fish-shell/tests/locale.in
Kurtis Rader 0ca103686f remove unset vars from the environment
Remove vars from the environment that are no longer set. Simplify the code by
removing an unnecessary loop. Add some tests.

Fixes #3124
2016-06-15 22:10:11 -07:00

62 lines
2.6 KiB
Fish

# Test behavior related to the locale.
# Verify that our UTF-8 locale produces the expected output.
echo -n A\u00FCA | xxd --plain
# Verify that exporting a change to the C locale produces the expected output.
# The output should include the literal byte \xFC rather than the UTF-8 sequence for \u00FC.
begin
set -lx LC_ALL C
echo -n B\u00FCB | xxd --plain
end
# Since the previous change was localized to a block it should no
# longer be in effect and we should be back to a UTF-8 locale.
echo -n C\u00FCC | xxd --plain
# Verify that setting a non-exported locale var doesn't affect the behavior.
# The output should include the UTF-8 sequence for \u00FC rather than that literal byte.
# Just like the previous test.
begin
set -l LC_ALL C
echo -n D\u00FCD | xxd --plain
end
# Verify that fish can pass through non-ASCII characters in the C/POSIX
# locale. This is to prevent regression of
# https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2802.
#
# These tests are needed because the relevant standards allow the functions
# mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() to treat bytes with the high bit set as either valid
# or invalid in the C/POSIX locales. GNU libc treats those bytes as invalid.
# Other libc implementations (e.g., BSD) treat them as valid. We want fish to
# always treat those bytes as valid.
# The fish in the middle of the pipeline should be receiving a UTF-8 encoded
# version of the unicode from the echo. It should pass those bytes thru
# literally since it is in the C locale. We verify this by first passing the
# echo output directly to the `xxd` program then via a fish instance. The
# output should be "58c3bb58" for the first statement and "58c3bc58" for the
# second.
echo -n X\u00FBX | \
xxd --plain
echo X\u00FCX | env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'read foo; echo -n $foo' | \
xxd --plain
# The next tests deliberately spawn another fish instance to test inheritence of env vars.
# This test is subtle. Despite the presence of the \u00fc unicode char (a "u"
# with an umlaut) the fact the locale is C/POSIX will cause the \xfc byte to
# be emitted rather than the usual UTF-8 sequence \xc3\xbc. That's because the
# few single-byte unicode chars (that are not ASCII) are generally in the
# ISO 8859-x char sets which are encompassed by the C locale. The output should
# be "59fc59".
env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'echo -n Y\u00FCY' | \
xxd --plain
# The user can specify a wide unicode character (one requiring more than a
# single byte). In the C/POSIX locales we substitute a question-mark for the
# unencodable wide char. The output should be "543f54".
env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'echo -n T\u01FDT' | \
xxd --plain