fish-shell/tests/checks/check-translations.fish
Fabian Boehm e66f6878b5 Make tests usable with path with spaces
This is somewhat subtle:

The #RUN line in a littlecheck file will be run by a posix shell,
which means the substitutions will also be mangled by it.

Now, we *have* shell-quoted them, but unfortunately what we need is to
quote them for inside a pre-existing layer of quotes, e.g.

    # RUN: fish -C 'set -g fish %fish'

here, %fish can't be replaced with `'path with spaces/fish'`, because
that ends up as

    # RUN: fish -C 'set -g fish 'path with spaces/fish''

which is just broken.

So instead, we pass it as a variable to that fish:

    # RUN: fish=%fish fish...

In addition, we need to not mangle the arguments in our test_driver.

For that, because we insist on posix shell, which has only one array,
and we source a file, we *need* to stop having that file use
arguments.

Which is okay - test_env.sh could previously be used to start a test,
and now it no longer can because that is test_*driver*.sh's job.

For the interactive tests, it's slightly different:

pexpect.spawn(foo) is sensitive to shell metacharacters like space.

So we shell-quote it.

But if you pass any args to pexpect.spawn, it no longer uses a shell,
and so we cannot shell-quote it.

There could be a better way to fix this?
2025-01-01 16:45:43 +01:00

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Fish

#RUN: fish=%fish %fish %s
#REQUIRES: msgfmt --help
set -l fail_count 0
for file in $FISH_SOURCE_DIR/po/*.po
# We only check the format strings.
# Later on we might do a full "--check" to also check the headers.
msgfmt --check-format $file
or set fail_count (math $fail_count + 1)
end
# Prevent setting timestamp if any errors were encountered
if test "$fail_count" -gt 0
exit 1
end
# No output is good output