Sorry, but that is simply fatuous pseud-OO.
You pull in nearly 300 modules to do nothing more than: system '/usr/sbin/httpd';
Well yes, but my point is that a single object instantiation and method call can be something trivial - e.g. adding two numbers...
perl -MMath::BigInt -E'say Math::BigInt->new(400)->badd(2)'
(400's big enough to justify Math::BigInt, right?) ... or something complex - e.g. serving HTTP. (If you don't like the Apache example, then pure Perl Web servers such as Starman are usually not much more than an instantiation plus method call.)
Quite frankly, I cannot see any merit in your module over using App::Prove myself.
App::Reprove does a different task. App::Prove runs one or more test cases that are on the local disk. App::Reprove takes the name of an already installed module, finds its test cases on CPAN, downloads them into a temp dir and runs App::Prove on them.
But then, I can see no merit in App::Prove over using the prove command directly either.
[tai@miranda (pts/2) ~]$ cat `which prove` | head -n 13
#!/usr/bin/perl
eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}'
if $running_under_some_shell;
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use App::Prove;
my $app = App::Prove->new;
$app->process_args(@ARGV);
exit( $app->run ? 0 : 1 );
__END__
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