mirror of
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell.git
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de32665939
There's just waaayy too many things that could go wrong with it, so it annoys more than it helps, especially since we don't get any indication what failed. E.g. on FreeBSD, the test failed without a usable message just because `tput` couldn't find an attribute (so colors were unset).
324 lines
10 KiB
Bash
Executable File
324 lines
10 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/bin/sh
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##
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# Test that the invocation of the fish executable works as we hope.
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#
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# We try to run the 'fish' binary with different command line switches.
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# Each time we check against an output that we expect.
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#
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# We are testing fish's invocation itself, so this is not written in
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# fish itself - if the invocation wasn't working, we'd never even
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# be able to use this test to check that the invocation wasn't working.
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#
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# What we test...
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#
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# * The environment is cleaned so that (hopefully) differences in
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# the host terminal, language or user settings do not affect the
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# tests.
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#
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# * The files 'tests/invocation/*.invoke' contain the arguments that
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# will be passed to the 'fish' command under test. The arguments
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# may be split over multiple lines for clarity.
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#
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# * Before execution, if the file 'tests/invocation/<name>.config'
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# exists, it will be copied as the 'config.fish' file in the
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# configuration directory.
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#
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# * The stdout and stderr are captured into files and will be
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# processed before comparison with the
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# 'tests/invocation/<name>.(out|err)' files. A missing file is
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# considered to be no output.
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# Either file may be given a further suffix of '.<system name>'
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# which will be used in preference to the default. This allows
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# the expected output to change depending on the system being
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# used - to allow for differences in behaviour.
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# The '<system name>' can be found with 'uname -s'.
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# This facility should be used sparingly as system differences
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# will confuse users.
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#
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# * The file 'tests/invocation/<name>.grep' is used to select the
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# sections of the file we are interested in within the stdout.
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# Only the parts that match will be compared to the '*.out' file.
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# This can be used to filter out changeable parts of the output
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# leaving just the parts we are interested in.
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#
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# * The stderr output will have the 'RC: <return code>' appended
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# if the command returned a non-zero value.
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# The stderr output will have the 'XDG_CONFIG_HOME' location
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# substituted, to allow error reports to be compared consistently.
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#
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# * If the processed output differs from the supplied output,
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# the test will fail, and the differences will be shown on the
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# console.
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#
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# * If anything fails, the return code for this script will be
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# non-zero.
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#
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# With this, errors would be fatal.
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# However, a return value of non-zero doesn't signal something that necessarily should be fatal.
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# For instance, `tput` returns 1 if an attribute isn't defined.
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# But we don't want it to kill our script, especially not without any indication.
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#
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# set -e
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# The directory this script is in (as everything is relative to here)
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here="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd -P)"
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cd "$here"
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# The temporary directory to use
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temp_dir="$here/../test"
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# The fish binary we are testing - for manual testing, may be overridden
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fish_exe="${fish_exe:-../test/root/bin/fish}"
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fish_dir="$(dirname "${fish_exe}")"
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fish_leaf="$(basename "${fish_exe}")"
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# Which system are we on.
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# fish has slightly different behaviour depending on the system it is
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# running on (and the libraries that it is linked with), so for special
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# cases, we'll use a suffixed file.
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system_name="$(uname -s)"
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# Check whether we have the 'colordiff' tool - if not, we'll revert to
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# boring regular 'diff'.
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if command -v colordiff >/dev/null 2>&1; then
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difftool='colordiff'
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else
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difftool='diff'
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fi
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##
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# Set variables to known values so that they will not affect the
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# execution of the test.
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clean_environment() {
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# Reset the terminal variables to a known type.
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export TERM=xterm
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unset ITERM_PROFILE
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# And the language as well, so that we do not see differences in
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# output dur to the user's locale
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export LANGUAGE=en_US:en
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# Ensure that the fish environment we use is in a clean state
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rm -rf "${temp_dir}/data" "${temp_dir}/home"
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mkdir -p "${temp_dir}/data" "${temp_dir}/home" "${temp_dir}/home/fish"
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export XDG_DATA_HOME="${temp_dir}/data"
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export XDG_CONFIG_HOME="${temp_dir}/home"
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}
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##
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# Fail completely :-(
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fail() {
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say "$term_red" "FAIL: $*" >&2
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exit 1
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}
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##
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# Coloured output
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#
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# Use like `say "$term_green" "message".
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say() {
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echo "$1$2$term_reset"
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}
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run_rc() {
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# Write the return code on to the end of the stderr, so that it can be
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# checked like anything else.
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eval "$*" || echo "RC: $?" >&2
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}
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filter() {
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# In some cases we want to check only a part of the output.
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# For those we filter the output through grep'd matches.
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if [ -f "$1" ] ; then
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# grep '-o', '-E' and '-f' are supported by the tools in modern GNU
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# environments, and on OS X.
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grep -oE -f "$1"
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else
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cat
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fi
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}
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##
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# Actual testing of a .invoke file.
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test_file() {
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local file="$1"
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local dir="$(dirname "$file")"
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local base="$(basename "$file" .invoke)"
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local test_config="${dir}/${base}.config"
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local test_stdout="${dir}/${base}.tmp.out"
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local test_stderr="${dir}/${base}.tmp.err"
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local want_stdout="${dir}/${base}.out"
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local grep_stdout="${dir}/${base}.grep"
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local want_stderr="${dir}/${base}.err"
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local empty="${dir}/${base}.empty"
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local filter
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local rc=0
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local test_args_literal
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local test_args
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local out_status=0
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local err_status=0
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# Literal arguments, for printing
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test_args_literal="$(cat "$file")"
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# Read the test arguments, escaping things that might be processed by us
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test_args="$(sed 's/\$/\$/' "$file" | tr '\n' ' ')"
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# Select system-specific files if they are present.
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system_specific=
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if [ -f "${test_config}.${system_name}" ] ; then
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test_config="${test_config}.${system_name}"
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system_specific=true
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fi
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if [ -f "${want_stdout}.${system_name}" ] ; then
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want_stdout="${want_stdout}.${system_name}"
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system_specific=true
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fi
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if [ -f "${want_stderr}.${system_name}" ] ; then
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want_stderr="${want_stderr}.${system_name}"
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system_specific=true
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fi
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if [ -f "${grep_stdout}.${system_name}" ] ; then
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grep_stdout="${grep_stdout}.${system_name}"
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system_specific=true
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fi
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# Create an empty file so that we can compare against it if needed
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touch "${empty}"
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# If they supplied a configuration file, we create it here
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if [ -f "$test_config" ] ; then
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cat "$test_config" > "${temp_dir}/home/fish/config.fish"
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else
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rm -f "${temp_dir}/home/fish/config.fish"
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fi
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echo -n "Testing file $file ${system_specific:+($system_name specific) }... "
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# The hoops we are jumping through here, with changing directory are
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# so that we always execute fish as './fish', which means that any
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# error messages will appear the same, even if the tested binary
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# is not one that we built here.
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# We disable the exit-on-error here, so that we can catch the return
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# code.
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set +e
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run_rc "cd \"$fish_dir\" && \"./$fish_leaf\" $test_args" \
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2> "$test_stderr" \
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< /dev/null \
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| filter "$grep_stdout" \
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> "$test_stdout"
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set -e
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# If the wanted output files are not present, they are assumed empty.
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if [ ! -f "$want_stdout" ] ; then
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want_stdout="$empty"
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fi
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if [ ! -f "$want_stderr" ] ; then
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want_stderr="$empty"
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fi
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# The standard error that we get will report errors using non-relative
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# filenames, so we try to replace these with the variable names.
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#
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# However, fish will also have helpfully translated the home directory
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# into '~/' in the error report. Consequently, we need to perform a
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# small fix-up so that we can replace the string sanely.
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xdg_config_in_home="${XDG_CONFIG_HOME#$HOME}"
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if [ "${#xdg_config_in_home}" -lt "${#XDG_CONFIG_HOME}" ]; then
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xdg_config_in_home="~$xdg_config_in_home"
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fi
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# 'sed -i' (inplace) has different syntax on BSD and GNU versions of
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# the tool, so cannot be used here, hence we write to a separate file,
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# and then move back.
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sed "s,$xdg_config_in_home,\$XDG_CONFIG_HOME,g" "${test_stderr}" > "${test_stderr}.new"
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mv -f "${test_stderr}.new" "${test_stderr}"
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# Check the results
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if ! diff "${test_stdout}" "${want_stdout}" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null ; then
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out_status=1
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fi
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if ! diff "${test_stderr}" "${want_stderr}" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null ; then
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err_status=1
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fi
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if [ "$out_status" = '0' ] && \
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[ "$err_status" = '0' ] ; then
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say "$term_green" "ok"
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# clean up tmp files
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rm -f "${test_stdout}" "${test_stderr}" "${empty}"
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rc=0
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else
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say "$term_red" "fail"
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say "$term_blue" "$test_args_literal" | sed 's/^/ /'
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if [ "$out_status" != '0' ] ; then
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say "$term_yellow" "Output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
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"$difftool" -u "${test_stdout}" "${want_stdout}"
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fi
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if [ "$err_status" != '0' ] ; then
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say "$term_yellow" "Error output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
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"$difftool" -u "${test_stderr}" "${want_stderr}"
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fi
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rc=1
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fi
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return $rc
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}
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########################################################################
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# Main harness
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if [ ! -x "${fish_exe}" ] ; then
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fail "Fish executable not found at '${fish_exe}'"
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fi
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clean_environment
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# Terminal colouring
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# Only do this after setting up $TERM.
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term_red=""
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term_green=""
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term_yellow=""
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term_blue=""
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term_magenta=""
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term_cyan=""
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term_white=""
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term_reset=""
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# Some systems don't have tput. Disable coloring.
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if command -v tput >/dev/null 2>&1; then
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term_red="$(tput setaf 1)"
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term_green="$(tput setaf 2)"
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term_yellow="$(tput setaf 3)"
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term_blue="$(tput setaf 4)"
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term_magenta="$(tput setaf 5)"
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term_cyan="$(tput setaf 6)"
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term_white="$(tput setaf 7)"
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term_reset="$(tput sgr0)"
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fi
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say "$term_cyan" "Testing shell invocation functionality"
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passed=0
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failed=0
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for file in invocation/*.invoke; do
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if ! test_file "$file" ; then
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failed=$(( failed + 1 ))
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else
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passed=$(( passed + 1 ))
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fi
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done
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echo "Encountered $failed errors in the invocation tests (out of $(( failed + passed )))."
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if [ "$failed" != 0 ] ; then
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exit 1
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fi
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exit 0
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