The London Perl and Raku Workshop takes place on 26th Oct 2024. If your company depends on Perl, please consider sponsoring and/or attending.
# Before `make install' is performed this script should be runnable with
# `make test'. After `make install' it should work as `perl test.pl'

######################### We start with some black magic to print on failure.

# Change 1..1 below to 1..last_test_to_print .
# (It may become useful if the test is moved to ./t subdirectory.)

BEGIN { $| = 1; print "1..5\n"; }
END {print "not ok 1\n" unless $loaded;}
use Archive::Tar;
$loaded = 1;
print "ok 1\n";

######################### End of black magic.

# Insert your test code below (better if it prints "ok 13"
# (correspondingly "not ok 13") depending on the success of chunk 13
# of the test code):

my $t1 = Archive::Tar->new ();
open TT, "MANIFEST";
my @files = <TT>;
close TT;
chomp @files;
undef $/;
open TT, "test.pl";
my $data1 = <TT>;
close TT;
print $t1->add_files (@files) 
    ? "ok 2\n" : "not ok 2\n";
print $t1->add_data ('x' . $files[$#files], $data1)
    ? "ok 3\n" : "not ok 3\n";
print $t1->write ("dummy.tar", 9) || $t1->write ("dummy.tar")
    ? "ok 4\n" : "not ok 4\n";
undef $t1;

package MyTest;

@ISA = qw (Archive::Tar);
my $t2 = MyTest->new ("dummy.tar");
my $data2 = $t2->get_content ('x' . $files[$#files]);
print $data1 eq $data2 ? "ok 5\n" : "not ok 5\n";

1;