mirror of
https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib
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806 lines
25 KiB
Bash
Executable file
806 lines
25 KiB
Bash
Executable file
#!/usr/bin/env bash
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#
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# Copyright 2015 The Bazel Authors. All rights reserved.
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#
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
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#
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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#
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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# limitations under the License.
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#
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# Common utility file for Bazel shell tests
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#
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# unittest.bash: a unit test framework in Bash.
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#
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# A typical test suite looks like so:
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#
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# ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# #!/usr/bin/env bash
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#
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# source path/to/unittest.bash || exit 1
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#
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# # Test that foo works.
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# function test_foo() {
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# foo >$TEST_log || fail "foo failed";
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# expect_log "blah" "Expected to see 'blah' in output of 'foo'."
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# }
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#
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# # Test that bar works.
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# function test_bar() {
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# bar 2>$TEST_log || fail "bar failed";
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# expect_not_log "ERROR" "Unexpected error from 'bar'."
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# ...
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# assert_equals $x $y
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# }
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#
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# run_suite "Test suite for blah"
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# ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# Each test function is considered to pass iff fail() is not called
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# while it is active. fail() may be called directly, or indirectly
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# via other assertions such as expect_log(). run_suite must be called
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# at the very end.
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#
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# A test function may redefine functions "set_up" and/or "tear_down";
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# these functions are executed before and after each test function,
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# respectively. Similarly, "cleanup" and "timeout" may be redefined,
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# and these function are called upon exit (of any kind) or a timeout.
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#
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# The user can pass --test_arg to bazel test to select specific tests
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# to run. Specifying --test_arg multiple times allows to select several
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# tests to be run in the given order. Additionally the user may define
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# TESTS=(test_foo test_bar ...) to specify a subset of test functions to
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# execute, for example, a working set during debugging. By default, all
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# functions called test_* will be executed.
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#
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# This file provides utilities for assertions over the output of a
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# command. The output of the command under test is directed to the
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# file $TEST_log, and then the expect_log* assertions can be used to
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# test for the presence of certain regular expressions in that file.
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#
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# The test framework is responsible for restoring the original working
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# directory before each test.
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#
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# The order in which test functions are run is not defined, so it is
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# important that tests clean up after themselves.
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#
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# Each test will be run in a new subshell.
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#
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# Functions named __* are not intended for use by clients.
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#
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# This framework implements the "test sharding protocol".
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#
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[ -n "$BASH_VERSION" ] ||
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{ echo "unittest.bash only works with bash!" >&2; exit 1; }
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DIR=$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" && pwd)
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#### Configuration variables (may be overridden by testenv.sh or the suite):
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# This function may be called by testenv.sh or a test suite to enable errexit
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# in a way that enables us to print pretty stack traces when something fails.
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function enable_errexit() {
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set -o errtrace
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set -eu
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trap __test_terminated_err ERR
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}
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function disable_errexit() {
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set +o errtrace
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set +eu
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trap - ERR
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}
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#### Set up the test environment, branched from the old shell/testenv.sh
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# Enable errexit with pretty stack traces.
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enable_errexit
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# Print message in "$1" then exit with status "$2"
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die () {
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# second argument is optional, defaulting to 1
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local status_code=${2:-1}
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# Stop capturing stdout/stderr, and dump captured output
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if [ "$CAPTURED_STD_ERR" -ne 0 -o "$CAPTURED_STD_OUT" -ne 0 ]; then
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restore_outputs
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if [ "$CAPTURED_STD_OUT" -ne 0 ]; then
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cat "${TEST_TMPDIR}/captured.out"
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CAPTURED_STD_OUT=0
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fi
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if [ "$CAPTURED_STD_ERR" -ne 0 ]; then
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cat "${TEST_TMPDIR}/captured.err" 1>&2
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CAPTURED_STD_ERR=0
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fi
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fi
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if [ -n "${1-}" ] ; then
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echo "$1" 1>&2
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fi
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if [ -n "${BASH-}" ]; then
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local caller_n=0
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while [ $caller_n -lt 4 ] && caller_out=$(caller $caller_n 2>/dev/null); do
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test $caller_n -eq 0 && echo "CALLER stack (max 4):"
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echo " $caller_out"
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let caller_n=caller_n+1
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done 1>&2
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fi
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if [ x"$status_code" != x -a x"$status_code" != x"0" ]; then
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exit "$status_code"
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else
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exit 1
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fi
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}
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# Print message in "$1" then record that a non-fatal error occurred in ERROR_COUNT
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ERROR_COUNT="${ERROR_COUNT:-0}"
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error () {
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if [ -n "$1" ] ; then
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echo "$1" 1>&2
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fi
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ERROR_COUNT=$(($ERROR_COUNT + 1))
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}
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# Die if "$1" != "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_eq () {
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[ "$1" = "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' == '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Die if "$1" == "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_ne () {
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[ "$1" != "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' != '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# The structure of the following if statements is such that if '[' fails
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# (e.g., a non-number was passed in) then the check will fail.
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# Die if "$1" > "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_le () {
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[ "$1" -gt "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' <= '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Die if "$1" >= "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_lt () {
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[ "$1" -lt "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' < '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Die if "$1" < "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_ge () {
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[ "$1" -ge "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' >= '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Die if "$1" <= "$2", print $3 as death reason
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check_gt () {
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[ "$1" -gt "$2" ] || die "Check failed: '$1' > '$2' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Die if $2 !~ $1; print $3 as death reason
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check_match ()
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{
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expr match "$2" "$1" >/dev/null || \
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die "Check failed: '$2' does not match regex '$1' ${3:+ ($3)}"
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}
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# Run command "$1" at exit. Like "trap" but multiple atexits don't
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# overwrite each other. Will break if someone does call trap
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# directly. So, don't do that.
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ATEXIT="${ATEXIT-}"
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atexit () {
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if [ -z "$ATEXIT" ]; then
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ATEXIT="$1"
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else
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ATEXIT="$1 ; $ATEXIT"
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fi
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trap "$ATEXIT" EXIT
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}
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## TEST_TMPDIR
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if [ -z "${TEST_TMPDIR:-}" ]; then
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export TEST_TMPDIR="$(mktemp -d ${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/bazel-test.XXXXXXXX)"
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fi
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if [ ! -e "${TEST_TMPDIR}" ]; then
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mkdir -p -m 0700 "${TEST_TMPDIR}"
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# Clean TEST_TMPDIR on exit
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atexit "rm -fr ${TEST_TMPDIR}"
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fi
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# Functions to compare the actual output of a test to the expected
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# (golden) output.
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#
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# Usage:
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# capture_test_stdout
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# ... do something ...
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# diff_test_stdout "$TEST_SRCDIR/path/to/golden.out"
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# Redirect a file descriptor to a file.
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CAPTURED_STD_OUT="${CAPTURED_STD_OUT:-0}"
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CAPTURED_STD_ERR="${CAPTURED_STD_ERR:-0}"
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capture_test_stdout () {
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exec 3>&1 # Save stdout as fd 3
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exec 4>"${TEST_TMPDIR}/captured.out"
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exec 1>&4
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CAPTURED_STD_OUT=1
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}
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capture_test_stderr () {
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exec 6>&2 # Save stderr as fd 6
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exec 7>"${TEST_TMPDIR}/captured.err"
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exec 2>&7
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CAPTURED_STD_ERR=1
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}
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# Force XML_OUTPUT_FILE to an existing path
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if [ -z "${XML_OUTPUT_FILE:-}" ]; then
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XML_OUTPUT_FILE=${TEST_TMPDIR}/output.xml
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fi
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#### Global variables:
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TEST_name="" # The name of the current test.
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TEST_log=$TEST_TMPDIR/log # The log file over which the
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# expect_log* assertions work. Must
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# be absolute to be robust against
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# tests invoking 'cd'!
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TEST_passed="true" # The result of the current test;
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# failed assertions cause this to
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# become false.
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# These variables may be overridden by the test suite:
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TESTS=() # A subset or "working set" of test
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# functions that should be run. By
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# default, all tests called test_* are
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# run.
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if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
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# Legacy behavior is to ignore missing regexp, but with errexit
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# the following line fails without || true.
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# TODO(dmarting): maybe we should revisit the way of selecting
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# test with that framework (use Bazel's environment variable instead).
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TESTS=($(for i in $@; do echo $i; done | grep ^test_ || true))
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if (( ${#TESTS[@]} == 0 )); then
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echo "WARNING: Arguments do not specifies tests!" >&2
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fi
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fi
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TEST_verbose="true" # Whether or not to be verbose. A
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# command; "true" or "false" are
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# acceptable. The default is: true.
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TEST_script="$(pwd)/$0" # Full path to test script
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#### Internal functions
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function __show_log() {
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echo "-- Test log: -----------------------------------------------------------"
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[[ -e $TEST_log ]] && cat $TEST_log || echo "(Log file did not exist.)"
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echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
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}
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# Usage: __pad <title> <pad-char>
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# Print $title padded to 80 columns with $pad_char.
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function __pad() {
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local title=$1
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local pad=$2
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{
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echo -n "$pad$pad $title "
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printf "%80s" " " | tr ' ' "$pad"
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} | head -c 80
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echo
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}
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#### Exported functions
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# Usage: init_test ...
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# Deprecated. Has no effect.
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function init_test() {
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:
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}
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# Usage: set_up
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# Called before every test function. May be redefined by the test suite.
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function set_up() {
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:
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}
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# Usage: tear_down
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# Called after every test function. May be redefined by the test suite.
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function tear_down() {
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:
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}
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# Usage: cleanup
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# Called upon eventual exit of the test suite. May be redefined by
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# the test suite.
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function cleanup() {
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:
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}
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# Usage: timeout
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# Called upon early exit from a test due to timeout.
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function timeout() {
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:
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}
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# Usage: fail <message> [<message> ...]
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# Print failure message with context information, and mark the test as
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# a failure. The context includes a stacktrace including the longest sequence
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# of calls outside this module. (We exclude the top and bottom portions of
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# the stack because they just add noise.) Also prints the contents of
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# $TEST_log.
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function fail() {
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__show_log >&2
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echo "$TEST_name FAILED:" "$@" "." >&2
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echo "$@" >$TEST_TMPDIR/__fail
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TEST_passed="false"
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__show_stack
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# Cleanup as we are leaving the subshell now
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tear_down
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exit 1
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}
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# Usage: warn <message>
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# Print a test warning with context information.
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# The context includes a stacktrace including the longest sequence
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# of calls outside this module. (We exclude the top and bottom portions of
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# the stack because they just add noise.)
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function warn() {
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__show_log >&2
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echo "$TEST_name WARNING: $1." >&2
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__show_stack
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if [ -n "${TEST_WARNINGS_OUTPUT_FILE:-}" ]; then
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echo "$TEST_name WARNING: $1." >> "$TEST_WARNINGS_OUTPUT_FILE"
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fi
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}
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# Usage: show_stack
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# Prints the portion of the stack that does not belong to this module,
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# i.e. the user's code that called a failing assertion. Stack may not
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# be available if Bash is reading commands from stdin; an error is
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# printed in that case.
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__show_stack() {
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local i=0
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local trace_found=0
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# Skip over active calls within this module:
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while (( i < ${#FUNCNAME[@]} )) && [[ ${BASH_SOURCE[i]:-} == ${BASH_SOURCE[0]} ]]; do
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(( ++i ))
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done
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# Show all calls until the next one within this module (typically run_suite):
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while (( i < ${#FUNCNAME[@]} )) && [[ ${BASH_SOURCE[i]:-} != ${BASH_SOURCE[0]} ]]; do
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# Read online docs for BASH_LINENO to understand the strange offset.
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# Undefined can occur in the BASH_SOURCE stack apparently when one exits from a subshell
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echo "${BASH_SOURCE[i]:-"Unknown"}:${BASH_LINENO[i - 1]:-"Unknown"}: in call to ${FUNCNAME[i]:-"Unknown"}" >&2
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(( ++i ))
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trace_found=1
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done
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[ $trace_found = 1 ] || echo "[Stack trace not available]" >&2
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}
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# Usage: expect_log <regexp> [error-message]
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# Asserts that $TEST_log matches regexp. Prints the contents of
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# $TEST_log and the specified (optional) error message otherwise, and
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# returns non-zero.
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function expect_log() {
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local pattern=$1
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local message=${2:-Expected regexp "$pattern" not found}
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grep -sq -- "$pattern" $TEST_log && return 0
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fail "$message"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: expect_log_warn <regexp> [error-message]
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# Warns if $TEST_log does not match regexp. Prints the contents of
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# $TEST_log and the specified (optional) error message on mismatch.
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function expect_log_warn() {
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local pattern=$1
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local message=${2:-Expected regexp "$pattern" not found}
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grep -sq -- "$pattern" $TEST_log && return 0
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warn "$message"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: expect_log_once <regexp> [error-message]
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# Asserts that $TEST_log contains one line matching <regexp>.
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# Prints the contents of $TEST_log and the specified (optional)
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# error message otherwise, and returns non-zero.
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function expect_log_once() {
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local pattern=$1
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local message=${2:-Expected regexp "$pattern" not found exactly once}
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expect_log_n "$pattern" 1 "$message"
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}
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# Usage: expect_log_n <regexp> <count> [error-message]
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# Asserts that $TEST_log contains <count> lines matching <regexp>.
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# Prints the contents of $TEST_log and the specified (optional)
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# error message otherwise, and returns non-zero.
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function expect_log_n() {
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local pattern=$1
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local expectednum=${2:-1}
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local message=${3:-Expected regexp "$pattern" not found exactly $expectednum times}
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local count=$(grep -sc -- "$pattern" $TEST_log)
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[[ $count = $expectednum ]] && return 0
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fail "$message"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: expect_not_log <regexp> [error-message]
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# Asserts that $TEST_log does not match regexp. Prints the contents
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# of $TEST_log and the specified (optional) error message otherwise, and
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# returns non-zero.
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function expect_not_log() {
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local pattern=$1
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local message=${2:-Unexpected regexp "$pattern" found}
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grep -sq -- "$pattern" $TEST_log || return 0
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fail "$message"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: expect_log_with_timeout <regexp> <timeout> [error-message]
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# Waits for the given regexp in the $TEST_log for up to timeout seconds.
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# Prints the contents of $TEST_log and the specified (optional)
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# error message otherwise, and returns non-zero.
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function expect_log_with_timeout() {
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local pattern=$1
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local timeout=$2
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local message=${3:-Regexp "$pattern" not found in "$timeout" seconds}
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local count=0
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while [ $count -lt $timeout ]; do
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grep -sq -- "$pattern" $TEST_log && return 0
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let count=count+1
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sleep 1
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done
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grep -sq -- "$pattern" $TEST_log && return 0
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fail "$message"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: expect_cmd_with_timeout <expected> <cmd> [timeout]
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# Repeats the command once a second for up to timeout seconds (10s by default),
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# until the output matches the expected value. Fails and returns 1 if
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# the command does not return the expected value in the end.
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function expect_cmd_with_timeout() {
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local expected="$1"
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local cmd="$2"
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local timeout=${3:-10}
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local count=0
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while [ $count -lt $timeout ]; do
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local actual="$($cmd)"
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[ "$expected" = "$actual" ] && return 0
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let count=count+1
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sleep 1
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done
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[ "$expected" = "$actual" ] && return 0
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fail "Expected '$expected' within ${timeout}s, was '$actual'"
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return 1
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}
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# Usage: assert_one_of <expected_list>... <actual>
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# Asserts that actual is one of the items in expected_list
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# Example: assert_one_of ( "foo", "bar", "baz" ) actualval
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function assert_one_of() {
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local args=("$@")
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local last_arg_index=$((${#args[@]} - 1))
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local actual=${args[last_arg_index]}
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unset args[last_arg_index]
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for expected_item in "${args[@]}"; do
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[ "$expected_item" = "$actual" ] && return 0
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done;
|
|
|
|
fail "Expected one of '${args[@]}', was '$actual'"
|
|
return 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: assert_equals <expected> <actual>
|
|
# Asserts [ expected = actual ].
|
|
function assert_equals() {
|
|
local expected=$1 actual=$2
|
|
[ "$expected" = "$actual" ] && return 0
|
|
|
|
fail "Expected '$expected', was '$actual'"
|
|
return 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: assert_not_equals <unexpected> <actual>
|
|
# Asserts [ unexpected != actual ].
|
|
function assert_not_equals() {
|
|
local unexpected=$1 actual=$2
|
|
[ "$unexpected" != "$actual" ] && return 0;
|
|
|
|
fail "Expected not '$unexpected', was '$actual'"
|
|
return 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: assert_contains <regexp> <file> [error-message]
|
|
# Asserts that file matches regexp. Prints the contents of
|
|
# file and the specified (optional) error message otherwise, and
|
|
# returns non-zero.
|
|
function assert_contains() {
|
|
local pattern=$1
|
|
local file=$2
|
|
local message=${3:-Expected regexp "$pattern" not found in "$file"}
|
|
grep -sq -- "$pattern" "$file" && return 0
|
|
|
|
cat "$file" >&2
|
|
fail "$message"
|
|
return 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: assert_not_contains <regexp> <file> [error-message]
|
|
# Asserts that file does not match regexp. Prints the contents of
|
|
# file and the specified (optional) error message otherwise, and
|
|
# returns non-zero.
|
|
function assert_not_contains() {
|
|
local pattern=$1
|
|
local file=$2
|
|
local message=${3:-Expected regexp "$pattern" found in "$file"}
|
|
grep -sq -- "$pattern" "$file" || return 0
|
|
|
|
cat "$file" >&2
|
|
fail "$message"
|
|
return 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Updates the global variables TESTS if
|
|
# sharding is enabled, i.e. ($TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS > 0).
|
|
function __update_shards() {
|
|
[ -z "${TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS-}" ] && return 0
|
|
|
|
[ "$TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS" -gt 0 ] ||
|
|
{ echo "Invalid total shards $TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS" >&2; exit 1; }
|
|
|
|
[ "$TEST_SHARD_INDEX" -lt 0 -o "$TEST_SHARD_INDEX" -ge "$TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS" ] &&
|
|
{ echo "Invalid shard $shard_index" >&2; exit 1; }
|
|
|
|
TESTS=$(for test in "${TESTS[@]}"; do echo "$test"; done |
|
|
awk "NR % $TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS == $TEST_SHARD_INDEX")
|
|
|
|
[ -z "${TEST_SHARD_STATUS_FILE-}" ] || touch "$TEST_SHARD_STATUS_FILE"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: __test_terminated <signal-number>
|
|
# Handler that is called when the test terminated unexpectedly
|
|
function __test_terminated() {
|
|
__show_log >&2
|
|
echo "$TEST_name FAILED: terminated by signal $1." >&2
|
|
TEST_passed="false"
|
|
__show_stack
|
|
timeout
|
|
exit 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: __test_terminated_err
|
|
# Handler that is called when the test terminated unexpectedly due to "errexit".
|
|
function __test_terminated_err() {
|
|
# When a subshell exits due to signal ERR, its parent shell also exits,
|
|
# thus the signal handler is called recursively and we print out the
|
|
# error message and stack trace multiple times. We're only interested
|
|
# in the first one though, as it contains the most information, so ignore
|
|
# all following.
|
|
if [[ -f $TEST_TMPDIR/__err_handled ]]; then
|
|
exit 1
|
|
fi
|
|
__show_log >&2
|
|
if [[ ! -z "$TEST_name" ]]; then
|
|
echo -n "$TEST_name "
|
|
fi
|
|
echo "FAILED: terminated because this command returned a non-zero status:" >&2
|
|
touch $TEST_TMPDIR/__err_handled
|
|
TEST_passed="false"
|
|
__show_stack
|
|
# If $TEST_name is still empty, the test suite failed before we even started
|
|
# to run tests, so we shouldn't call tear_down.
|
|
if [[ ! -z "$TEST_name" ]]; then
|
|
tear_down
|
|
fi
|
|
exit 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: __trap_with_arg <handler> <signals ...>
|
|
# Helper to install a trap handler for several signals preserving the signal
|
|
# number, so that the signal number is available to the trap handler.
|
|
function __trap_with_arg() {
|
|
func="$1" ; shift
|
|
for sig ; do
|
|
trap "$func $sig" "$sig"
|
|
done
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: <node> <block>
|
|
# Adds the block to the given node in the report file. Quotes in the in
|
|
# arguments need to be escaped.
|
|
function __log_to_test_report() {
|
|
local node="$1"
|
|
local block="$2"
|
|
if [[ ! -e "$XML_OUTPUT_FILE" ]]; then
|
|
local xml_header='<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>'
|
|
echo "$xml_header<testsuites></testsuites>" > $XML_OUTPUT_FILE
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
# replace match on node with block and match
|
|
# replacement expression only needs escaping for quotes
|
|
perl -e "\
|
|
\$input = @ARGV[0]; \
|
|
\$/=undef; \
|
|
open FILE, '+<$XML_OUTPUT_FILE'; \
|
|
\$content = <FILE>; \
|
|
if (\$content =~ /($node.*)\$/) { \
|
|
seek FILE, 0, 0; \
|
|
print FILE \$\` . \$input . \$1; \
|
|
}; \
|
|
close FILE" "$block"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: <total> <passed>
|
|
# Adds the test summaries to the xml nodes.
|
|
function __finish_test_report() {
|
|
local total=$1
|
|
local passed=$2
|
|
local failed=$((total - passed))
|
|
|
|
cat $XML_OUTPUT_FILE | \
|
|
sed \
|
|
"s/<testsuites>/<testsuites tests=\"$total\" failures=\"0\" errors=\"$failed\">/" | \
|
|
sed \
|
|
"s/<testsuite>/<testsuite tests=\"$total\" failures=\"0\" errors=\"$failed\">/" \
|
|
> $XML_OUTPUT_FILE.bak
|
|
|
|
rm -f $XML_OUTPUT_FILE
|
|
mv $XML_OUTPUT_FILE.bak $XML_OUTPUT_FILE
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Multi-platform timestamp function
|
|
UNAME=$(uname -s | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z')
|
|
if [ "$UNAME" = "linux" ] || [[ "$UNAME" =~ msys_nt* ]]; then
|
|
function timestamp() {
|
|
echo $(($(date +%s%N)/1000000))
|
|
}
|
|
else
|
|
function timestamp() {
|
|
# macOS and BSDs do not have %N, so Python is the best we can do.
|
|
# LC_ALL=C works around python 3.8 and 3.9 crash on macOS when the
|
|
# filesystem encoding is unspecified (e.g. when LANG=en_US).
|
|
local PYTHON=python
|
|
command -v python3 &> /dev/null && PYTHON=python3
|
|
LC_ALL=C "${PYTHON}" -c 'import time; print(int(round(time.time() * 1000)))'
|
|
}
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
function get_run_time() {
|
|
local ts_start=$1
|
|
local ts_end=$2
|
|
run_time_ms=$((${ts_end}-${ts_start}))
|
|
echo $(($run_time_ms/1000)).${run_time_ms: -3}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Usage: run_tests <suite-comment>
|
|
# Must be called from the end of the user's test suite.
|
|
# Calls exit with zero on success, non-zero otherwise.
|
|
function run_suite() {
|
|
echo >&2
|
|
echo "$1" >&2
|
|
echo >&2
|
|
|
|
__log_to_test_report "<\/testsuites>" "<testsuite></testsuite>"
|
|
|
|
local total=0
|
|
local passed=0
|
|
|
|
atexit "cleanup"
|
|
|
|
# If the user didn't specify an explicit list of tests (e.g. a
|
|
# working set), use them all.
|
|
if [ ${#TESTS[@]} = 0 ]; then
|
|
TESTS=$(declare -F | awk '{print $3}' | grep ^test_)
|
|
elif [ -n "${TEST_WARNINGS_OUTPUT_FILE:-}" ]; then
|
|
if grep -q "TESTS=" "$TEST_script" ; then
|
|
echo "TESTS variable overridden in Bazel sh_test. Please remove before submitting" \
|
|
>> "$TEST_WARNINGS_OUTPUT_FILE"
|
|
fi
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
__update_shards
|
|
|
|
for TEST_name in ${TESTS[@]}; do
|
|
>$TEST_log # Reset the log.
|
|
TEST_passed="true"
|
|
|
|
total=$(($total + 1))
|
|
if [[ "$TEST_verbose" == "true" ]]; then
|
|
__pad $TEST_name '*' >&2
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
local run_time="0.0"
|
|
rm -f $TEST_TMPDIR/{__ts_start,__ts_end}
|
|
|
|
if [ "$(type -t $TEST_name)" = function ]; then
|
|
# Save exit handlers eventually set.
|
|
local SAVED_ATEXIT="$ATEXIT";
|
|
ATEXIT=
|
|
|
|
# Run test in a subshell.
|
|
rm -f $TEST_TMPDIR/__err_handled
|
|
__trap_with_arg __test_terminated INT KILL PIPE TERM ABRT FPE ILL QUIT SEGV
|
|
(
|
|
timestamp >$TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_start
|
|
set_up
|
|
eval $TEST_name
|
|
tear_down
|
|
timestamp >$TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_end
|
|
test $TEST_passed == "true"
|
|
) 2>&1 | tee $TEST_TMPDIR/__log
|
|
# Note that tee will prevent the control flow continuing if the test
|
|
# spawned any processes which are still running and have not closed
|
|
# their stdout.
|
|
|
|
test_subshell_status=${PIPESTATUS[0]}
|
|
if [ "$test_subshell_status" != 0 ]; then
|
|
TEST_passed="false"
|
|
# Ensure that an end time is recorded in case the test subshell
|
|
# terminated prematurely.
|
|
[ -f $TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_end ] || timestamp >$TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_end
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
# Calculate run time for the testcase.
|
|
local ts_start=$(cat $TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_start)
|
|
local ts_end=$(cat $TEST_TMPDIR/__ts_end)
|
|
run_time=$(get_run_time $ts_start $ts_end)
|
|
|
|
# Eventually restore exit handlers.
|
|
if [ -n "$SAVED_ATEXIT" ]; then
|
|
ATEXIT="$SAVED_ATEXIT"
|
|
trap "$ATEXIT" EXIT
|
|
fi
|
|
else # Bad test explicitly specified in $TESTS.
|
|
fail "Not a function: '$TEST_name'"
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
local testcase_tag=""
|
|
|
|
if [[ "$TEST_passed" == "true" ]]; then
|
|
if [[ "$TEST_verbose" == "true" ]]; then
|
|
echo "PASSED: $TEST_name" >&2
|
|
fi
|
|
passed=$(($passed + 1))
|
|
testcase_tag="<testcase name=\"$TEST_name\" status=\"run\" time=\"$run_time\" classname=\"\"></testcase>"
|
|
else
|
|
echo "FAILED: $TEST_name" >&2
|
|
# end marker in CDATA cannot be escaped, we need to split the CDATA sections
|
|
log=$(cat $TEST_TMPDIR/__log | sed 's/]]>/]]>]]><![CDATA[/g')
|
|
fail_msg=$(cat $TEST_TMPDIR/__fail 2> /dev/null || echo "No failure message")
|
|
testcase_tag="<testcase name=\"$TEST_name\" status=\"run\" time=\"$run_time\" classname=\"\"><error message=\"$fail_msg\"><![CDATA[$log]]></error></testcase>"
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
if [[ "$TEST_verbose" == "true" ]]; then
|
|
echo >&2
|
|
fi
|
|
__log_to_test_report "<\/testsuite>" "$testcase_tag"
|
|
done
|
|
|
|
__finish_test_report $total $passed
|
|
__pad "$passed / $total tests passed." '*' >&2
|
|
[ $total = $passed ] || {
|
|
__pad "There were errors." '*'
|
|
exit 1
|
|
} >&2
|
|
|
|
exit 0
|
|
}
|