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#!./perl
BEGIN {
chdir 't' if -d 't';
unshift @INC, "../lib" if -d "../lib";
eval { require Config; import Config; };
unless (defined $Config{'i_grp'} &&
$Config{'i_grp'} eq 'define' &&
-f "/etc/group" ) { # Play safe.
print "1..0\n";
exit 0;
}
if (not defined $where) { # Try NIS.
foreach my $ypcat (qw(/usr/bin/ypcat /bin/ypcat /etc/ypcat)) {
if (-x $ypcat &&
open(GR, "$ypcat group 2>/dev/null |") &&
defined(<GR>)) {
$where = "NIS group";
last;
}
}
}
if (not defined $where) { # Try NetInfo.
foreach my $nidump (qw(/usr/bin/nidump)) {
if (-x $nidump &&
open(GR, "$nidump group . 2>/dev/null |") &&
defined(<GR>)) {
$where = "NetInfo group";
last;
}
}
}
if (not defined $where) { # Try local.
my $GR = "/etc/group";
if (-f $GR && open(GR, $GR) && defined(<GR>)) {
$where = $GR;
}
}
if (not defined $where) { # Give up.
print "1..0\n";
exit 0;
}
}
# By now GR filehandle should be open and full of juicy group entries.
print "1..1\n";
# Go through at most this many groups.
# (note that the first entry has been read away by now)
my $max = 25;
my $n = 0;
my $tst = 1;
my %perfect;
my %seen;
while (<GR>) {
chomp;
my @s = split /:/;
my ($name_s,$passwd_s,$gid_s,$members_s) = @s;
if (@s) {
push @{ $seen{$name_s} }, $.;
} else {
warn "# Your $where line $. is empty.\n";
next;
}
last if $n == $max;
# In principle we could whine if @s != 4 but do we know enough
# of group file formats everywhere?
if (@s == 4) {
$members_s =~ s/\s*,\s*/,/g;
$members_s =~ s/\s+$//;
$members_s =~ s/^\s+//;
@n = getgrgid($gid_s);
# 'nogroup' et al.
next unless @n;
my ($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = @n;
# Protect against one-to-many and many-to-one mappings.
if ($name_s ne $name) {
@n = getgrnam($name_s);
($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = @n;
next if $name_s ne $name;
}
# NOTE: group names *CAN* contain whitespace.
$members =~ s/\s+/,/g;
# what about different orders of members?
$perfect{$name_s}++
if $name eq $name_s and
# Do not compare passwords: think shadow passwords.
# Not that group passwords are used much but better not assume anything.
$gid eq $gid_s and
$members eq $members_s;
}
$n++;
}
if (keys %perfect == 0) {
$max++;
print <<EOEX;
#
# The failure of op/grent test is not necessarily serious.
# It may fail due to local group administration conventions.
# If you are for example using both NIS and local groups,
# test failure is possible. Any distributed group scheme
# can cause such failures.
#
# What the grent test is doing is that it compares the $max first
# entries of $where
# with the results of getgrgid() and getgrnam() call. If it finds no
# matches at all, it suspects something is wrong.
#
EOEX
print "not ";
$not = 1;
} else {
$not = 0;
}
print "ok ", $tst++;
print "\t# (not necessarily serious: run t/op/grent.t by itself)" if $not;
print "\n";
close(GR);
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