From 3b7bbee7b661536713df3f6c93a8f446bdbfd0ae Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alvaro Herrera Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2017 18:39:44 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Make PostgresNode easily subclassable This module becomes much more useful if we allow it to be used as base class for external projects. To achieve this, change the exported get_new_node function into a class method instead, and use the standard Perl idiom of accepting the class as first argument. This method works as expected for subclasses. The standalone function is kept for backwards compatibility, though it could be removed in pg11. Author: Chap Flackman, based on an earlier patch from Craig Ringer Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMsr+YF8kO+4+K-_U4PtN==2FndJ+5Bn6A19XHhMiBykEwv0wA@mail.gmail.com --- src/test/perl/PostgresNode.pm | 20 ++++++++++++-------- src/test/perl/README | 2 +- 2 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/test/perl/PostgresNode.pm b/src/test/perl/PostgresNode.pm index 711d0deae8..8ec843edea 100644 --- a/src/test/perl/PostgresNode.pm +++ b/src/test/perl/PostgresNode.pm @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ PostgresNode - class representing PostgreSQL server instance use PostgresNode; - my $node = get_new_node('mynode'); + my $node = PostgresNode->get_new_node('mynode'); # Create a data directory with initdb $node->init(); @@ -845,20 +845,24 @@ sub _update_pid =pod -=item get_new_node(node_name) +=item PostgresNode->get_new_node(node_name) -Build a new PostgresNode object, assigning a free port number. Standalone -function that's automatically imported. +Build a new object of class C (or of a subclass, if you have +one), assigning a free port number. Remembers the node, to prevent its port +number from being reused for another node, and to ensure that it gets +shut down when the test script exits. -Remembers the node, to prevent its port number from being reused for another -node, and to ensure that it gets shut down when the test script exits. +You should generally use this instead of C. -You should generally use this instead of PostgresNode::new(...). +For backwards compatibility, it is also exported as a standalone function, +which can only create objects of class C. =cut sub get_new_node { + my $class = 'PostgresNode'; + $class = shift if 1 < scalar @_; my $name = shift; my $found = 0; my $port = $last_port_assigned; @@ -903,7 +907,7 @@ sub get_new_node print "# Found free port $port\n"; # Lock port number found by creating a new node - my $node = new PostgresNode($name, $test_pghost, $port); + my $node = $class->new($name, $test_pghost, $port); # Add node to list of nodes push(@all_nodes, $node); diff --git a/src/test/perl/README b/src/test/perl/README index 4279d316c4..cbee418e14 100644 --- a/src/test/perl/README +++ b/src/test/perl/README @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ Each test script should begin with: then it will generally need to set up one or more nodes, run commands against them and evaluate the results. For example: - my $node = get_new_node('master'); + my $node = PostgresNode->get_new_node('master'); $node->init; $node->start; -- 2.40.0