tr '\015' Q | sed -e 's/Q$//'
}
+# In some bourne shell implementations, the "unset" builtin returns
+# nonzero status when a variable to be unset was not set in the first
+# place.
+#
+# Use sane_unset when that should not be considered an error.
+
+sane_unset () {
+ unset "$@"
+ return 0
+}
+
test_tick () {
if test -z "${test_tick+set}"
then
echo >&3 ""
}
-test_expect_code () {
- test "$#" = 4 && { prereq=$1; shift; } || prereq=
- test "$#" = 3 ||
- error "bug in the test script: not 3 or 4 parameters to test-expect-code"
- if ! test_skip "$@"
- then
- say >&3 "expecting exit code $1: $3"
- test_run_ "$3"
- if [ "$?" = 0 -a "$eval_ret" = "$1" ]
- then
- test_ok_ "$2"
- else
- test_failure_ "$@"
- fi
- fi
- echo >&3 ""
-}
-
# test_external runs external test scripts that provide continuous
# test output about their progress, and succeeds/fails on
# zero/non-zero exit code. It outputs the test output on stdout even
fi
}
+# test_line_count checks that a file has the number of lines it
+# ought to. For example:
+#
+# test_expect_success 'produce exactly one line of output' '
+# do something >output &&
+# test_line_count = 1 output
+# '
+#
+# is like "test $(wc -l <output) = 1" except that it passes the
+# output through when the number of lines is wrong.
+
+test_line_count () {
+ if test $# != 3
+ then
+ error "bug in the test script: not 3 parameters to test_line_count"
+ elif ! test $(wc -l <"$3") "$1" "$2"
+ then
+ echo "test_line_count: line count for $3 !$1 $2"
+ cat "$3"
+ return 1
+ fi
+}
# This is not among top-level (test_expect_success | test_expect_failure)
# but is a prefix that can be used in the test script, like:
return 0
}
+# Similar to test_must_fail and test_might_fail, but check that a
+# given command exited with a given exit code. Meant to be used as:
+#
+# test_expect_success 'Merge with d/f conflicts' '
+# test_expect_code 1 git merge "merge msg" B master
+# '
+
+test_expect_code () {
+ want_code=$1
+ shift
+ "$@"
+ exit_code=$?
+ if test $exit_code = $want_code
+ then
+ echo >&2 "test_expect_code: command exited with $exit_code: $*"
+ return 0
+ else
+ echo >&2 "test_expect_code: command exited with $exit_code, we wanted $want_code $*"
+ return 1
+ fi
+}
+
# test_cmp is a helper function to compare actual and expected output.
# You can use it like:
#