
Test::DistManifest - Author test that validates a package MANIFEST

version 1.012

use Test::More; # This is the common idiom for author test modules like this, but see # the full example in examples/checkmanifest.t and, more importantly, # Adam Kennedy's article: http://use.perl.org/~Alias/journal/38822 eval 'use Test::DistManifest'; if ($@) { plan skip_all => 'Test::DistManifest required to test MANIFEST'; } manifest_ok('MANIFEST', 'MANIFEST.SKIP'); # Default options manifest_ok(); # Functionally equivalent to above

This module provides a simple method of testing that a MANIFEST matches the distribution.
It tests three things:
If there is no MANIFEST.SKIP included in your distribution, this module will replicate the toolchain behaviour of using the default system-wide MANIFEST.SKIP file. To view the contents of this file, use the command:
$ perldoc -m ExtUtils::MANIFEST.SKIP

By default, this module exports the following functions:

manifest_ok( $manifest, $skipfile )
This subroutine checks the manifest list contained in $manifest by using Module::Manifest to determine the list of files and then checking for the existence of all such files. Then, it checks if there are any files in the distribution that were not specified in the $manifest file but do not match any regular expressions provided in the $skipfile exclusion file.
If your MANIFEST file is generated by a module installation toolchain system such as ExtUtils::MakeMaker, Module::Build or Module::Install, then you shouldn't have any problems with these files. It's just a helpful test to remind you to update these files, using:
$ make manifest # For ExtUtils::MakeMaker $ ./Build manifest # For Module::Build
By default, errors in the MANIFEST or MANIFEST.SKIP files are treated as fatal, which really is the purpose of using Test::DistManifest as part of your author test suite.
In some cases this is not desirable behaviour, such as with the Debian Perl Group, which runs all tests - including author tests - as part of its module packaging process. This wreaks havoc because Debian adds its control files in debian/ downstream, and that directory or its files are generally not in MANIFEST.SKIP.
By setting the environment variable MANIFEST_WARN_ONLY to a true value, errors will be non-fatal - they show up as diagnostic messages only, but all tests pass from the perspective of Test::Harness.
This can be used in a test script as:
$ENV{MANIFEST_WARN_ONLY} = 1;
or from other shell scripts as:
export MANIFEST_WARN_ONLY=1
Note that parsing errors in MANIFEST and circular dependencies will always be considered fatal. The author is not aware of any cases where other behaviour would be useful.

This module internally plans 4 tests:
Module::ManifestIf you want to run tests on multiple different MANIFEST files, you can simply pass 'no_plan' to the import function, like so:
use Test::DistManifest 'no_plan';
# Multiple tests work properly now
manifest_ok('MANIFEST', 'MANIFEST.SKIP');
manifest_ok();
manifest_ok('MANIFEST.OTHER', 'MANIFEST.SKIP');
I doubt this will be useful to users of this module. However, this is used internally for testing and it might be helpful to you. You can also plan more tests, but keep in mind that the idea of "3 internal tests" may change in the future.
Example code:
use Test::DistManifest tests => 5; manifest_ok(); # 4 tests ok(1, 'is 1 true?');


Test::CheckManifest, a module providing similar functionality


Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Test-DistManifest
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.

Jonathan Yu <jawnsy@cpan.org>

This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Jonathan Yu <jawnsy@cpan.org>.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.