#!perl # this should be perl 5.8 compatible, since it will be used # with old perls while testing dist modules on those perls use strict; use warnings; use File::Temp "tempdir"; use ExtUtils::Manifest "maniread"; use Cwd "getcwd"; -f "Configure" or die "Expected to be run from a perl checkout"; my $manifest = maniread(); my $start = getcwd() or die "Cannot fetch current directory: $!\n"; # get ppport.h my $pppdir = test_dist("Devel-PPPort"); my $pppfile = "$pppdir/ppport.h"; -f $pppfile or die "No ppport.h found in $pppdir\n"; # Devel-PPPort is manually processed before anything else to ensure we # have an up to date ppport.h opendir my $distdir, "dist" or die "Cannot opendir 'dist': $!\n"; my @dists = sort { lc $a cmp lc $b } grep { /^\w/ && $_ ne "Devel-PPPort" } readdir $distdir; closedir $distdir; # These may end up being included if their problems are resolved { # https://github.com/Perl/version.pm claims CPAN is upstream @dists = grep { $_ ne "version" } @dists; # Safe is tied pretty heavily to core # in any case it didn't seem simple to fix @dists = grep { $_ ne "Safe" } @dists; } for my $dist (@dists) { test_dist($dist); } sub test_dist { my ($name) = @_; print "*** Testing $name ***\n"; my $dir = tempdir( CLEANUP => 1); system "cp", "-a", "dist/$name/.", "$dir/." and die "Cannot copy dist files to working directory\n"; chdir $dir or die "Cannot chdir to dist working directory '$dir': $!\n"; if ($pppfile) { system "cp", $pppfile, "." and die "Cannot copy $pppfile to .\n"; } if ($name eq "IO" || $name eq "threads" || $name eq "threads-shared") { write_testpl(); } unless (-f "Makefile.PL") { print " Creating Makefile.PL for $name\n"; my $key = "ABSTRACT_FROM"; my @parts = split /-/, $name; my $last = $parts[-1]; my $fromname; for my $check ("$last.pm", join("/", "lib", @parts) . ".pm") { if (-f $check) { $fromname = $check; last; } } $fromname or die "Cannot find ABSTRACT_FROM for $name\n"; my $value = $fromname; open my $fh, ">", "Makefile.PL" or die "Cannot create Makefile.PL: $!\n"; # adapted from make_ext.pl printf $fh <<'EOM', $name, $fromname, $key, $value; use strict; use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; # This is what the .PL extracts to. Not the ultimate file that is installed. # (ie Win32 runs pl2bat after this) # Doing this here avoids all sort of quoting issues that would come from # attempting to write out perl source with literals to generate the arrays and # hash. my @temps = 'Makefile.PL'; foreach (glob('scripts/pod*.PL')) { # The various pod*.PL extractors change directory. Doing that with relative # paths in @INC breaks. It seems the lesser of two evils to copy (to avoid) # the chdir doing anything, than to attempt to convert lib paths to # absolute, and potentially run into problems with quoting special # characters in the path to our build dir (such as spaces) require File::Copy; my $temp = $_; $temp =~ s!scripts/!!; File::Copy::copy($_, $temp) or die "Can't copy $temp to $_: $!"; push @temps, $temp; } my $script_ext = $^O eq 'VMS' ? '.com' : ''; my %%pod_scripts; foreach (glob('pod*.PL')) { my $script = $_; s/.PL$/$script_ext/i; $pod_scripts{$script} = $_; } my @exe_files = values %%pod_scripts; WriteMakefile( NAME => '%s', VERSION_FROM => '%s', %-13s => '%s', realclean => { FILES => "@temps" }, (%%pod_scripts ? ( PL_FILES => \%%pod_scripts, EXE_FILES => \@exe_files, clean => { FILES => "@exe_files" }, ) : ()), ); EOM close $fh; } system $^X, "Makefile.PL" and die "$name: Makefile.PL failed\n"; my $verbose = 0; system "make", "test", "TEST_VERBOSE=$verbose" and die "$name: make test failed\n"; system "make", "install" and die "$name: make install failed\n"; chdir $start or die "Cannot return to $start: $!\n"; $dir; } # IO, threads and threads-shared use the blead t/test.pl when tested in core # and bundle their own test.pl when distributed on CPAN. # The test.pl source below is from the IO distribution but so far seems sufficient # for threads and threads-shared. # # This might be better as a file in Porting/ rather than embedded here. sub write_testpl { open my $fh, ">", "t/test.pl" or die "Cannot create t/test.pl: $!"; # the blead t/test.pl uses modern features and can't be used here. print $fh <<'EOS'; # # t/test.pl - most of Test::More functionality without the fuss # NOTE: # # Increment ($x++) has a certain amount of cleverness for things like # # $x = 'zz'; # $x++; # $x eq 'aaa'; # # stands more chance of breaking than just a simple # # $x = $x + 1 # # In this file, we use the latter "Baby Perl" approach, and increment # will be worked over by t/op/inc.t $Level = 1; my $test = 1; my $planned; my $noplan; my $Perl; # Safer version of $^X set by which_perl() $TODO = 0; $NO_ENDING = 0; # Use this instead of print to avoid interference while testing globals. sub _print { local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); print STDOUT @_; } sub _print_stderr { local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); print STDERR @_; } sub plan { my $n; if (@_ == 1) { $n = shift; if ($n eq 'no_plan') { undef $n; $noplan = 1; } } else { my %plan = @_; $n = $plan{tests}; } _print "1..$n\n" unless $noplan; $planned = $n; } END { my $ran = $test - 1; if (!$NO_ENDING) { if (defined $planned && $planned != $ran) { _print_stderr "# Looks like you planned $planned tests but ran $ran.\n"; } elsif ($noplan) { _print "1..$ran\n"; } } } # Use this instead of "print STDERR" when outputing failure diagnostic # messages sub _diag { return unless @_; my @mess = map { /^#/ ? "$_\n" : "# $_\n" } map { split /\n/ } @_; $TODO ? _print(@mess) : _print_stderr(@mess); } sub diag { _diag(@_); } sub skip_all { if (@_) { _print "1..0 # Skip @_\n"; } else { _print "1..0\n"; } exit(0); } sub _ok { my ($pass, $where, $name, @mess) = @_; # Do not try to microoptimize by factoring out the "not ". # VMS will avenge. my $out; if ($name) { # escape out '#' or it will interfere with '# skip' and such $name =~ s/#/\\#/g; $out = $pass ? "ok $test - $name" : "not ok $test - $name"; } else { $out = $pass ? "ok $test" : "not ok $test"; } $out .= " # TODO $TODO" if $TODO; _print "$out\n"; unless ($pass) { _diag "# Failed $where\n"; } # Ensure that the message is properly escaped. _diag @mess; $test = $test + 1; # don't use ++ return $pass; } sub _where { my @caller = caller($Level); return "at $caller[1] line $caller[2]"; } # DON'T use this for matches. Use like() instead. sub ok ($@) { my ($pass, $name, @mess) = @_; _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } sub _q { my $x = shift; return 'undef' unless defined $x; my $q = $x; $q =~ s/\\/\\\\/g; $q =~ s/'/\\'/g; return "'$q'"; } sub _qq { my $x = shift; return defined $x ? '"' . display ($x) . '"' : 'undef'; }; # keys are the codes \n etc map to, values are 2 char strings such as \n my %backslash_escape; foreach my $x (split //, 'nrtfa\\\'"') { $backslash_escape{ord eval "\"\\$x\""} = "\\$x"; } # A way to display scalars containing control characters and Unicode. # Trying to avoid setting $_, or relying on local $_ to work. sub display { my @result; foreach my $x (@_) { if (defined $x and not ref $x) { my $y = ''; foreach my $c (unpack("U*", $x)) { if ($c > 255) { $y .= sprintf "\\x{%x}", $c; } elsif ($backslash_escape{$c}) { $y .= $backslash_escape{$c}; } else { my $z = chr $c; # Maybe we can get away with a literal... $z = sprintf "\\%03o", $c if $z =~ /[[:^print:]]/; $y .= $z; } } $x = $y; } return $x unless wantarray; push @result, $x; } return @result; } sub is ($$@) { my ($got, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_; my $pass; if( !defined $got || !defined $expected ) { # undef only matches undef $pass = !defined $got && !defined $expected; } else { $pass = $got eq $expected; } unless ($pass) { unshift(@mess, "# got "._q($got)."\n", "# expected "._q($expected)."\n"); } _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } sub isnt ($$@) { my ($got, $isnt, $name, @mess) = @_; my $pass; if( !defined $got || !defined $isnt ) { # undef only matches undef $pass = defined $got || defined $isnt; } else { $pass = $got ne $isnt; } unless( $pass ) { unshift(@mess, "# it should not be "._q($got)."\n", "# but it is.\n"); } _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } sub cmp_ok ($$$@) { my($got, $type, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_; my $pass; { local $^W = 0; local($@,$!); # don't interfere with $@ # eval() sometimes resets $! $pass = eval "\$got $type \$expected"; } unless ($pass) { # It seems Irix long doubles can have 2147483648 and 2147483648 # that stringify to the same thing but are acutally numerically # different. Display the numbers if $type isn't a string operator, # and the numbers are stringwise the same. # (all string operators have alphabetic names, so tr/a-z// is true) # This will also show numbers for some uneeded cases, but will # definately be helpful for things such as == and <= that fail if ($got eq $expected and $type !~ tr/a-z//) { unshift @mess, "# $got - $expected = " . ($got - $expected) . "\n"; } unshift(@mess, "# got "._q($got)."\n", "# expected $type "._q($expected)."\n"); } _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } # Check that $got is within $range of $expected # if $range is 0, then check it's exact # else if $expected is 0, then $range is an absolute value # otherwise $range is a fractional error. # Here $range must be numeric, >= 0 # Non numeric ranges might be a useful future extension. (eg %) sub within ($$$@) { my ($got, $expected, $range, $name, @mess) = @_; my $pass; if (!defined $got or !defined $expected or !defined $range) { # This is a fail, but doesn't need extra diagnostics } elsif ($got !~ tr/0-9// or $expected !~ tr/0-9// or $range !~ tr/0-9//) { # This is a fail unshift @mess, "# got, expected and range must be numeric\n"; } elsif ($range < 0) { # This is also a fail unshift @mess, "# range must not be negative\n"; } elsif ($range == 0) { # Within 0 is == $pass = $got == $expected; } elsif ($expected == 0) { # If expected is 0, treat range as absolute $pass = ($got <= $range) && ($got >= - $range); } else { my $diff = $got - $expected; $pass = abs ($diff / $expected) < $range; } unless ($pass) { if ($got eq $expected) { unshift @mess, "# $got - $expected = " . ($got - $expected) . "\n"; } unshift@mess, "# got "._q($got)."\n", "# expected "._q($expected)." (within "._q($range).")\n"; } _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } # Note: this isn't quite as fancy as Test::More::like(). sub like ($$@) { like_yn (0,@_) }; # 0 for - sub unlike ($$@) { like_yn (1,@_) }; # 1 for un- sub like_yn ($$$@) { my ($flip, $got, $expected, $name, @mess) = @_; my $pass; $pass = $got =~ /$expected/ if !$flip; $pass = $got !~ /$expected/ if $flip; unless ($pass) { unshift(@mess, "# got '$got'\n", $flip ? "# expected !~ /$expected/\n" : "# expected /$expected/\n"); } local $Level = $Level + 1; _ok($pass, _where(), $name, @mess); } sub pass { _ok(1, '', @_); } sub fail { _ok(0, _where(), @_); } sub curr_test { $test = shift if @_; return $test; } sub next_test { my $retval = $test; $test = $test + 1; # don't use ++ $retval; } # Note: can't pass multipart messages since we try to # be compatible with Test::More::skip(). sub skip { my $why = shift; my $n = @_ ? shift : 1; for (1..$n) { _print "ok $test # skip $why\n"; $test = $test + 1; } local $^W = 0; last SKIP; } sub todo_skip { my $why = shift; my $n = @_ ? shift : 1; for (1..$n) { _print "not ok $test # TODO & SKIP $why\n"; $test = $test + 1; } local $^W = 0; last TODO; } sub eq_array { my ($ra, $rb) = @_; return 0 unless $#$ra == $#$rb; for my $i (0..$#$ra) { next if !defined $ra->[$i] && !defined $rb->[$i]; return 0 if !defined $ra->[$i]; return 0 if !defined $rb->[$i]; return 0 unless $ra->[$i] eq $rb->[$i]; } return 1; } sub eq_hash { my ($orig, $suspect) = @_; my $fail; while (my ($key, $value) = each %$suspect) { # Force a hash recompute if this perl's internals can cache the hash key. $key = "" . $key; if (exists $orig->{$key}) { if ($orig->{$key} ne $value) { _print "# key ", _qq($key), " was ", _qq($orig->{$key}), " now ", _qq($value), "\n"; $fail = 1; } } else { _print "# key ", _qq($key), " is ", _qq($value), ", not in original.\n"; $fail = 1; } } foreach (keys %$orig) { # Force a hash recompute if this perl's internals can cache the hash key. $_ = "" . $_; next if (exists $suspect->{$_}); _print "# key ", _qq($_), " was ", _qq($orig->{$_}), " now missing.\n"; $fail = 1; } !$fail; } sub require_ok ($) { my ($require) = @_; eval < [ command-line switches ] # nolib => 1 # don't use -I../lib (included by default) # prog => one-liner (avoid quotes) # progs => [ multi-liner (avoid quotes) ] # progfile => perl script # stdin => string to feed the stdin # stderr => redirect stderr to stdout # args => [ command-line arguments to the perl program ] # verbose => print the command line my $is_mswin = $^O eq 'MSWin32'; my $is_netware = $^O eq 'NetWare'; my $is_macos = $^O eq 'MacOS'; my $is_vms = $^O eq 'VMS'; my $is_cygwin = $^O eq 'cygwin'; sub _quote_args { my ($runperl, $args) = @_; foreach (@$args) { # In VMS protect with doublequotes because otherwise # DCL will lowercase -- unless already doublequoted. $_ = q(").$_.q(") if $is_vms && !/^\"/ && length($_) > 0; $$runperl .= ' ' . $_; } } sub _create_runperl { # Create the string to qx in runperl(). my %args = @_; my $runperl = which_perl(); if ($runperl =~ m/\s/) { $runperl = qq{"$runperl"}; } #- this allows, for example, to set PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG=/usr/bin/valgrind if ($ENV{PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG}) { $runperl = "$ENV{PERL_RUNPERL_DEBUG} $runperl"; } unless ($args{nolib}) { if ($is_macos) { $runperl .= ' -I::lib'; # Use UNIX style error messages instead of MPW style. $runperl .= ' -MMac::err=unix' if $args{stderr}; } else { $runperl .= ' "-I../lib"'; # doublequotes because of VMS } } if ($args{switches}) { local $Level = 2; die "test.pl:runperl(): 'switches' must be an ARRAYREF " . _where() unless ref $args{switches} eq "ARRAY"; _quote_args(\$runperl, $args{switches}); } if (defined $args{prog}) { die "test.pl:runperl(): both 'prog' and 'progs' cannot be used " . _where() if defined $args{progs}; $args{progs} = [$args{prog}] } if (defined $args{progs}) { die "test.pl:runperl(): 'progs' must be an ARRAYREF " . _where() unless ref $args{progs} eq "ARRAY"; foreach my $prog (@{$args{progs}}) { if ($is_mswin || $is_netware || $is_vms) { $runperl .= qq ( -e "$prog" ); } else { $runperl .= qq ( -e '$prog' ); } } } elsif (defined $args{progfile}) { $runperl .= qq( "$args{progfile}"); } else { # You probaby didn't want to be sucking in from the upstream stdin die "test.pl:runperl(): none of prog, progs, progfile, args, " . " switches or stdin specified" unless defined $args{args} or defined $args{switches} or defined $args{stdin}; } if (defined $args{stdin}) { # so we don't try to put literal newlines and crs onto the # command line. $args{stdin} =~ s/\n/\\n/g; $args{stdin} =~ s/\r/\\r/g; if ($is_mswin || $is_netware || $is_vms) { $runperl = qq{$Perl -e "print qq(} . $args{stdin} . q{)" | } . $runperl; } elsif ($is_macos) { # MacOS can only do two processes under MPW at once; # the test itself is one; we can't do two more, so # write to temp file my $stdin = qq{$Perl -e 'print qq(} . $args{stdin} . qq{)' > teststdin; }; if ($args{verbose}) { my $stdindisplay = $stdin; $stdindisplay =~ s/\n/\n\#/g; _print_stderr "# $stdindisplay\n"; } `$stdin`; $runperl .= q{ < teststdin }; } else { $runperl = qq{$Perl -e 'print qq(} . $args{stdin} . q{)' | } . $runperl; } } if (defined $args{args}) { _quote_args(\$runperl, $args{args}); } $runperl .= ' 2>&1' if $args{stderr} && !$is_macos; $runperl .= " \xB3 Dev:Null" if !$args{stderr} && $is_macos; if ($args{verbose}) { my $runperldisplay = $runperl; $runperldisplay =~ s/\n/\n\#/g; _print_stderr "# $runperldisplay\n"; } return $runperl; } sub runperl { die "test.pl:runperl() does not take a hashref" if ref $_[0] and ref $_[0] eq 'HASH'; my $runperl = &_create_runperl; my $result; my $tainted = ${^TAINT}; my %args = @_; exists $args{switches} && grep m/^-T$/, @{$args{switches}} and $tainted = $tainted + 1; if ($tainted) { # We will assume that if you're running under -T, you really mean to # run a fresh perl, so we'll brute force launder everything for you my $sep; if (! eval 'require Config; 1') { warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@"; $sep = ':'; } else { $sep = $Config::Config{path_sep}; } my @keys = grep {exists $ENV{$_}} qw(CDPATH IFS ENV BASH_ENV); local @ENV{@keys} = (); # Untaint, plus take out . and empty string: local $ENV{'DCL$PATH'} = $1 if $is_vms && ($ENV{'DCL$PATH'} =~ /(.*)/s); $ENV{PATH} =~ /(.*)/s; local $ENV{PATH} = join $sep, grep { $_ ne "" and $_ ne "." and -d $_ and ($is_mswin or $is_vms or !(stat && (stat _)[2]&0022)) } split quotemeta ($sep), $1; $ENV{PATH} .= "$sep/bin" if $is_cygwin; # Must have /bin under Cygwin $runperl =~ /(.*)/s; $runperl = $1; $result = `$runperl`; } else { $result = `$runperl`; } $result =~ s/\n\n/\n/ if $is_vms; # XXX pipes sometimes double these return $result; } *run_perl = \&runperl; # Nice alias. sub DIE { _print_stderr "# @_\n"; exit 1; } # A somewhat safer version of the sometimes wrong $^X. sub which_perl { unless (defined $Perl) { $Perl = $^X; # VMS should have 'perl' aliased properly return $Perl if $^O eq 'VMS'; my $exe; if (! eval 'require Config; 1') { warn "test.pl had problems loading Config: $@"; $exe = ''; } else { $exe = $Config::Config{_exe}; } $exe = '' unless defined $exe; # This doesn't absolutize the path: beware of future chdirs(). # We could do File::Spec->abs2rel() but that does getcwd()s, # which is a bit heavyweight to do here. if ($Perl =~ /^perl\Q$exe\E$/i) { my $perl = "perl$exe"; if (! eval 'require File::Spec; 1') { warn "test.pl had problems loading File::Spec: $@"; $Perl = "./$perl"; } else { $Perl = File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->curdir(), $perl); } } # Build up the name of the executable file from the name of # the command. if ($Perl !~ /\Q$exe\E$/i) { $Perl .= $exe; } warn "which_perl: cannot find $Perl from $^X" unless -f $Perl; # For subcommands to use. $ENV{PERLEXE} = $Perl; } return $Perl; } sub unlink_all { foreach my $file (@_) { 1 while unlink $file; _print_stderr "# Couldn't unlink '$file': $!\n" if -f $file; } } my %tmpfiles; END { unlink_all keys %tmpfiles } # A regexp that matches the tempfile names $::tempfile_regexp = 'tmp\d+[A-Z][A-Z]?'; # Avoid ++, avoid ranges, avoid split // my @letters = qw(A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z); sub tempfile { my $count = 0; do { my $temp = $count; my $try = "tmp$$"; do { $try .= $letters[$temp % 26]; $temp = int ($temp / 26); } while $temp; # Need to note all the file names we allocated, as a second request may # come before the first is created. if (!-e $try && !$tmpfiles{$try}) { # We have a winner $tmpfiles{$try}++; return $try; } $count = $count + 1; } while $count < 26 * 26; die "Can't find temporary file name starting 'tmp$$'"; } # This is the temporary file for _fresh_perl my $tmpfile = tempfile(); # # _fresh_perl # # The $resolve must be a subref that tests the first argument # for success, or returns the definition of success (e.g. the # expected scalar) if given no arguments. # sub _fresh_perl { my($prog, $resolve, $runperl_args, $name) = @_; $runperl_args ||= {}; $runperl_args->{progfile} = $tmpfile; $runperl_args->{stderr} = 1; open TEST, ">$tmpfile" or die "Cannot open $tmpfile: $!"; # VMS adjustments if( $^O eq 'VMS' ) { $prog =~ s#/dev/null#NL:#; # VMS file locking $prog =~ s{if \(-e _ and -f _ and -r _\)} {if (-e _ and -f _)} } print TEST $prog; close TEST or die "Cannot close $tmpfile: $!"; my $results = runperl(%$runperl_args); my $status = $?; # Clean up the results into something a bit more predictable. $results =~ s/\n+$//; $results =~ s/at\s+$::tempfile_regexp\s+line/at - line/g; $results =~ s/of\s+$::tempfile_regexp\s+aborted/of - aborted/g; # bison says 'parse error' instead of 'syntax error', # various yaccs may or may not capitalize 'syntax'. $results =~ s/^(syntax|parse) error/syntax error/mig; if ($^O eq 'VMS') { # some tests will trigger VMS messages that won't be expected $results =~ s/\n?%[A-Z]+-[SIWEF]-[A-Z]+,.*//; # pipes double these sometimes $results =~ s/\n\n/\n/g; } my $pass = $resolve->($results); unless ($pass) { _diag "# PROG: \n$prog\n"; _diag "# EXPECTED:\n", $resolve->(), "\n"; _diag "# GOT:\n$results\n"; _diag "# STATUS: $status\n"; } # Use the first line of the program as a name if none was given unless( $name ) { ($first_line, $name) = $prog =~ /^((.{1,50}).*)/; $name .= '...' if length $first_line > length $name; } _ok($pass, _where(), "fresh_perl - $name"); } # # fresh_perl_is # # Combination of run_perl() and is(). # sub fresh_perl_is { my($prog, $expected, $runperl_args, $name) = @_; local $Level = 2; _fresh_perl($prog, sub { @_ ? $_[0] eq $expected : $expected }, $runperl_args, $name); } # # fresh_perl_like # # Combination of run_perl() and like(). # sub fresh_perl_like { my($prog, $expected, $runperl_args, $name) = @_; local $Level = 2; _fresh_perl($prog, sub { @_ ? $_[0] =~ (ref $expected ? $expected : /$expected/) : $expected }, $runperl_args, $name); } sub can_ok ($@) { my($proto, @methods) = @_; my $class = ref $proto || $proto; unless( @methods ) { return _ok( 0, _where(), "$class->can(...)" ); } my @nok = (); foreach my $method (@methods) { local($!, $@); # don't interfere with caller's $@ # eval sometimes resets $! eval { $proto->can($method) } || push @nok, $method; } my $name; $name = @methods == 1 ? "$class->can('$methods[0]')" : "$class->can(...)"; _ok( !@nok, _where(), $name ); } sub isa_ok ($$;$) { my($object, $class, $obj_name) = @_; my $diag; $obj_name = 'The object' unless defined $obj_name; my $name = "$obj_name isa $class"; if( !defined $object ) { $diag = "$obj_name isn't defined"; } elsif( !ref $object ) { $diag = "$obj_name isn't a reference"; } else { # We can't use UNIVERSAL::isa because we want to honor isa() overrides local($@, $!); # eval sometimes resets $! my $rslt = eval { $object->isa($class) }; if( $@ ) { if( $@ =~ /^Can't call method "isa" on unblessed reference/ ) { if( !UNIVERSAL::isa($object, $class) ) { my $ref = ref $object; $diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'"; } } else { die <isa on your object and got some weird error. This should never happen. Please contact the author immediately. Here's the error. $@ WHOA } } elsif( !$rslt ) { my $ref = ref $object; $diag = "$obj_name isn't a '$class' it's a '$ref'"; } } _ok( !$diag, _where(), $name ); } # Set a watchdog to timeout the entire test file # NOTE: If the test file uses 'threads', then call the watchdog() function # _AFTER_ the 'threads' module is loaded. sub watchdog ($) { my $timeout = shift; my $timeout_msg = 'Test process timed out - terminating'; my $pid_to_kill = $$; # PID for this process # Don't use a watchdog process if 'threads' is loaded - # use a watchdog thread instead if (! $threads::threads) { # On Windows and VMS, try launching a watchdog process # using system(1, ...) (see perlport.pod) if (($^O eq 'MSWin32') || ($^O eq 'VMS')) { # On Windows, try to get the 'real' PID if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') { eval { require Win32; }; if (defined(&Win32::GetCurrentProcessId)) { $pid_to_kill = Win32::GetCurrentProcessId(); } } # If we still have a fake PID, we can't use this method at all return if ($pid_to_kill <= 0); # Launch watchdog process my $watchdog; eval { local $SIG{'__WARN__'} = sub { _diag("Watchdog warning: $_[0]"); }; my $sig = $^O eq 'VMS' ? 'TERM' : 'KILL'; $watchdog = system(1, which_perl(), '-e', "sleep($timeout);" . "warn('# $timeout_msg\n');" . "kill($sig, $pid_to_kill);"); }; if ($@ || ($watchdog <= 0)) { _diag('Failed to start watchdog'); _diag($@) if $@; undef($watchdog); return; } # Add END block to parent to terminate and # clean up watchdog process eval "END { local \$! = 0; local \$? = 0; wait() if kill('KILL', $watchdog); };"; return; } # Try using fork() to generate a watchdog process my $watchdog; eval { $watchdog = fork() }; if (defined($watchdog)) { if ($watchdog) { # Parent process # Add END block to parent to terminate and # clean up watchdog process eval "END { local \$! = 0; local \$? = 0; wait() if kill('KILL', $watchdog); };"; return; } ### Watchdog process code # Load POSIX if available eval { require POSIX; }; # Execute the timeout sleep($timeout - 2) if ($timeout > 2); # Workaround for perlbug #49073 sleep(2); # Kill test process if still running if (kill(0, $pid_to_kill)) { _diag($timeout_msg); kill('KILL', $pid_to_kill); } # Don't execute END block (added at beginning of this file) $NO_ENDING = 1; # Terminate ourself (i.e., the watchdog) POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit)); exit(1); } # fork() failed - fall through and try using a thread } # Use a watchdog thread because either 'threads' is loaded, # or fork() failed if (eval 'require threads; 1') { threads->create(sub { # Load POSIX if available eval { require POSIX; }; # Execute the timeout my $time_left = $timeout; do { $time_left -= sleep($time_left); } while ($time_left > 0); # Kill the parent (and ourself) select(STDERR); $| = 1; _diag($timeout_msg); POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit)); my $sig = $^O eq 'VMS' ? 'TERM' : 'KILL'; kill($sig, $pid_to_kill); })->detach(); return; } # If everything above fails, then just use an alarm timeout if (eval { alarm($timeout); 1; }) { # Load POSIX if available eval { require POSIX; }; # Alarm handler will do the actual 'killing' $SIG{'ALRM'} = sub { select(STDERR); $| = 1; _diag($timeout_msg); POSIX::_exit(1) if (defined(&POSIX::_exit)); my $sig = $^O eq 'VMS' ? 'TERM' : 'KILL'; kill($sig, $pid_to_kill); }; } } 1; EOS close $fh; }