I wrote a bunch of tests that depended on a database for holding my data. The tests deleted all the rows from the tables that I was working with and then inserting the test data into the tables. If I did this against the production database I was going to delete the production data as well, that would be bad.
I decided to have a production and a test database. I wanted something that would be easy to include in my test code and would not require a major change in production code. I thought, if I am working with my test modules I make my DB connection code look like this what would I have to do.
use Base::DB::Connect 'test';
The only thing I had to do was include a import subroutine/method. It changed the $database variable from 'Prod' to 'Test' and I was done! I was happy because I did not have to change the code to support 'Test' and 'Production' as separate environments.
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Re^2: Migrating Code From Test to Production: How to do it right, how to set up an environment that leaves nothing to chance
by tphyahoo (Vicar) on Jul 14, 2006 at 09:58 UTC | |
by Aristotle (Chancellor) on Jul 16, 2006 at 18:50 UTC |