#!/bin/sh ## # Test that the invocation of the fish executable works as we hope. # # We try to run the 'fish' binary with different command line switches. # Each time we check against an output that we expect. # # We are testing fish's invocation itself, so this is not written in # fish itself - if the invocation wasn't working, we'd never even # be able to use this test to check that the invocation wasn't working. # # What we test... # # * The environment is cleaned so that (hopefully) differences in # the host terminal, language or user settings do not affect the # tests. # # * The files 'tests/invocation/*.invoke' contain the arguments that # will be passed to the 'fish' command under test. The arguments # may be split over multiple lines for clarity. # # * Before execution, if the file 'tests/invocation/.config' # exists, it will be copied as the 'config.fish' file in the # configuration directory. # # * The stdout and stderr are captured into files and will be # processed before comparison with the # 'tests/invocation/.(out|err)' files. A missing file is # considered to be no output. # Either file may be given a further suffix of '.' # which will be used in preference to the default. This allows # the expected output to change depending on the system being # used - to allow for differences in behaviour. # The '' can be found with 'uname -s'. # This facility should be used sparingly as system differences # will confuse users. # # * The file 'tests/invocation/.grep' is used to select the # sections of the file we are interested in within the stdout. # Only the parts that match will be compared to the '*.out' file. # This can be used to filter out changeable parts of the output # leaving just the parts we are interested in. # # * The stderr output will have the 'RC: ' appended # if the command returned a non-zero value. # The stderr output will have the 'XDG_CONFIG_HOME' location # substituted, to allow error reports to be compared consistently. # # * If the processed output differs from the supplied output, # the test will fail, and the differences will be shown on the # console. # # * If anything fails, the return code for this script will be # non-zero. # # With this, errors would be fatal. # However, a return value of non-zero doesn't signal something that necessarily should be fatal. # For instance, `tput` returns 1 if an attribute isn't defined. # But we don't want it to kill our script, especially not without any indication. # # set -e # The directory this script is in (as everything is relative to here) here="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd -P)" cd "$here" # The temporary directory to use temp_dir="$here/../test" # The fish binary we are testing - for manual testing, may be overridden fish_exe="${fish_exe:-../test/root/bin/fish}" fish_dir="$(dirname "${fish_exe}")" fish_leaf="$(basename "${fish_exe}")" # Which system are we on. # fish has slightly different behaviour depending on the system it is # running on (and the libraries that it is linked with), so for special # cases, we'll use a suffixed file. system_name="$(uname -s)" # Check whether we have the 'colordiff' tool - if not, we'll revert to # boring regular 'diff'. if command -v colordiff >/dev/null 2>&1; then difftool='colordiff' else difftool='diff' fi ## # Set variables to known values so that they will not affect the # execution of the test. clean_environment() { # Reset the terminal variables to a known type. export TERM=xterm unset ITERM_PROFILE # And the language as well, so that we do not see differences in # output dur to the user's locale export LANGUAGE=en_US:en # Ensure that the fish environment we use is in a clean state rm -rf "${temp_dir}/data" "${temp_dir}/home" mkdir -p "${temp_dir}/data" "${temp_dir}/home" "${temp_dir}/home/fish" export XDG_DATA_HOME="${temp_dir}/data" export XDG_CONFIG_HOME="${temp_dir}/home" } ## # Fail completely :-( fail() { say "$term_red" "FAIL: $*" >&2 exit 1 } ## # Coloured output # # Use like `say "$term_green" "message". say() { echo "$1$2$term_reset" } run_rc() { # Write the return code on to the end of the stderr, so that it can be # checked like anything else. eval "$*" || echo "RC: $?" >&2 } filter() { # In some cases we want to check only a part of the output. # For those we filter the output through grep'd matches. if [ -f "$1" ] ; then # grep '-o', '-E' and '-f' are supported by the tools in modern GNU # environments, and on OS X. # # But not on OpenIndiana/Illumos, so we use ggrep if available. if command -v ggrep >/dev/null 2>&1; then ggrep -oE -f "$1" else grep -oE -f "$1" fi else cat fi } ## # Actual testing of a .invoke file. test_file() ( file="$1" dir="$(dirname "$file")" base="$(basename "$file" .invoke)" test_config="${dir}/${base}.config" test_stdout="${dir}/${base}.tmp.out" test_stderr="${dir}/${base}.tmp.err" want_stdout="${dir}/${base}.out" grep_stdout="${dir}/${base}.grep" want_stderr="${dir}/${base}.err" empty="${dir}/${base}.empty" rc=0 test_args_literal= test_args= out_status=0 err_status=0 # Literal arguments, for printing test_args_literal="$(cat "$file")" # Read the test arguments, escaping things that might be processed by us test_args="$(sed 's/\$/\$/' "$file" | tr '\n' ' ')" # Select system-specific files if they are present. system_specific= if [ -f "${test_config}.${system_name}" ] ; then test_config="${test_config}.${system_name}" system_specific=true fi if [ -f "${want_stdout}.${system_name}" ] ; then want_stdout="${want_stdout}.${system_name}" system_specific=true fi if [ -f "${want_stderr}.${system_name}" ] ; then want_stderr="${want_stderr}.${system_name}" system_specific=true fi if [ -f "${grep_stdout}.${system_name}" ] ; then grep_stdout="${grep_stdout}.${system_name}" system_specific=true fi # Create an empty file so that we can compare against it if needed touch "${empty}" # If they supplied a configuration file, we create it here if [ -f "$test_config" ] ; then cat "$test_config" > "${temp_dir}/home/fish/config.fish" else rm -f "${temp_dir}/home/fish/config.fish" fi printf '%s' "Testing file $file ${system_specific:+($system_name specific) }... " # The hoops we are jumping through here, with changing directory are # so that we always execute fish as './fish', which means that any # error messages will appear the same, even if the tested binary # is not one that we built here. # We disable the exit-on-error here, so that we can catch the return # code. set +e run_rc "cd \"$fish_dir\" && \"./$fish_leaf\" $test_args" \ 2> "$test_stderr" \ < /dev/null \ | filter "$grep_stdout" \ > "$test_stdout" set -e # If the wanted output files are not present, they are assumed empty. if [ ! -f "$want_stdout" ] ; then want_stdout="$empty" fi if [ ! -f "$want_stderr" ] ; then want_stderr="$empty" fi # The standard error that we get will report errors using non-relative # filenames, so we try to replace these with the variable names. # # However, fish will also have helpfully translated the home directory # into '~/' in the error report. Consequently, we need to perform a # small fix-up so that we can replace the string sanely. xdg_config_in_home="${XDG_CONFIG_HOME#$HOME}" if [ "${#xdg_config_in_home}" -lt "${#XDG_CONFIG_HOME}" ]; then xdg_config_in_home="~$xdg_config_in_home" fi # 'sed -i' (inplace) has different syntax on BSD and GNU versions of # the tool, so cannot be used here, hence we write to a separate file, # and then move back. sed "s,$xdg_config_in_home,\$XDG_CONFIG_HOME,g" "${test_stderr}" > "${test_stderr}.new" mv -f "${test_stderr}.new" "${test_stderr}" # Check the results if ! diff "${want_stdout}" "${test_stdout}" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null ; then out_status=1 fi if ! diff "${want_stderr}" "${test_stderr}" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null ; then err_status=1 fi if [ "$out_status" = '0' ] && \ [ "$err_status" = '0' ] ; then say "$term_green" "ok" # clean up tmp files rm -f "${test_stdout}" "${test_stderr}" "${empty}" rc=0 else say "$term_red" "fail" say "$term_blue" "$test_args_literal" | sed 's/^/ /' if [ "$out_status" != '0' ] ; then say "$term_yellow" "Output differs for file $file. Diff follows:" "$difftool" -u "${want_stdout}" "${test_stdout}" fi if [ "$err_status" != '0' ] ; then say "$term_yellow" "Error output differs for file $file. Diff follows:" "$difftool" -u "${want_stderr}" "${test_stderr}" fi rc=1 fi return $rc ) ######################################################################## # Main harness if [ ! -x "${fish_exe}" ] ; then fail "Fish executable not found at '${fish_exe}'" fi clean_environment # Terminal colouring # Only do this after setting up $TERM. term_red="" term_green="" term_yellow="" term_blue="" term_magenta="" term_cyan="" term_white="" term_reset="" # Some systems don't have tput. Disable coloring. if command -v tput >/dev/null 2>&1; then term_red="$(tput setaf 1)" term_green="$(tput setaf 2)" term_yellow="$(tput setaf 3)" term_blue="$(tput setaf 4)" term_magenta="$(tput setaf 5)" term_cyan="$(tput setaf 6)" term_white="$(tput setaf 7)" term_reset="$(tput sgr0)" fi say "$term_cyan" "Testing shell invocation functionality" passed=0 failed=0 for file in invocation/*.invoke; do if ! test_file "$file" ; then failed=$(( failed + 1 )) else passed=$(( passed + 1 )) fi done echo "Encountered $failed errors in the invocation tests (out of $(( failed + passed )))." if [ "$failed" != 0 ] ; then exit 1 fi exit 0