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#
# t/test.pl - most of Test::More functionality without the fuss
# NOTE:
#
# Do not rely on features found only in more modern Perls here, as some CPAN
# distributions copy this file and must operate on older Perls. Similarly, keep
# things, simple as this may be run under fairly broken circumstances. For
# example, increment ($x++) has a certain amount of cleverness for things like
#
# $x = 'zz';
# $x++; # $x eq 'aaa';
#
# This stands more chance of breaking than just a simple
#
# $x = $x + 1
#
# In this file, we use the latter "Baby Perl" approach, and increment
# will be worked over by t/op/inc.t
$| = 1;
our $Level = 1;
my $test = 1;
my $planned;
my $noplan;
my $Perl; # Safer version of $^X set by which_perl()
# This defines ASCII/UTF-8 vs EBCDIC/UTF-EBCDIC
$::IS_ASCII = ord 'A' == 65;
$::IS_EBCDIC = ord 'A' == 193;
# This is 'our' to enable harness to account for TODO-ed tests in
# overall grade of PASS or FAIL
our $TODO = 0;
our $NO_ENDING = 0;
our $Tests_Are_Passing = 1;
# Use this instead of print to avoid interference while testing globals.
sub _print {
local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', '');
print STDOUT @_;
}
sub _print_stderr {
local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', '');
print STDERR @_;
}
sub plan {
my $n;
if (@_ == 1) {
$n = shift;
if ($n eq 'no_plan') {
undef $n;
$noplan = 1;
}
} else {
my %plan = @_;
$plan{skip_all} and skip_all($plan{skip_all});
$n = $plan{tests};
}
_print "1..$n\n" unless $noplan;
$planned = $n;
}
# Set the plan at the end. See Test::More::done_testing.
sub done_testing {
my $n = $test - 1;
$n = shift if @_;
_print "1..$n\n";
$planned = $n;
}
END {
my $ran = $test - 1;
if (!$NO_ENDING) {
if (defined $planned && $planned != $ran) {
_print_stderr
"# Looks like you planned $planned tests but ran $ran.\n";
} elsif ($noplan) {
_print "1..$ran\n";
}
}
}
sub _diag {
return unless @_;
my @mess = _comment(@_);
$TODO ? _print(@mess) : _print_stderr(@mess);
}
# Use this instead of "print STDERR" when outputting failure diagnostic
# messages
sub diag {
_diag(@_);
}
# Use this instead of "print" when outputting informational messages
sub note {
return unless @_;
_print( _comment(@_) );
}
sub is_miniperl {
return !defined &DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader;
}
sub set_up_inc {
# Don’t clobber @INC under miniperl
@INC = () unless is_miniperl;
unshift @INC, @_;
}
sub _comment {
return map { /^#/ ? "$_\n" : "# $_\n" }
map { split /\n/ } @_;
}
sub _have_dynamic_extension {
my $extension = shift;
unless (eval {require Config; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@";
return 1;
}
$extension =~ s!::!/!g;
return 1 if ($Config::Config{extensions} =~ /\b$extension\b/);
}
sub skip_all {
if (@_) {
_print "1..0 # Skip @_\n";
} else {
_print "1..0\n";
}
exit(0);
}
sub skip_all_if_miniperl {
skip_all(@_) if is_miniperl();
}
sub skip_all_without_dynamic_extension {
my ($extension) = @_;
skip_all("no dynamic loading on miniperl, no $extension") if is_miniperl();
return if &_have_dynamic_extension;
skip_all("$extension was not built");
}
sub skip_all_without_perlio {
skip_all('no PerlIO') unless PerlIO::Layer->find('perlio');
}
sub skip_all_without_config {
unless (eval {require Config; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@";
return;
}
foreach (@_) {
next if $Config::Config{$_};
my $key = $_; # Need to copy, before trying to modify.
$key =~ s/^use//;
$key =~ s/^d_//;
skip_all("no $key");
}
}
sub skip_all_without_unicode_tables { # (but only under miniperl)
if (is_miniperl()) {
skip_all_if_miniperl("Unicode tables not built yet")
unless eval 'require "unicore/UCD.pl"';
}
}
sub find_git_or_skip {
my ($source_dir, $reason);
if ( $ENV{CONTINUOUS_INTEGRATION} && $ENV{WORKSPACE} ) {
$source_dir = $ENV{WORKSPACE};
if ( -d "${source_dir}/.git" ) {
$ENV{GIT_DIR} = "${source_dir}/.git";
return $source_dir;
}
}
if (-d '.git') {
$source_dir = '.';
} elsif (-l 'MANIFEST' && -l 'AUTHORS') {
my $where = readlink 'MANIFEST';
die "Can't readlink MANIFEST: $!" unless defined $where;
die "Confusing symlink target for MANIFEST, '$where'"
unless $where =~ s!/MANIFEST\z!!;
if (-d "$where/.git") {
# Looks like we are in a symlink tree
if (exists $ENV{GIT_DIR}) {
diag("Found source tree at $where, but \$ENV{GIT_DIR} is $ENV{GIT_DIR}. Not changing it");
} else {
note("Found source tree at $where, setting \$ENV{GIT_DIR}");
$ENV{GIT_DIR} = "$where/.git";
}
$source_dir = $where;
}
} elsif (exists $ENV{GIT_DIR} || -f '.git') {
my $commit = '8d063cd8450e59ea1c611a2f4f5a21059a2804f1';
my $out = `git rev-parse --verify --quiet '$commit^{commit}'`;
chomp $out;
if($out eq $commit) {
$source_dir = '.'
}
}
if ($ENV{'PERL_BUILD_PACKAGING'}) {
$reason = 'PERL_BUILD_PACKAGING is set';
} elsif ($source_dir) {
my $version_string = `git --version`;
if (defined $version_string
&& $version_string =~ /\Agit version (\d+\.\d+\.\d+)(.*)/) {
return $source_dir if eval "v$1 ge v1.5.0";
# If you have earlier than 1.5.0 and it works, change this test
$reason = "in git checkout, but git version '$1$2' too old";
} else {
$reason = "in git checkout, but cannot run git";
}
} else {
$reason = 'not being run from a git checkout';
}
skip_all($reason) if $_[0] && $_[0] eq 'all';
skip($reason, @_);
}
sub BAIL_OUT {
my ($reason) = @_;
_print("Bail out! $reason\n");
exit 255;
}
sub _ok {
my ($pass, $where, $name, @mess) = @_;
# Do not try to microoptimize by factoring out the "not ".
# VMS will avenge.
my $out;
if ($name) {
# escape out '#' or it will interfere with '# skip' and such
$name =~ s/#/\\#/g;
$out = $pass ? "ok $test - $name" : "not ok $test - $name";
} else {
$out = $pass ? "ok $test - [$where]" : "not ok $test - [$where]";
}
if ($TODO) {
$out = $out . " # TODO $TODO";
} else {
$Tests_Are_Passing = 0 unless $pass;
}
_print "$out\n";
if ($pass) {
note @mess; # Ensure that the message is properly escaped.
}
else {
my $msg = "# Failed test $test - ";
$msg.= "$name " if $name;
$msg .= "$where\n";
_diag $msg;
_diag @mess;
}
$test = $test + 1; # don't use ++
return $pass;
}
sub _where {
my (undef, $filename, $lineno) = caller($Level);
return "at $filename line $lineno";
}
# DON'T use this for matches. Use like() instead.
sub ok ($@) {
my ($pass, $name, @mess) = @_;
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
sub _q {
my $x = shift;
return 'undef' unless defined $x;
my $q = $x;
$q =~ s/\\/\\\\/g;
$q =~ s/'/\\'/g;
return "'$q'";
}
sub _qq {
my $x = shift;
return defined $x ? '"' . display ($x) . '"' : 'undef';
};
# Support pre-5.10 Perls, for the benefit of CPAN dists that copy this file.
# Note that chr(90) exists in both ASCII ("Z") and EBCDIC ("!").
my $chars_template = defined(eval { pack "W*", 90 }) ? "W*" : "U*";
eval 'sub re::is_regexp { ref($_[0]) eq "Regexp" }'
if !defined &re::is_regexp;
# keys are the codes \n etc map to, values are 2 char strings such as \n
my %backslash_escape;
foreach my $x (split //, 'enrtfa\\\'"') {
$backslash_escape{ord eval "\"\\$x\""} = "\\$x";
}
# A way to display scalars containing control characters and Unicode.
# Trying to avoid setting $_, or relying on local $_ to work.
sub display {
my @result;
foreach my $element (@_) {
my $x = $element; # Make a copy in case @_ contains unmodifiable elements
if (defined $x and not ref $x) {
my $y = '';
foreach my $c (unpack($chars_template, $x)) {
if ($c > 255) {
$y = $y . sprintf "\\x{%x}", $c;
} elsif ($backslash_escape{$c}) {
$y = $y . $backslash_escape{$c};
} elsif ($c < ord " ") {
# Use octal for characters with small ordinals that are
# traditionally expressed as octal: the controls below
# space, which on EBCDIC are almost all the controls, but
# on ASCII don't include DEL nor the C1 controls.
$y = $y . sprintf "\\%03o", $c;
} elsif (chr $c =~ /[[:print:]]/a) {
$y = $y . chr $c;
}
else {
$y = $y . sprintf "\\x%02X", $c;
}
}
$x = $y;
}
return $x unless wantarray;
push @result, $x;
}
return @result;
}
# Escape a string in a similar (but not identical) fashion to how the
# regex debugger does, using "x" style escapes in the form
# "%x{01+bc+02+cd}" to show the codepoint of the escaped values. Like
# the regex debugger we use percentage instead of backslash so that it
# is trivial to distinguish backslash based sequences that are commonly
# found in regex patterns from escaped octets that are in the pattern.
# To reduce the output length and improve clarity if there are multiple
# escaped codepoints in a row we bundle them together into one "%x{...}"
# structure.
#
# Implementation note: This code should work fine on all platforms as we
# use utf8::native_to_unicode() to map native codepoints to unicode
# (thanks Karl!) and back again, also we deliberately avoid using the
# regex engine to do the escaping as this function is intended for cases
# where we are testing the regex engine.
#
# WARNING: This function should only be used for diagnostic purposes, it
# does not output valid code!
sub display_rx {
my ($str) = @_;
my $escaped = "";
my @cp; # codepoints
for my $i (0 .. length($str)-1) {
my $char = substr($str,$i,1);
push @cp, utf8::native_to_unicode(ord($char));
}
while (@cp) {
my $ord = shift @cp;
if (32 <= $ord <= 126 and $ord != 37) {
$escaped .= chr(utf8::unicode_to_native($ord));
}
else {
my @cp_hex = sprintf "%02x", $ord;
while (@cp and $cp[0] != 37 and ($cp[0]<32 or $cp[0]>126)) {
push @cp_hex, sprintf "%02x", shift @cp;
}
$escaped .= sprintf "%%x{%s}", join "+", @cp_hex;
}
}
return $escaped;
}
sub is ($$@) {
my ($got, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_;
my $pass;
if( !defined $got || !defined $expected ) {
# undef only matches undef
$pass = !defined $got && !defined $expected;
}
else {
$pass = $got eq $expected;
}
unless ($pass) {
unshift(@mess, "# got "._qq($got)."\n",
"# expected "._qq($expected)."\n");
if (defined $got and defined $expected and
(length($got)>20 or length($expected)>20))
{
my $p = 0;
$p++ while substr($got,$p,1) eq substr($expected,$p,1);
push @mess,"# diff at $p\n";
push @mess,"# after "._qq(substr($got,$p < 40 ? 0 : $p - 40,
$p < 40 ? $p : 40)) . "\n";
push @mess,"# have "._qq(substr($got,$p,40))."\n";
push @mess,"# want "._qq(substr($expected,$p,40))."\n";
}
}
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
sub isnt ($$@) {
my ($got, $isnt, $name, @mess) = @_;
my $pass;
if( !defined $got || !defined $isnt ) {
# undef only matches undef
$pass = defined $got || defined $isnt;
}
else {
$pass = $got ne $isnt;
}
unless( $pass ) {
unshift(@mess, "# it should not be "._qq($got)."\n",
"# but it is.\n");
}
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
sub cmp_ok ($$$@) {
my($got, $type, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_;
my $pass;
{
local $^W = 0;
local($@,$!); # don't interfere with $@
# eval() sometimes resets $!
$pass = eval "\$got $type \$expected";
}
unless ($pass) {
# It seems Irix long doubles can have 2147483648 and 2147483648
# that stringify to the same thing but are actually numerically
# different. Display the numbers if $type isn't a string operator,
# and the numbers are stringwise the same.
# (all string operators have alphabetic names, so tr/a-z// is true)
# This will also show numbers for some unneeded cases, but will
# definitely be helpful for things such as == and <= that fail
if ($got eq $expected and $type !~ tr/a-z//) {
unshift @mess, "# $got - $expected = " . ($got - $expected) . "\n";
}
unshift(@mess, "# got "._qq($got)."\n",
"# expected $type "._qq($expected)."\n");
}
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
# Check that $got is within $range of $expected
# if $range is 0, then check it's exact
# else if $expected is 0, then $range is an absolute value
# otherwise $range is a fractional error.
# Here $range must be numeric, >= 0
# Non numeric ranges might be a useful future extension. (eg %)
sub within ($$$@) {
my ($got, $expected, $range, $name, @mess) = @_;
my $pass;
if (!defined $got or !defined $expected or !defined $range) {
# This is a fail, but doesn't need extra diagnostics
} elsif ($got !~ tr/0-9// or $expected !~ tr/0-9// or $range !~ tr/0-9//) {
# This is a fail
unshift @mess, "# got, expected and range must be numeric\n";
} elsif ($range < 0) {
# This is also a fail
unshift @mess, "# range must not be negative\n";
} elsif ($range == 0) {
# Within 0 is ==
$pass = $got == $expected;
} elsif ($expected == 0) {
# If expected is 0, treat range as absolute
$pass = ($got <= $range) && ($got >= - $range);
} else {
my $diff = $got - $expected;
$pass = abs ($diff / $expected) < $range;
}
unless ($pass) {
if ($got eq $expected) {
unshift @mess, "# $got - $expected = " . ($got - $expected) . "\n";
}
unshift@mess, "# got "._qq($got)."\n",
"# expected "._qq($expected)." (within "._qq($range).")\n";
}
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
# Note: this isn't quite as fancy as Test::More::like().
sub like ($$@) { like_yn (0,@_) }; # 0 for -
sub unlike ($$@) { like_yn (1,@_) }; # 1 for un-
sub like_yn ($$$@) {
my ($flip, undef, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_;
# We just accept like(..., qr/.../), not like(..., '...'), and
# definitely not like(..., '/.../') like
# Test::Builder::maybe_regex() does.
unless (re::is_regexp($expected)) {
die "PANIC: The value '$expected' isn't a regexp. The like() function needs a qr// pattern, not a string";
}
my $pass = ($flip) ? $_[1] !~ /$expected/ : $_[1] =~ /$expected/;
unless ($pass) {
my $display_got = display($_[1]);
my $display_expected = display($expected);
unshift(@mess, "# got '$display_got'\n",
$flip
? "# expected !~ /$display_expected/\n"
: "# expected /$display_expected/\n");
}
local $Level = $Level + 1;
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
sub refcount_is {
# Don't unpack first arg; access it directly via $_[0] to avoid creating
# another reference and upsetting the refcount
my (undef, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_;
my $got = &Internals::SvREFCNT($_[0]) + 1; # +1 to account for the & calling style
my $pass = $got == $expected;
unless ($pass) {
unshift @mess, "# got $got references\n" .
"# expected $expected\n";
}
_ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess);
}
sub pass {
_ok(1, '', @_);
}
sub fail {
_ok(0, _where(), @_);
}
sub curr_test {
$test = shift if @_;
return $test;
}
sub next_test {
my $retval = $test;
$test = $test + 1; # don't use ++
$retval;
}
# Note: can't pass multipart messages since we try to
# be compatible with Test::More::skip().
sub skip {
my $why = shift;
my $n = @_ ? shift : 1;
my $bad_swap;
my $both_zero;
{
local $^W = 0;
$bad_swap = $why > 0 && $n == 0;
$both_zero = $why == 0 && $n == 0;
}
if ($bad_swap || $both_zero || @_) {
my $arg = "'$why', '$n'";
if (@_) {
$arg .= join(", ", '', map { qq['$_'] } @_);
}
die qq[$0: expected skip(why, count), got skip($arg)\n];
}
for (1..$n) {
_print "ok $test # skip $why\n";
$test = $test + 1;
}
local $^W = 0;
last SKIP;
}
sub skip_if_miniperl {
skip(@_) if is_miniperl();
}
sub skip_without_dynamic_extension {
my $extension = shift;
skip("no dynamic loading on miniperl, no extension $extension", @_)
if is_miniperl();
return if &_have_dynamic_extension($extension);
skip("extension $extension was not built", @_);
}
sub todo_skip {
my $why = shift;
my $n = @_ ? shift : 1;
for (1..$n) {
_print "not ok $test # TODO & SKIP $why\n";
$test = $test + 1;
}
local $^W = 0;
last TODO;
}
sub eq_array {
my ($ra, $rb) = @_;
return 0 unless $#$ra == $#$rb;
for my $i (0..$#$ra) {
next if !defined $ra->[$i] && !defined $rb->[$i];
return 0 if !defined $ra->[$i];
return 0 if !defined $rb->[$i];
return 0 unless $ra->[$i] eq $rb->[$i];
}
return 1;
}
sub eq_hash {
my ($orig, $suspect) = @_;
my $fail;
while (my ($key, $value) = each %$suspect) {
# Force a hash recompute if this perl's internals can cache the hash key.
$key = "" . $key;
if (exists $orig->{$key}) {
if (
defined $orig->{$key} != defined $value
|| (defined $value && $orig->{$key} ne $value)
) {
_print "# key ", _qq($key), " was ", _qq($orig->{$key}),
" now ", _qq($value), "\n";
$fail = 1;
}
} else {
_print "# key ", _qq($key), " is ", _qq($value),
", not in original.\n";
$fail = 1;
}
}
foreach (keys %$orig) {
# Force a hash recompute if this perl's internals can cache the hash key.
$_ = "" . $_;
next if (exists $suspect->{$_});
_print "# key ", _qq($_), " was ", _qq($orig->{$_}), " now missing.\n";
$fail = 1;
}
!$fail;
}
# We only provide a subset of the Test::More functionality.
sub require_ok ($) {
my ($require) = @_;
if ($require =~ tr/[A-Za-z0-9:.]//c) {
fail("Invalid character in \"$require\", passed to require_ok");
} else {
eval <<REQUIRE_OK;
require $require;
REQUIRE_OK
is($@, '', _where(), "require $require");
}
}
sub use_ok ($) {
my ($use) = @_;
if ($use =~ tr/[A-Za-z0-9:.]//c) {
fail("Invalid character in \"$use\", passed to use");
} else {
eval <<USE_OK;
use $use;
USE_OK
is($@, '', _where(), "use $use");
}
}
# runperl, run_perl - Runs a separate perl interpreter and returns its output.
# Arguments :
# switches => [ command-line switches ]
# nolib => 1 # don't use -I../lib (included by default)
# non_portable => Don't warn if a one liner contains quotes
# prog => one-liner (avoid quotes)
# progs => [ multi-liner (avoid quotes) ]
# progfile => perl script
# stdin => string to feed the stdin (or undef to redirect from /dev/null)
# stderr => If 'devnull' suppresses stderr, if other TRUE value redirect
# stderr to stdout
# args => [ command-line arguments to the perl program ]
# verbose => print the command line
my $is_mswin = $^O eq 'MSWin32';
my $is_vms = $^O eq 'VMS';
my $is_cygwin = $^O eq 'cygwin';
sub _quote_args {
my ($runperl, $args) = @_;
foreach (@$args) {
# In VMS protect with doublequotes because otherwise
# DCL will lowercase -- unless already doublequoted.
$_ = q(").$_.q(") if $is_vms && !/^\"/ && length($_) > 0;
$runperl = $runperl . ' ' . $_;
}
return $runperl;
}
sub _create_runperl { # Create the string to qx in runperl().
my %args = @_;
my $runperl = which_perl();
if ($runperl =~ m/\s/) {
$runperl = qq{"$runperl"};
}
#- this allows, for example, to set PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG=/usr/bin/valgrind
if ($ENV{PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG}) {
$runperl = "$ENV{PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG} $runperl";
}
unless ($args{nolib}) {
$runperl = $runperl . ' "-I../lib" "-I." '; # doublequotes because of VMS
}
if ($args{switches}) {
local $Level = 2;
die "test.pl:runperl(): 'switches' must be an ARRAYREF " . _where()
unless ref $args{switches} eq "ARRAY";
$runperl = _quote_args($runperl, $args{switches});
}
if (defined $args{prog}) {
die "test.pl:runperl(): both 'prog' and 'progs' cannot be used " . _where()
if defined $args{progs};
$args{progs} = [split /\n/, $args{prog}, -1]
}
if (defined $args{progs}) {
die "test.pl:runperl(): 'progs' must be an ARRAYREF " . _where()
unless ref $args{progs} eq "ARRAY";
foreach my $prog (@{$args{progs}}) {
if (!$args{non_portable}) {
if ($prog =~ tr/'"//) {
warn "quotes in prog >>$prog<< are not portable";
}
if ($prog =~ /^([<>|]|2>)/) {
warn "Initial $1 in prog >>$prog<< is not portable";
}
if ($prog =~ /&\z/) {
warn "Trailing & in prog >>$prog<< is not portable";
}
}
if ($is_mswin || $is_vms) {
$runperl = $runperl . qq ( -e "$prog" );
}
else {
$runperl = $runperl . qq ( -e '$prog' );
}
}
} elsif (defined $args{progfile}) {
$runperl = $runperl . qq( "$args{progfile}");
} else {
# You probably didn't want to be sucking in from the upstream stdin
die "test.pl:runperl(): none of prog, progs, progfile, args, "
. " switches or stdin specified"
unless defined $args{args} or defined $args{switches}
or defined $args{stdin};
}
if (defined $args{stdin}) {
# so we don't try to put literal newlines and crs onto the
# command line.
$args{stdin} =~ s/\n/\\n/g;
$args{stdin} =~ s/\r/\\r/g;
if ($is_mswin || $is_vms) {
$runperl = qq{$Perl -e "print qq(} .
$args{stdin} . q{)" | } . $runperl;
}
else {
$runperl = qq{$Perl -e 'print qq(} .
$args{stdin} . q{)' | } . $runperl;
}
} elsif (exists $args{stdin}) {
# Using the pipe construction above can cause fun on systems which use
# ksh as /bin/sh, as ksh does pipes differently (with one less process)
# With sh, for the command line 'perl -e 'print qq()' | perl -e ...'
# the sh process forks two children, which use exec to start the two
# perl processes. The parent shell process persists for the duration of
# the pipeline, and the second perl process starts with no children.
# With ksh (and zsh), the shell saves a process by forking a child for
# just the first perl process, and execing itself to start the second.
# This means that the second perl process starts with one child which
# it didn't create. This causes "fun" when if the tests assume that
# wait (or waitpid) will only return information about processes
# started within the test.
# They also cause fun on VMS, where the pipe implementation returns
# the exit code of the process at the front of the pipeline, not the
# end. This messes up any test using OPTION FATAL.
# Hence it's useful to have a way to make STDIN be at eof without
# needing a pipeline, so that the fork tests have a sane environment
# without these surprises.
# /dev/null appears to be surprisingly portable.
$runperl = $runperl . ($is_mswin ? ' <nul' : ' </dev/null');
}
if (defined $args{args}) {
$runperl = _quote_args($runperl, $args{args});
}
if (exists $args{stderr} && $args{stderr} eq 'devnull') {
$runperl = $runperl . ($is_mswin ? ' 2>nul' : ' 2>/dev/null');
}
elsif ($args{stderr}) {
$runperl = $runperl . ' 2>&1';
}
if ($args{verbose}) {
my $runperldisplay = $runperl;
$runperldisplay =~ s/\n/\n\#/g;
_print_stderr "# $runperldisplay\n";
}
return $runperl;
}
# usage:
# $ENV{PATH} =~ /(.*)/s;
# local $ENV{PATH} = untaint_path($1);
sub untaint_path {
my $path = shift;
my $sep;
if (! eval {require Config; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@";
$sep = ':';
} else {
$sep = $Config::Config{path_sep};
}
$path =
join $sep, grep { $_ ne "" and $_ ne "." and -d $_ and
($is_mswin or $is_vms or !(stat && (stat _)[2]&0022)) }
split quotemeta ($sep), $1;
if ($is_cygwin) { # Must have /bin under Cygwin
if (length $path) {
$path = $path . $sep;
}
$path = $path . '/bin';
} elsif (!$is_vms and !length $path) {
# empty PATH is the same as a path of "." on *nix so to prevent
# tests from dieing under taint we need to return something
# absolute. Perhaps "/" would be better? Anything absolute will do.
$path = "/usr/bin";
}
$path;
}
# sub run_perl {} is alias to below
# Since this uses backticks to run, it is subject to the rules of the shell.
# Locale settings may pose a problem, depending on the program being run.
sub runperl {
die "test.pl:runperl() does not take a hashref"
if ref $_[0] and ref $_[0] eq 'HASH';
my $runperl = &_create_runperl;
my $result;
my $tainted = ${^TAINT};
my %args = @_;
exists $args{switches} && grep m/^-T$/, @{$args{switches}} and $tainted = $tainted + 1;
if ($tainted) {
# We will assume that if you're running under -T, you really mean to
# run a fresh perl, so we'll brute force launder everything for you
my @keys = grep {exists $ENV{$_}} qw(CDPATH IFS ENV BASH_ENV);
local @ENV{@keys} = ();
# Untaint, plus take out . and empty string:
local $ENV{'DCL$PATH'} = $1 if $is_vms && exists($ENV{'DCL$PATH'}) && ($ENV{'DCL$PATH'} =~ /(.*)/s);
$ENV{PATH} =~ /(.*)/s;
local $ENV{PATH} = untaint_path($1);
$runperl =~ /(.*)/s;
$runperl = $1;
$result = `$runperl`;
} else {
$result = `$runperl`;
}
$result =~ s/\n\n/\n/g if $is_vms; # XXX pipes sometimes double these
return $result;
}
# Nice alias
*run_perl = *run_perl = \&runperl; # shut up "used only once" warning
# Run perl with specified environment and arguments, return (STDOUT, STDERR)
# set DEBUG_RUNENV=1 in the environment to debug.
sub runperl_and_capture {
my ($env, $args) = @_;
my $STDOUT = tempfile();
my $STDERR = tempfile();
my $PERL = $^X;
my $FAILURE_CODE = 119;
local %ENV = %ENV;
delete $ENV{PERLLIB};
delete $ENV{PERL5LIB};
delete $ENV{PERL5OPT};
delete $ENV{PERL_USE_UNSAFE_INC};
my $pid = fork;
return (0, "Couldn't fork: $!") unless defined $pid; # failure
if ($pid) { # parent
waitpid $pid,0;
my $exit_code = $? ? $? >> 8 : 0;
my ($out, $err)= ("", "");
local $/;
if (open my $stdout, '<', $STDOUT) {
$out .= <$stdout>;
} else {
$err .= "Could not read STDOUT '$STDOUT' file: $!\n";
}
if (open my $stderr, '<', $STDERR) {
$err .= <$stderr>;
} else {
$err .= "Could not read STDERR '$STDERR' file: $!\n";
}
if ($exit_code == $FAILURE_CODE) {
$err .= "Something went wrong. Received FAILURE_CODE as exit code.\n";
}
if ($ENV{DEBUG_RUNENV}) {
print "OUT: $out\n";
print "ERR: $err\n";
}
return ($out, $err);
} elsif (defined $pid) { # child
# Just in case the order we update the environment changes how
# the environment is set up we sort the keys here for consistency.
for my $k (sort keys %$env) {
$ENV{$k} = $env->{$k};
}
if ($ENV{DEBUG_RUNENV}) {
print "Child Process $$ Executing:\n$PERL @$args\n";
}
open STDOUT, '>', $STDOUT
or do {
print "Failed to dup STDOUT to '$STDOUT': $!";
exit $FAILURE_CODE;
};
open STDERR, '>', $STDERR
or do {
print "Failed to dup STDERR to '$STDERR': $!";
exit $FAILURE_CODE;
};
exec $PERL, @$args
or print STDERR "Failed to exec: ",
join(" ",map { "'$_'" } $^X, @$args),
": $!\n";
exit $FAILURE_CODE;
}
}
sub DIE {
_print_stderr "# @_\n";
exit 1;
}
# A somewhat safer version of the sometimes wrong $^X.
sub which_perl {
unless (defined $Perl) {
$Perl = $^X;
# VMS should have 'perl' aliased properly
return $Perl if $is_vms;
my $exe;
if (! eval {require Config; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@";
$exe = '';
} else {
$exe = $Config::Config{_exe};
}
$exe = '' unless defined $exe;
# This doesn't absolutize the path: beware of future chdirs().
# We could do File::Spec->abs2rel() but that does getcwd()s,
# which is a bit heavyweight to do here.
if ($Perl =~ /^perl\Q$exe\E$/i) {
my $perl = "perl$exe";
if (! eval {require File::Spec; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading File::Spec: $@";
$Perl = "./$perl";
} else {
$Perl = File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->curdir(), $perl);
}
}
# Build up the name of the executable file from the name of
# the command.
if ($Perl !~ /\Q$exe\E$/i) {
$Perl = $Perl . $exe;
}
warn "which_perl: cannot find $Perl from $^X" unless -f $Perl;
# For subcommands to use.
$ENV{PERLEXE} = $Perl;
}
return $Perl;
}
sub unlink_all {
my $count = 0;
foreach my $file (@_) {
1 while unlink $file;
if( -f $file ){
_print_stderr "# Couldn't unlink '$file': $!\n";
}else{
$count = $count + 1; # don't use ++
}
}
$count;
}
# _num_to_alpha - Returns a string of letters representing a positive integer.
# Arguments :
# number to convert
# maximum number of letters
# returns undef if the number is negative
# returns undef if the number of letters is greater than the maximum wanted
# _num_to_alpha( 0) eq 'A';
# _num_to_alpha( 1) eq 'B';
# _num_to_alpha(25) eq 'Z';
# _num_to_alpha(26) eq 'AA';
# _num_to_alpha(27) eq 'AB';
my @letters = qw(A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z);
# Avoid ++ -- ranges split negative numbers
sub _num_to_alpha {
my($num,$max_char) = @_;
return unless $num >= 0;
my $alpha = '';
my $char_count = 0;
$max_char = 0 if !defined($max_char) or $max_char < 0;
while( 1 ){
$alpha = $letters[ $num % @letters ] . $alpha;
$num = int( $num / @letters );
last if $num == 0;
$num = $num - 1;
# char limit
next unless $max_char;
$char_count = $char_count + 1;
return if $char_count == $max_char;
}
return $alpha;
}
my %tmpfiles;
sub unlink_tempfiles {
unlink_all keys %tmpfiles;
%tmpfiles = ();
}
END { unlink_tempfiles(); }
# NOTE: tempfile() may be used as a module names in our tests
# so the result must be restricted to only legal characters for a module
# name.
# A regexp that matches the tempfile names
$::tempfile_regexp = 'tmp_[A-Z]+_[A-Z]+';
# Avoid ++, avoid ranges, avoid split //
my $tempfile_count = 0;
my $max_file_chars = 3;
# Note that the max number of is NOT 26**3, it is 26**3 + 26**2 + 26,
# as 3 character files are distinct from 2 character files, from 1 characters
# files, etc.
sub tempfile {
# if you change the format returned by tempfile() you MUST change
# the $::tempfile_regex define above.
my $try_prefix = (-d "t" ? "t/" : "")."tmp_"._num_to_alpha($$);
while (1) {
my $alpha = _num_to_alpha($tempfile_count,$max_file_chars);
last unless defined $alpha;
my $try = $try_prefix . "_" . $alpha;
$tempfile_count = $tempfile_count + 1;
# Need to note all the file names we allocated, as a second request
# may come before the first is created. Also we are avoiding ++ here
# so we aren't using the normal idiom for this kind of test.
if (!$tmpfiles{$try} && !-e $try) {
# We have a winner
$tmpfiles{$try} = 1;
return $try;
}
}
die sprintf
'panic: Too many tempfile()s with prefix "%s", limit of %d reached',
$try_prefix, 26 ** $max_file_chars;
}
# register_tempfile - Adds a list of files to be removed at the end of the current test file
# Arguments :
# a list of files to be removed later
# returns a count of how many file names were actually added
# Reuses %tmpfiles so that tempfile() will also skip any files added here
# even if the file doesn't exist yet.
sub register_tempfile {
my $count = 0;
for( @_ ){
if( $tmpfiles{$_} ){
_print_stderr "# Temporary file '$_' already added\n";
}else{
$tmpfiles{$_} = 1;
$count = $count + 1;
}
}
return $count;
}
# This is the temporary file for fresh_perl
my $tmpfile = tempfile();
sub fresh_perl {
my($prog, $runperl_args) = @_;
# Run 'runperl' with the complete perl program contained in '$prog', and
# arguments in the hash referred to by '$runperl_args'. The results are
# returned, with $? set to the exit code. Unless overridden, stderr is
# redirected to stdout.
#
# Placing the program in a file bypasses various sh vagaries
die sprintf "Second argument to fresh_perl_.* must be hashref of args to fresh_perl (or {})"
unless !(defined $runperl_args) || ref($runperl_args) eq 'HASH';
# Given the choice of the mis-parsable {}
# (we want an anon hash, but a borked lexer might think that it's a block)
# or relying on taking a reference to a lexical
# (\ might be mis-parsed, and the reference counting on the pad may go
# awry)
# it feels like the least-worse thing is to assume that auto-vivification
# works. At least, this is only going to be a run-time failure, so won't
# affect tests using this file but not this function.
my $trim= delete $runperl_args->{rtrim_result}; # hide from runperl
$runperl_args->{progfile} ||= $tmpfile;
$runperl_args->{stderr} = 1 unless exists $runperl_args->{stderr};
open TEST, '>', $tmpfile or die "Cannot open $tmpfile: $!";
binmode TEST, ':utf8' if $runperl_args->{wide_chars};
print TEST $prog;
close TEST or die "Cannot close $tmpfile: $!";
my $results = runperl(%$runperl_args);
my $status = $?; # Not necessary to save this, but it makes it clear to
# future maintainers.
$results=~s/[ \t]+\n/\n/g if $trim;
# Clean up the results into something a bit more predictable.
$results =~ s/\n+$//;
$results =~ s/at\s+$::tempfile_regexp\s+line/at - line/g;
$results =~ s/of\s+$::tempfile_regexp\s+aborted/of - aborted/g;
# bison says 'parse error' instead of 'syntax error',
# various yaccs may or may not capitalize 'syntax'.
$results =~ s/^(syntax|parse) error/syntax error/mig;
if ($is_vms) {
# some tests will trigger VMS messages that won't be expected
$results =~ s/\n?%[A-Z]+-[SIWEF]-[A-Z]+,.*//;
# pipes double these sometimes
$results =~ s/\n\n/\n/g;
}
$? = $status;
return $results;
}
sub _fresh_perl {
my($prog, $action, $expect, $runperl_args, $name) = @_;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
# strip trailing whitespace if requested - makes some tests easier
$expect=~s/[[:blank:]]+\n/\n/g if $runperl_args->{rtrim_result};
my $results = fresh_perl($prog, $runperl_args);
my $status = $?;
# Use the first line of the program as a name if none was given
unless( $name ) {
(my $first_line, $name) = $prog =~ /^((.{1,50}).*)/;
$name = $name . '...' if length $first_line > length $name;
}
# Historically this was implemented using a closure, but then that means
# that the tests for closures avoid using this code. Given that there
# are exactly two callers, doing exactly two things, the simpler approach
# feels like a better trade off.
my $pass;
if ($action eq 'eq') {
$pass = is($results, $expect, $name);
} elsif ($action eq '=~') {
$pass = like($results, $expect, $name);
} else {
die "_fresh_perl can't process action '$action'";
}
unless ($pass) {
_diag "# PROG: \n$prog\n";
_diag "# STATUS: $status\n";
}
return $pass;
}
#
# fresh_perl_is
#
# Combination of run_perl() and is().
#
sub fresh_perl_is {
my($prog, $expected, $runperl_args, $name) = @_;
# _fresh_perl() is going to clip the trailing newlines off the result.
# This will make it so the test author doesn't have to know that.
$expected =~ s/\n+$//;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
_fresh_perl($prog, 'eq', $expected, $runperl_args, $name);
}
#
# fresh_perl_like
#
# Combination of run_perl() and like().
#
sub fresh_perl_like {
my($prog, $expected, $runperl_args, $name) = @_;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
_fresh_perl($prog, '=~', $expected, $runperl_args, $name);
}
# Many tests use the same format in __DATA__ or external files to specify a
# sequence of (fresh) tests to run, extra files they may temporarily need, and
# what the expected output is. Putting it here allows common code to serve
# these multiple tests.
#
# Each program is source code to run followed by an "EXPECT" line, followed
# by the expected output.
#
# The first line of the code to run may be a command line switch such as -wE
# or -0777 (alphanumerics only; only one cluster, beginning with a minus is
# allowed). Later lines may contain (note the '# ' on each):
# # TODO reason for todo
# # SKIP reason for skip
# # SKIP ?code to test if this should be skipped
# # NAME name of the test (as with ok($ok, $name))
#
# The expected output may contain:
# OPTION list of options
# OPTIONS list of options
#
# The possible options for OPTION may be:
# regex - the expected output is a regular expression
# random - all lines match but in any order
# fatal - the code will fail fatally (croak, die)
# nonfatal - the code is not expected to fail fatally
#
# If the actual output contains a line "SKIPPED" the test will be
# skipped.
#
# If the actual output contains a line "PREFIX", any output starting with that
# line will be ignored when comparing with the expected output
#
# If the global variable $FATAL is true then OPTION fatal is the
# default.
our $FATAL;
sub _setup_one_file {
my $fh = shift;
# Store the filename as a program that started at line 0.
# Real files count lines starting at line 1.
my @these = (0, shift);
my ($lineno, $current);
while (<$fh>) {
if ($_ eq "########\n") {
if (defined $current) {
push @these, $lineno, $current;
}
undef $current;
} else {
if (!defined $current) {
$lineno = $.;
}
$current .= $_;
}
}
if (defined $current) {
push @these, $lineno, $current;
}
((scalar @these) / 2 - 1, @these);
}
sub setup_multiple_progs {
my ($tests, @prgs);
foreach my $file (@_) {
next if $file =~ /(?:~|\.orig|,v)$/;
next if $file =~ /perlio$/ && !PerlIO::Layer->find('perlio');
next if -d $file;
open my $fh, '<', $file or die "Cannot open $file: $!\n" ;
my $found;
while (<$fh>) {
if (/^__END__/) {
$found = $found + 1; # don't use ++
last;
}
}
# This is an internal error, and should never happen. All bar one of
# the files had an __END__ marker to signal the end of their preamble,
# although for some it wasn't technically necessary as they have no
# tests. It might be possible to process files without an __END__ by
# seeking back to the start and treating the whole file as tests, but
# it's simpler and more reliable just to make the rule that all files
# must have __END__ in. This should never fail - a file without an
# __END__ should not have been checked in, because the regression tests
# would not have passed.
die "Could not find '__END__' in $file"
unless $found;
my ($t, @p) = _setup_one_file($fh, $file);
$tests += $t;
push @prgs, @p;
close $fh
or die "Cannot close $file: $!\n";
}
return ($tests, @prgs);
}
sub run_multiple_progs {
my $up = shift;
my @prgs;
if ($up) {
# The tests in lib run in a temporary subdirectory of t, and always
# pass in a list of "programs" to run
@prgs = @_;
} else {
# The tests below t run in t and pass in a file handle. In theory we
# can pass (caller)[1] as the second argument to report errors with
# the filename of our caller, as the handle is always DATA. However,
# line numbers in DATA count from the __END__ token, so will be wrong.
# Which is more confusing than not providing line numbers. So, for now,
# don't provide line numbers. No obvious clean solution - one hack
# would be to seek DATA back to the start and read to the __END__ token,
# but that feels almost like we should just open $0 instead.
# Not going to rely on undef in list assignment.
my $dummy;
($dummy, @prgs) = _setup_one_file(shift);
}
my $taint_disabled;
if (! eval {require Config; 1}) {
warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@";
$taint_disabled = '';
} else {
$taint_disabled = $Config::Config{taint_disabled};
}
my $tmpfile = tempfile();
my $count_failures = 0;
my ($file, $line);
PROGRAM:
while (defined ($line = shift @prgs)) {
$_ = shift @prgs;
unless ($line) {
$file = $_;
if (defined $file) {
print "# From $file\n";
}
next;
}
my $switch = "";
my @temps ;
my @temp_path;
if (s/^(\s*-\w+)//) {
$switch = $1;
}
s/^# NOTE.*\n//mg; # remove any NOTE comments in the content
# unhide conflict markers - we hide them so that naive
# conflict marker detection logic doesn't get upset with our
# tests.
s/([<=>])CONFLICT\1/$1 x 7/ge;
my ($prog, $expected) = split(/\nEXPECT(?:\n|$)/, $_, 2);
my %reason;
foreach my $what (qw(skip todo)) {
$prog =~ s/^#\s*\U$what\E\s*(.*)\n//m and $reason{$what} = $1;
# If the SKIP reason starts ? then it's taken as a code snippet to
# evaluate. This provides the flexibility to have conditional SKIPs
if ($reason{$what} && $reason{$what} =~ s/^\?//) {
my $temp = eval $reason{$what};
if ($@) {
die "# In \U$what\E code reason:\n# $reason{$what}\n$@";
}
$reason{$what} = $temp;
}
}
my $name = '';
if ($prog =~ s/^#\s*NAME\s+(.+)\n//m) {
$name = $1;
} elsif (defined $file) {
$name = "test from $file at line $line";
}
if ($switch=~/[Tt]/ and $taint_disabled eq "define") {
$reason{skip} ||= "This perl does not support taint";
}
if ($reason{skip}) {
SKIP:
{
skip($name ? "$name - $reason{skip}" : $reason{skip}, 1);
}
next PROGRAM;
}
if ($prog =~ /--FILE--/) {
my @files = split(/\n?--FILE--\s*([^\s\n]*)\s*\n/, $prog) ;
shift @files ;
die "Internal error: test $_ didn't split into pairs, got " .
scalar(@files) . "[" . join("%%%%", @files) ."]\n"
if @files % 2;
while (@files > 2) {
my $filename = shift @files;
my $code = shift @files;
push @temps, $filename;
if ($filename =~ m#(.*)/# && $filename !~ m#^\.\./#) {
require File::Path;
File::Path::mkpath($1);
push(@temp_path, $1);
}
open my $fh, '>', $filename or die "Cannot open $filename: $!\n";
print $fh $code;
close $fh or die "Cannot close $filename: $!\n";
}
shift @files;
$prog = shift @files;
}
open my $fh, '>', $tmpfile or die "Cannot open >$tmpfile: $!";
print $fh q{
BEGIN {
push @INC, '.';
open STDERR, '>&', STDOUT
or die "Can't dup STDOUT->STDERR: $!;";
}
};
print $fh "\n#line 1\n"; # So the line numbers don't get messed up.
print $fh $prog,"\n";
close $fh or die "Cannot close $tmpfile: $!";
my $results = runperl( stderr => 1, progfile => $tmpfile,
stdin => undef, $up
? (switches => ["-I$up/lib", $switch], nolib => 1)
: (switches => [$switch])
);
my $status = $?;
$results =~ s/\n+$//;
# allow expected output to be written as if $prog is on STDIN
$results =~ s/$::tempfile_regexp/-/g;
if ($^O eq 'VMS') {
# some tests will trigger VMS messages that won't be expected
$results =~ s/\n?%[A-Z]+-[SIWEF]-[A-Z]+,.*//;
# pipes double these sometimes
$results =~ s/\n\n/\n/g;
}
# bison says 'parse error' instead of 'syntax error',
# various yaccs may or may not capitalize 'syntax'.
$results =~ s/^(syntax|parse) error/syntax error/mig;
# allow all tests to run when there are leaks
$results =~ s/Scalars leaked: \d+\n//g;
$expected =~ s/\n+$//;
my $prefix = ($results =~ s#^PREFIX(\n|$)##) ;
# any special options? (OPTIONS foo bar zap)
my $option_regex = 0;
my $option_random = 0;
my $fatal = $FATAL;
if ($expected =~ s/^OPTIONS? (.+)(?:\n|\Z)//) {
foreach my $option (split(' ', $1)) {
if ($option eq 'regex') { # allow regular expressions
$option_regex = 1;
}
elsif ($option eq 'random') { # all lines match, but in any order
$option_random = 1;
}
elsif ($option eq 'fatal') { # perl should fail
$fatal = 1;
}
elsif ($option eq 'nonfatal') {
# used to turn off default fatal
$fatal = 0;
}
else {
die "$0: Unknown OPTION '$option'\n";
}
}
}
die "$0: can't have OPTION regex and random\n"
if $option_regex + $option_random > 1;
my $ok = 0;
if ($results =~ s/^SKIPPED\n//) {
print "$results\n" ;
$ok = 1;
}
else {
if ($option_random) {
my @got = sort split "\n", $results;
my @expected = sort split "\n", $expected;
$ok = "@got" eq "@expected";
}
elsif ($option_regex) {
$ok = $results =~ /^$expected/;
}
elsif ($prefix) {
$ok = $results =~ /^\Q$expected/;
}
else {
$ok = $results eq $expected;
}
if ($ok && $fatal && !($status >> 8)) {
$ok = 0;
}
}
local $::TODO = $reason{todo};
unless ($ok) {
my $err_line = '';
$err_line .= "FILE: $file ; line $line\n" if defined $file;
$err_line .= "PROG: $switch\n$prog\n" .
"EXPECTED:\n$expected\n";
$err_line .= "EXIT STATUS: != 0\n" if $fatal;
$err_line .= "GOT:\n$results\n";
$err_line .= "EXIT STATUS: " . ($status >> 8) . "\n" if $fatal;
if ($::TODO) {
$err_line =~ s/^/# /mg;
print $err_line; # Harness can't filter it out from STDERR.
}
else {
print STDERR $err_line;
++$count_failures;
die "PERL_TEST_ABORT_FIRST_FAILURE set Test Failure"
if $ENV{PERL_TEST_ABORT_FIRST_FAILURE};
}
}
if (defined $file) {
_ok($ok, "at $file line $line", $name);
} else {
# We don't have file and line number data for the test, so report
# errors as coming from our caller.
local $Level = $Level + 1;
ok($ok, $name);
}
foreach (@temps) {
unlink $_ if $_;
}
foreach (@temp_path) {
File::Path::rmtree $_ if -d $_;
}
}
if ( $count_failures ) {
print STDERR <<'EOS';
#
# Note: 'run_multiple_progs' run has one or more failures
# you can consider setting the environment variable
# PERL_TEST_ABORT_FIRST_FAILURE=1 before running the test
# to stop on the first error.
#
EOS
}
return;
}
sub can_ok ($@) {
my($proto, @methods) = @_;
my $class = ref $proto || $proto;
unless( @methods ) {
return _ok( 0, _where(), "$class->can(...)" );
}
my @nok = ();
foreach my $method (@methods) {
local($!, $@); # don't interfere with caller's $@
# eval sometimes resets $!
eval { $proto->can($method) } || push @nok, $method;
}
my $name;
$name = @methods == 1 ? "$class->can('$methods[0]')"
: "$class->can(...)";
_ok( !@nok, _where(), $name );
}
# Call $class->new( @$args ); and run the result through object_ok.
# See Test::More::new_ok
sub new_ok {
my($class, $args, $obj_name) = @_;
$args ||= [];
$obj_name = "The object" unless defined $obj_name;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
my $obj;
my $ok = eval { $obj = $class->new(@$args); 1 };
my $error = $@;
if($ok) {
object_ok($obj, $class, $obj_name);
}
else {
ok( 0, "new() died" );
diag("Error was: $@");
}
return $obj;
}
sub isa_ok ($$;$) {
my($object, $class, $obj_name) = @_;
my $diag;
$obj_name = 'The object' unless defined $obj_name;
my $name = "$obj_name isa $class";
if( !defined $object ) {
$diag = "$obj_name isn't defined";
}
else {
my $whatami = ref $object ? 'object' : 'class';
# We can't use UNIVERSAL::isa because we want to honor isa() overrides
local($@, $!); # eval sometimes resets $!
my $rslt = eval { $object->isa($class) };
my $error = $@; # in case something else blows away $@
if( $error ) {
if( $error =~ /^Can't call method "isa" on unblessed reference/ ) {
# It's an unblessed reference
$obj_name = 'The reference' unless defined $obj_name;
if( !UNIVERSAL::isa($object, $class) ) {
my $ref = ref $object;
$diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'";
}
}
elsif( $error =~ /Can't call method "isa" without a package/ ) {
# It's something that can't even be a class
$obj_name = 'The thing' unless defined $obj_name;
$diag = "$obj_name isn't a class or reference";
}
else {
die <<WHOA;
WHOA! I tried to call ->isa on your object and got some weird error.
This should never happen. Please contact the author immediately.
Here's the error.
$@
WHOA
}
}
elsif( !$rslt ) {
$obj_name = "The $whatami" unless defined $obj_name;
my $ref = ref $object;
$diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'";
}
}
_ok( !$diag, _where(), $name );
}
sub class_ok {
my($class, $isa, $class_name) = @_;
# Written so as to count as one test
local $Level = $Level + 1;
if( ref $class ) {
ok( 0, "$class is a reference, not a class name" );
}
else {
isa_ok($class, $isa, $class_name);
}
}
sub object_ok {
my($obj, $isa, $obj_name) = @_;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
if( !ref $obj ) {
ok( 0, "$obj is not a reference" );
}
else {
isa_ok($obj, $isa, $obj_name);
}
}
# Purposefully avoiding a closure.
sub __capture {
push @::__capture, join "", @_;
}
sub capture_warnings {
my $code = shift;
local @::__capture;
local $SIG {__WARN__} = \&__capture;
local $Level = 1;
&$code;
return @::__capture;
}
# This will generate a variable number of tests.
# Use done_testing() instead of a fixed plan.
sub warnings_like {
my ($code, $expect, $name) = @_;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
my @w = capture_warnings($code);
cmp_ok(scalar @w, '==', scalar @$expect, $name);
foreach my $e (@$expect) {
if (ref $e) {
like(shift @w, $e, $name);
} else {
is(shift @w, $e, $name);
}
}
if (@w) {
diag("Saw these additional warnings:");
diag($_) foreach @w;
}
}
sub _fail_excess_warnings {
my($expect, $got, $name) = @_;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
# This will fail, and produce diagnostics
is($expect, scalar @$got, $name);
diag("Saw these warnings:");
diag($_) foreach @$got;
}
sub warning_is {
my ($code, $expect, $name) = @_;
die sprintf "Expect must be a string or undef, not a %s reference", ref $expect
if ref $expect;
local $Level = $Level + 1;
my @w = capture_warnings($code);
if (@w > 1) {
_fail_excess_warnings(0 + defined $expect, \@w, $name);
} else {
is($w[0], $expect, $name);
}
}
sub warning_like {
my ($code, $expect, $name) = @_;
die sprintf "Expect must be a regexp object"
unless ref $expect eq 'Regexp';
local $Level = $Level + 1;
my @w = capture_warnings($code);
if (@w > 1) {
_fail_excess_warnings(0 + defined $expect, \@w, $name);
} else {
like($w[0], $expect, $name);
}
}
# Set or clear a watchdog timer. The input seconds is:
# zero to clear;
# non-zero to set
# and is multiplied by $ENV{PERL_TEST_TIME_OUT_FACTOR} (default 1; minimum 1).
# Set this variable in your profile for slow boxes, or use it to override the
# timeout temporarily for debugging.
#
# This will figure out a suitable method to implement the timer, but you can
# force it to use an alarm by setting the optional second parameter to
# 'alarm', or to use a separate process (if available on this platform) by
# setting that parameter to 'process'.
#
# It is good practice to CLEAR EVERY WATCHDOG timer. Otherwise the timer
# applies to the entire rest of the file. Even if that works now, new tests
# tend to get added to the end of the file, and people may not notice that
# they are being timed. Those tests may all complete before the timer kills
# them, but then more new tests get added, even further away from the timer
# setting code, with less likelihood of noticing that. Those tests may also
# generally work, but flap on heavily loaded smokers, leading to debugging
# effort that wouldn't have had to be expended if the timer had been cancelled
# in the first place
#
# NOTE: If the test file uses 'threads', then call the watchdog() function
# _AFTER_ the 'threads' module is loaded.
{ # Closure
my $watchdog;
my $watchdog_thread;
sub watchdog ($;$)
{
my $timeout = shift;
# If cancelling, use the state variables to know which method was used to
# create the watchdog.
if ($timeout == 0) {
if ($watchdog_thread) {
$watchdog_thread->kill('KILL');
undef $watchdog_thread;
}
elsif ($watchdog) {
kill('KILL', $watchdog);
undef $watchdog;
}
else {
alarm(0);
}
return;
}
# Make sure these aren't defined.
undef $watchdog;
undef $watchdog_thread;
my $method = shift || "";
my $timeout_msg = 'Test process timed out - terminating';
# Accept either spelling
my $timeout_factor = $ENV{PERL_TEST_TIME_OUT_FACTOR}
|| $ENV{PERL_TEST_TIMEOUT_FACTOR}
|| 1;
$timeout_factor = 1 if $timeout_factor < 1;
$timeout_factor = $1 if $timeout_factor =~ /^(\d+)$/;
# Valgrind slows perl way down so give it more time before dying.
$timeout_factor = 10 if $timeout_factor < 10 && $ENV{PERL_VALGRIND};
$timeout *= $timeout_factor;
my $pid_to_kill = $$; # PID for this process
if ($method eq "alarm") {
goto WATCHDOG_VIA_ALARM;
}
# shut up use only once warning
my $threads_on = $threads::threads && $threads::threads;
# Don't use a watchdog process if 'threads' is loaded -
# use a watchdog thread instead
if (!$threads_on || $method eq "process") {
# On Windows and VMS, try launching a watchdog process
# using system(1, ...) (see perlport.pod). system() returns
# immediately on these platforms with effectively a pid of the new
# process
if ($is_mswin || $is_vms) {
# On Windows, try to get the 'real' PID
if ($is_mswin) {
eval { require Win32; };
if (defined(&Win32::GetCurrentProcessId)) {
$pid_to_kill = Win32::GetCurrentProcessId();
}
}
# If we still have a fake PID, we can't use this method at all
return if ($pid_to_kill <= 0);
# Launch watchdog process
undef $watchdog;
eval {
local $SIG{'__WARN__'} = sub {
_diag("Watchdog warning: $_[0]");
};
my $sig = $is_vms ? 'TERM' : 'KILL';
my $prog = "sleep($timeout);" .
"warn qq/# $timeout_msg" . '\n/;' .
"kill(q/$sig/, $pid_to_kill);";
# If we're in taint mode PATH will be tainted
$ENV{PATH} =~ /(.*)/s;
local $ENV{PATH} = untaint_path($1);
# On Windows use the indirect object plus LIST form to guarantee
# that perl is launched directly rather than via the shell (see
# perlfunc.pod), and ensure that the LIST has multiple elements
# since the indirect object plus COMMANDSTRING form seems to
# hang (see perl #121283). Don't do this on VMS, which doesn't
# support the LIST form at all.
if ($is_mswin) {
my $runperl = which_perl();
$runperl =~ /(.*)/;
$runperl = $1;
if ($runperl =~ m/\s/) {
$runperl = qq{"$runperl"};
}
$watchdog = system({ $runperl } 1, $runperl, '-e', $prog);
}
else {
my $cmd = _create_runperl(prog => $prog);
$watchdog = system(1, $cmd);
}
};
if ($@ || ($watchdog <= 0)) {
_diag('Failed to start watchdog');
_diag($@) if $@;
undef($watchdog);
return;
}
# Add END block to parent to terminate and
# clean up watchdog process
eval("END { local \$! = 0; local \$? = 0;
wait() if kill('KILL', $watchdog); };");
return;
}
# Try using fork() to generate a watchdog process
undef $watchdog;
eval { $watchdog = fork() };
if (defined($watchdog)) {
if ($watchdog) { # Parent process
# Add END block to parent to terminate and
# clean up watchdog process
eval "END { local \$! = 0; local \$? = 0;
wait() if kill('KILL', $watchdog); };";
return;
}
### Watchdog process code
# Load POSIX if available
eval { require POSIX; };
# Execute the timeout
sleep($timeout - 2) if ($timeout > 2); # Workaround for perlbug #49073
sleep(2);
# Kill test process if still running
if (kill(0, $pid_to_kill)) {
_diag($timeout_msg);
kill('KILL', $pid_to_kill);
if ($is_cygwin) {
# sometimes the above isn't enough on cygwin
sleep 1; # wait a little, it might have worked after all
system("/bin/kill -f $pid_to_kill") if kill(0, $pid_to_kill);
}
}
# Don't execute END block (added at beginning of this file)
$NO_ENDING = 1;
# Terminate ourself (i.e., the watchdog)
POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit));
exit(1);
}
# fork() failed - fall through and try using a thread
}
# Use a watchdog thread because either 'threads' is loaded,
# or fork() failed
if (eval {require threads; 1}) {
$watchdog_thread = 'threads'->create(sub {
# Load POSIX if available
eval { require POSIX; };
$SIG{'KILL'} = sub { threads->exit(); };
# Detach after the signal handler is set up; the parent knows
# not to signal until detached.
'threads'->detach();
# Execute the timeout
my $time_left = $timeout;
do {
$time_left = $time_left - sleep($time_left);
} while ($time_left > 0);
# Kill the parent (and ourself)
select(STDERR); $| = 1;
_diag($timeout_msg);
POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit));
my $sig = $is_vms ? 'TERM' : 'KILL';
kill($sig, $pid_to_kill);
});
# Don't proceed until the watchdog has set up its signal handler.
# (Otherwise there is a possibility that we will exit with threads
# running.) The watchdog tells us that the handler is set by
# detaching itself. (The 'is_running()' is a fail-safe.)
while ( $watchdog_thread->is_running()
&& ! $watchdog_thread->is_detached())
{
'threads'->yield();
}
return;
}
# If everything above fails, then just use an alarm timeout
WATCHDOG_VIA_ALARM:
if (eval { alarm($timeout); 1; }) {
# Load POSIX if available
eval { require POSIX; };
# Alarm handler will do the actual 'killing'
$SIG{'ALRM'} = sub {
select(STDERR); $| = 1;
_diag($timeout_msg);
POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit));
my $sig = $is_vms ? 'TERM' : 'KILL';
kill($sig, $pid_to_kill);
};
}
}
} # End closure
# Orphaned Docker or Linux containers do not necessarily attach to PID 1. They might attach to 0 instead.
sub is_linux_container {
if ($^O eq 'linux' && open my $fh, '<', '/proc/1/cgroup') {
while(<$fh>) {
if (m{^\d+:pids:(.*)} && $1 ne '/init.scope') {
return 1;
}
}
}
return 0;
}
1;
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