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TAP::Parser(3perl)     Perl Programmers Reference Guide	    TAP::Parser(3perl)

NAME
       TAP::Parser - Parse TAP output

VERSION
       Version 3.26

SYNOPSIS
	   use TAP::Parser;

	   my $parser = TAP::Parser->new( { source => $source } );

	   while ( my $result = $parser->next ) {
	       print $result->as_string;
	   }

DESCRIPTION
       "TAP::Parser" is designed to produce a proper parse of TAP output. For
       an example of how to run tests through this module, see the simple
       harnesses "examples/".

       There's a wiki dedicated to the Test Anything Protocol:

       <http://testanything.org>

       It includes the TAP::Parser Cookbook:

       <http://testanything.org/wiki/index.php/TAP::Parser_Cookbook>

METHODS
   Class Methods
       "new"

	my $parser = TAP::Parser->new(\%args);

       Returns a new "TAP::Parser" object.

       The arguments should be a hashref with one of the following keys:

       ·   "source"

	   CHANGED in 3.18

	   This is the preferred method of passing input to the constructor.

	   The "source" is used to create a TAP::Parser::Source that is passed
	   to the "iterator_factory_class" which in turn figures out how to
	   handle the source and creates a <TAP::Parser::Iterator> for it.
	   The iterator is used by the parser to read in the TAP stream.

	   To configure the IteratorFactory use the "sources" parameter below.

	   Note that "source", "tap" and "exec" are mutually exclusive.

       ·   "tap"

	   CHANGED in 3.18

	   The value should be the complete TAP output.

	   The tap is used to create a TAP::Parser::Source that is passed to
	   the "iterator_factory_class" which in turn figures out how to
	   handle the source and creates a <TAP::Parser::Iterator> for it.
	   The iterator is used by the parser to read in the TAP stream.

	   To configure the IteratorFactory use the "sources" parameter below.

	   Note that "source", "tap" and "exec" are mutually exclusive.

       ·   "exec"

	   Must be passed an array reference.

	   The exec array ref is used to create a TAP::Parser::Source that is
	   passed to the "iterator_factory_class" which in turn figures out
	   how to handle the source and creates a <TAP::Parser::Iterator> for
	   it.	The iterator is used by the parser to read in the TAP stream.

	   By default the TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Executable class will
	   create a TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process object to handle the
	   source.  This passes the array reference strings as command
	   arguments to IPC::Open3::open3:

	    exec => [ '/usr/bin/ruby', 't/my_test.rb' ]

	   If any "test_args" are given they will be appended to the end of
	   the command argument list.

	   To configure the IteratorFactory use the "sources" parameter below.

	   Note that "source", "tap" and "exec" are mutually exclusive.

       The following keys are optional.

       ·   "sources"

	   NEW to 3.18.

	   If set, "sources" must be a hashref containing the names of the
	   TAP::Parser::SourceHandlers to load and/or configure.  The values
	   are a hash of configuration that will be accessible to to the
	   source handlers via "config_for" in TAP::Parser::Source.

	   For example:

	     sources => {
	       Perl => { exec => '/path/to/custom/perl' },
	       File => { extensions => [ '.tap', '.txt' ] },
	       MyCustom => { some => 'config' },
	     }

	   This will cause "TAP::Parser" to pass custom configuration to two
	   of the built- in source handlers -
	   TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::Perl, TAP::Parser::SourceHandler::File
	   - and attempt to load the "MyCustom" class.	See "load_handlers" in
	   TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory for more detail.

	   The "sources" parameter affects how "source", "tap" and "exec"
	   parameters are handled.

	   See TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory, TAP::Parser::SourceHandler and
	   subclasses for more details.

       ·   "callback"

	   If present, each callback corresponding to a given result type will
	   be called with the result as the argument if the "run" method is
	   used:

	    my %callbacks = (
		test	=> \&test_callback,
		plan	=> \&plan_callback,
		comment => \&comment_callback,
		bailout => \&bailout_callback,
		unknown => \&unknown_callback,
	    );

	    my $aggregator = TAP::Parser::Aggregator->new;
	    for my $file ( @test_files ) {
		my $parser = TAP::Parser->new(
		    {
			source	  => $file,
			callbacks => \%callbacks,
		    }
		);
		$parser->run;
		$aggregator->add( $file, $parser );
	    }

       ·   "switches"

	   If using a Perl file as a source, optional switches may be passed
	   which will be used when invoking the perl executable.

	    my $parser = TAP::Parser->new( {
		source	 => $test_file,
		switches => [ '-Ilib' ],
	    } );

       ·   "test_args"

	   Used in conjunction with the "source" and "exec" option to supply a
	   reference to an @ARGV style array of arguments to pass to the test
	   program.

       ·   "spool"

	   If passed a filehandle will write a copy of all parsed TAP to that
	   handle.

       ·   "merge"

	   If false, STDERR is not captured (though it is 'relayed' to keep it
	   somewhat synchronized with STDOUT.)

	   If true, STDERR and STDOUT are the same filehandle.	This may cause
	   breakage if STDERR contains anything resembling TAP format, but
	   does allow exact synchronization.

	   Subtleties of this behavior may be platform-dependent and may
	   change in the future.

       ·   "grammar_class"

	   This option was introduced to let you easily customize which
	   grammar class the parser should use.	 It defaults to
	   TAP::Parser::Grammar.

	   See also "make_grammar".

       ·   "result_factory_class"

	   This option was introduced to let you easily customize which result
	   factory class the parser should use.	 It defaults to
	   TAP::Parser::ResultFactory.

	   See also "make_result".

       ·   "iterator_factory_class"

	   CHANGED in 3.18

	   This option was introduced to let you easily customize which
	   iterator factory class the parser should use.  It defaults to
	   TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory.

   Instance Methods
       "next"

	 my $parser = TAP::Parser->new( { source => $file } );
	 while ( my $result = $parser->next ) {
	     print $result->as_string, "\n";
	 }

       This method returns the results of the parsing, one result at a time.
       Note that it is destructive.  You can't rewind and examine previous
       results.

       If callbacks are used, they will be issued before this call returns.

       Each result returned is a subclass of TAP::Parser::Result.  See that
       module and related classes for more information on how to use them.

       "run"

	 $parser->run;

       This method merely runs the parser and parses all of the TAP.

       "make_grammar"

       Make a new TAP::Parser::Grammar object and return it.  Passes through
       any arguments given.

       The "grammar_class" can be customized, as described in "new".

       "make_result"

       Make a new TAP::Parser::Result object using the parser's
       TAP::Parser::ResultFactory, and return it.  Passes through any
       arguments given.

       The "result_factory_class" can be customized, as described in "new".

       "make_iterator_factory"

       NEW to 3.18.

       Make a new TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory object and return it.  Passes
       through any arguments given.

       "iterator_factory_class" can be customized, as described in "new".

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
       If you've read this far in the docs, you've seen this:

	   while ( my $result = $parser->next ) {
	       print $result->as_string;
	   }

       Each result returned is a TAP::Parser::Result subclass, referred to as
       result types.

   Result types
       Basically, you fetch individual results from the TAP.  The six types,
       with examples of each, are as follows:

       ·   Version

	    TAP version 12

       ·   Plan

	    1..42

       ·   Pragma

	    pragma +strict

       ·   Test

	    ok 3 - We should start with some foobar!

       ·   Comment

	    # Hope we don't use up the foobar.

       ·   Bailout

	    Bail out!  We ran out of foobar!

       ·   Unknown

	    ... yo, this ain't TAP! ...

       Each result fetched is a result object of a different type.  There are
       common methods to each result object and different types may have
       methods unique to their type.  Sometimes a type method may be
       overridden in a subclass, but its use is guaranteed to be identical.

   Common type methods
       "type"

       Returns the type of result, such as "comment" or "test".

       "as_string"

       Prints a string representation of the token.  This might not be the
       exact output, however.  Tests will have test numbers added if not
       present, TODO and SKIP directives will be capitalized and, in general,
       things will be cleaned up.  If you need the original text for the
       token, see the "raw" method.

       "raw"

       Returns the original line of text which was parsed.

       "is_plan"

       Indicates whether or not this is the test plan line.

       "is_test"

       Indicates whether or not this is a test line.

       "is_comment"

       Indicates whether or not this is a comment. Comments will generally
       only appear in the TAP stream if STDERR is merged to STDOUT. See the
       "merge" option.

       "is_bailout"

       Indicates whether or not this is bailout line.

       "is_yaml"

       Indicates whether or not the current item is a YAML block.

       "is_unknown"

       Indicates whether or not the current line could be parsed.

       "is_ok"

	 if ( $result->is_ok ) { ... }

       Reports whether or not a given result has passed.  Anything which is
       not a test result returns true.	This is merely provided as a
       convenient shortcut which allows you to do this:

	my $parser = TAP::Parser->new( { source => $source } );
	while ( my $result = $parser->next ) {
	    # only print failing results
	    print $result->as_string unless $result->is_ok;
	}

   "plan" methods
	if ( $result->is_plan ) { ... }

       If the above evaluates as true, the following methods will be available
       on the $result object.

       "plan"

	 if ( $result->is_plan ) {
	    print $result->plan;
	 }

       This is merely a synonym for "as_string".

       "directive"

	my $directive = $result->directive;

       If a SKIP directive is included with the plan, this method will return
       it.

	1..0 # SKIP: why bother?

       "explanation"

	my $explanation = $result->explanation;

       If a SKIP directive was included with the plan, this method will return
       the explanation, if any.

   "pragma" methods
	if ( $result->is_pragma ) { ... }

       If the above evaluates as true, the following methods will be available
       on the $result object.

       "pragmas"

       Returns a list of pragmas each of which is a + or - followed by the
       pragma name.

   "comment" methods
	if ( $result->is_comment ) { ... }

       If the above evaluates as true, the following methods will be available
       on the $result object.

       "comment"

	 if ( $result->is_comment ) {
	     my $comment = $result->comment;
	     print "I have something to say:  $comment";
	 }

   "bailout" methods
	if ( $result->is_bailout ) { ... }

       If the above evaluates as true, the following methods will be available
       on the $result object.

       "explanation"

	 if ( $result->is_bailout ) {
	     my $explanation = $result->explanation;
	     print "We bailed out because ($explanation)";
	 }

       If, and only if, a token is a bailout token, you can get an
       "explanation" via this method.  The explanation is the text after the
       mystical "Bail out!" words which appear in the tap output.

   "unknown" methods
	if ( $result->is_unknown ) { ... }

       There are no unique methods for unknown results.

   "test" methods
	if ( $result->is_test ) { ... }

       If the above evaluates as true, the following methods will be available
       on the $result object.

       "ok"

	 my $ok = $result->ok;

       Returns the literal text of the "ok" or "not ok" status.

       "number"

	 my $test_number = $result->number;

       Returns the number of the test, even if the original TAP output did not
       supply that number.

       "description"

	 my $description = $result->description;

       Returns the description of the test, if any.  This is the portion after
       the test number but before the directive.

       "directive"

	 my $directive = $result->directive;

       Returns either "TODO" or "SKIP" if either directive was present for a
       test line.

       "explanation"

	 my $explanation = $result->explanation;

       If a test had either a "TODO" or "SKIP" directive, this method will
       return the accompanying explanation, if present.

	 not ok 17 - 'Pigs can fly' # TODO not enough acid

       For the above line, the explanation is not enough acid.

       "is_ok"

	 if ( $result->is_ok ) { ... }

       Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the test passed.
       Remember that for TODO tests, the test always passes.

       Note:  this was formerly "passed".  The latter method is deprecated and
       will issue a warning.

       "is_actual_ok"

	 if ( $result->is_actual_ok ) { ... }

       Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the test passed,
       regardless of its TODO status.

       Note:  this was formerly "actual_passed".  The latter method is
       deprecated and will issue a warning.

       "is_unplanned"

	 if ( $test->is_unplanned ) { ... }

       If a test number is greater than the number of planned tests, this
       method will return true.	 Unplanned tests will always return false for
       "is_ok", regardless of whether or not the test "has_todo" (see
       TAP::Parser::Result::Test for more information about this).

       "has_skip"

	 if ( $result->has_skip ) { ... }

       Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not this test had a SKIP
       directive.

       "has_todo"

	 if ( $result->has_todo ) { ... }

       Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not this test had a TODO
       directive.

       Note that TODO tests always pass.  If you need to know whether or not
       they really passed, check the "is_actual_ok" method.

       "in_todo"

	 if ( $parser->in_todo ) { ... }

       True while the most recent result was a TODO. Becomes true before the
       TODO result is returned and stays true until just before the next non-
       TODO test is returned.

TOTAL RESULTS
       After parsing the TAP, there are many methods available to let you dig
       through the results and determine what is meaningful to you.

   Individual Results
       These results refer to individual tests which are run.

       "passed"

	my @passed = $parser->passed; # the test numbers which passed
	my $passed = $parser->passed; # the number of tests which passed

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests passed.  If a test
       failed but had a TODO directive, it will be counted as a passed test.

       "failed"

	my @failed = $parser->failed; # the test numbers which failed
	my $failed = $parser->failed; # the number of tests which failed

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests failed.  If a test
       passed but had a TODO directive, it will NOT be counted as a failed
       test.

       "actual_passed"

	# the test numbers which actually passed
	my @actual_passed = $parser->actual_passed;

	# the number of tests which actually passed
	my $actual_passed = $parser->actual_passed;

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests actually passed,
       regardless of whether or not a TODO directive was found.

       "actual_ok"

       This method is a synonym for "actual_passed".

       "actual_failed"

	# the test numbers which actually failed
	my @actual_failed = $parser->actual_failed;

	# the number of tests which actually failed
	my $actual_failed = $parser->actual_failed;

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests actually failed,
       regardless of whether or not a TODO directive was found.

       "todo"

	my @todo = $parser->todo; # the test numbers with todo directives
	my $todo = $parser->todo; # the number of tests with todo directives

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests had TODO
       directives.

       "todo_passed"

	# the test numbers which unexpectedly succeeded
	my @todo_passed = $parser->todo_passed;

	# the number of tests which unexpectedly succeeded
	my $todo_passed = $parser->todo_passed;

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests actually passed but
       were declared as "TODO" tests.

       "todo_failed"

	 # deprecated in favor of 'todo_passed'.  This method was horribly misnamed.

       This was a badly misnamed method.  It indicates which TODO tests
       unexpectedly succeeded.	Will now issue a warning and call
       "todo_passed".

       "skipped"

	my @skipped = $parser->skipped; # the test numbers with SKIP directives
	my $skipped = $parser->skipped; # the number of tests with SKIP directives

       This method lets you know which (or how many) tests had SKIP
       directives.

   Pragmas
       "pragma"

       Get or set a pragma. To get the state of a pragma:

	 if ( $p->pragma('strict') ) {
	     # be strict
	 }

       To set the state of a pragma:

	 $p->pragma('strict', 1); # enable strict mode

       "pragmas"

       Get a list of all the currently enabled pragmas:

	 my @pragmas_enabled = $p->pragmas;

   Summary Results
       These results are "meta" information about the total results of an
       individual test program.

       "plan"

	my $plan = $parser->plan;

       Returns the test plan, if found.

       "good_plan"

       Deprecated.  Use "is_good_plan" instead.

       "is_good_plan"

	 if ( $parser->is_good_plan ) { ... }

       Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the number of tests
       planned matches the number of tests run.

       Note:  this was formerly "good_plan".  The latter method is deprecated
       and will issue a warning.

       And since we're on that subject ...

       "tests_planned"

	 print $parser->tests_planned;

       Returns the number of tests planned, according to the plan.  For
       example, a plan of '1..17' will mean that 17 tests were planned.

       "tests_run"

	 print $parser->tests_run;

       Returns the number of tests which actually were run.  Hopefully this
       will match the number of "$parser->tests_planned".

       "skip_all"

       Returns a true value (actually the reason for skipping) if all tests
       were skipped.

       "start_time"

       Returns the time when the Parser was created.

       "end_time"

       Returns the time when the end of TAP input was seen.

       "has_problems"

	 if ( $parser->has_problems ) {
	     ...
	 }

       This is a 'catch-all' method which returns true if any tests have
       currently failed, any TODO tests unexpectedly succeeded, or any parse
       errors occurred.

       "version"

	 $parser->version;

       Once the parser is done, this will return the version number for the
       parsed TAP. Version numbers were introduced with TAP version 13 so if
       no version number is found version 12 is assumed.

       "exit"

	 $parser->exit;

       Once the parser is done, this will return the exit status.  If the
       parser ran an executable, it returns the exit status of the executable.

       "wait"

	 $parser->wait;

       Once the parser is done, this will return the wait status.  If the
       parser ran an executable, it returns the wait status of the executable.
       Otherwise, this merely returns the "exit" status.

   "ignore_exit"
	 $parser->ignore_exit(1);

       Tell the parser to ignore the exit status from the test when
       determining whether the test passed. Normally tests with non-zero exit
       status are considered to have failed even if all individual tests
       passed. In cases where it is not possible to control the exit value of
       the test script use this option to ignore it.

       "parse_errors"

	my @errors = $parser->parse_errors; # the parser errors
	my $errors = $parser->parse_errors; # the number of parser_errors

       Fortunately, all TAP output is perfect.	In the event that it is not,
       this method will return parser errors.  Note that a junk line which the
       parser does not recognize is "not" an error.  This allows this parser
       to handle future versions of TAP.  The following are all TAP errors
       reported by the parser:

       ·   Misplaced plan

	   The plan (for example, '1..5'), must only come at the beginning or
	   end of the TAP output.

       ·   No plan

	   Gotta have a plan!

       ·   More than one plan

	    1..3
	    ok 1 - input file opened
	    not ok 2 - first line of the input valid # todo some data
	    ok 3 read the rest of the file
	    1..3

	   Right.  Very funny.	Don't do that.

       ·   Test numbers out of sequence

	    1..3
	    ok 1 - input file opened
	    not ok 2 - first line of the input valid # todo some data
	    ok 2 read the rest of the file

	   That last test line above should have the number '3' instead of
	   '2'.

	   Note that it's perfectly acceptable for some lines to have test
	   numbers and others to not have them.	 However, when a test number
	   is found, it must be in sequence.  The following is also an error:

	    1..3
	    ok 1 - input file opened
	    not ok - first line of the input valid # todo some data
	    ok 2 read the rest of the file

	   But this is not:

	    1..3
	    ok	- input file opened
	    not ok - first line of the input valid # todo some data
	    ok 3 read the rest of the file

       "get_select_handles"

       Get an a list of file handles which can be passed to "select" to
       determine the readiness of this parser.

       "delete_spool"

       Delete and return the spool.

	 my $fh = $parser->delete_spool;

CALLBACKS
       As mentioned earlier, a "callback" key may be added to the
       "TAP::Parser" constructor. If present, each callback corresponding to a
       given result type will be called with the result as the argument if the
       "run" method is used. The callback is expected to be a subroutine
       reference (or anonymous subroutine) which is invoked with the parser
       result as its argument.

	my %callbacks = (
	    test    => \&test_callback,
	    plan    => \&plan_callback,
	    comment => \&comment_callback,
	    bailout => \&bailout_callback,
	    unknown => \&unknown_callback,
	);

	my $aggregator = TAP::Parser::Aggregator->new;
	for my $file ( @test_files ) {
	    my $parser = TAP::Parser->new(
		{
		    source    => $file,
		    callbacks => \%callbacks,
		}
	    );
	    $parser->run;
	    $aggregator->add( $file, $parser );
	}

       Callbacks may also be added like this:

	$parser->callback( test => \&test_callback );
	$parser->callback( plan => \&plan_callback );

       The following keys allowed for callbacks. These keys are case-
       sensitive.

       ·   "test"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_test" returns true.

       ·   "version"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_version" returns true.

       ·   "plan"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_plan" returns true.

       ·   "comment"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_comment" returns true.

       ·   "bailout"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_unknown" returns true.

       ·   "yaml"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_yaml" returns true.

       ·   "unknown"

	   Invoked if "$result->is_unknown" returns true.

       ·   "ELSE"

	   If a result does not have a callback defined for it, this callback
	   will be invoked. Thus, if all of the previous result types are
	   specified as callbacks, this callback will never be invoked.

       ·   "ALL"

	   This callback will always be invoked and this will happen for each
	   result after one of the above callbacks is invoked.	For example,
	   if Term::ANSIColor is loaded, you could use the following to color
	   your test output:

	    my %callbacks = (
		test => sub {
		    my $test = shift;
		    if ( $test->is_ok && not $test->directive ) {
			# normal passing test
			print color 'green';
		    }
		    elsif ( !$test->is_ok ) {	 # even if it's TODO
			print color 'white on_red';
		    }
		    elsif ( $test->has_skip ) {
			print color 'white on_blue';

		    }
		    elsif ( $test->has_todo ) {
			print color 'white';
		    }
		},
		ELSE => sub {
		    # plan, comment, and so on (anything which isn't a test line)
		    print color 'black on_white';
		},
		ALL => sub {
		    # now print them
		    print shift->as_string;
		    print color 'reset';
		    print "\n";
		},
	    );

       ·   "EOF"

	   Invoked when there are no more lines to be parsed. Since there is
	   no accompanying TAP::Parser::Result object the "TAP::Parser" object
	   is passed instead.

TAP GRAMMAR
       If you're looking for an EBNF grammar, see TAP::Parser::Grammar.

BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY
       The Perl-QA list attempted to ensure backwards compatibility with
       Test::Harness.  However, there are some minor differences.

   Differences
       ·   TODO plans

	   A little-known feature of Test::Harness is that it supported TODO
	   lists in the plan:

	    1..2 todo 2
	    ok 1 - We have liftoff
	    not ok 2 - Anti-gravity device activated

	   Under Test::Harness, test number 2 would pass because it was listed
	   as a TODO test on the plan line. However, we are not aware of
	   anyone actually using this feature and hard-coding test numbers is
	   discouraged because it's very easy to add a test and break the test
	   number sequence. This makes test suites very fragile. Instead, the
	   following should be used:

	    1..2
	    ok 1 - We have liftoff
	    not ok 2 - Anti-gravity device activated # TODO

       ·   'Missing' tests

	   It rarely happens, but sometimes a harness might encounter 'missing
	   tests:

	    ok 1
	    ok 2
	    ok 15
	    ok 16
	    ok 17

	   Test::Harness would report tests 3-14 as having failed. For the
	   "TAP::Parser", these tests are not considered failed because
	   they've never run. They're reported as parse failures (tests out of
	   sequence).

SUBCLASSING
       If you find you need to provide custom functionality (as you would have
       using Test::Harness::Straps), you're in luck: "TAP::Parser" and friends
       are designed to be easily plugged-into and/or subclassed.

       Before you start, it's important to know a few things:

       1.
	 All "TAP::*" objects inherit from TAP::Object.

       2.
	 Many "TAP::*" classes have a SUBCLASSING section to guide you.

       3.
	 Note that "TAP::Parser" is designed to be the central "maker" - ie:
	 it is responsible for creating most new objects in the
	 "TAP::Parser::*" namespace.

	 This makes it possible for you to have a single point of configuring
	 what subclasses should be used, which means that in many cases you'll
	 find you only need to sub-class one of the parser's components.

	 The exception to this rule are SourceHandlers & Iterators, but those
	 are both created with customizable IteratorFactory.

       4.
	 By subclassing, you may end up overriding undocumented methods.
	 That's not a bad thing per se, but be forewarned that undocumented
	 methods may change without warning from one release to the next - we
	 cannot guarantee backwards compatibility.  If any documented method
	 needs changing, it will be deprecated first, and changed in a later
	 release.

   Parser Components
       Sources

       A TAP parser consumes input from a single raw source of TAP, which
       could come from anywhere (a file, an executable, a database, an IO
       handle, a URI, etc..).  The source gets bundled up in a
       TAP::Parser::Source object which gathers some meta data about it.  The
       parser then uses a TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory to determine which
       TAP::Parser::SourceHandler to use to turn the raw source into a stream
       of TAP by way of "Iterators".

       If you simply want "TAP::Parser" to handle a new source of TAP you
       probably don't need to subclass "TAP::Parser" itself.  Rather, you'll
       need to create a new TAP::Parser::SourceHandler class, and just plug it
       into the parser using the sources param to "new".  Before you start
       writing one, read through TAP::Parser::IteratorFactory to get a feel
       for how the system works first.

       If you find you really need to use your own iterator factory you can
       still do so without sub-classing "TAP::Parser" by setting
       "iterator_factory_class".

       If you just need to customize the objects on creation, subclass
       TAP::Parser and override "make_iterator_factory".

       Note that "make_source" & "make_perl_source" have been DEPRECATED and
       are now removed.

       Iterators

       A TAP parser uses iterators to loop through the stream of TAP read in
       from the source it was given.  There are a few types of Iterators
       available by default, all sub-classes of TAP::Parser::Iterator.
       Choosing which iterator to use is the responsibility of the iterator
       factory, though it simply delegates to the Source Handler it uses.

       If you're writing your own TAP::Parser::SourceHandler, you may need to
       create your own iterators too.  If so you'll need to subclass
       TAP::Parser::Iterator.

       Note that "make_iterator" has been DEPRECATED and is now removed.

       Results

       A TAP parser creates TAP::Parser::Results as it iterates through the
       input stream.  There are quite a few result types available; choosing
       which class to use is the responsibility of the result factory.

       To create your own result types you have two options:

       option 1
	 Subclass TAP::Parser::Result and register your new result type/class
	 with the default TAP::Parser::ResultFactory.

       option 2
	 Subclass TAP::Parser::ResultFactory itself and implement your own
	 TAP::Parser::Result creation logic.  Then you'll need to customize
	 the class used by your parser by setting the "result_factory_class"
	 parameter.  See "new" for more details.

       If you need to customize the objects on creation, subclass TAP::Parser
       and override "make_result".

       Grammar

       TAP::Parser::Grammar is the heart of the parser.	 It tokenizes the TAP
       input stream and produces results.  If you need to customize its
       behaviour you should probably familiarize yourself with the source
       first.  Enough lecturing.

       Subclass TAP::Parser::Grammar and customize your parser by setting the
       "grammar_class" parameter.  See "new" for more details.

       If you need to customize the objects on creation, subclass TAP::Parser
       and override "make_grammar"

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
       All of the following have helped. Bug reports, patches, (im)moral
       support, or just words of encouragement have all been forthcoming.

       ·   Michael Schwern

       ·   Andy Lester

       ·   chromatic

       ·   GEOFFR

       ·   Shlomi Fish

       ·   Torsten Schoenfeld

       ·   Jerry Gay

       ·   Aristotle

       ·   Adam Kennedy

       ·   Yves Orton

       ·   Adrian Howard

       ·   Sean & Lil

       ·   Andreas J. Koenig

       ·   Florian Ragwitz

       ·   Corion

       ·   Mark Stosberg

       ·   Matt Kraai

       ·   David Wheeler

       ·   Alex Vandiver

       ·   Cosimo Streppone

       ·   Ville Skyttae

AUTHORS
       Curtis "Ovid" Poe <ovid@cpan.org>

       Andy Armstong <andy@hexten.net>

       Eric Wilhelm @ <ewilhelm at cpan dot org>

       Michael Peters <mpeters at plusthree dot com>

       Leif Eriksen <leif dot eriksen at bigpond dot com>

       Steve Purkis <spurkis@cpan.org>

       Nicholas Clark <nick@ccl4.org>

       Lee Johnson <notfadeaway at btinternet dot com>

       Philippe Bruhat <book@cpan.org>

BUGS
       Please report any bugs or feature requests to
       "bug-test-harness@rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
       <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Test-Harness>.  We will
       be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
       your bug as we make changes.

       Obviously, bugs which include patches are best. If you prefer, you can
       patch against bleed by via anonymous checkout of the latest version:

	git clone git://github.com/Perl-Toolchain-Gang/Test-Harness.git

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
       Copyright 2006-2008 Curtis "Ovid" Poe, all rights reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

POD ERRORS
       Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
       below:

       Around line 1852:
	   Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in 'Skyttae'. Assuming
	   UTF-8

perl v5.18.2			  2014-01-06		    TAP::Parser(3perl)
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