%PDF- %PDF-
Direktori : /proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/TAP/Formatter/ |
Current File : //proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/TAP/Formatter/Color.pm |
package TAP::Formatter::Color; use strict; use warnings; use constant IS_WIN32 => ( $^O =~ /^(MS)?Win32$/ ); use base 'TAP::Object'; my $NO_COLOR; BEGIN { $NO_COLOR = 0; eval 'require Term::ANSIColor'; if ($@) { $NO_COLOR = $@; }; if (IS_WIN32) { eval 'use Win32::Console::ANSI'; if ($@) { $NO_COLOR = $@; } }; if ($NO_COLOR) { *set_color = sub { }; } else { *set_color = sub { my ( $self, $output, $color ) = @_; $output->( Term::ANSIColor::color($color) ); }; } } =head1 NAME TAP::Formatter::Color - Run Perl test scripts with color =head1 VERSION Version 3.42 =cut our $VERSION = '3.42'; =head1 DESCRIPTION Note that this harness is I<experimental>. You may not like the colors I've chosen and I haven't yet provided an easy way to override them. This test harness is the same as L<TAP::Harness>, but test results are output in color. Passing tests are printed in green. Failing tests are in red. Skipped tests are blue on a white background and TODO tests are printed in white. If L<Term::ANSIColor> cannot be found (and L<Win32::Console::ANSI> if running under Windows) tests will be run without color. =head1 SYNOPSIS use TAP::Formatter::Color; my $harness = TAP::Formatter::Color->new( \%args ); $harness->runtests(@tests); =head1 METHODS =head2 Class Methods =head3 C<new> The constructor returns a new C<TAP::Formatter::Color> object. If L<Term::ANSIColor> is not installed, returns undef. =cut # new() implementation supplied by TAP::Object sub _initialize { my $self = shift; if ($NO_COLOR) { # shorten that message a bit ( my $error = $NO_COLOR ) =~ s/ in \@INC .*//s; warn "Note: Cannot run tests in color: $error\n"; return; # abort object construction } return $self; } ############################################################################## =head3 C<can_color> Test::Formatter::Color->can_color() Returns a boolean indicating whether or not this module can actually generate colored output. This will be false if it could not load the modules needed for the current platform. =cut sub can_color { return !$NO_COLOR; } =head3 C<set_color> Set the output color. =cut 1;