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- #!/usr/bin/env perl
- package App::Prove::Remote::rprove;
- use strict;
- use warnings;
- use App::Prove::Remote::Connector ();
- use Getopt::Long ();
- exit run() unless caller();
- sub run {
- my ( $host, $verbosity, @tests ) = ('127.0.0.1', 0);
- Getopt::Long::Configure( 'bundling', 'auto_help', 'pass_through' );
- Getopt::Long::GetOptions(
- 'host|h=s' => \$host,
- 'verbosity|v=i' => \$verbosity,
- );
- my $conn = App::Prove::Remote::Connector->new($host, $verbosity);
- return 0;
- }
- 1;
- __END__
- =head1 NAME
- rprove - Prove wrapper which executes your tests on the remote host
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- rprove [options] [file ...]
- Options:
- -help You are reading it!
- -host Host to connect to. Defaults to 127.0.0.1.
- -verbosity How verbose you want this (and the SSH connection) to be
- =head1 OPTIONS
- =over 8
- =item B<-help>
- Print a brief help message and exits.
- =item B<-host>
- Host to connect to. Defaults to 127.0.0.1
- =item B<-verbosity>
- How verbose you want this to be. Useful if you need to debug
- some strange SSH behavior.
- =back
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- B<rprove> will locally run prove with a --exec argument which is a shim.
- This (remote_shim.pl) will connect to the remote host for the test in
- question, upload it to a temporary directory and run it on the host.
- Output of the script is then read by the TAP parser as is expected for
- a seamless testing experience *as if you had ran the test locally*.
- =cut
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