8394507891
Unlike the other tests, this actually treats stow(1) as a black box script, running it directly rather than require-ing it as a library. This allows us to check things like the exit codes returned.
50 lines
1.2 KiB
Perl
50 lines
1.2 KiB
Perl
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
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#
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# Test processing of CLI options.
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#
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use strict;
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use warnings;
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use File::Basename;
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use Test::More tests => 1;
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use testutil;
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#init_test_dirs();
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# Since here we're doing black-box testing on the stow executable,
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# this looks like it should be robust:
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#
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#my $STOW = dirname(__FILE__) . '/../bin/stow';
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#
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# but unfortunately it breaks things like "make distcheck", which
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# builds the stow script into a separate path like
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#
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# stow-2.3.0/_build/sub/bin
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#
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# before cd'ing to something like
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#
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# stow-2.3.0/_build/sub
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#
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# and then running the tests via:
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#
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# make check-TESTS
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# make[2]: Entering directory '/path/to/stow/src/stow-2.3.0/_build/sub'
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# dir=../../t; \
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# /usr/bin/perl -Ibin -Ilib -I../../t -MTest::Harness -e 'runtests(@ARGV)' "${dir#./}"/*.t
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#
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# So the simplest solution is to hardcode an assumption that we run
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# tests either from somewhere like this during distcheck:
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#
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# stow-2.3.0/_build/sub
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#
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# or from the top of the source tree during development. This can be done
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# via the following, which also follows the KISS principle:
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my $STOW = 'bin/stow';
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`$STOW --help`;
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is($?, 0, "--help should return 0 exit code");
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# vim:ft=perl
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