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package Fennec;
use strict;
use warnings;

BEGIN { require Fennec::Runner }

use Fennec::Test;
use Fennec::Util qw/inject_sub require_module verbose_message/;
use Carp qw/croak carp/;
our $VERSION = '2.017';

sub defaults {
    (
        utils => [
            'Test::More',
            'Test::Warn',
            'Test::Exception',
            'Test::Workflow',
            'Mock::Quick',
            'Child',
        ],
        parallel     => defined $ENV{'FENNEC_PARALLEL'} ? $ENV{'FENNEC_PARALLEL'} : 3,
        runner_class => 'Fennec::Runner',
        with_tests   => [],
        Child        => ['child'],
        debug        => $ENV{'FENNEC_DEBUG'} || 0,
    );
}

sub _setup_class {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $runner, $importer, $load ) = @_;
    return unless $load;

    require_module $load;

    no strict 'refs';
    *{"$importer\::CLASS"} = \$load;
    *{"$importer\::class"} = sub { $load };
}

sub import {
    my $class    = shift;
    my $importer = caller;

    my %defaults = $class->defaults;
    $defaults{runner_class} ||= 'Fennec::Runner';
    my %params = ( %defaults, @_ );

    $ENV{FENNEC_SEED}  ||= $params{seed}  if $params{seed};
    $ENV{FENNEC_DEBUG} ||= $params{debug} if $params{debug};

    my ( $runner, $runner_init ) = $class->_get_runner(
        $importer,
        $defaults{runner_class},
        $defaults{runner_params},
    );

    verbose_message("Entering build stage: $importer\n");

    push @{$runner->test_classes} => $importer;

    my $meta = $class->_init_meta( $importer, %params );

    $class->_setup_class( $runner, $importer, $params{class} );
    $class->_process_deps( $runner, $params{skip_without} );
    $class->_set_isa( $importer, 'Fennec::Test', $meta->base );
    $class->_load_utils( $importer, %params );

    # Intercept Mock::Quick mocks
    my $wfmeta = $importer->TEST_WORKFLOW;
    if ( $wfmeta && grep { $_ eq 'Mock::Quick' } @{$defaults{utils} || []}) {
        my $intercept = sub {
            my ($code) = @_;
            my @caller = caller;

            my $store = $wfmeta->control_store;
            return push @$store => $code->() if $store;

            my $layer = $wfmeta->peek_layer || $wfmeta->root_layer;
            $layer->add_control($code);
        };
        no strict 'refs';
        *{"$importer\::QINTERCEPT"} = sub{ $intercept };
    }

    $class->_with_tests( $importer, $params{with_tests} );
    $class->init( %params, importer => $importer, meta => $meta );

    if ($ENV{FENNEC_DEBUG} || $params{debug}) {
        require Time::HiRes;
        my $collector;
        my $debug = sub {
            my $msg = pop;

            my ($sec, $ms) = Time::HiRes::gettimeofday();
            my $line = sprintf(
                "FENNEC_DEBUG_CUSTOM:PID:%d\0SEC:%d\0MSEC:%d\0MESSAGE:%s\n",
                $$,
                $sec,
                $ms,
                $msg
            );
            $collector ||= Fennec::Runner->new->collector;
            $collector->diag($line);
        };
        no strict 'refs';
        *{"$importer\::fennec_debug"} = $debug;
    }

    $class->_export_done_testing(
        $importer,
        $runner,
        $runner_init,
    );

    $class->after_import({
        importer => $importer,
        runner   => $runner,
        meta     => $meta,
        wf_meta  => $wfmeta,
        layer    => $wfmeta->peek_layer || $wfmeta->root_layer,
    }) if $class->can('after_import');

    verbose_message("Entering primary stage: $importer\n");
}

sub init {
    my $class    = shift;
    my %params   = @_;
    my $importer = $params{importer};
    my $meta     = $params{meta};

    my $wfmeta = $importer->TEST_WORKFLOW;
    $wfmeta->test_sort( $meta->test_sort )
        if $meta->test_sort;

    no strict 'refs';
    my $stash = \%{"$importer\::"};
    delete $stash->{$_} for qw/run_tests done_testing/;
}

sub _get_runner {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, $runner_class, $runner_params ) = @_;

    require_module $runner_class;
    my $runner_init = $runner_class->is_initialized;

    croak "Fennec cannot be used in package 'main' when the test is used with Fennec::Finder"
        if $runner_init && $importer eq 'main';

    if ($runner_init) {
        my $runner = $runner_class->new;
        carp "Runner is already initialized, but it is not a $runner_class"
            unless $runner->isa($runner_class);

        carp "Runner is already initialized, ignoring 'runner_params'"
            if $runner_params;

        return ( $runner, $runner_init );
    }

    my $runner = $runner_class->new(
        parallel => 0,
        $runner_params ? (%$runner_params) : (),
    );

    require Fennec::EndRunner;
    Fennec::EndRunner->set_pid($$);
    Fennec::EndRunner->set_runner($runner);

    return ( $runner, $runner_init );
}

sub _process_deps {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $runner, $deps ) = @_;

    return unless $deps && @$deps;

    for my $require (@$deps) {
        unless ( eval { require_module $require; 1 } ) {
            $runner->_skip_all(1);
            $runner->collector->skip("'$require' is not installed");
            $runner->collector->finish;
            exit 0;
        }
    }
}

sub _init_meta {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, %params ) = @_;

    require Fennec::Meta;

    my $meta = Fennec::Meta->new(
        %params,

        # Well, this is confusing.
        fennec => $class,
        class  => $importer,
    );

    inject_sub( $importer, 'FENNEC', sub { $meta } );

    return $meta;
}

sub _set_isa {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, @bases ) = @_;

    for my $base (@bases) {
        next unless $base;
        no strict 'refs';
        require_module $base;
        push @{"$importer\::ISA"} => $base
            unless grep { $_ eq $base } @{"$importer\::ISA"};
    }
}

sub _load_utils {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, %params ) = @_;

    my $utils = $params{utils};
    return unless $utils && @$utils;

    for my $util (@$utils) {
        require_module $util;
        my $args = $params{$util} || [];
        my $code = "package $importer; $util\->import(\@\$args); 1";
        eval $code || die $@;
    }
}

sub _with_tests {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, $classes ) = @_;

    return unless $classes && @$classes;

    $importer->TEST_WORKFLOW->root_layer->merge_in( undef, @$classes );
}

sub _export_done_testing {
    my $class = shift;
    my ( $importer, $runner, $runner_init ) = @_;

    if ($runner_init) {
        no strict 'refs';
        no warnings 'redefine';
        *{"$importer\::done_testing"} = sub {
            $importer->FENNEC->post(@_) if @_;
            return 1;
        };
    }
    else {
        no strict 'refs';
        no warnings 'redefine';
        my $has_run = 0;
        *{"$importer\::done_testing"} = sub {
            croak "done_testing() called more than once!"
                if $has_run++;

            Fennec::EndRunner->set_runner(undef);

            $importer->FENNEC->post(@_) if @_;
            $runner->run();

            1;
        };
    }
}

1;

__END__

=pod

=head1 NAME

Fennec - A testers toolbox, and best friend

=head1 DESCRIPTION

Fennec ties together several testing related modules and enhances their
functionality in ways you don't get loading them individually. Fennec makes
testing easier, and more useful.

=head1 SYNOPSYS

There are 2 ways to use Fennec. You can use Fennec directly, or you can use the
shiny sugar-coated interface provided by the add-on module L<Fennec::Declare>.

=head2 VANILLA SYNTAX

If L<Devel::Declare> and its awesome power of syntax specification scares you,
you can always write your Fennec tests in the stone age like this... just don't
miss any semicolons.

t/some_test.t:
    package TEST::SomeTest;
    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec(
        parallel  => 3,
        test_sort => 'random',
    );

    # This is optional, there is a default 'new' if you do not override it.
    sub new { ... }

    # Test blocks are called as methods on an instance of your test package.
    tests group_1 => sub {
        my $self = shift;
        ok( 1, "1 is true" );
    };

    test group_2 => (
        todo => 'This is not ready yet',
        code => sub {
            my $self = shift;
            ok( 0, "Not ready" );
        }
    );

    # It is important to always end a Fennec test with this function call.
    done_testing();

=head2 DECLARE SYNTAX

B<Note:> In order to use this you B<MUST> install L<Fennec::Declare> which is a
separate distribution on cpan. This module is separate because it uses the
controversial L<Devel::Declare> module.

t/some_test.t:
    package TEST::SomeTest;
    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec::Declare(
        parallel  => 3,
        test_sort => 'random',
    );

    # This is optional, there is a default 'new' if you do not override it.
    sub new { ... }

    # Test blocks are called as methods on an instance of your test package.
    tests group_1 {
        # Note: $self is automatically shifted for you.
        ok( $self, "Got self automatically" );
    };

    test group_2 ( todo => 'This is not ready yet' ) {
        # Note: $self is automatically shifted for you.
        ok( 0, "Not ready" );
    }

    # It is important to always end a Fennec test with this function call.
    done_testing;

=head1 FEATURES

=head2 PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY FENNEC

=over 4

=item Forking just works

Forking in perl tests that use L<Test::Builder> is perilous at best. Fennec
initiates an L<Fennec::Collector> class which sets up Test::Builder to funnel
all test results to the main thread for rendering. A result of this is that
forking just works.

=item Concurrency, test blocks can run in parallel

By default all C<test> blocks are run in parallel with a cap of 3 concurrent
processes. The process cap can be set with the C<parallel> import argument.

=item No need to maintain a test count

The test count traditionally was used to ensure your file finished running
instead of exiting silently too early. With L<Test::Builder> and friends this
has largely been replaced with the C<done_testing()> function typically called
at the end of tests. Fennec shares this concept, but takes it further, you MUST
call C<done_testing()> at the end of your test files. This is safer because it
can be used to ensure your test script ran completely.

=item Can be decoupled from Test::Builder

Fennec is built with the assumption that L<Test::Builder> and tools built from
it will be used. However custom L<Fennec::Collector> and L<Fennec::Runner>
classes can replace this assumption with any testing framework you want to use.

=item Can run specific test blocks, excluding others

Have you ever had a huge test that took a long time to run? Have you ever
needed to debug a failing test at the end of the file? How many times did you
need to sit through tests that didn't matter?

With Fennec you can specify the C<FENNEC_TEST> environment variable with either
a line number or test block name. Only tests defined on that line, or with that
name will be run.

=item Predictability: Rand is always seeded with the date

Randomizing the order in which test blocks are run can help find subtle
interaction bugs. At the same time if tests are always in random order you
cannot reliably reproduce a failure.

Fennec always seeds rand with the current date. This means that on any given
date the test run order will always be the same. However different days test
different orders. You can always specify the C<FENNEC_SEED> environment
variable to override the value used to seed rand.

=item Diag output is coupled with test output

When you run a Fennec test with a verbose harness (prove -v) the diagnostic
output will be coupled with the TAP output. This is done by sending both output
to STDOUT. In a non-verbose harness the diagnostics will be sent to STDERR per
usual.

=item Works with Moose

All your test classes are instantiated objects. You can use Moose to define
these test classes. But you do not have to, you are not forced to use OOP in
your tests.

=back

=head2 PROVIDED BY MODULES LOADED BY FENNEC

=over 4

=item The 3 most common and useful Test::* modules

L<Test::More>, L<Test::Warn>, L<Test::Exception>

=item RSPEC support

Those familiar with Ruby may already know about the RSPEC testing process. In
general you C<describe> something that is to be tested, then you define setup
and teardown methods (C<before_all>, C<before_each>, C<after_all>,
C<after_each>) and then finally you test C<it>. See the L</EXAMPLES> section or
L<Test::Workflow> for more details.

=item Test re-ordering, tests can run in random, sorted, or defined order.

When you load Fennec you can specify a test order. The default is random. You
can also use the order in which they are defined, or sorted (alphabetically)
order. If necessary you can pass in a sorting function that takes a list of all
test-objects as arguments.

I<Provided by Test::Workflow>

=item Reusable test modules

You can write tests in modules using L<Test::Workflow> and then import those
tests into Fennec tests. This is useful if you have tests that you want run in
several, or even all test files.

I<Provided by Test::Workflow>

=item Incredibly powerful mocking with a simple API

You can create classless object instances from a specification on the fly,
define new packages, or override existing packages.

I<Provided by Mock::Quick>

=back

=head1 DEFAULT IMPORTED MODULES

B<Note:> These can be overridden either on import, or by subclassing Fennec.

=over 4

=item Child - Forking for dummies

Child is an OO interface to forking that removes all the boilderplate such as
checking if the pid changed, and making sure you exit the child process.

=item Mock::Quick - Mocking without the eye gouging

L<Mock::Quick> is a mocking library that makes mocking easy. In addition it uses
a declarative style interface. Unlike most other mocking libraries on CPAN, it
does not make people want to gouge their eyes out and curl up in the fetal
position.

=item Test::Workflow - RSPEC for perl.

L<Test::Workflow> is a testing library written specifically for Fennec. This
library provides RSPEC workflow functions and structure. It can be useful on
its own, but combined with Fennec it gets concurrency.

=item Test::More

Tried and True testing module that everyone uses.

=item Test::Warn

L<Test::Warn> - Test code that issues warnings.

=item Test::Exception

L<Test::Exception> - Test code that throws exceptions

=back

=head1 IMPORT ARGUMENTS

=over 4

=item base => 'Some::Base'

Load the specified module and make it the base class for your test class.

=item class => 'What::To::Test'

Used to specify the name of the package your test file is validating. When this
parameter is specified 3 things are done for you: The class is automatically
loaded, the $CLASS variable is imported and contains the module name, and the
class() subroutine is defined and returns the name.

    use Fennec class => 'Foo::Bar';

    ok( $INC{'Foo/Bar.pm'}, "Loaded 'Foo::Bar'" );
    is( $CLASS, 'Foo::Bar', "We have \$CLASS" );
    is( class(), 'Foo::Bar', "We have class()" );

    tests method => sub {
        my $self = shift;
        is( $self->class(), 'Foo::Bar', "We have class() method" );
    };

    done_testing;

=item parallel => $PROC_LIMIT

How many test blocks can be run in parallel. Default is 3. Set to 1 to fork for
each test, but only run one at a time. Set to 0 to prevent forking.

You can also set this using the C<$FENNEC_PARALLEL> environment variable.

=item debug => 1

Enable tracking debugging information. At the end of the Fennec run it will
present you with a CSV temp file. This file lists all blocks that are run, and
mocks that are made in sequence from top to bottom. The actions are split into
columns by PID. This is usedul when debugging potential race-conditions when
using parallel testing.

Example:

    26150,26151,26152,26153,26154
    0 26150 BLOCK 54->78 child: outer_wrap, , , , , 
     ,1 26151 BLOCK 47->52 test: class_store, , , , 
    0 26150 MOCK Foo => (outer), , , , , 
    0 26150 BLOCK 58->61 before_all: ba, , , , , 
     , ,2 26152 MOCK Foo => (outer), , , 
     , ,2 26152 BLOCK 63->66 before_each: be, , , 
     , ,2 26152 BLOCK 68->72 test: the_check, , , 
     , , ,3 26153 BLOCK 16->31 test: object, , 
     , , , ,4 26154 BLOCK 33->45 test: class, 

You can use this in a spreadsheet program, or use this command to look at it in
a more friendly way.

    column -s, -t < '/path/to/tempfile' | less -#2 -S

=item collector_class => 'Fennec::Collector::TB::TempFiles'

Specify which collector to use. Defaults to a Test::Builder based collector
that uses temp files to funnel tests from child procs to the parent.

You generally won't need to specify this, unless you use a test infrastructure
that is neither TAP nore Test::Builder based.

=item runner_class => 'Fennec::Runner'

Specify the runner class. You probably don't need this.

=item runner_params => { ... }

Lets you specify arguments used when Fennec::Runner is initialized.

=item skip_without => [ 'Need::This', 'And::This' ]

Tell Fennec to skip the test file if any of the specified modules are missing.

=item test_sort => $SORT

Options: 'random', 'sorted', 'ordered', or a code block.

Code block accepts a list of Test::Workflow::Test objects.

=item utils => [ 'Test::Foo', ... ]

Load these modules instead of the default list.

If you need to specify import arguments for any specific util class, you can
use the class name as the key with an arrayref containing the arguments.

    use Fennec(
        utils          => [ 'Some::Module' ],
        'Some::Module' => [ arg => $val, ... ],
    );

=item with_tests => [ 'Reusable::Tests', 'Common::Tests' ]

Load these modules that have reusable tests. Reusable tests are tests that are
common to multiple test files.

=item seed => '...'

Set the random seed to be used. Defaults to current date, can be overridden by
the FENNEC_SEED environment variable.

=item debug => $BOOL

Can be used to turn on internal debugging for Fennec. This currently does very
little.

=back

=head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

=over 4

=item FENNEC_SEED

Can be used to set a specific random seed

=item FENNEC_TEST

Can be used to tell Fennec to only run specific tests (can be given a line
number or a block name).

=item FENNEC_DEBUG

When true internal debugging is turned on.

=back

=head1 EXPORTED FUNCTIONS

=head2 FROM FENNEC

=over 4

=item done_testing()

=item done_testing(sub { ... })

Should be called at the end of your test file to kick off the RSPEC tests.
Always returns 1, so you can use it as the last statement of your module. You
must only ever call this once per test file.

B<Never> put tests below the done_testing call. If you want tests to run AFTER
the RSPEC workflow completes, you can pass done_testing a coderef with the
tests.

    done_testing( sub {
        ok( 1, "This runs after the RSPEC workflow" );
    });

=back

=head2 FROM Test::Workflow

See L<Test::Workflow> or L</EXAMPLES> for more details.

=over 4

=item with_tests 'Module::Name';

Import tests from a module

=item tests $name => sub { ... };

=item tests $name => ( %params );

=item it $name => sub { ... };

=item it $name => ( %params );

Define a test block

=item describe $name => sub { ... };

Describe a set of tests (group tests and setup/teardown functions)

=item case $name => sub { ... };

Used to run a set of tests against multiple conditions

=item before_all $name => sub { ... };

Setup, run once before any tests in the describe scope run.

=item before_case $name => sub { ... };

Setup, run before any case blocks are run.

=item before_each $name => sub { ... };

=item after_case $name => sub { ... };

Setup, run once per test, just before it runs. Both run after the case block
(if there is one).

=item around_each $name => sub { ... };

Setup and/or teardown.

=item after_each $name => sub { ... };

Teardown, run once per test, after it finishes.

=item after_all $name => sub { ... };

Teardown, run once, after all tests in the describe scope complete.

=back

=head2 FROM Mock::Quick

See L<Mock::Quick> or L</EXAMPLES> for more details.

=over 4

=item my $control = qclass $CLASS => ( %PARAMS, %OVERRIDES );

=item my $control = qtakeover $CLASS => ( %PARAMS, %OVERRIDES );

=item my $control = qimplement $CLASS => ( %PARAMS, %OVERRIDES );

=item my $control = qcontrol $CLASS => ( %PARAMS, %OVERRIDES );

Used to define, takeover, or override parts of other packages.

=item my $obj = qobj( %PARAMS );

=item my ( $obj, $control ) = qobjc( %PARAMS );

=item my $obj = qstrict( %PARAMS );

=item my ( $obj, $control ) = qstrictc( %PARAMS );

Define an object specification, quickly.

=item my $clear = qclear();

Used to clear a field in a quick object.

=item my $meth = qmeth { ... };

=item my $meth = qmeth( sub { ... } );

Used to define a method for a quick object.

=back

=head2 OTHER

See L<Test::More>, L<Test::Warn>, and L<Test::Exception>

=head1 EXAMPLES

Examples can be the best form of documentation.

=head2 SIMPLE

=head3 VANILLA SYNTAX

t/simple.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec;

    use_ok 'Data::Dumper';

    tests dumper => sub {
        my $VAR1;
        is_deeply(
            eval Dumper({ a => 1 }),
            { a => 1 },
            "Serialize and De-Serialize"
        );
    };

    tests future => (
        todo => "Not ready yet",
        code => sub {
            ok( 0, "I still have to write these" );
        },
    );

    done_testing;

=head3 DECLARE SYNTAX

t/simple.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec::Declare;

    use_ok 'Data::Dumper';

    tests dumper {
        my $VAR1;
        is_deeply(
            eval Dumper({ a => 1 }),
            { a => 1 },
            "Serialize and De-Serialize"
        );

        is(
            eval { no strict; Dumper( { a => 1 } ) },
            { a => 1 },
            "Serialize and De-Serialize"
        );
    }

    tests future( todo => "Not ready yet" ) {
        ok( 0, "I still have to write these" );
    }

    done_testing;

=head2 RUN TESTS UNDER DIFFERENT CONDITIONS

This example shows 4 conditions (C<$letter> as 'a', 'b', 'c', and 'd'). It also
has 2 test blocks, one that verifies C<$letter> is a letter, the other verifies
it is lowercase. Each test block will be run once for each condition, 2*4=8, so
in total 8 tests will be run.

=head3 VANILLA

sample.t:

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec;

    my $letter;
    case a => sub { $letter = 'a' };
    case b => sub { $letter = 'b' };
    case c => sub { $letter = 'c' };
    case d => sub { $letter = 'd' };

    tests is_letter => sub {
        like( $letter, qr/^[a-z]$/i, "Got a letter" );
    };

    tests is_lowercase => sub {
        is( $letter, lc( $letter ), "Letter is lowercase" );
    };

    done_testing;

=head3 OBJECT ORIENTED

sample.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec;

    sub letter {
        my $self = shift;
        ( $self->{letter} ) = @_ if @_;
        return $self->{letter};
    }

    describe letters => sub {
        case a => sub { shift->letter('a') };
        case b => sub { shift->letter('b') };
        case c => sub { shift->letter('c') };
        case d => sub { shift->letter('d') };

        tests is_letter => sub {
            my $self = shift;
            like( $self->letter, qr/^[a-z]$/i, "Got a letter" );
        };

        tests is_lowercase => sub {
            my $self = shift;
            is( $self->letter, lc( $self->letter ), "Letter is lowercase" );
        };
    };

    done_testing;

=head3 DECLARE

B<Note:> no need to shift $self, it is done for you!

sample.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec::Declare;

    sub letter {
        my $self = shift;
        ( $self->{letter} ) = @_ if @_;
        return $self->{letter};
    }

    describe letters {
        case a { $self->letter('a') }

        case b { $self->letter('b') }

        case c { $self->letter('c') }

        case d { $self->letter('d') }

        tests is_letter {
            like( $self->letter, qr/^[a-z]$/i, "Got a letter" );
        }

        tests is_lowercase {
            is( $self->letter, lc( $self->letter ), "Letter is lowercase" );
        }
    }

    done_testing;

=head2 MOCKING

See L<Mock::Quick> for more details

=head3 OBJECT ON THE FLY

    my $obj = qobj(
        foo => 'foo',
        bar => qmeth { 'bar' },
        baz => sub { 'baz' },
    );

    is( $obj->foo, 'foo' );
    is( $obj->bar, 'bar' );
    is( ref $obj->baz, 'CODE', "baz is a method that returns a coderef" );

    # All methods autovivify as read/write accessors:
    lives_ok { $obj->blah( 'x' ) };

    # use qstrict() to make an object that does not autovivify accessors.

=head3 SCOPE OF MOCKS IN FENNEC

With vanilla L<Mock::Quick> a mock is destroyed when the control object is destroyed.

    my $control = qtakeover Foo => (blah => 'blah');
    is( Foo->blah, 'blah', "got mock" );
    $control = undef;
    ok( !Foo->can('blah'), "Mock destroyed" );

    # WITHOUT FENNEC This issues a warning, the $control object is ignored so
    # the mock is destroyed before it can be used.
    qtakover Foo => (blah => 'blah');
    ok( !Foo->can('blah'), "Mock destroyed before it could be used" );

With the workflow support provided by Fennec, you can omit the control object
and let the mock be scoped implicitly.

    tests implicit_mock_scope => sub {
        my $self = shift;
        can_ok( $self, 'QINTERCEPT' );
        qtakeover Foo => (blah => sub { 'blah' });
        is( Foo->blah, 'blah', "Mock not auto-destroyed" );
    };

    describe detailed_implicit_mock_scope => sub {
        qtakeover Foo => ( outer => 'outer' );
        ok( !Foo->can( 'outer' ), "No Leak" );

        before_all ba => sub {
            qtakeover Foo => ( ba => 'ba' );
            can_ok( 'Foo', qw/outer ba/ );
        };

        before_each be => sub {
            qtakeover Foo => ( be => 'be' );
            can_ok( 'Foo', qw/outer ba be/ );
        };

        tests the_check => sub {
            qtakeover Foo => ( inner => 'inner' );

            can_ok( 'Foo', qw/outer ba be inner/ );
        };

        ok( !Foo->can( 'outer' ), "No Leak" );
        ok( !Foo->can( 'ba' ), "No Leak" );
        ok( !Foo->can( 'be' ), "No Leak" );
        ok( !Foo->can( 'inner' ), "No Leak" );
    };


=head3 TAKEOVER AN EXISTING CLASS

    require Some::Class;
    my $control = qtakeover 'Some::Class' => (
        # Override some methods:
        foo => sub { 'foo' },
        bar => sub { 'bar' },

        # For methods that return a simple value you don't actually need to
        # wrap them in a sub.
        baz => 'bat',
    );

    is( Some::Class->foo, 'foo' );
    is( Some::Class->bar, 'bar' );

    # Use the control object to make another override
    $control->override( foo => 'FOO' );
    is( Some::Class->foo, 'FOO' );

    # Original class is restored when $control falls out of scope.
    $control = undef;

=head3 MOCK A CLASS INSTEAD OF LOADING THE REAL ONE

This will prevent the real class from loading if code tries to C<require> or
C<use> it. However when the control object falls out of scope you will be able
to load the real one again.

    my $control = qimplement 'Some::Class' => (
        my_method => sub { ... }
        simple    => 'foo',
    );

=head3 MOCK AN ANONYMOUS CLASS

    my $control = qclass(
        -with_new => 1, # Make a constructor for us
        method => sub { ... },
        simple => 'foo',
    );

    my $obj = $control->package->new;

=head2 REUSABLE TEST LIBRARIES

This is a test library that verifies your test file uses strict in the first 3 lines.
You can also pass C<with_tests =E<gt> [ 'Some::Test::Lib' ]> as an import
argument to Fennec. This matters because you can subclass Fennec to always
include this library.

t/test.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;
    use Fennec;

    with_tests 'Some::Test::Lib';

    done_testing;

lib/Some/Test/Lib.pm

    package Some::Test::Lib;
    use Test::Workflow;
    use Test::More;
    use Scalar::Util qw/blessed/;

    tests check_use_strict => sub {
        my $self  = shift;
        my $class = blessed $self;

        my $file = $class;
        $file =~ s{::}{/}g;
        $file .= '.pm';

        my $full = $INC{$file};
        ok( -e $full, "Found path and filename for $class" );
        open( my $fh, '<', $full ) || die $!;
        my $found = 0;

        for ( 1 .. 3 ) {
            $found = <$fh> =~ m/^\s*use strict;\s*$/;
            last if $found;
        }
        close($fh);
        ok( $found, "'use strict;' is in the first 3 lines of the test file" );
    }

    1;

=head2 POST TESTS

You cannot put any tests under C<done_testing()> Doing so will cause problems.
However you can put tests IN done_testing.

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec;

    my $foo = 1;

    is( $foo, 1, "foo is 1" );

    done_testing(
        sub {
            is( $foo, 1, "foo is still 1" );
        }
    );

=head2 RSPEC

The following test will produce output similar to the following. Keep in mind
that the concurrent nature of Fennec means that the lines for each process may
appear out of order relative to lines from other processes. Lines for any given
process will always be in the correct order though.

Spacing has been added, and process output has been grouped together, except
for the main process to demonstrate that after_all really does come last.

    # PID          OUTPUT
    #---------------------------------------------
    7253 describe runs long before everything else
    7253 before_all runs first

    7254 Case runs between before_all and before_each
    7254 before_each runs just before tests
    7254 tests run in the middle
    7254 after_each runs just after tests

    7255 before_each runs just before tests
    7255 This test inherits the before and after blocks from the parent describe.
    7255 after_each runs just after tests

    7253 after_all runs last.

sample.t

    use strict;
    use warnings;

    use Fennec;

    describe order => sub {
        print "$$ describe runs long before everything else\n";

        before_all setup_a => sub {
            print "$$ before_all runs first\n";
        };

        case a_case => sub {
            print "$$ Case runs between before_all and before_each\n";
        };

        before_each setup_b => sub {
            print "$$ before_each runs just before tests\n";
        };

        tests a_test => sub {
            print "$$ tests run in the middle\n";
        };

        after_each teardown_b => sub {
            print "$$ after_each runs just after tests\n";
        };

        after_all teardown_a => sub {
            print "$$ after_all runs last.\n";
        };

        describe nested => sub {
            tests b_test => sub {
                print "$$ This test inherits the before/after/case blocks from the parent describe.\n";
            };
        };
    };

    done_testing;

=head1 MANUAL

The manual can be found here: L<Fennec::Manual> it is a sort of Nexus for
documentation, including this document.

=head1 VIM INTEGRATION

Insert this into your .vimrc file to bind the F8 key to running the test block
directly under your cursor. You can be on any line of the test block (except in
some cases the first or last line.

    function! RunFennecLine()
        let cur_line = line(".")
        exe "!FENNEC_TEST='" . cur_line . "' prove -v -I lib %"
    endfunction

    " Go to command mode, save the file, run the current test
    :map <F8> <ESC>:w<cr>:call RunFennecLine()<cr>
    :imap <F8> <ESC>:w<cr>:call RunFennecLine()<cr>

=head1 RUNNING FENNEC TEST FILES IN PARALLEL

The best option is to use prove with the -j flag.

B<Note: The following is no longer a recommended practice, it is however still
supported>

You can also create a custom runner using a single .t file to run all your
Fennec tests. This has caveats though, such as not knowing which test file had
problems without checking the failure messages.

This will find all *.ft and/or *.pm modules under the t/ directory. It will load
and run any found. These will be run in parallel

t/runner.t
    #!/usr/bin/perl
    use strict;
    use warnings;

    # Paths are optional, if none are specified it defaults to 't/'
    use Fennec::Finder( 't/' );

    # The next lines are optional, if you have no custom configuration to apply
    # you can jump right to 'done_testing'.

    # Get the runner (singleton)
    my $runner = Fennec::Finder->new;
    $runner->parallel( 3 );

    # You must call this.
    run();

=head1 AUTHORS

Chad Granum L<exodist7@gmail.com>

=head1 COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2013 Chad Granum

Fennec is free software; Standard perl license (GPL and Artistic).

Fennec is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the license for more details.