NAME Test::Ping - Testing pings using Net::Ping VERSION Version 0.07 SYNOPSIS This module helps test pings using Net::Ping use Test::More tests => 2; use Test::Ping; my $good_host = '127.0.0.1'; my $bad_host = '1.1.1.1; ping_ok( $good_host, "able to ping $good_host" ); ping_not_ok( $bad_host, "can't ping $bad_host" ); ... DESCRIPTION Using this module you do not have to work with an object, but can instead use actual procedural testing functions, which is cleaner and more straight forward for testing purposes. This module keeps track of the object for you, starting and closing it and provides a nifty way of testing for pings. SUBROUTINES/METHODS ping_ok( $host, $test ) Checks if a host replies to ping correctly. ping_not_ok( $host, $test ) Does the exact opposite of ping_ok(). EXPORT ping_ok ping_not_ok SUPPORTED VARIABLES Only variables which have tests would be noted as supported. Tests is actually what I'm working on right now. PROTO, TIMEOUT and PORT only change the values in the object hash, and don't run any methods or recreate the object. That's what the Net::Ping testing suite does and that's the spec I'm following here. PROTO Changes the 'proto' hash value. TIMEOUT Changes the 'timeout' hash value. PORT Changes the 'port_num' hash value. INTEND-TO-SUPPORT VARIABLES These are variables I intend to support, so stay tuned or just send a patch. Generally speaking, variables are added whenever there is a test they have to pass. SOURCE_VERIFY SERVICE_CHECK TCP_SERVICE_CHECK DISABLED TILL FURTHER NOTICE VARIABLES BIND INTERNAL METHODS _has_var_ok( $var_name, $var_value, $description ) Gets a variable name to test, what to test against and the name of the test. Runs an actual test using Test::Builder. This is used to debug the actual module, if you wanna make sure it works. use Test::More tests => 1; use Test::Ping; # Test::Ping calls the protocol variable 'PROTO', # but Net::Ping calls it internally (in the hash) 'proto' # (this is documented above under PROTO) # this is checking against Net::Ping specifically $Test::Ping::PROTO = 'icmp'; Test::Ping::_has_var_ok( 'proto', 'icmp', 'Net::Ping has correct protocol variable', ); _ping_object When debugging behavior, fetching an internal object from a procedural module can be a bit difficult (especially when it has base inheritance with another one). This method allows you (or me) to fetch the actual Net::Ping object from Test::Ping. It eases testing and assurance. This is used by the Tie functions to set the variables for the object for you. use Test::Ping; use Data::Dumper; print 'Object internals: ' . Dumper( Test::Ping::_ping_object() ); Or you could also change the Net::Ping object to one of your own: use Test::Ping; use Net::Ping; Test::Ping::_ping_object( Net::Ping->new(@opts) ); However, you should be warned. I test for a Net::Ping object so trying to pass other objects will fail. If anyone needs this changed or any reason, contact me and I'll consider it. DEPENDENCIES This module uses Net::Ping. AUTHOR Sawyer X, "" BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-test-ping at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at . There is also a GitHub issue tracker at which I'll probably check just as much. SUPPORT You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc Test::Ping If you have Git, this is the clone path: git@github.com:xsawyerx/test-ping.git You can also look for information at: * GitHub Website: * RT: CPAN's request tracker * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation * CPAN Ratings * Search CPAN ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks to everyone who works and contributed to Net::Ping. This module depends solely on it. COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2009 Sawyer X, all rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.