trap 'die' exit
+# The semantics of the editor variables are that of invoking
+# sh -c "$EDITOR \"$@\"" files ...
+#
+# If our trash directory contains shell metacharacters, they will be
+# interpreted if we just set $EDITOR directly, so do a little dance with
+# environment variables to work around this.
+#
+# In particular, quoting isn't enough, as the path may contain the same quote
+# that we're using.
+test_set_editor () {
+ FAKE_EDITOR="$1"
+ export FAKE_EDITOR
+ VISUAL='"$FAKE_EDITOR"'
+ export VISUAL
+}
+
test_tick () {
if test -z "${test_tick+set}"
then
test_must_fail () {
"$@"
- test $? -gt 0 -a $? -le 128
+ test $? -gt 0 -a $? -le 129
}
# test_cmp is a helper function to compare actual and expected output.
repo="$1"
mkdir "$repo"
cd "$repo" || error "Cannot setup test environment"
- "$GIT_EXEC_PATH/git" init --template=$GIT_EXEC_PATH/templates/blt/ >/dev/null 2>&1 ||
+ "$GIT_EXEC_PATH/git" init "--template=$GIT_EXEC_PATH/templates/blt/" >/dev/null 2>&1 ||
error "cannot run git init -- have you built things yet?"
mv .git/hooks .git/hooks-disabled
cd "$owd"
case "$test_failure" in
0)
# We could:
- # cd .. && rm -fr trash
+ # cd .. && rm -fr 'trash directory'
# but that means we forbid any tests that use their own
# subdirectory from calling test_done without coming back
# to where they started from.
. ../GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS
# Test repository
-test=trash
+test="trash directory"
rm -fr "$test" || {
trap - exit
echo >&5 "FATAL: Cannot prepare test area"
exit 1
}
-test_create_repo $test
-cd "$test"
+test_create_repo "$test"
+# Use -P to resolve symlinks in our working directory so that the cwd
+# in subprocesses like git equals our $PWD (for pathname comparisons).
+cd -P "$test" || exit 1
this_test=$(expr "./$0" : '.*/\(t[0-9]*\)-[^/]*$')
for skp in $GIT_SKIP_TESTS