2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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#!/bin/bash
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# This script creates a bunch of awkward test case files. It gets
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# automatically run as part of Vagrant provisioning.
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trap 'exit' ERR
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if [[ ! -d "/vagrant" ]]; then
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echo "This script should be run in the Vagrant environment"
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exit 1
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fi
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source "/vagrant/devtools/dev-fixtures.sh"
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# Delete old testcases if they exist already, then create a
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# directory to house new ones.
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if [[ -d "$TEST_ROOT" ]]; then
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 0/13]\033[0m Deleting existing test cases directory"
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sudo rm -rf "$TEST_ROOT"
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fi
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sudo mkdir "$TEST_ROOT"
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sudo chmod 777 "$TEST_ROOT"
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Use Specsheet for the extended tests
This commit changes the way the extended test suite is run.
Previously, there was a folder full of outputs, and a script that ran exa repeatedly to check the outputs match. This script was hacked-together, with many problems:
• It stops at the first failure, so if one test fails, you have no idea how many actually failed.
• It also didn't actually show you the diff if one was different, it just checked it.
• It combined stdout and stderr, and didn't test the exit status of exa.
• All the output file names were just whatever I felt like calling the file at the time.
• There is no way to only run a few of the tests — you have to run the whole thing each time.
• There's no feel-good overall view where you see how many tests are passing.
I started writing Specsheet to solve this problem (amongst other problems), and now, three and a half years later, it's finally ready for prime time.
The tests are now defined as data rather than as a script. The outputs have a consistent naming convention (directory_flags.ansitxt), and they check stdout, stderr, and exit status separately. Specsheet also lets simple outputs (empty, non-empty, or one-line error messages) can be written inline rather than needing to be in files.
So even though this pretty much runs the same tests as the run.sh script did, the tests are now more organised, making it easy to see where tests are missing and functionality is not being tested.
2020-10-17 19:39:44 +00:00
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sudo mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/empty"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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# Awkward file size testcases.
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# This needs sudo to set the files’ users at the very end.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/files"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 1/13]\033[0m Creating file size testcases"
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for i in {1..13}; do
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fallocate -l "$i" "$TEST_ROOT/files/$i"_bytes
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fallocate -l "$i"KiB "$TEST_ROOT/files/$i"_KiB
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fallocate -l "$i"MiB "$TEST_ROOT/files/$i"_MiB
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done
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touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/files/"*
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2021-01-08 16:45:59 +00:00
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touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/files/"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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chmod 644 "$TEST_ROOT/files/"*
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/files/"*
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# File name extension testcases.
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# These aren’t tested in details view, but we set timestamps on them to
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# test that various sort options work.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 2/13]\033[0m Creating file name extension testcases"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/Makefile"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/IMAGE.PNG"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/image.svg"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/VIDEO.AVI"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/video.wmv"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/music.mp3"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/MUSIC.OGG"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/lossless.flac"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/lossless.wav"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/crypto.asc"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/crypto.signature"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/document.pdf"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/DOCUMENT.XLSX"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/COMPRESSED.ZIP"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compressed.tar.gz"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compressed.tgz"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compressed.tar.xz"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compressed.txz"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compressed.deb"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/backup~"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/#SAVEFILE#"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/file.tmp"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compiled.class"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compiled.o"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compiled.js"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/file-names-exts/compiled.coffee"
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# File name testcases.
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# bash really doesn’t want you to create a file with escaped characters
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# in its name, so we have to resort to the echo builtin and touch!
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/file-names"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 3/13]\033[0m Creating file names testcases"
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/ascii: hello" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/emoji: [🆒]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/utf-8: pâté" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/bell: [\a]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/backspace: [\b]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/form-feed: [\f]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line: [\n]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/return: [\r]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/tab: [\t]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/vertical-tab: [\v]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/escape: [\033]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/ansi: [\033[34mblue\033[0m]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/invalid-utf8-1: [\xFF]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/invalid-utf8-2: [\xc3\x28]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/invalid-utf8-3: [\xe2\x82\x28]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/invalid-utf8-4: [\xf0\x28\x8c\x28]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir: [\n]" | xargs -0 mkdir
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir: [\n]/subfile" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir: [\n]/another: [\n]" | xargs -0 touch
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir: [\n]/broken" | xargs -0 touch
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/links"
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ln -s "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir"*/* "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/links"
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echo -ne "$TEST_ROOT/file-names/new-line-dir: [\n]/broken" | xargs -0 rm
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# Special file testcases.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/specials"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 4/13]\033[0m Creating special file kind testcases"
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sudo mknod "$TEST_ROOT/specials/block-device" b 3 60
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sudo mknod "$TEST_ROOT/specials/char-device" c 14 40
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sudo mknod "$TEST_ROOT/specials/named-pipe" p
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sudo touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/specials/"*
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# Awkward symlink testcases.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/links"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 5/13]\033[0m Creating symlink testcases"
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ln -s / "$TEST_ROOT/links/root"
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ln -s /usr "$TEST_ROOT/links/usr"
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ln -s nowhere "$TEST_ROOT/links/broken"
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ln -s /proc/1/root "$TEST_ROOT/links/forbidden"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/links/some_file"
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ln -s "$TEST_ROOT/links/some_file" "$TEST_ROOT/links/some_file_absolute"
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(cd "$TEST_ROOT/links"; ln -s "some_file" "some_file_relative")
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(cd "$TEST_ROOT/links"; ln -s "." "current_dir")
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(cd "$TEST_ROOT/links"; ln -s ".." "parent_dir")
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(cd "$TEST_ROOT/links"; ln -s "itself" "itself")
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# Awkward passwd testcases.
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# sudo is needed for these because we technically aren’t a member
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# of the groups (because they don’t exist), and chown and chgrp
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# are smart enough to disallow it!
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/passwd"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 6/13]\033[0m Creating user and group testcases"
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touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-uid"
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chmod 644 "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-uid"
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sudo chown $FIXED_BAD_UID:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-uid"
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touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-gid"
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chmod 644 "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-gid"
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_BAD_GID "$TEST_ROOT/passwd/unknown-gid"
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# Awkward permission testcases.
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# Differences in the way ‘chmod’ handles setting ‘setuid’ and ‘setgid’
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# when you don’t already own the file mean that we need to use ‘sudo’
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# to change permissions to those.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/permissions"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 7/13]\033[0m Creating file permission testcases"
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/forbidden-directory"
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chmod 000 "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/forbidden-directory"
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touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/forbidden-directory"
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/forbidden-directory"
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for perms in 000 001 002 004 010 020 040 100 200 400 644 755 777 1000 1001 2000 2010 4000 4100 7666 7777; do
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/$perms"
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/$perms"
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sudo chmod $perms "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/$perms"
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sudo touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/permissions/$perms"
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done
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# Awkward date and time testcases.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/dates"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 8/13]\033[0m Creating date and time testcases"
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# created dates
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# there’s no way to touch the created date of a file...
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# so we have to do this the old-fashioned way!
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# (and make sure these don't actually get listed)
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2020-10-17 20:26:24 +00:00
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touch -t $FIXED_OLD_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/dates/peach"; sleep 1
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touch -t $FIXED_MED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/dates/plum"; sleep 1
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touch -t $FIXED_NEW_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/dates/pear"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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# modified dates
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2020-10-17 20:26:24 +00:00
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touch -t $FIXED_OLD_DATE -m "$TEST_ROOT/dates/pear"
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touch -t $FIXED_MED_DATE -m "$TEST_ROOT/dates/peach"
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touch -t $FIXED_NEW_DATE -m "$TEST_ROOT/dates/plum"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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# accessed dates
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2020-10-17 20:26:24 +00:00
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touch -t $FIXED_OLD_DATE -a "$TEST_ROOT/dates/plum"
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touch -t $FIXED_MED_DATE -a "$TEST_ROOT/dates/pear"
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touch -t $FIXED_NEW_DATE -a "$TEST_ROOT/dates/peach"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER -R "$TEST_ROOT/dates"
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2020-10-17 20:26:24 +00:00
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/far-dates"
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touch -t $FIXED_PAST_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/far-dates/the-distant-past"
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touch -t $FIXED_FUTURE_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/far-dates/beyond-the-future"
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2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
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# Awkward extended attribute testcases.
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# We need to test combinations of various numbers of files *and*
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# extended attributes in directories. Turns out, the easiest way to
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# do this is to generate all combinations of files with “one-xattr”
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# or “two-xattrs” in their name and directories with “empty” or
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# “one-file” in their name, then just give the right number of
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# xattrs and children to those.
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"
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echo -e "\033[1m[ 9/13]\033[0m Creating extended attribute testcases"
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/files"
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touch "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/files/"{no-xattrs,one-xattr,two-xattrs}{,_forbidden}
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/dirs"
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/dirs/"{no-xattrs,one-xattr,two-xattrs}_{empty,one-file,two-files}{,_forbidden}
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setfattr -n user.greeting -v hello "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"/**/*{one-xattr,two-xattrs}*
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setfattr -n user.another_greeting -v hi "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"/**/*two-xattrs*
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for dir in "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/dirs/"*one-file*; do
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touch $dir/file-in-question
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done
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for dir in "$TEST_ROOT/attributes/dirs/"*two-files*; do
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touch $dir/this-file
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touch $dir/that-file
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done
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find "$TEST_ROOT/attributes" -exec touch {} -t $FIXED_DATE \;
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# I want to use the following to test,
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# but it only works on macos:
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#chmod +a "$FIXED_USER deny readextattr" "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"/**/*_forbidden
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sudo chmod 000 "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"/**/*_forbidden
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER -R "$TEST_ROOT/attributes"
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# A sample Git repository
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# This uses cd because it's easier than telling Git where to go each time
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echo -e "\033[1m[10/13]\033[0m Creating Git testcases (1/3)"
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mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/git"
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cd "$TEST_ROOT/git"
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git init >/dev/null
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mkdir edits additions moves
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echo "original content" | tee edits/{staged,unstaged,both} >/dev/null
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echo "this file gets moved" > moves/hither
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git add edits moves
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git config --global user.email "exa@exa.exa"
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git config --global user.name "Exa Exa"
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git commit -m "Automated test commit" >/dev/null
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echo "modifications!" | tee edits/{staged,both} >/dev/null
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touch additions/{staged,edited}
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|
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mv moves/{hither,thither}
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git add edits moves additions
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echo "more modifications!" | tee edits/unstaged edits/both additions/edited >/dev/null
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touch additions/unstaged
|
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find "$TEST_ROOT/git" -exec touch {} -t $FIXED_DATE \;
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sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER -R "$TEST_ROOT/git"
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|
# A second Git repository
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|
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|
# for testing two at once
|
|
|
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|
echo -e "\033[1m[11/13]\033[0m Creating Git testcases (2/3)"
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|
|
|
|
mkdir -p "$TEST_ROOT/git2/deeply/nested/directory"
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|
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cd "$TEST_ROOT/git2"
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git init >/dev/null
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|
touch "deeply/nested/directory/upd8d"
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|
git add "deeply/nested/directory/upd8d"
|
|
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|
git commit -m "Automated test commit" >/dev/null
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|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
echo "Now with contents" > "deeply/nested/directory/upd8d"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "deeply/nested/directory/l8st"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
echo -e "target\n*.mp3" > ".gitignore"
|
|
|
|
|
mkdir "ignoreds"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "ignoreds/music.mp3"
|
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|
touch "ignoreds/music.m4a"
|
|
|
|
|
mkdir "ignoreds/nested"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "ignoreds/nested/70s grove.mp3"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "ignoreds/nested/funky chicken.m4a"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
mkdir "target"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "target/another ignored file"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
mkdir "deeply/nested/repository"
|
|
|
|
|
cd "deeply/nested/repository"
|
|
|
|
|
git init >/dev/null
|
|
|
|
|
touch subfile
|
Use Specsheet for the extended tests
This commit changes the way the extended test suite is run.
Previously, there was a folder full of outputs, and a script that ran exa repeatedly to check the outputs match. This script was hacked-together, with many problems:
• It stops at the first failure, so if one test fails, you have no idea how many actually failed.
• It also didn't actually show you the diff if one was different, it just checked it.
• It combined stdout and stderr, and didn't test the exit status of exa.
• All the output file names were just whatever I felt like calling the file at the time.
• There is no way to only run a few of the tests — you have to run the whole thing each time.
• There's no feel-good overall view where you see how many tests are passing.
I started writing Specsheet to solve this problem (amongst other problems), and now, three and a half years later, it's finally ready for prime time.
The tests are now defined as data rather than as a script. The outputs have a consistent naming convention (directory_flags.ansitxt), and they check stdout, stderr, and exit status separately. Specsheet also lets simple outputs (empty, non-empty, or one-line error messages) can be written inline rather than needing to be in files.
So even though this pretty much runs the same tests as the run.sh script did, the tests are now more organised, making it easy to see where tests are missing and functionality is not being tested.
2020-10-17 19:39:44 +00:00
|
|
|
|
# This file, ‘subfile’, should _not_ be marked as a new file by exa, because
|
|
|
|
|
# it’s in the sub-repository but hasn’t been added to it. Were the sub-repo not
|
|
|
|
|
# present, it would be marked as a new file, as the top-level repo knows about
|
|
|
|
|
# the ‘deeply’ directory.
|
2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
find "$TEST_ROOT/git2" -exec touch {} -t $FIXED_DATE \;
|
|
|
|
|
sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER -R "$TEST_ROOT/git2"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# A third Git repository
|
|
|
|
|
# Regression test for https://github.com/ogham/exa/issues/526
|
|
|
|
|
echo -e "\033[1m[12/13]\033[0m Creating Git testcases (3/3)"
|
|
|
|
|
mkdir -p "$TEST_ROOT/git3"
|
|
|
|
|
cd "$TEST_ROOT/git3"
|
|
|
|
|
git init >/dev/null
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Create a symbolic link pointing to a non-existing file
|
|
|
|
|
ln -s aaa/aaa/a b
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# This normally fails with:
|
2020-10-17 20:25:49 +00:00
|
|
|
|
find "$TEST_ROOT/git3" -exec touch {} -h -t $FIXED_DATE \;
|
2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
|
|
|
|
sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER -R "$TEST_ROOT/git3"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Hidden and dot file testcases.
|
|
|
|
|
# We need to set the permissions of `.` and `..` because they actually
|
|
|
|
|
# get displayed in the output here, so this has to come last.
|
|
|
|
|
echo -e "\033[1m[13/13]\033[0m Creating hidden and dot file testcases"
|
|
|
|
|
shopt -u dotglob
|
|
|
|
|
GLOBIGNORE=".:.."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
mkdir "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens"
|
Use Specsheet for the extended tests
This commit changes the way the extended test suite is run.
Previously, there was a folder full of outputs, and a script that ran exa repeatedly to check the outputs match. This script was hacked-together, with many problems:
• It stops at the first failure, so if one test fails, you have no idea how many actually failed.
• It also didn't actually show you the diff if one was different, it just checked it.
• It combined stdout and stderr, and didn't test the exit status of exa.
• All the output file names were just whatever I felt like calling the file at the time.
• There is no way to only run a few of the tests — you have to run the whole thing each time.
• There's no feel-good overall view where you see how many tests are passing.
I started writing Specsheet to solve this problem (amongst other problems), and now, three and a half years later, it's finally ready for prime time.
The tests are now defined as data rather than as a script. The outputs have a consistent naming convention (directory_flags.ansitxt), and they check stdout, stderr, and exit status separately. Specsheet also lets simple outputs (empty, non-empty, or one-line error messages) can be written inline rather than needing to be in files.
So even though this pretty much runs the same tests as the run.sh script did, the tests are now more organised, making it easy to see where tests are missing and functionality is not being tested.
2020-10-17 19:39:44 +00:00
|
|
|
|
cd "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens"
|
2020-10-16 22:41:25 +00:00
|
|
|
|
touch "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/visible"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/.hidden"
|
|
|
|
|
touch "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/..extra-hidden"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# ./hiddens/
|
|
|
|
|
touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/"*
|
|
|
|
|
chmod 644 "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/"*
|
|
|
|
|
sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens/"*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# .
|
|
|
|
|
touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens"
|
|
|
|
|
chmod 755 "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens"
|
|
|
|
|
sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT/hiddens"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# ..
|
|
|
|
|
sudo touch -t $FIXED_DATE "$TEST_ROOT"
|
|
|
|
|
sudo chmod 755 "$TEST_ROOT"
|
|
|
|
|
sudo chown $FIXED_USER:$FIXED_USER "$TEST_ROOT"
|