# vim: set filetype=expect: set ::env(fish_escape_delay_ms) 10 spawn $fish_key_reader -c # Do we get the expected startup prompt? expect -ex "Press a key:" { puts "saw expected startup prompt" } unmatched { puts stderr "didn't see expected startup prompt" } # Is a single control char echoed correctly? send "\x01" expect -ex "char: \\cA\r\nbind \\cA 'do something'\r\n" { puts "ctrl-a handled" } unmatched { puts stderr "ctrl-a not handled" } # Is a non-ASCII UTF-8 sequence prefaced by an escape char handled correctly? sleep 0.020 # send "\x1B\xE1\x88\xB4" send "\x1B\u1234" expect -ex "char: \\u1234\r\nbind \\e\\u1234 'do something'\r\n" { puts "unicode char, handled" } unmatched { puts stderr "unicode char, not handled" } # Is a NULL char echoed correctly? sleep 0.020 send -null expect -ex "char: \\c@\r\nbind -k nul 'do something'\r\n" { puts "\\c@ handled" } unmatched { puts stderr "\\c@ not handled" } # Does it keep running if handed control sequences in the wrong order? send "\x03" sleep 0.010 send "\x04" expect -ex "char: \\cD\r\n" { puts "invalid terminate sequence handled" } unmatched { puts stderr "invalid terminate sequence not handled" } # Now send a second [ctrl-D]. Does that terminate the process like it should? send "\x04" expect -ex "char: \\cD\r\n" { puts "valid terminate sequence handled" } unmatched { puts stderr "valid terminate sequence not handled" } expect -ex "Exiting at your request.\r\n" { puts "exited on seeing valid terminate" } unmatched { puts stderr "did not exit on seeing valid terminate sequence" }