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postgres/src/test/perl/TestLib.pm
Michael Paquier a78edd4b42 Remove PGSSLCRLDIR from the list of variables ignored in TAP tests
This variable was present in the list added by 9d660670, but it is not
supported by this branch.  Issue noticed while diving into a similar
change for pg_regress.c.

Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-06-12 10:39:44 +09:00

362 lines
8.3 KiB
Perl

# TestLib, low-level routines and actions regression tests.
#
# This module contains a set of routines dedicated to environment setup for
# a PostgreSQL regression test run and includes some low-level routines
# aimed at controlling command execution, logging and test functions. This
# module should never depend on any other PostgreSQL regression test modules.
package TestLib;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Config;
use Cwd;
use Exporter 'import';
use Fcntl qw(:mode :seek);
use File::Basename;
use File::Spec;
use File::Temp ();
use IPC::Run;
use SimpleTee;
use Test::More;
our @EXPORT = qw(
slurp_dir
slurp_file
append_to_file
system_or_bail
system_log
run_log
command_ok
command_fails
command_exit_is
program_help_ok
program_version_ok
program_options_handling_ok
command_like
$windows_os
);
our ($windows_os, $tmp_check, $log_path, $test_logfile);
BEGIN
{
# Set to untranslated messages, to be able to compare program output
# with expected strings.
delete $ENV{LANGUAGE};
delete $ENV{LC_ALL};
$ENV{LC_MESSAGES} = 'C';
my @envkeys = qw (
PGCLIENTENCODING
PGCONNECT_TIMEOUT
PGDATA
PGDATABASE
PGGSSLIB
PGHOSTADDR
PGKRBSRVNAME
PGPASSFILE
PGPASSWORD
PGREQUIREPEER
PGREQUIRESSL
PGSERVICE
PGSERVICEFILE
PGSSLCERT
PGSSLCRL
PGSSLKEY
PGSSLMODE
PGSSLROOTCERT
PGUSER
PGPORT
PGHOST
);
delete @ENV{@envkeys};
# Must be set early
$windows_os = $Config{osname} eq 'MSWin32' || $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
if ($windows_os)
{
require Win32API::File;
Win32API::File->import(qw(createFile OsFHandleOpen CloseHandle setFilePointer));
}
}
INIT
{
# Determine output directories, and create them. The base path is the
# TESTDIR environment variable, which is normally set by the invoking
# Makefile.
$tmp_check = $ENV{TESTDIR} ? "$ENV{TESTDIR}/tmp_check" : "tmp_check";
$log_path = "$tmp_check/log";
mkdir $tmp_check;
mkdir $log_path;
# Open the test log file, whose name depends on the test name.
$test_logfile = basename($0);
$test_logfile =~ s/\.[^.]+$//;
$test_logfile = "$log_path/regress_log_$test_logfile";
open TESTLOG, '>', $test_logfile
or die "could not open STDOUT to logfile \"$test_logfile\": $!";
# Hijack STDOUT and STDERR to the log file
open(ORIG_STDOUT, ">&STDOUT");
open(ORIG_STDERR, ">&STDERR");
open(STDOUT, ">&TESTLOG");
open(STDERR, ">&TESTLOG");
# The test output (ok ...) needs to be printed to the original STDOUT so
# that the 'prove' program can parse it, and display it to the user in
# real time. But also copy it to the log file, to provide more context
# in the log.
my $builder = Test::More->builder;
my $fh = $builder->output;
tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", *ORIG_STDOUT, *TESTLOG;
$fh = $builder->failure_output;
tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", *ORIG_STDERR, *TESTLOG;
# Enable auto-flushing for all the file handles. Stderr and stdout are
# redirected to the same file, and buffering causes the lines to appear
# in the log in confusing order.
autoflush STDOUT 1;
autoflush STDERR 1;
autoflush TESTLOG 1;
}
END
{
# Test files have several ways of causing prove_check to fail:
# 1. Exit with a non-zero status.
# 2. Call ok(0) or similar, indicating that a constituent test failed.
# 3. Deviate from the planned number of tests.
#
# Preserve temporary directories after (1) and after (2).
$File::Temp::KEEP_ALL = 1 unless $? == 0 && all_tests_passing();
}
sub all_tests_passing
{
my $fail_count = 0;
foreach my $status (Test::More->builder->summary)
{
return 0 unless $status;
}
return 1;
}
#
# Helper functions
#
sub tempdir
{
my ($prefix) = @_;
$prefix = "tmp_test" unless defined $prefix;
return File::Temp::tempdir(
$prefix . '_XXXX',
DIR => $tmp_check,
CLEANUP => 1);
}
sub tempdir_short
{
# Use a separate temp dir outside the build tree for the
# Unix-domain socket, to avoid file name length issues.
return File::Temp::tempdir(CLEANUP => 1);
}
# Translate a Perl file name to a host file name. Currently, this is a no-op
# except for the case of Perl=msys and host=mingw32. The subject need not
# exist, but its parent directory must exist.
sub perl2host
{
my ($subject) = @_;
return $subject unless $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
my $here = cwd;
my $leaf;
if (chdir $subject)
{
$leaf = '';
}
else
{
$leaf = '/' . basename $subject;
my $parent = dirname $subject;
chdir $parent or die "could not chdir \"$parent\": $!";
}
# this odd way of calling 'pwd -W' is the only way that seems to work.
my $dir = qx{sh -c "pwd -W"};
chomp $dir;
chdir $here;
return $dir . $leaf;
}
sub system_log
{
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @_) . "\n");
return system(@_);
}
sub system_or_bail
{
if (system_log(@_) != 0)
{
BAIL_OUT("system $_[0] failed");
}
}
sub run_log
{
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{ $_[0] }) . "\n");
return IPC::Run::run(@_);
}
sub slurp_dir
{
my ($dir) = @_;
opendir(my $dh, $dir)
or die "could not opendir \"$dir\": $!";
my @direntries = readdir $dh;
closedir $dh;
return @direntries;
}
sub slurp_file
{
my ($filename, $offset) = @_;
local $/;
my $contents;
if ($Config{osname} ne 'MSWin32')
{
open(my $in, '<', $filename)
or die "could not read \"$filename\": $!";
if (defined($offset))
{
seek($in, $offset, SEEK_SET)
or die "could not seek \"$filename\": $!";
}
$contents = <$in>;
close $in;
}
else
{
my $fHandle = createFile($filename, "r", "rwd")
or die "could not open \"$filename\": $^E";
OsFHandleOpen(my $fh = IO::Handle->new(), $fHandle, 'r')
or die "could not read \"$filename\": $^E\n";
if (defined($offset))
{
setFilePointer($fh, $offset, qw(FILE_BEGIN))
or die "could not seek \"$filename\": $^E\n";
}
$contents = <$fh>;
CloseHandle($fHandle)
or die "could not close \"$filename\": $^E\n";
}
$contents =~ s/\r\n/\n/g if $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
return $contents;
}
sub append_to_file
{
my ($filename, $str) = @_;
open my $fh, ">>", $filename
or die "could not write \"$filename\": $!";
print $fh $str;
close $fh;
}
#
# Test functions
#
sub command_ok
{
my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_;
my $result = run_log($cmd);
ok($result, $test_name);
}
sub command_fails
{
my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_;
my $result = run_log($cmd);
ok(!$result, $test_name);
}
sub command_exit_is
{
my ($cmd, $expected, $test_name) = @_;
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $h = IPC::Run::start $cmd;
$h->finish();
# On Windows, the exit status of the process is returned directly as the
# process's exit code, while on Unix, it's returned in the high bits
# of the exit code (see WEXITSTATUS macro in the standard <sys/wait.h>
# header file). IPC::Run's result function always returns exit code >> 8,
# assuming the Unix convention, which will always return 0 on Windows as
# long as the process was not terminated by an exception. To work around
# that, use $h->full_result on Windows instead.
my $result =
($Config{osname} eq "MSWin32")
? ($h->full_results)[0]
: $h->result(0);
is($result, $expected, $test_name);
}
sub program_help_ok
{
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --help\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--help' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>',
\$stderr;
ok($result, "$cmd --help exit code 0");
isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --help goes to stdout");
is($stderr, '', "$cmd --help nothing to stderr");
}
sub program_version_ok
{
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --version\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--version' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>',
\$stderr;
ok($result, "$cmd --version exit code 0");
isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --version goes to stdout");
is($stderr, '', "$cmd --version nothing to stderr");
}
sub program_options_handling_ok
{
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --not-a-valid-option\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--not-a-valid-option' ], '>',
\$stdout,
'2>', \$stderr;
ok(!$result, "$cmd with invalid option nonzero exit code");
isnt($stderr, '', "$cmd with invalid option prints error message");
}
sub command_like
{
my ($cmd, $expected_stdout, $test_name) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr;
ok($result, "@$cmd exit code 0");
is($stderr, '', "@$cmd no stderr");
like($stdout, $expected_stdout, "$test_name: matches");
}
1;