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# -*- shell-script -*-
#
# Copyright (C) 1996-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
########################################################
### IMPORTANT NOTE: keep this file 'set -e' clean. ###
########################################################
# Do not source several times.
test ${test_lib_sourced-no} = yes && return 0
test_lib_sourced=yes
# CDPATH is evil if used in non-interactive scripts (and even more
# evil if exported in the environment).
CDPATH=; unset CDPATH
# Be more Bourne compatible.
# (Snippet inspired to configure's initialization in Autoconf 2.64)
DUALCASE=1; export DUALCASE # for MKS sh
if test -n "${ZSH_VERSION+set}" && (emulate sh) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
emulate sh
NULLCMD=:
setopt NO_GLOB_SUBST
# If Zsh is not started directly in POSIX-compatibility mode, it has some
# incompatibilities in the handling of $0 that conflict with our usage;
# i.e., $0 inside a file sourced with the '.' builtin is temporarily set
# to the name of the sourced file. Work around that.
# Note that a bug in some versions of Zsh prevents us from resetting $0
# in a sourced script, so the use of $argv0. For more info see:
# <http://www.zsh.org/mla/workers/2009/msg01140.html>
# The apparently useless 'eval' here is needed by at least dash 0.5.2,
# to prevent it from bailing out with an error like:
# "Syntax error: Bad substitution".
eval 'argv0=${functrace[-1]%:*}' && test -f "$argv0" || {
echo "Cannot determine the path of running test script." >&2
echo "Your Zsh (version $ZSH_VERSION) is probably too old." >&2
exit 99
}
else
argv0=$0
# Ignore command substitution failure, for it might cause problems
# with "set -e" on some shells.
am_shell_opts=$(set -o) || :
case $am_shell_opts in *posix*) set -o posix;; esac
unset am_shell_opts
fi
# A single whitespace character.
sp=' '
# A tabulation character.
tab=' '
# A newline character.
nl='
'
# As autoconf-generated configure scripts do, ensure that IFS
# is defined initially, so that saving and restoring $IFS works.
IFS=$sp$tab$nl
# The name of the current test (without the '.sh' or '.tap' suffix).
me=${argv0##*/} # Strip all directory components.
case $me in # Strip test suffix.
*.tap) me=${me%.tap};;
*.sh) me=${me%.sh} ;;
esac
# Source extra package-specific configuration.
. test-defs.sh
# And fail hard if something went wrong.
test $? -eq 0 || exit 99
# We use a trap below for cleanup. This requires us to go through
# hoops to get the right exit status transported through the signal.
# Turn off errexit here so that we don't trip the bug with OSF1/Tru64
# sh inside this function (FIXME: is this still relevant now that we
# require a POSIX shell?).
_am_exit ()
{
set +e
# See comments in the exit trap for the reason we do this.
test 77 = $1 && am__test_skipped=yes
# Extra escaping to ensure we do not call our 'exit' alias.
(\exit $1); \exit $1
}
# Avoid interferences from the environment
am__test_skipped=no
# This alias must actually be placed before any use if 'exit' -- even
# just inside a function definition. Weird, but real.
alias exit=_am_exit
# In some shells (e.g., Solaris 10 /bin/ksh, or NetBSD 5.1 /bin/sh),
# "unset VAR" returns a non-zero exit status in case the VAR variable
# is already unset. This doesn't interact well with our usage of
# "set -e" in the testsuite. This function and the alias below help
# to work around the issue. But be sure to use them only if actually
# needed. The repeated unset in the check below cater to the very
# unlikely case where the '_am_v' variable is set in the environment.
if unset _am_v && unset _am_v; then
: Nothing needs to be done.
else
_am_unset ()
{
for _am_v
do
# Extra escaping (here and below) to ensure we do not call our
# 'unset' alias.
eval ${_am_v}=dummy && \unset ${_am_v} || return 1
done
\unset _am_v
}
alias unset=_am_unset
fi
## ------------------------------------ ##
## General testsuite shell functions. ##
## ------------------------------------ ##
# Print warnings (e.g., about skipped and failed tests) to this file
# number. Override by putting, say:
# AM_TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = stderr_fileno_=9; export stderr_fileno_;
# AM_TESTS_FD_REDIRECT = 9>&2
# in your Makefile.am.
# This is useful when using automake's parallel tests mode, to print the
# reason for skip/failure to console, rather than to the *.log files.
: ${stderr_fileno_=2}
# Helper functions used by "plain" tests of the Automake testsuite
# (i.e., tests that don't use any test protocol).
# TAP tests will override these functions with their TAP-enhanced
# equivalents later (see sourcing of 'tap-functions.sh' below).
# These are copied from Gnulib's 'tests/init.sh'.
warn_ () { echo "$@" 1>&$stderr_fileno_; }
fail_ () { warn_ "$me: failed test: $@"; exit 1; }
skip_ () { warn_ "$me: skipped test: $@"; exit 77; }
fatal_ () { warn_ "$me: hard error: $@"; exit 99; }
framework_failure_ () { warn_ "$me: set-up failure: $@"; exit 99; }
# For compatibility with TAP functions.
skip_all_ () { skip_ "$@"; }
if test $am_test_protocol = tap; then
. tap-functions.sh
fi
## ---------------------------- ##
## Auxiliary shell functions. ##
## ---------------------------- ##
# Tell whether we should keep the test directories around, even in
# case of success. By default, we don't.
am_keeping_testdirs ()
{
case $keep_testdirs in
""|n|no|NO) return 1;;
*) return 0;;
esac
}
# seq_ - print a sequence of numbers
# ----------------------------------
# This function simulates GNU seq(1) portably. Valid usages:
# - seq LAST
# - seq FIRST LAST
# - seq FIRST INCREMENT LAST
seq_ ()
{
case $# in
0) fatal_ "seq_: missing argument";;
1) seq_first=1 seq_incr=1 seq_last=$1;;
2) seq_first=$1 seq_incr=1 seq_last=$2;;
3) seq_first=$1 seq_incr=$2 seq_last=$3;;
*) fatal_ "seq_: too many arguments";;
esac
i=$seq_first
while test $i -le $seq_last; do
echo $i
i=$(($i + $seq_incr))
done
}
# rm_rf_ [FILES OR DIRECTORIES ...]
# ---------------------------------
# Recursively remove the given files or directory, also handling the case
# of non-writable subdirectories.
rm_rf_ ()
{
test $# -gt 0 || return 0
$PERL "$am_testaux_srcdir"/deltree.pl "$@"
}
commented_sed_unindent_prog='
/^$/b # Nothing to do for empty lines.
x # Get x<indent> into pattern space.
/^$/{ # No prior x<indent>, go prepare it.
g # Copy this 1st non-blank line into pattern space.
s/^\(['"$tab"' ]*\).*/x\1/ # Prepare x<indent> in pattern space.
} # Now: x<indent> in pattern and <line> in hold.
G # Build x<indent>\n<line> in pattern space, and
h # duplicate it into hold space.
s/\n.*$// # Restore x<indent> in pattern space, and
x # exchange with the above duplicate in hold space.
s/^x\(.*\)\n\1// # Remove leading <indent> from <line>.
s/^x.*\n// # Restore <line> when there is no leading <indent>.
'
# unindent [input files...]
# -------------------------
# Remove the "proper" amount of leading whitespace from the given files,
# and output the result on stdout. That amount is determined by looking
# at the leading whitespace of the first non-blank line in the input
# files. If no input file is specified, standard input is implied.
unindent ()
{
if test x"$sed_unindent_prog" = x; then
sed_unindent_prog=$(printf '%s\n' "$commented_sed_unindent_prog" \
| sed -e "s/ *# .*//")
fi
sed "$sed_unindent_prog" ${1+"$@"}
}
sed_unindent_prog="" # Avoid interferences from the environment.
## ---------------------------------------------------------------- ##
## Create and set up of the temporary directory used by the test. ##
## Set up of the exit trap for cleanup of said directory. ##
## ---------------------------------------------------------------- ##
# Set up the exit trap.
am_exit_trap ()
{
exit_status=$1
set +e
cd "$am_top_builddir"
if test $am_test_protocol = tap; then
if test "$planned_" = later && test $exit_status -eq 0; then
plan_ "now"
fi
test $exit_status -eq 0 && test $tap_pass_count_ -eq $tap_count_ \
|| keep_testdirs=yes
else
# This is to ensure that a test script does give a SKIP outcome just
# because a command in it happens to exit with status 77. This
# behaviour, while from time to time useful to developers, is not
# meant to be enabled by default, as it could cause spurious failures
# in the wild. Thus it will be enabled only when the variable
# 'am_explicit_skips' is set to a "true" value.
case $am_explicit_skips in
[yY]|[yY]es|1)
if test $exit_status -eq 77 && test $am__test_skipped != yes; then
echo "$me: implicit skip turned into failure"
exit_status=78
fi;;
esac
test $exit_status -eq 0 || keep_testdirs=yes
fi
am_keeping_testdirs || rm_rf_ $am_test_subdir
set +x
# Spurious escaping to ensure we do not call our "exit" alias.
\exit $exit_status
}
am_set_exit_traps ()
{
trap 'am_exit_trap $?' 0
trap "fatal_ 'caught signal SIGHUP'" 1
trap "fatal_ 'caught signal SIGINT'" 2
trap "fatal_ 'caught signal SIGTERM'" 15
# Various shells seems to just ignore SIGQUIT under some circumstances,
# even if the signal is not blocked; however, if the signal is trapped,
# the trap gets correctly executed. So we also trap SIGQUIT.
# Here is a list of some shells that have been verified to exhibit the
# problematic behavior with SIGQUIT:
# - zsh 4.3.12 on Debian GNU/Linux
# - /bin/ksh and /usr/xpg4/bin/sh on Solaris 10
# - Bash 3.2.51 on Solaris 10 and bash 4.1.5 on Debian GNU/Linux
# - AT&T ksh on Debian Gnu/Linux (deb package ksh, version 93u-1)
# OTOH, at least these shells that do *not* exhibit that behaviour:
# - modern version of the Almquist Shell (at least 0.5.5.1), on
# both Solaris and GNU/Linux
# - public domain Korn Shell, version 5.2.14, on Debian GNU/Linux
trap "fatal_ 'caught signal SIGQUIT'" 3
# Ignore further SIGPIPE in the trap code. This is required to avoid
# a very weird issue with some shells, at least when the execution of
# the automake testsuite is driven by the 'prove' utility: if prove
# (or the make process that has spawned it) gets interrupted with
# Ctrl-C, the shell might go in a loop, continually getting a SIGPIPE,
# sometimes finally dumping core, other times hanging indefinitely.
# See also Test::Harness bug [rt.cpan.org #70855], archived at
# <https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=70855>
trap "trap '' 13; fatal_ 'caught signal SIGPIPE'" 13
}
am_test_setup ()
{
process_requirements $required
am_set_exit_traps
# Create and populate the temporary directory, if required.
if test x"$am_create_testdir" = x"no"; then
am_test_subdir=
else
am_setup_testdir
fi
am_extra_info
set -x
pwd
}
|