Thank you for the clarification, run_test() NOT run_tests(). This code is very long, so I purposely cut it short for the reader's sake. here's a better code description:

sub new { my ($class) = @_; # Initialize attributes my $self = { _test_name => undef, # Name of the current test _testcase_name => undef, # Name of the current testcase _test_statistics => {}, # Statistics for the current + test }; bless $self, $class; # Two-argument version used to support inhe +ritance return $self; }

here is where the run_test() is called and how cleanup_test() is used

sub run_test{ my ($self, @tests) = @_; # Setup test system. $self->_setup_test_system(); # Run each test. TEST: for my $test_name (@tests) { # Setup everything necessary for current test. $self->setup_test_system($test_name); # Run each testcase for current test. TESTCASE: while ($self->__fetch_next()){ my $start = gettimeofday(); my $is_pass = $self->_run_testcase(); my $end = gettimeofday(); my $duration = $end - $start; if (!$is_pass && $self->{_abort_on_failure}) { print "\nFailure occurred,for $test_name.\n"; last TESTCASE; # Exit loop } } # Cleanup at end of test. $self->cleanup_test(); # Clean up test system. $self->_cleanup_test_system(); return $self->{_test_system_stats}{num_tests_failed}; } }

In reply to Re^2: Passing a duration time from 1 subroutine to another by gasjunkie_jabz
in thread Passing a duration time from 1 subroutine to another by gasjunkie_jabz

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