It’s a good test to be able to switch strict mode on in run.sh and not have it break anything! Now, the EXA_STRICT environment variable will toggle it on. We can even switch it off and see that it doesn’t error.
Some of the deduce functions used to just blatantly call std::env::var_os and not care, introducing global state into a module that was otherwise nice and functional and self-contained. (Well, almost. There’s still terminal width.)
Anyway, this made it hard to test, because we couldn’t test it fully with this global dependency in place. It *is* possible to work around this by actually setting the environment variables in the tests, but this way is more self-documenting.
With this in place, we can start to unit test things like deriving the view by passing in what the $COLUMNS environment variable should be, and that’s one of the first things checked.
src/options/mod.rs *almost* has all its tests moved to where they should be!
Sometimes, the type in the Ok part of the Result wouldn’t implement PartialEq, so the first macro (which uses assert_eq) won’t work. In these cases, this new macro can be used instead, which just unwraps the Err’s contents. In other cases, it can shave off a ) at the end of a few lines.
The table Options struct is roughly half runtime configuration and half flags to select which columns to display The column fields might as well be in their own struct, and now that the ‘for_dir’ function doesn’t use SizeFormat, it can be moved to Columns.
Way in the past, the size format was the only variable column; the others were all fixed. Now there are many configurable columns and this field was still hanging around. The code that does the rendering just gets the size format as an argument, and now it works the same way as the TimeFormat.
This changes the SizeFormat option parser from its old, strict-by-default behaviour (where passing both --bytes and --binary would be an error) to the new, use-the-last-argument behaviour (where passing --bytes --binary would use --binary because it came later).
Doing this meant adding functionality to Matches so that it could return *which* argument matched. Previously, the order of --bytes and --binary didn’t matter, because they couldn’t both be present, but now it does.
The assert_parses function was problematic because it insisted on using assert_eq! to check its contents. This won’t work for any type we want to test that doesn’t implement PartialEq, such as TimeFormat, which holds references to years and date strings and other such.
To go about fixing this, the first step is to change that function so it only does the initial processing, rather than the assertion, which is now done outside of it in the test macros instead.
Now the code actually starts to use the Strictness flag that was added in the earlier commit! Well, the *code* doesn’t, but the tests do: the macros that create the test cases now have a parameter for which tests they should run. It’s usually ‘Both’ for both strict mode and default mode, but can be specified to only run in one, for when the results differ (usually when options override one another)
The downside to strict mode is that, now, *any* call to `matches.has` or `matches.get` could fail, because an option could have been specified twice, and this is the place where those are checked for. This makes the code a little less ergonomic in places, but that’s what the ? operator is for. The only place this has really had an effect is in `Classify::deduce`, which used to just return a boolean but can now fail.
In order to more thoroughly test the mode, some of the older parts of the code can now act more strict. For example, `TerminalColours::deduce` will now use the last-given option rather than searching for “colours” before “colors”.
Help and Version continue doing their own thing.
The value is ignored, but this broke quite a lot of tests that assumed MatchedFlags had only one field.
Parsing tests have to have OsStr flags because I couldn’t get that part working right, but in general, some tests now re-use common functionality too.
This commit gives IgnorePatterns a bunch of constructor methods that mean its option-parsing sister file doesn’t need to know that it’s a vec of glob patterns inside: it can work with anything that iterates over strings. Now, the options module doesn’t need to know about the glob crate.
This commit modifies a specific file timestamp so we test both July (which is 5 characters in French) and December (which is 4 characters in Japanese). It’s also kind of a test for locales as well.
This merges in exa’s own new options parser, which has the following features:
- You can specify an option twice and it’ll use the second one, making aliases usable for defaults (fixes#144)
- Lets arguments be specified more than once (fixes#125)
Strict mode is not done yet; I just wanted to merge this in because it’s been a while, and there’s work that needs to be done on master so I don’t want them drifting apart any further.
It’s likely that you’ll find cases where multiple arguments doesn’t work or where the wrong value is being used. There aren’t tests for *everything* yet, and it still uses global environment variables.
# Conflicts:
# src/options/view.rs
The term_size crate introduced in #237 did things *slightly* differently than exa: it tried to get the terminal width of stdout, stderr, and stdin. This broke some tests that only redirected stdout.
Now it’s more like help. There aren’t any other fields in its struct at the moment, but there will be in the future (listing the features, and extremely colourful vanity mode)
Originally, both the matched flags and the list of free strings were returned from the parsing function and then passed around to every type that had a ‘deduce’ method. This worked, but the list of free strings was carried around with it, never used.
Now, only the flags are passed around. They’re in a new struct which has the methods the Matches had.
Both of Matches’s fields are now just data, and all of the methods on MatchedFlags don’t ignore any fields, so it’s more cohesive, at least I think that’s the word.
Building up the MatchedFlags is a bit more annoying though because the vector is now hidden behind a field.
One of the previous tests started to fail, because it was working when it shouldn’t have! It worked up until now because I forgot to flag --level as taking an argument, and “--level 4” still worked with 4 as a filename. So there’s now an early check for that functionality that got lost somewhere.
Apparently I forgot to give the --time flag an argument, and this wasn’t actually covered by any of the xtests! Well, it’s tested now.
I’m not sure how to handle multiple --time arguments.