" which runs my CGI script. And then I've got Selenium set up and one of my unit test files runs some Selenium commands to run my cgi script through its paces. But the coverage report from Module::Build dispatch 'testcover' doesn't show that any of my module code has been executed. It's been executed by my cgi script, but I guess the CGI script was run manually and was not executed directly by my unit test file, so maybe that's why the coverage isn't being recognized. Is there a way to do this right so I can integrate Selenium and unit test files and code coverage all together somehow?

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  • I think I figured it out - see my update in the answer
    – DVK
    May 26, 2010 at 16:34
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    +1 for making me learn something new AND for using Devel::Cover :)
    – DVK
    May 26, 2010 at 16:35

1 Answer 1

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I'm not familiar with Selenium or EPIC, but one workaround (unless/until someone comes with more native solution) is to simply include "-MDevel::Cover" into the run configuration command line.

Worse comes to worst, add some conditional logic in BEGIN{} block that - based on some selenium environment variable - conditionally does use Devel::Cover

UPDATE:

It should be possible to suppress output from Devel::Cover using -MDevel::Cover=-silent,1

$ perl5.8 -MDevel::Cover -e '{1;}'
Devel::Cover 0.64: Collecting coverage data for branch, blah
Selecting packages matching:
Ignoring packages matching:
blah, blah, blah
---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
File                           stmt   bran   cond    sub    pod   time  total
---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total                           n/a    n/a    n/a    n/a    n/a    n/a    n/a
---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------


$ perl5.8 -MDevel::Cover=-silent,1 -e '{1;}'

$
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  • I tried both solutions and neither seemed to work. When I put -MDevel::Cover into the command line of the cgi run configuration, that new module generated some text on stdout that garbled the cgi script header. When I added use Devel::Cover to my unit test file that uses selenium to exercise the cgi script, it gave me similar results like I was getting before from Module::Build dispatch testcover ... no coverage of my module that I know the cgi script is calling routines in. May 25, 2010 at 2:26
  • @Kurt - I am not certain whether you can disable Devel::Cover's IO in some usable way, but I can check...
    – DVK
    May 25, 2010 at 2:56
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    @Kurt - try -MDevel::Cover=-slient, please
    – DVK
    May 25, 2010 at 3:00
  • I tried the -MDevel::Cover=-silent option in Eclipse under Arguments in the run configuration and Devel::Cover still output a bunch of text to the stdout which hosed up the http header: Devel::Cover 0.65: Collecting coverage data for branch, condition, statement, subroutine and time. Pod coverage is unavailable. Please install Pod::Coverage from CPAN. Selecting packages matching: Ignoring packages matching: /Devel/Cover[./] May 26, 2010 at 15:21
  • @Kurt - Sorry, it's not a switch, it's an argumnet! -MDevel::Cover=-slient,1
    – DVK
    May 26, 2010 at 16:31

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