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# TestLib, low-level routines and actions regression tests. # # This module contains a set of routines dedicated to environment setup for # a PostgreSQL regression test run and includes some low-level routines # aimed at controlling command execution, logging and test functions. This # module should never depend on any other PostgreSQL regression test modules. package TestLib; use strict; use warnings; use Config; use Cwd; use Exporter 'import'; use Fcntl qw(:mode :seek); use File::Basename; use File::Spec; use File::Temp (); use IPC::Run; use SimpleTee; use Test::More; our @EXPORT = qw( slurp_dir slurp_file append_to_file system_or_bail system_log run_log command_ok command_fails command_exit_is program_help_ok program_version_ok program_options_handling_ok command_like $windows_os ); our ($windows_os, $tmp_check, $log_path, $test_logfile); BEGIN { # Set to untranslated messages, to be able to compare program output # with expected strings. delete $ENV{LANGUAGE}; delete $ENV{LC_ALL}; $ENV{LC_MESSAGES} = 'C'; # This list should be kept in sync with pg_regress.c. my @envkeys = qw ( PGCLIENTENCODING PGCONNECT_TIMEOUT PGDATA PGDATABASE PGGSSLIB PGHOSTADDR PGKRBSRVNAME PGPASSFILE PGPASSWORD PGREQUIREPEER PGREQUIRESSL PGSERVICE PGSERVICEFILE PGSSLCERT PGSSLCRL PGSSLKEY PGSSLMODE PGSSLROOTCERT PGUSER PGPORT PGHOST ); delete @ENV{@envkeys}; # Must be set early $windows_os = $Config{osname} eq 'MSWin32' || $Config{osname} eq 'msys'; if ($windows_os) { require Win32API::File; Win32API::File->import(qw(createFile OsFHandleOpen CloseHandle)); } } INIT { # Determine output directories, and create them. The base path is the # TESTDIR environment variable, which is normally set by the invoking # Makefile. $tmp_check = $ENV{TESTDIR} ? "$ENV{TESTDIR}/tmp_check" : "tmp_check"; $log_path = "$tmp_check/log"; mkdir $tmp_check; mkdir $log_path; # Open the test log file, whose name depends on the test name. $test_logfile = basename($0); $test_logfile =~ s/\.[^.]+$//; $test_logfile = "$log_path/regress_log_$test_logfile"; open TESTLOG, '>', $test_logfile or die "could not open STDOUT to logfile \"$test_logfile\": $!"; # Hijack STDOUT and STDERR to the log file open(ORIG_STDOUT, ">&STDOUT"); open(ORIG_STDERR, ">&STDERR"); open(STDOUT, ">&TESTLOG"); open(STDERR, ">&TESTLOG"); # The test output (ok ...) needs to be printed to the original STDOUT so # that the 'prove' program can parse it, and display it to the user in # real time. But also copy it to the log file, to provide more context # in the log. my $builder = Test::More->builder; my $fh = $builder->output; tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", *ORIG_STDOUT, *TESTLOG; $fh = $builder->failure_output; tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", *ORIG_STDERR, *TESTLOG; # Enable auto-flushing for all the file handles. Stderr and stdout are # redirected to the same file, and buffering causes the lines to appear # in the log in confusing order. autoflush STDOUT 1; autoflush STDERR 1; autoflush TESTLOG 1; } END { # Test files have several ways of causing prove_check to fail: # 1. Exit with a non-zero status. # 2. Call ok(0) or similar, indicating that a constituent test failed. # 3. Deviate from the planned number of tests. # # Preserve temporary directories after (1) and after (2). $File::Temp::KEEP_ALL = 1 unless $? == 0 && all_tests_passing(); } sub all_tests_passing { my $fail_count = 0; foreach my $status (Test::More->builder->summary) { return 0 unless $status; } return 1; } # # Helper functions # sub tempdir { my ($prefix) = @_; $prefix = "tmp_test" unless defined $prefix; return File::Temp::tempdir( $prefix . '_XXXX', DIR => $tmp_check, CLEANUP => 1); } sub tempdir_short { # Use a separate temp dir outside the build tree for the # Unix-domain socket, to avoid file name length issues. return File::Temp::tempdir(CLEANUP => 1); } # Translate a Perl file name to a host file name. Currently, this is a no-op # except for the case of Perl=msys and host=mingw32. The subject need not # exist, but its parent directory must exist. sub perl2host { my ($subject) = @_; return $subject unless $Config{osname} eq 'msys'; my $here = cwd; my $leaf; if (chdir $subject) { $leaf = ''; } else { $leaf = '/' . basename $subject; my $parent = dirname $subject; chdir $parent or die "could not chdir \"$parent\": $!"; } # this odd way of calling 'pwd -W' is the only way that seems to work. my $dir = qx{sh -c "pwd -W"}; chomp $dir; chdir $here; return $dir . $leaf; } sub system_log { print("# Running: " . join(" ", @_) . "\n"); return system(@_); } sub system_or_bail { if (system_log(@_) != 0) { BAIL_OUT("system $_[0] failed"); } } sub run_log { print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{ $_[0] }) . "\n"); return IPC::Run::run(@_); } sub slurp_dir { my ($dir) = @_; opendir(my $dh, $dir) or die "could not opendir \"$dir\": $!"; my @direntries = readdir $dh; closedir $dh; return @direntries; } sub slurp_file { my ($filename, $offset) = @_; local $/; my $contents; my $fh; # On windows open file using win32 APIs, to allow us to set the # FILE_SHARE_DELETE flag ("d" below), otherwise other accesses to the file # may fail. if ($Config{osname} ne 'MSWin32') { open($fh, '<', $filename) or die "could not read \"$filename\": $!"; } else { my $fHandle = createFile($filename, "r", "rwd") or die "could not open \"$filename\": $^E"; OsFHandleOpen($fh = IO::Handle->new(), $fHandle, 'r') or die "could not read \"$filename\": $^E\n"; } if (defined($offset)) { seek($fh, $offset, SEEK_SET) or die "could not seek \"$filename\": $!"; } $contents = <$fh>; close $fh; $contents =~ s/\r\n/\n/g if $Config{osname} eq 'msys'; return $contents; } sub append_to_file { my ($filename, $str) = @_; open my $fh, ">>", $filename or die "could not write \"$filename\": $!"; print $fh $str; close $fh; } # # Test functions # sub command_ok { my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_; my $result = run_log($cmd); ok($result, $test_name); } sub command_fails { my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_; my $result = run_log($cmd); ok(!$result, $test_name); } sub command_exit_is { my ($cmd, $expected, $test_name) = @_; print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n"); my $h = IPC::Run::start $cmd; $h->finish(); # On Windows, the exit status of the process is returned directly as the # process's exit code, while on Unix, it's returned in the high bits # of the exit code (see WEXITSTATUS macro in the standard <sys/wait.h> # header file). IPC::Run's result function always returns exit code >> 8, # assuming the Unix convention, which will always return 0 on Windows as # long as the process was not terminated by an exception. To work around # that, use $h->full_result on Windows instead. my $result = ($Config{osname} eq "MSWin32") ? ($h->full_results)[0] : $h->result(0); is($result, $expected, $test_name); } sub program_help_ok { my ($cmd) = @_; my ($stdout, $stderr); print("# Running: $cmd --help\n"); my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--help' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr; ok($result, "$cmd --help exit code 0"); isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --help goes to stdout"); is($stderr, '', "$cmd --help nothing to stderr"); } sub program_version_ok { my ($cmd) = @_; my ($stdout, $stderr); print("# Running: $cmd --version\n"); my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--version' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr; ok($result, "$cmd --version exit code 0"); isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --version goes to stdout"); is($stderr, '', "$cmd --version nothing to stderr"); } sub program_options_handling_ok { my ($cmd) = @_; my ($stdout, $stderr); print("# Running: $cmd --not-a-valid-option\n"); my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--not-a-valid-option' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr; ok(!$result, "$cmd with invalid option nonzero exit code"); isnt($stderr, '', "$cmd with invalid option prints error message"); } sub command_like { my ($cmd, $expected_stdout, $test_name) = @_; my ($stdout, $stderr); print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n"); my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr; ok($result, "@$cmd exit code 0"); is($stderr, '', "@$cmd no stderr"); $stdout =~ s/\r\n/\n/g if $Config{osname} eq 'msys'; like($stdout, $expected_stdout, "$test_name: matches"); } # Run a command and check its status and outputs. # The 5 arguments are: # - cmd: ref to list for command, options and arguments to run # - ret: expected exit status # - out: ref to list of re to be checked against stdout (all must match) # - err: ref to list of re to be checked against stderr (all must match) # - test_name: name of test sub command_checks_all { my ($cmd, $expected_ret, $out, $err, $test_name) = @_; # run command my ($stdout, $stderr); print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n"); IPC::Run::run($cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr); # See http://perldoc.perl.org/perlvar.html#%24CHILD_ERROR my $ret = $?; die "command exited with signal " . ($ret & 127) if $ret & 127; $ret = $ret >> 8; foreach ($stderr, $stdout) { s/\r\n/\n/g if $Config{osname} eq 'msys'; } # check status ok($ret == $expected_ret, "$test_name status (got $ret vs expected $expected_ret)"); # check stdout for my $re (@$out) { like($stdout, $re, "$test_name stdout /$re/"); } # check stderr for my $re (@$err) { like($stderr, $re, "$test_name stderr /$re/"); } return; } 1;