Revert "tests/invocation.sh: Port to sh (from bash)"

This reverts commit 9aa8740c36, which broke on macOS.

If anyone wants to try, feel free to do so!
This commit is contained in:
Fabian Homborg 2019-01-07 21:27:32 +01:00
parent 9aa8740c36
commit fc5e8f9fec

View file

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
##
# Test that the invocation of the fish executable works as we hope.
#
@ -57,6 +57,13 @@
# Errors will be fatal
set -e
# If any command in the pipeline fails report the rc of the first fail.
set -o pipefail
# If nothing matches a glob expansion, return nothing (not the glob
# itself)
shopt -s nullglob
# The directory this script is in (as everything is relative to here)
here="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd -P)"
cd "$here"
@ -64,6 +71,9 @@ cd "$here"
# The temporary directory to use
temp_dir="$here/../test"
# The files we're going to execute are in the 'invocation' directory.
files_to_test=($(echo invocation/*.invoke))
# The fish binary we are testing - for manual testing, may be overridden
fish_exe="${fish_exe:-../test/root/bin/fish}"
fish_dir="$(dirname "${fish_exe}")"
@ -79,7 +89,7 @@ system_name="$(uname -s)"
# Check whether we have the 'colordiff' tool - if not, we'll revert to
# boring regular 'diff'.
if command -v colordiff >/dev/null 2>&1; then
if [ "$(type -t colordiff)" != '' ] ; then
difftool='colordiff'
else
difftool='diff'
@ -89,7 +99,7 @@ fi
##
# Set variables to known values so that they will not affect the
# execution of the test.
clean_environment() {
function clean_environment() {
# Reset the terminal variables to a known type.
export TERM=xterm
@ -109,41 +119,27 @@ clean_environment() {
##
# Fail completely :-(
fail() {
say "$term_red" "FAIL: $*" >&2
function fail() {
say red "FAIL: $*" >&2
exit 1
}
##
# Coloured output
#
# Use like `say "$term_green" "message".
say() {
echo "$1$2$term_reset"
function say() {
local color_name="$1"
local msg="$2"
local color_var="term_${color_name}"
local color="${!color_var}"
echo "$color$msg$term_reset"
}
run_rc() {
# Write the return code on to the end of the stderr, so that it can be
# checked like anything else.
eval "$*" || echo "RC: $?" >&2
}
filter() {
# In some cases we want to check only a part of the output.
# For those we filter the output through grep'd matches.
if [ -f "$1" ] ; then
# grep '-o', '-E' and '-f' are supported by the tools in modern GNU
# environments, and on OS X.
grep -oE -f "$1"
else
cat
fi
}
##
# Actual testing of a .invoke file.
test_file() {
function test_file() {
local file="$1"
local dir="$(dirname "$file")"
local base="$(basename "$file" .invoke)"
@ -154,7 +150,7 @@ test_file() {
local grep_stdout="${dir}/${base}.grep"
local want_stderr="${dir}/${base}.err"
local empty="${dir}/${base}.empty"
local filter
local -a filter
local rc=0
local test_args_literal
local test_args
@ -195,6 +191,16 @@ test_file() {
rm -f "${temp_dir}/home/fish/config.fish"
fi
# In some cases we want to check only a part of the output.
# For those we filter the output through grep'd matches.
if [ -f "$grep_stdout" ] ; then
# grep '-o', '-E' and '-f' are supported by the tools in modern GNU
# environments, and on OS X.
filter=('grep' '-o' '-E' '-f' "$grep_stdout")
else
filter=('cat')
fi
echo -n "Testing file $file ${system_specific:+($system_name specific) }... "
# The hoops we are jumping through here, with changing directory are
@ -204,13 +210,20 @@ test_file() {
# We disable the exit-on-error here, so that we can catch the return
# code.
set +e
run_rc "cd \"$fish_dir\" && \"./$fish_leaf\" $test_args" \
eval "cd \"$fish_dir\" && \"./$fish_leaf\" $test_args" \
2> "$test_stderr" \
< /dev/null \
| filter "$grep_stdout" \
| ${filter[*]} \
> "$test_stdout"
rc="$?"
set -e
if [ "$rc" != '0' ] ; then
# Write the return code on to the end of the stderr, so that it can be
# checked like anything else.
echo "RC: $rc" >> "${test_stderr}"
fi
# If the wanted output files are not present, they are assumed empty.
if [ ! -f "$want_stdout" ] ; then
want_stdout="$empty"
@ -225,9 +238,9 @@ test_file() {
# However, fish will also have helpfully translated the home directory
# into '~/' in the error report. Consequently, we need to perform a
# small fix-up so that we can replace the string sanely.
xdg_config_in_home="${XDG_CONFIG_HOME#$HOME}"
if [ "${#xdg_config_in_home}" -lt "${#XDG_CONFIG_HOME}" ]; then
xdg_config_in_home="~$xdg_config_in_home"
xdg_config_in_home="$XDG_CONFIG_HOME"
if [ "${xdg_config_in_home:0:${#HOME}}" = "${HOME}" ] ; then
xdg_config_in_home="~/${xdg_config_in_home:${#HOME}+1}"
fi
# 'sed -i' (inplace) has different syntax on BSD and GNU versions of
# the tool, so cannot be used here, hence we write to a separate file,
@ -245,20 +258,20 @@ test_file() {
if [ "$out_status" = '0' ] && \
[ "$err_status" = '0' ] ; then
say "$term_green" "ok"
say green "ok"
# clean up tmp files
rm -f "${test_stdout}" "${test_stderr}" "${empty}"
rc=0
else
say "$term_red" "fail"
say "$term_blue" "$test_args_literal" | sed 's/^/ /'
say red "fail"
say blue "$test_args_literal" | sed 's/^/ /'
if [ "$out_status" != '0' ] ; then
say "$term_yellow" "Output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
say yellow "Output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
"$difftool" -u "${test_stdout}" "${want_stdout}"
fi
if [ "$err_status" != '0' ] ; then
say "$term_yellow" "Error output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
say yellow "Error output differs for file $file. Diff follows:"
"$difftool" -u "${test_stderr}" "${want_stderr}"
fi
rc=1
@ -299,11 +312,11 @@ if command -v tput >/dev/null 2>&1; then
term_reset="$(tput sgr0)"
fi
say "$term_cyan" "Testing shell invocation functionality"
say cyan "Testing shell invocation functionality"
passed=0
failed=0
for file in invocation/*.invoke; do
for file in ${files_to_test[*]} ; do
if ! test_file "$file" ; then
failed=$(( failed + 1 ))
else