|  | # Test framework for git.  See t/README for usage. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # Copyright (c) 2005 Junio C Hamano | 
|  | # | 
|  | # 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 of the License, 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 https://www.gnu.org/licenses/ . | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Test the binaries we have just built.  The tests are kept in | 
|  | # t/ subdirectory and are run in 'trash directory' subdirectory. | 
|  | if test -z "$TEST_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | then | 
|  | # ensure that TEST_DIRECTORY is an absolute path so that it | 
|  | # is valid even if the current working directory is changed | 
|  | TEST_DIRECTORY=$(pwd) | 
|  | else | 
|  | # The TEST_DIRECTORY will always be the path to the "t" | 
|  | # directory in the git.git checkout. This is overridden by | 
|  | # e.g. t/lib-subtest.sh, but only because its $(pwd) is | 
|  | # different. Those tests still set "$TEST_DIRECTORY" to the | 
|  | # same path. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # See use of "$GIT_BUILD_DIR" and "$TEST_DIRECTORY" below for | 
|  | # hard assumptions about "$GIT_BUILD_DIR/t" existing and being | 
|  | # the "$TEST_DIRECTORY", and e.g. "$TEST_DIRECTORY/helper" | 
|  | # needing to exist. | 
|  | TEST_DIRECTORY=$(cd "$TEST_DIRECTORY" && pwd) || exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | GIT_BUILD_DIR="${GIT_BUILD_DIR:-${TEST_DIRECTORY%/t}}" | 
|  | if test "$TEST_DIRECTORY" = "$GIT_BUILD_DIR" | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "PANIC: Running in a $TEST_DIRECTORY that doesn't end in '/t'?" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test -f "$GIT_BUILD_DIR/GIT-BUILD-DIR" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_BUILD_DIR="$(cat "$GIT_BUILD_DIR/GIT-BUILD-DIR")" || exit 1 | 
|  | # On Windows, we must convert Windows paths lest they contain a colon | 
|  | case "$(uname -s)" in | 
|  | *MINGW*) | 
|  | GIT_BUILD_DIR="$(cygpath -au "$GIT_BUILD_DIR")" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Prepend a string to a VAR using an arbitrary ":" delimiter, not | 
|  | # adding the delimiter if VAR or VALUE is empty. I.e. a generalized: | 
|  | # | 
|  | #	VAR=$1${VAR:+${1:+$2}$VAR} | 
|  | # | 
|  | # Usage (using ":" as the $2 delimiter): | 
|  | # | 
|  | #	prepend_var VAR : VALUE | 
|  | prepend_var () { | 
|  | eval "$1=\"$3\${$1:+${3:+$2}\$$1}\"" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # If [AL]SAN is in effect we want to abort so that we notice | 
|  | # problems. The GIT_SAN_OPTIONS variable can be used to set common | 
|  | # defaults shared between [AL]SAN_OPTIONS. | 
|  | prepend_var GIT_SAN_OPTIONS : abort_on_error=1 | 
|  | prepend_var GIT_SAN_OPTIONS : strip_path_prefix="$GIT_BUILD_DIR/" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # If we were built with ASAN, it may complain about leaks | 
|  | # of program-lifetime variables. Disable it by default to lower | 
|  | # the noise level. This needs to happen at the start of the script, | 
|  | # before we even do our "did we build git yet" check (since we don't | 
|  | # want that one to complain to stderr). | 
|  | prepend_var ASAN_OPTIONS : $GIT_SAN_OPTIONS | 
|  | prepend_var ASAN_OPTIONS : detect_leaks=0 | 
|  | export ASAN_OPTIONS | 
|  |  | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : $GIT_SAN_OPTIONS | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : exitcode=0 | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : fast_unwind_on_malloc=0 | 
|  | export LSAN_OPTIONS | 
|  |  | 
|  | prepend_var UBSAN_OPTIONS : $GIT_SAN_OPTIONS | 
|  | export UBSAN_OPTIONS | 
|  |  | 
|  | # The TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be overwritten via GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS. So in | 
|  | # case the caller has manually set up this variable via the environment we must | 
|  | # make sure to not overwrite that value, and thus we save it into | 
|  | # TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_OVERRIDE here. | 
|  | if test -n "$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY" && test -z "$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_OVERRIDE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_OVERRIDE=$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test ! -f "$GIT_BUILD_DIR"/GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo >&2 'error: GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS missing (has Git been built?).' | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | . "$GIT_BUILD_DIR"/GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS | 
|  | export PERL_PATH SHELL_PATH | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | then | 
|  | # Similarly, override this to store the test-results subdir | 
|  | # elsewhere | 
|  | TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY=$TEST_DIRECTORY | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # In t0000, we need to override test directories of nested testcases. In case | 
|  | # the developer has TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY part of his build options, then we'd | 
|  | # reset this value to instead contain what the developer has specified. We thus | 
|  | # have this knob to allow overriding the directory. | 
|  | if test -n "${TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_OVERRIDE}" | 
|  | then | 
|  | TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY="${TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_OVERRIDE}" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Disallow the use of abbreviated options in the test suite by default | 
|  | if test -z "${GIT_TEST_DISALLOW_ABBREVIATED_OPTIONS}" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_TEST_DISALLOW_ABBREVIATED_OPTIONS=true | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_DISALLOW_ABBREVIATED_OPTIONS | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Explicitly set the default branch name for testing, to avoid the | 
|  | # transitory "git init" warning under --verbose. | 
|  | : ${GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME:=master} | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME | 
|  |  | 
|  | ################################################################ | 
|  | # It appears that people try to run tests without building... | 
|  | GIT_BINARY="${GIT_TEST_INSTALLED:-$GIT_BUILD_DIR}/git$X" | 
|  | "$GIT_BINARY" >/dev/null | 
|  | if test $? != 1 | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_TEST_INSTALLED" | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo >&2 "error: there is no working Git at '$GIT_TEST_INSTALLED'" | 
|  | else | 
|  | echo >&2 'error: you do not seem to have built git yet.' | 
|  | fi | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | store_arg_to= | 
|  | opt_required_arg= | 
|  | # $1: option string | 
|  | # $2: name of the var where the arg will be stored | 
|  | mark_option_requires_arg () { | 
|  | if test -n "$opt_required_arg" | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "error: options that require args cannot be bundled" \ | 
|  | "together: '$opt_required_arg' and '$1'" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | opt_required_arg=$1 | 
|  | store_arg_to=$2 | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # These functions can be overridden e.g. to output JUnit XML | 
|  | start_test_output () { :; } | 
|  | start_test_case_output () { :; } | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output () { :; } | 
|  | finalize_test_output () { :; } | 
|  |  | 
|  | parse_option () { | 
|  | local opt="$1" | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$opt" in | 
|  | -d|--d|--de|--deb|--debu|--debug) | 
|  | debug=t ;; | 
|  | -i|--i|--im|--imm|--imme|--immed|--immedi|--immedia|--immediat|--immediate) | 
|  | immediate=t ;; | 
|  | -l|--l|--lo|--lon|--long|--long-|--long-t|--long-te|--long-tes|--long-test|--long-tests) | 
|  | GIT_TEST_LONG=t; export GIT_TEST_LONG ;; | 
|  | -r) | 
|  | mark_option_requires_arg "$opt" run_list | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --run=*) | 
|  | run_list=${opt#--*=} ;; | 
|  | -h|--h|--he|--hel|--help) | 
|  | help=t ;; | 
|  | -v|--v|--ve|--ver|--verb|--verbo|--verbos|--verbose) | 
|  | verbose=t ;; | 
|  | --verbose-only=*) | 
|  | verbose_only=${opt#--*=} | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | -q|--q|--qu|--qui|--quie|--quiet) | 
|  | # Ignore --quiet under a TAP::Harness. Saying how many tests | 
|  | # passed without the ok/not ok details is always an error. | 
|  | test -z "$HARNESS_ACTIVE" && quiet=t ;; | 
|  | --with-dashes) | 
|  | with_dashes=t ;; | 
|  | --no-bin-wrappers) | 
|  | no_bin_wrappers=t ;; | 
|  | --no-color) | 
|  | color= ;; | 
|  | --va|--val|--valg|--valgr|--valgri|--valgrin|--valgrind) | 
|  | valgrind=memcheck | 
|  | tee=t | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --valgrind=*) | 
|  | valgrind=${opt#--*=} | 
|  | tee=t | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --valgrind-only=*) | 
|  | valgrind_only=${opt#--*=} | 
|  | tee=t | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --tee) | 
|  | tee=t ;; | 
|  | --root=*) | 
|  | root=${opt#--*=} ;; | 
|  | --chain-lint) | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT=1 ;; | 
|  | --no-chain-lint) | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT=0 ;; | 
|  | -x) | 
|  | trace=t ;; | 
|  | -V|--verbose-log) | 
|  | verbose_log=t | 
|  | tee=t | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --write-junit-xml) | 
|  | . "$TEST_DIRECTORY/test-lib-junit.sh" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --github-workflow-markup) | 
|  | . "$TEST_DIRECTORY/test-lib-github-workflow-markup.sh" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --stress) | 
|  | stress=t ;; | 
|  | --stress=*) | 
|  | echo "error: --stress does not accept an argument: '$opt'" >&2 | 
|  | echo "did you mean --stress-jobs=${opt#*=} or --stress-limit=${opt#*=}?" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --stress-jobs=*) | 
|  | stress=t; | 
|  | stress_jobs=${opt#--*=} | 
|  | case "$stress_jobs" in | 
|  | *[!0-9]*|0*|"") | 
|  | echo "error: --stress-jobs=<N> requires the number of jobs to run" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *)	# Good. | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --stress-limit=*) | 
|  | stress=t; | 
|  | stress_limit=${opt#--*=} | 
|  | case "$stress_limit" in | 
|  | *[!0-9]*|0*|"") | 
|  | echo "error: --stress-limit=<N> requires the number of repetitions" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *)	# Good. | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | --invert-exit-code) | 
|  | invert_exit_code=t | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | echo "error: unknown test option '$opt'" >&2; exit 1 ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Parse options while taking care to leave $@ intact, so we will still | 
|  | # have all the original command line options when executing the test | 
|  | # script again for '--tee' and '--verbose-log' later. | 
|  | for opt | 
|  | do | 
|  | if test -n "$store_arg_to" | 
|  | then | 
|  | eval $store_arg_to=\$opt | 
|  | store_arg_to= | 
|  | opt_required_arg= | 
|  | continue | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$opt" in | 
|  | --*|-?) | 
|  | parse_option "$opt" ;; | 
|  | -?*) | 
|  | # bundled short options must be fed separately to parse_option | 
|  | opt=${opt#-} | 
|  | while test -n "$opt" | 
|  | do | 
|  | extra=${opt#?} | 
|  | this=${opt%$extra} | 
|  | opt=$extra | 
|  | parse_option "-$this" | 
|  | done | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | echo "error: unknown test option '$opt'" >&2; exit 1 ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | done | 
|  | if test -n "$store_arg_to" | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "error: $opt_required_arg requires an argument" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$valgrind_only" | 
|  | then | 
|  | test -z "$valgrind" && valgrind=memcheck | 
|  | test -z "$verbose" && verbose_only="$valgrind_only" | 
|  | elif test -n "$valgrind" | 
|  | then | 
|  | test -z "$verbose_log" && verbose=t | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$stress" | 
|  | then | 
|  | verbose=t | 
|  | trace=t | 
|  | immediate=t | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | TEST_STRESS_JOB_SFX="${GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR:+.stress-$GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR}" | 
|  | TEST_NAME="$(basename "$0" .sh)" | 
|  | TEST_NUMBER="${TEST_NAME%%-*}" | 
|  | TEST_NUMBER="${TEST_NUMBER#t}" | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_DIR="$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY/test-results" | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_BASE="$TEST_RESULTS_DIR/$TEST_NAME$TEST_STRESS_JOB_SFX" | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE_PFX=trace | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR_SFX=leak | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE= | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR="$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR_SFX" | 
|  | TRASH_DIRECTORY="trash directory.$TEST_NAME$TEST_STRESS_JOB_SFX" | 
|  | test -n "$root" && TRASH_DIRECTORY="$root/$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | case "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" in | 
|  | /*) ;; # absolute path is good | 
|  | *) TRASH_DIRECTORY="$TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY/$TRASH_DIRECTORY" ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | # If --stress was passed, run this test repeatedly in several parallel loops. | 
|  | if test "$GIT_TEST_STRESS_STARTED" = "done" | 
|  | then | 
|  | : # Don't stress test again. | 
|  | elif test -n "$stress" | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test -n "$stress_jobs" | 
|  | then | 
|  | job_count=$stress_jobs | 
|  | elif test -n "$GIT_TEST_STRESS_LOAD" | 
|  | then | 
|  | job_count="$GIT_TEST_STRESS_LOAD" | 
|  | elif job_count=$(getconf _NPROCESSORS_ONLN 2>/dev/null) && | 
|  | test -n "$job_count" | 
|  | then | 
|  | job_count=$((2 * $job_count)) | 
|  | else | 
|  | job_count=8 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | mkdir -p "$TEST_RESULTS_DIR" | 
|  | stressfail="$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.stress-failed" | 
|  | rm -f "$stressfail" | 
|  |  | 
|  | stress_exit=0 | 
|  | trap ' | 
|  | kill $job_pids 2>/dev/null | 
|  | wait | 
|  | stress_exit=1 | 
|  | ' TERM INT HUP | 
|  |  | 
|  | job_pids= | 
|  | job_nr=0 | 
|  | while test $job_nr -lt "$job_count" | 
|  | do | 
|  | ( | 
|  | GIT_TEST_STRESS_STARTED=done | 
|  | GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR=$job_nr | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_STRESS_STARTED GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR | 
|  |  | 
|  | trap ' | 
|  | kill $test_pid 2>/dev/null | 
|  | wait | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ' TERM INT | 
|  |  | 
|  | cnt=1 | 
|  | while ! test -e "$stressfail" && | 
|  | { test -z "$stress_limit" || | 
|  | test $cnt -le $stress_limit ; } | 
|  | do | 
|  | $TEST_SHELL_PATH "$0" "$@" >"$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.stress-$job_nr.out" 2>&1 & | 
|  | test_pid=$! | 
|  |  | 
|  | if wait $test_pid | 
|  | then | 
|  | printf "OK   %2d.%d\n" $GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR $cnt | 
|  | else | 
|  | echo $GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR >>"$stressfail" | 
|  | printf "FAIL %2d.%d\n" $GIT_TEST_STRESS_JOB_NR $cnt | 
|  | fi | 
|  | cnt=$(($cnt + 1)) | 
|  | done | 
|  | ) & | 
|  | job_pids="$job_pids $!" | 
|  | job_nr=$(($job_nr + 1)) | 
|  | done | 
|  |  | 
|  | wait | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -f "$stressfail" | 
|  | then | 
|  | stress_exit=1 | 
|  | echo "Log(s) of failed test run(s):" | 
|  | for failed_job_nr in $(sort -n "$stressfail") | 
|  | do | 
|  | echo "Contents of '$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.stress-$failed_job_nr.out':" | 
|  | cat "$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.stress-$failed_job_nr.out" | 
|  | done | 
|  | rm -rf "$TRASH_DIRECTORY.stress-failed" | 
|  | # Move the last one. | 
|  | mv "$TRASH_DIRECTORY.stress-$failed_job_nr" "$TRASH_DIRECTORY.stress-failed" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | exit $stress_exit | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # if --tee was passed, write the output not only to the terminal, but | 
|  | # additionally to the file test-results/$BASENAME.out, too. | 
|  | if test "$GIT_TEST_TEE_STARTED" = "done" | 
|  | then | 
|  | : # do not redirect again | 
|  | elif test -n "$tee" | 
|  | then | 
|  | mkdir -p "$TEST_RESULTS_DIR" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Make this filename available to the sub-process in case it is using | 
|  | # --verbose-log. | 
|  | GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE=$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.out | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Truncate before calling "tee -a" to get rid of the results | 
|  | # from any previous runs. | 
|  | >"$GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE" | 
|  |  | 
|  | (GIT_TEST_TEE_STARTED=done ${TEST_SHELL_PATH} "$0" "$@" 2>&1; | 
|  | echo $? >"$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.exit") | tee -a "$GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE" | 
|  | test "$(cat "$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.exit")" = 0 | 
|  | exit | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$trace" && test -n "$test_untraceable" | 
|  | then | 
|  | # '-x' tracing requested, but this test script can't be reliably | 
|  | # traced, unless it is run with a Bash version supporting | 
|  | # BASH_XTRACEFD (introduced in Bash v4.1). | 
|  | # | 
|  | # Perform this version check _after_ the test script was | 
|  | # potentially re-executed with $TEST_SHELL_PATH for '--tee' or | 
|  | # '--verbose-log', so the right shell is checked and the | 
|  | # warning is issued only once. | 
|  | if test -n "$BASH_VERSION" && eval ' | 
|  | test ${BASH_VERSINFO[0]} -gt 4 || { | 
|  | test ${BASH_VERSINFO[0]} -eq 4 && | 
|  | test ${BASH_VERSINFO[1]} -ge 1 | 
|  | } | 
|  | ' | 
|  | then | 
|  | : Executed by a Bash version supporting BASH_XTRACEFD.  Good. | 
|  | else | 
|  | echo >&2 "# warning: ignoring -x; '$0' is untraceable without BASH_XTRACEFD" | 
|  | trace= | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test -n "$trace" && test -z "$verbose_log" | 
|  | then | 
|  | verbose=t | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Since bash 5.0, checkwinsize is enabled by default which does | 
|  | # update the COLUMNS variable every time a non-builtin command | 
|  | # completes, even for non-interactive shells. | 
|  | # Disable that since we are aiming for repeatability. | 
|  | test -n "$BASH_VERSION" && shopt -u checkwinsize 2>/dev/null | 
|  |  | 
|  | # For repeatability, reset the environment to known value. | 
|  | # TERM is sanitized below, after saving color control sequences. | 
|  | LANG=C | 
|  | LC_ALL=C | 
|  | PAGER=cat | 
|  | TZ=UTC | 
|  | COLUMNS=80 | 
|  | export LANG LC_ALL PAGER TZ COLUMNS | 
|  | EDITOR=: | 
|  |  | 
|  | # A call to "unset" with no arguments causes at least Solaris 10 | 
|  | # /usr/xpg4/bin/sh and /bin/ksh to bail out.  So keep the unsets | 
|  | # deriving from the command substitution clustered with the other | 
|  | # ones. | 
|  | unset VISUAL EMAIL LANGUAGE $(env | sed -n \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_TRACE/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_DEBUG/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_TEST/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_.*_TEST/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_PROVE/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_VALGRIND/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_UNZIP/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_PERF_/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_CURL_VERBOSE/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_TRACE_CURL/d' \ | 
|  | -e '/^GIT_BUILD_DIR/d' \ | 
|  | -e 's/^\(GIT_[^=]*\)=.*/\1/p' | 
|  | ) | 
|  | unset XDG_CACHE_HOME | 
|  | unset XDG_CONFIG_HOME | 
|  | unset GITPERLLIB | 
|  | unset GIT_TRACE2_PARENT_NAME | 
|  | unset GIT_TRACE2_PARENT_SID | 
|  | TEST_AUTHOR_LOCALNAME=author | 
|  | TEST_AUTHOR_DOMAIN=example.com | 
|  | GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL=${TEST_AUTHOR_LOCALNAME}@${TEST_AUTHOR_DOMAIN} | 
|  | GIT_AUTHOR_NAME='A U Thor' | 
|  | GIT_AUTHOR_DATE='1112354055 +0200' | 
|  | TEST_COMMITTER_LOCALNAME=committer | 
|  | TEST_COMMITTER_DOMAIN=example.com | 
|  | GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL=${TEST_COMMITTER_LOCALNAME}@${TEST_COMMITTER_DOMAIN} | 
|  | GIT_COMMITTER_NAME='C O Mitter' | 
|  | GIT_COMMITTER_DATE='1112354055 +0200' | 
|  | GIT_MERGE_VERBOSITY=5 | 
|  | GIT_MERGE_AUTOEDIT=no | 
|  | export GIT_MERGE_VERBOSITY GIT_MERGE_AUTOEDIT | 
|  | export GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL GIT_AUTHOR_NAME | 
|  | export GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL GIT_COMMITTER_NAME | 
|  | export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE GIT_AUTHOR_DATE | 
|  | export EDITOR | 
|  |  | 
|  | GIT_TEST_BUILTIN_HASH=$("$GIT_BINARY" version --build-options | sed -ne 's/^default-hash: //p') | 
|  | GIT_DEFAULT_HASH="${GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_HASH:-$GIT_TEST_BUILTIN_HASH}" | 
|  | export GIT_DEFAULT_HASH | 
|  | GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT="${GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT:-files}" | 
|  | export GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Tests using GIT_TRACE typically don't want <timestamp> <file>:<line> output | 
|  | GIT_TRACE_BARE=1 | 
|  | export GIT_TRACE_BARE | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Some tests scan the GIT_TRACE2_EVENT feed for events, but the | 
|  | # default depth is 2, which frequently causes issues when the | 
|  | # events are wrapped in new regions. Set it to a sufficiently | 
|  | # large depth to avoid custom changes in the test suite. | 
|  | GIT_TRACE2_EVENT_NESTING=100 | 
|  | export GIT_TRACE2_EVENT_NESTING | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Use specific version of the index file format | 
|  | if test -n "${GIT_TEST_INDEX_VERSION:+isset}" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_INDEX_VERSION="$GIT_TEST_INDEX_VERSION" | 
|  | export GIT_INDEX_VERSION | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_TEST_PERL_FATAL_WARNINGS" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_PERL_FATAL_WARNINGS=1 | 
|  | export GIT_PERL_FATAL_WARNINGS | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | case $GIT_TEST_FSYNC in | 
|  | '') | 
|  | GIT_TEST_FSYNC=0 | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_FSYNC | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Protect ourselves from common misconfiguration to export | 
|  | # CDPATH into the environment | 
|  | unset CDPATH | 
|  |  | 
|  | unset GREP_OPTIONS | 
|  | unset UNZIP | 
|  |  | 
|  | case $(echo $GIT_TRACE |tr "[A-Z]" "[a-z]") in | 
|  | 1|2|true) | 
|  | GIT_TRACE=4 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Line feed | 
|  | LF=' | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Single quote | 
|  | SQ=\' | 
|  |  | 
|  | # UTF-8 ZERO WIDTH NON-JOINER, which HFS+ ignores | 
|  | # when case-folding filenames | 
|  | u200c=$(printf '\342\200\214') | 
|  |  | 
|  | export _x05 _x35 LF u200c EMPTY_TREE EMPTY_BLOB ZERO_OID OID_REGEX | 
|  |  | 
|  | test "x$TERM" != "xdumb" && ( | 
|  | test -t 1 && | 
|  | tput bold >/dev/null 2>&1 && | 
|  | tput setaf 1 >/dev/null 2>&1 && | 
|  | tput sgr0 >/dev/null 2>&1 | 
|  | ) && | 
|  | color=t | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$color" | 
|  | then | 
|  | # Save the color control sequences now rather than run tput | 
|  | # each time say_color() is called.  This is done for two | 
|  | # reasons: | 
|  | #   * TERM will be changed to dumb | 
|  | #   * HOME will be changed to a temporary directory and tput | 
|  | #     might need to read ~/.terminfo from the original HOME | 
|  | #     directory to get the control sequences | 
|  | # Note:  This approach assumes the control sequences don't end | 
|  | # in a newline for any terminal of interest (command | 
|  | # substitutions strip trailing newlines).  Given that most | 
|  | # (all?) terminals in common use are related to ECMA-48, this | 
|  | # shouldn't be a problem. | 
|  | say_color_error=$(tput bold; tput setaf 1) # bold red | 
|  | say_color_skip=$(tput setaf 4) # blue | 
|  | say_color_warn=$(tput setaf 3) # brown/yellow | 
|  | say_color_pass=$(tput setaf 2) # green | 
|  | say_color_info=$(tput setaf 6) # cyan | 
|  | say_color_reset=$(tput sgr0) | 
|  | say_color_="" # no formatting for normal text | 
|  | say_color () { | 
|  | test -z "$1" && test -n "$quiet" && return | 
|  | eval "say_color_color=\$say_color_$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | printf "%s\\n" "$say_color_color$*$say_color_reset" | 
|  | } | 
|  | else | 
|  | say_color() { | 
|  | test -z "$1" && test -n "$quiet" && return | 
|  | shift | 
|  | printf "%s\n" "$*" | 
|  | } | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | USER_TERM="$TERM" | 
|  | TERM=dumb | 
|  | export TERM USER_TERM | 
|  |  | 
|  | # What is written by tests to stdout and stderr is sent to different places | 
|  | # depending on the test mode (e.g. /dev/null in non-verbose mode, piped to tee | 
|  | # with --tee option, etc.). We save the original stdin to FD #6 and stdout and | 
|  | # stderr to #5 and #7, so that the test framework can use them (e.g. for | 
|  | # printing errors within the test framework) independently of the test mode. | 
|  | exec 5>&1 | 
|  | exec 6<&0 | 
|  | exec 7>&2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | _error_exit () { | 
|  | finalize_test_output | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | error () { | 
|  | say_color error "error: $*" | 
|  | _error_exit | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUG () { | 
|  | error >&7 "bug in the test script: $*" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | BAIL_OUT () { | 
|  | test $# -ne 1 && BUG "1 param" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Do not change "Bail out! " string. It's part of TAP syntax: | 
|  | # https://testanything.org/tap-specification.html | 
|  | local bail_out="Bail out! " | 
|  | local message="$1" | 
|  |  | 
|  | say_color >&5 error $bail_out "$message" | 
|  | _error_exit | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | say () { | 
|  | say_color info "$*" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$HARNESS_ACTIVE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test "$verbose" = t || test -n "$verbose_only" | 
|  | then | 
|  | BAIL_OUT 'verbose mode forbidden under TAP harness; try --verbose-log' | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | test "${test_description}" != "" || | 
|  | error "Test script did not set test_description." | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$help" = "t" | 
|  | then | 
|  | printf '%s\n' "$test_description" | 
|  | exit 0 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$verbose_log" = "t" | 
|  | then | 
|  | exec 3>>"$GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE" 4>&3 | 
|  | elif test "$verbose" = "t" | 
|  | then | 
|  | exec 4>&2 3>&2 | 
|  | else | 
|  | exec 4>/dev/null 3>/dev/null | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Send any "-x" output directly to stderr to avoid polluting tests | 
|  | # which capture stderr. We can do this unconditionally since it | 
|  | # has no effect if tracing isn't turned on. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # Note that this sets up the trace fd as soon as we assign the variable, so it | 
|  | # must come after the creation of descriptor 4 above. Likewise, we must never | 
|  | # unset this, as it has the side effect of closing descriptor 4, which we | 
|  | # use to show verbose tests to the user. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # Note also that we don't need or want to export it. The tracing is local to | 
|  | # this shell, and we would not want to influence any shells we exec. | 
|  | BASH_XTRACEFD=4 | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_failure=0 | 
|  | test_count=0 | 
|  | test_fixed=0 | 
|  | test_broken=0 | 
|  | test_success=0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_missing_prereq= | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_external_has_tap=0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | die () { | 
|  | code=$? | 
|  | # This is responsible for running the atexit commands even when a | 
|  | # test script run with '--immediate' fails, or when the user hits | 
|  | # ctrl-C, i.e. when 'test_done' is not invoked at all. | 
|  | test_atexit_handler || code=$? | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_EXIT_OK" | 
|  | then | 
|  | exit $code | 
|  | else | 
|  | echo >&5 "FATAL: Unexpected exit with code $code" | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK= | 
|  | trap 'die' EXIT | 
|  | # Disable '-x' tracing, because with some shells, notably dash, it | 
|  | # prevents running the cleanup commands when a test script run with | 
|  | # '--verbose-log -x' is interrupted. | 
|  | trap '{ code=$?; set +x; } 2>/dev/null; exit $code' INT TERM HUP | 
|  |  | 
|  | # The user-facing functions are loaded from a separate file so that | 
|  | # test_perf subshells can have them too | 
|  | . "$TEST_DIRECTORY/test-lib-functions.sh" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # You are not expected to call test_ok_ and test_failure_ directly, use | 
|  | # the test_expect_* functions instead. | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_ok_ () { | 
|  | test_success=$(($test_success + 1)) | 
|  | say_color "" "ok $test_count - $@" | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output ok "$@" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | _invert_exit_code_failure_end_blurb () { | 
|  | say_color warn "# faked up failures as TODO & now exiting with 0 due to --invert-exit-code" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_failure_ () { | 
|  | failure_label=$1 | 
|  | test_failure=$(($test_failure + 1)) | 
|  | local pfx="" | 
|  | if test -n "$invert_exit_code" # && test -n "$HARNESS_ACTIVE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | pfx="# TODO induced breakage (--invert-exit-code):" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | say_color error "not ok $test_count - ${pfx:+$pfx }$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | printf '%s\n' "$*" | sed -e 's/^/#	/' | 
|  | if test -n "$immediate" | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color error "1..$test_count" | 
|  | if test -n "$invert_exit_code" | 
|  | then | 
|  | finalize_test_output | 
|  | _invert_exit_code_failure_end_blurb | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 0 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | check_test_results_san_file_ "$test_failure" | 
|  | _error_exit | 
|  | fi | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output failure "$failure_label" "$@" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_known_broken_ok_ () { | 
|  | test_fixed=$(($test_fixed+1)) | 
|  | say_color error "ok $test_count - $1 # TODO known breakage vanished" | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output fixed "$1" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_known_broken_failure_ () { | 
|  | test_broken=$(($test_broken+1)) | 
|  | say_color warn "not ok $test_count - $1 # TODO known breakage" | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output broken "$1" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_debug () { | 
|  | test "$debug" = "" || eval "$1" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | match_pattern_list () { | 
|  | arg="$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | test -z "$*" && return 1 | 
|  | # We need to use "$*" to get field-splitting, but we want to | 
|  | # disable globbing, since we are matching against an arbitrary | 
|  | # $arg, not what's in the filesystem. Using "set -f" accomplishes | 
|  | # that, but we must do it in a subshell to avoid impacting the | 
|  | # rest of the script. The exit value of the subshell becomes | 
|  | # the function's return value. | 
|  | ( | 
|  | set -f | 
|  | for pattern_ in $* | 
|  | do | 
|  | case "$arg" in | 
|  | $pattern_) | 
|  | exit 0 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | done | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | match_test_selector_list () { | 
|  | operation="$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | title="$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | arg="$1" | 
|  | shift | 
|  | test -z "$1" && return 0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Commas are accepted as separators. | 
|  | OLDIFS=$IFS | 
|  | IFS=',' | 
|  | set -- $1 | 
|  | IFS=$OLDIFS | 
|  |  | 
|  | # If the first selector is negative we include by default. | 
|  | include= | 
|  | case "$1" in | 
|  | !*) include=t ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | for selector | 
|  | do | 
|  | orig_selector=$selector | 
|  |  | 
|  | positive=t | 
|  | case "$selector" in | 
|  | !*) | 
|  | positive= | 
|  | selector=${selector##?} | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | test -z "$selector" && continue | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$selector" in | 
|  | *-*) | 
|  | if expr "z${selector%%-*}" : "z[0-9]*[^0-9]" >/dev/null | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "error: $operation: invalid non-numeric in range" \ | 
|  | "start: '$orig_selector'" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if expr "z${selector#*-}" : "z[0-9]*[^0-9]" >/dev/null | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "error: $operation: invalid non-numeric in range" \ | 
|  | "end: '$orig_selector'" >&2 | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | if expr "z$selector" : "z[0-9]*[^0-9]" >/dev/null | 
|  | then | 
|  | case "$title" in *${selector}*) | 
|  | include=$positive | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | continue | 
|  | fi | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Short cut for "obvious" cases | 
|  | test -z "$include" && test -z "$positive" && continue | 
|  | test -n "$include" && test -n "$positive" && continue | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$selector" in | 
|  | -*) | 
|  | if test $arg -le ${selector#-} | 
|  | then | 
|  | include=$positive | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *-) | 
|  | if test $arg -ge ${selector%-} | 
|  | then | 
|  | include=$positive | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *-*) | 
|  | if test ${selector%%-*} -le $arg \ | 
|  | && test $arg -le ${selector#*-} | 
|  | then | 
|  | include=$positive | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | if test $arg -eq $selector | 
|  | then | 
|  | include=$positive | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | done | 
|  |  | 
|  | test -n "$include" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | maybe_teardown_verbose () { | 
|  | test -z "$verbose_only" && return | 
|  | exec 4>/dev/null 3>/dev/null | 
|  | verbose= | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | last_verbose=t | 
|  | maybe_setup_verbose () { | 
|  | test -z "$verbose_only" && return | 
|  | if match_pattern_list $test_count "$verbose_only" | 
|  | then | 
|  | exec 4>&2 3>&2 | 
|  | # Emit a delimiting blank line when going from | 
|  | # non-verbose to verbose.  Within verbose mode the | 
|  | # delimiter is printed by test_expect_*.  The choice | 
|  | # of the initial $last_verbose is such that before | 
|  | # test 1, we do not print it. | 
|  | test -z "$last_verbose" && echo >&3 "" | 
|  | verbose=t | 
|  | else | 
|  | exec 4>/dev/null 3>/dev/null | 
|  | verbose= | 
|  | fi | 
|  | last_verbose=$verbose | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | maybe_teardown_valgrind () { | 
|  | test -z "$GIT_VALGRIND" && return | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED= | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | maybe_setup_valgrind () { | 
|  | test -z "$GIT_VALGRIND" && return | 
|  | if test -z "$valgrind_only" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED=t | 
|  | return | 
|  | fi | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED= | 
|  | if match_pattern_list $test_count "$valgrind_only" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED=t | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | trace_level_=0 | 
|  | want_trace () { | 
|  | test "$trace" = t && { | 
|  | test "$verbose" = t || test "$verbose_log" = t | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # This is a separate function because some tests use | 
|  | # "return" to end a test_expect_success block early | 
|  | # (and we want to make sure we run any cleanup like | 
|  | # "set +x"). | 
|  | test_eval_inner_ () { | 
|  | eval "$*" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_eval_ () { | 
|  | # If "-x" tracing is in effect, then we want to avoid polluting stderr | 
|  | # with non-test commands. But once in "set -x" mode, we cannot prevent | 
|  | # the shell from printing the "set +x" to turn it off (nor the saving | 
|  | # of $? before that). But we can make sure that the output goes to | 
|  | # /dev/null. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # There are a few subtleties here: | 
|  | # | 
|  | #   - we have to redirect descriptor 4 in addition to 2, to cover | 
|  | #     BASH_XTRACEFD | 
|  | # | 
|  | #   - the actual eval has to come before the redirection block (since | 
|  | #     it needs to see descriptor 4 to set up its stderr) | 
|  | # | 
|  | #   - likewise, any error message we print must be outside the block to | 
|  | #     access descriptor 4 | 
|  | # | 
|  | #   - checking $? has to come immediately after the eval, but it must | 
|  | #     be _inside_ the block to avoid polluting the "set -x" output | 
|  | # | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Do not add anything extra (including LF) after '$*' | 
|  | test_eval_inner_ </dev/null >&3 2>&4 " | 
|  | want_trace && trace_level_=$(($trace_level_+1)) && set -x | 
|  | $*" | 
|  | { | 
|  | test_eval_ret_=$? | 
|  | if want_trace | 
|  | then | 
|  | test 1 = $trace_level_ && set +x | 
|  | trace_level_=$(($trace_level_-1)) | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } 2>/dev/null 4>&2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$test_eval_ret_" != 0 && want_trace | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color error >&4 "error: last command exited with \$?=$test_eval_ret_" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | return $test_eval_ret_ | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fail_117 () { | 
|  | return 117 | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_run_ () { | 
|  | test_cleanup=: | 
|  | expecting_failure=$2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "${GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT:-1}" != 0; then | 
|  | # 117 is magic because it is unlikely to match the exit | 
|  | # code of other programs | 
|  | test_eval_inner_ "fail_117 && $1" </dev/null >&3 2>&4 | 
|  | if test $? != 117 | 
|  | then | 
|  | BUG "broken &&-chain: $1" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | setup_malloc_check | 
|  | test_eval_ "$1" | 
|  | eval_ret=$? | 
|  | teardown_malloc_check | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$immediate" || test $eval_ret = 0 || | 
|  | test -n "$expecting_failure" && test "$test_cleanup" != ":" | 
|  | then | 
|  | setup_malloc_check | 
|  | test_eval_ "$test_cleanup" | 
|  | teardown_malloc_check | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test "$verbose" = "t" && test -n "$HARNESS_ACTIVE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | return "$eval_ret" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_start_ () { | 
|  | test_count=$(($test_count+1)) | 
|  | maybe_setup_verbose | 
|  | maybe_setup_valgrind | 
|  | start_test_case_output "$@" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_finish_ () { | 
|  | echo >&3 "" | 
|  | maybe_teardown_valgrind | 
|  | maybe_teardown_verbose | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_TEST_TEE_OFFSET" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_TEST_TEE_OFFSET=$(test-tool path-utils file-size \ | 
|  | "$GIT_TEST_TEE_OUTPUT_FILE") | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_skip () { | 
|  | to_skip= | 
|  | skipped_reason= | 
|  | if match_pattern_list $this_test.$test_count "$GIT_SKIP_TESTS" | 
|  | then | 
|  | to_skip=t | 
|  | skipped_reason="GIT_SKIP_TESTS" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test -z "$to_skip" && test -n "$run_list" && | 
|  | ! match_test_selector_list '--run' "$1" $test_count "$run_list" | 
|  | then | 
|  | to_skip=t | 
|  | skipped_reason="--run" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test -z "$to_skip" && test -n "$test_prereq" && | 
|  | ! test_have_prereq "$test_prereq" | 
|  | then | 
|  | to_skip=t | 
|  |  | 
|  | of_prereq= | 
|  | if test "$missing_prereq" != "$test_prereq" | 
|  | then | 
|  | of_prereq=" of $test_prereq" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | skipped_reason="missing $missing_prereq${of_prereq}" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Keep a list of all the missing prereq for result aggregation | 
|  | if test -z "$missing_prereq" | 
|  | then | 
|  | test_missing_prereq=$missing_prereq | 
|  | else | 
|  | test_missing_prereq="$test_missing_prereq,$missing_prereq" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$to_skip" in | 
|  | t) | 
|  |  | 
|  | say_color skip "ok $test_count # skip $1 ($skipped_reason)" | 
|  | : true | 
|  | finalize_test_case_output skip "$@" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | false | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # stub; perf-lib overrides it | 
|  | test_at_end_hook_ () { | 
|  | : | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_atexit_cleanup=: | 
|  | test_atexit_handler () { | 
|  | # In a succeeding test script 'test_atexit_handler' is invoked | 
|  | # twice: first from 'test_done', then from 'die' in the trap on | 
|  | # EXIT. | 
|  | # This condition and resetting 'test_atexit_cleanup' below makes | 
|  | # sure that the registered cleanup commands are run only once. | 
|  | test : != "$test_atexit_cleanup" || return 0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | setup_malloc_check | 
|  | test_eval_ "$test_atexit_cleanup" | 
|  | test_atexit_cleanup=: | 
|  | teardown_malloc_check | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | check_test_results_san_file_has_entries_ () { | 
|  | test -z "$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE" && return 1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Lines marked with DEDUP_TOKEN show unique leaks. We only care that we | 
|  | # found at least one. | 
|  | # | 
|  | # But also suppress any false positives caused by bugs or races in the | 
|  | # sanitizer itself. | 
|  | grep -s ^DEDUP_TOKEN "$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE".* | | 
|  | grep -qv sanitizer::GetThreadStackTopAndBottom | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | check_test_results_san_file_ () { | 
|  | if ! check_test_results_san_file_has_entries_ | 
|  | then | 
|  | return | 
|  | fi && | 
|  | say_color error "$(cat "$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE".*)" && | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$test_failure" = 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | say "Our logs revealed a memory leak, exit non-zero!" && | 
|  | invert_exit_code=t | 
|  | else | 
|  | say "Our logs revealed a memory leak..." | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_done () { | 
|  | # Run the atexit commands _before_ the trash directory is | 
|  | # removed, so the commands can access pidfiles and socket files. | 
|  | test_atexit_handler | 
|  |  | 
|  | finalize_test_output | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$HARNESS_ACTIVE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | mkdir -p "$TEST_RESULTS_DIR" | 
|  |  | 
|  | cat >"$TEST_RESULTS_BASE.counts" <<-EOF | 
|  | total $test_count | 
|  | success $test_success | 
|  | fixed $test_fixed | 
|  | broken $test_broken | 
|  | failed $test_failure | 
|  | missing_prereq $test_missing_prereq | 
|  |  | 
|  | EOF | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$test_fixed" != 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color error "# $test_fixed known breakage(s) vanished; please update test(s)" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test "$test_broken" != 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color warn "# still have $test_broken known breakage(s)" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | if test "$test_broken" != 0 || test "$test_fixed" != 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | test_remaining=$(( $test_count - $test_broken - $test_fixed )) | 
|  | msg="remaining $test_remaining test(s)" | 
|  | else | 
|  | test_remaining=$test_count | 
|  | msg="$test_count test(s)" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | case "$test_failure" in | 
|  | 0) | 
|  | if test $test_remaining -gt 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color pass "# passed all $msg" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Maybe print SKIP message | 
|  | test -z "$skip_all" || skip_all="# SKIP $skip_all" | 
|  | case "$test_count" in | 
|  | 0) | 
|  | say "1..$test_count${skip_all:+ $skip_all}" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | test -z "$skip_all" || | 
|  | say_color warn "$skip_all" | 
|  | say "1..$test_count" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$stress" && test -n "$invert_exit_code" | 
|  | then | 
|  | # We're about to move our "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | # to "$TRASH_DIRECTORY.stress-failed" if | 
|  | # --stress is combined with | 
|  | # --invert-exit-code. | 
|  | say "with --stress and --invert-exit-code we're not removing '$TRASH_DIRECTORY'" | 
|  | elif test -z "$debug" && test -n "$remove_trash" | 
|  | then | 
|  | test -d "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" || | 
|  | error "Tests passed but trash directory already removed before test cleanup; aborting" | 
|  |  | 
|  | cd "$TRASH_DIRECTORY/.." && | 
|  | rm -fr "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" || { | 
|  | # try again in a bit | 
|  | sleep 5; | 
|  | rm -fr "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | } || | 
|  | error "Tests passed but test cleanup failed; aborting" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | check_test_results_san_file_ "$test_failure" | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "$test_fixed" != 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test -z "$invert_exit_code" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  | elif test -z "$skip_all" && test -n "$invert_exit_code" | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color warn "# faking up non-zero exit with --invert-exit-code" | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_at_end_hook_ | 
|  |  | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 0 ;; | 
|  |  | 
|  | *) | 
|  | say_color error "# failed $test_failure among $msg" | 
|  | say "1..$test_count" | 
|  |  | 
|  | check_test_results_san_file_ "$test_failure" | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$invert_exit_code" | 
|  | then | 
|  | _invert_exit_code_failure_end_blurb | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 0 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | GIT_EXIT_OK=t | 
|  | exit 1 ;; | 
|  |  | 
|  | esac | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$valgrind" | 
|  | then | 
|  | make_symlink () { | 
|  | test -h "$2" && | 
|  | test "$1" = "$(readlink "$2")" || { | 
|  | # be super paranoid | 
|  | if mkdir "$2".lock | 
|  | then | 
|  | rm -f "$2" && | 
|  | ln -s "$1" "$2" && | 
|  | rm -r "$2".lock | 
|  | else | 
|  | while test -d "$2".lock | 
|  | do | 
|  | say "Waiting for lock on $2." | 
|  | sleep 1 | 
|  | done | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | make_valgrind_symlink () { | 
|  | # handle only executables, unless they are shell libraries that | 
|  | # need to be in the exec-path. | 
|  | test -x "$1" || | 
|  | test "# " = "$(test_copy_bytes 2 <"$1")" || | 
|  | return; | 
|  |  | 
|  | base=$(basename "$1") | 
|  | case "$base" in | 
|  | test-*) | 
|  | symlink_target="$GIT_BUILD_DIR/t/helper/$base" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | symlink_target="$GIT_BUILD_DIR/$base" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | # do not override scripts | 
|  | if test -x "$symlink_target" && | 
|  | test ! -d "$symlink_target" && | 
|  | test "#!" != "$(test_copy_bytes 2 <"$symlink_target")" | 
|  | then | 
|  | symlink_target=../valgrind.sh | 
|  | fi | 
|  | case "$base" in | 
|  | *.sh|*.perl) | 
|  | symlink_target=../unprocessed-script | 
|  | esac | 
|  | # create the link, or replace it if it is out of date | 
|  | make_symlink "$symlink_target" "$GIT_VALGRIND/bin/$base" || exit | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # override all git executables in TEST_DIRECTORY/.. | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND=$TEST_DIRECTORY/valgrind | 
|  | mkdir -p "$GIT_VALGRIND"/bin | 
|  | for file in $GIT_BUILD_DIR/git* $GIT_BUILD_DIR/t/helper/test-* | 
|  | do | 
|  | make_valgrind_symlink $file | 
|  | done | 
|  | # special-case the mergetools loadables | 
|  | make_symlink "$GIT_BUILD_DIR"/mergetools "$GIT_VALGRIND/bin/mergetools" | 
|  | OLDIFS=$IFS | 
|  | IFS=: | 
|  | for path in $PATH | 
|  | do | 
|  | ls "$path"/git-* 2> /dev/null | | 
|  | while read file | 
|  | do | 
|  | make_valgrind_symlink "$file" | 
|  | done | 
|  | done | 
|  | IFS=$OLDIFS | 
|  | PATH=$GIT_VALGRIND/bin:$PATH | 
|  | GIT_EXEC_PATH=$GIT_VALGRIND/bin | 
|  | export GIT_VALGRIND | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_MODE="$valgrind" | 
|  | export GIT_VALGRIND_MODE | 
|  | GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED=t | 
|  | test -n "$valgrind_only" && GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED= | 
|  | export GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED | 
|  | elif test -n "$GIT_TEST_INSTALLED" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_EXEC_PATH=$($GIT_TEST_INSTALLED/git --exec-path)  || | 
|  | error "Cannot run git from $GIT_TEST_INSTALLED." | 
|  | PATH=$GIT_TEST_INSTALLED:$GIT_BUILD_DIR/t/helper:$PATH | 
|  | GIT_EXEC_PATH=${GIT_TEST_EXEC_PATH:-$GIT_EXEC_PATH} | 
|  | else # normal case, use ../bin-wrappers only unless $with_dashes: | 
|  | if test -n "$no_bin_wrappers" | 
|  | then | 
|  | with_dashes=t | 
|  | else | 
|  | git_bin_dir="$GIT_BUILD_DIR/bin-wrappers" | 
|  | if ! test -x "$git_bin_dir/git" | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test -z "$with_dashes" | 
|  | then | 
|  | say "$git_bin_dir/git is not executable; using GIT_EXEC_PATH" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | with_dashes=t | 
|  | fi | 
|  | PATH="$git_bin_dir:$PATH" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | GIT_EXEC_PATH=$GIT_BUILD_DIR | 
|  | if test -n "$with_dashes" | 
|  | then | 
|  | PATH="$GIT_BUILD_DIR:$GIT_BUILD_DIR/t/helper:$PATH" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  | GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR="$GIT_TEST_TEMPLATE_DIR" | 
|  | GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM=1 | 
|  | GIT_ATTR_NOSYSTEM=1 | 
|  | GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES="$TRASH_DIRECTORY/.." | 
|  | export PATH GIT_EXEC_PATH GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM GIT_ATTR_NOSYSTEM GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Add libc MALLOC and MALLOC_PERTURB test only if we are not executing | 
|  | # the test with valgrind and have not compiled with conflict SANITIZE | 
|  | # options. | 
|  | if test -n "$valgrind" || | 
|  | test -n "$SANITIZE_ADDRESS" || | 
|  | test -n "$SANITIZE_LEAK" || | 
|  | test -n "$TEST_NO_MALLOC_CHECK" | 
|  | then | 
|  | setup_malloc_check () { | 
|  | : nothing | 
|  | } | 
|  | teardown_malloc_check () { | 
|  | : nothing | 
|  | } | 
|  | else | 
|  | _USE_GLIBC_TUNABLES= | 
|  | _USE_GLIBC_PRELOAD=libc_malloc_debug.so.0 | 
|  | if _GLIBC_VERSION=$(getconf GNU_LIBC_VERSION 2>/dev/null) && | 
|  | _GLIBC_VERSION=${_GLIBC_VERSION#"glibc "} && | 
|  | expr 2.34 \<= "$_GLIBC_VERSION" >/dev/null && | 
|  | stderr=$(LD_PRELOAD=$_USE_GLIBC_PRELOAD git version 2>&1 >/dev/null) && | 
|  | test -z "$stderr" | 
|  | then | 
|  | _USE_GLIBC_TUNABLES=YesPlease | 
|  | fi | 
|  | setup_malloc_check () { | 
|  | local g | 
|  | local t | 
|  | MALLOC_CHECK_=3	MALLOC_PERTURB_=165 | 
|  | export MALLOC_CHECK_ MALLOC_PERTURB_ | 
|  | if test -n "$_USE_GLIBC_TUNABLES" | 
|  | then | 
|  | g= | 
|  | LD_PRELOAD=$_USE_GLIBC_PRELOAD | 
|  | for t in \ | 
|  | glibc.malloc.check=1 \ | 
|  | glibc.malloc.perturb=165 | 
|  | do | 
|  | g="${g#:}:$t" | 
|  | done | 
|  | GLIBC_TUNABLES=$g | 
|  | export LD_PRELOAD GLIBC_TUNABLES | 
|  | fi | 
|  | } | 
|  | teardown_malloc_check () { | 
|  | unset MALLOC_CHECK_ MALLOC_PERTURB_ | 
|  | unset LD_PRELOAD GLIBC_TUNABLES | 
|  | } | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$GIT_TEST_CMP" | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_TEST_CMP_USE_COPIED_CONTEXT" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CMP="$DIFF -c" | 
|  | else | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CMP="$DIFF -u" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | GITPERLLIB="$GIT_TEST_GITPERLLIB" | 
|  | export GITPERLLIB | 
|  | test -d "$GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" || { | 
|  | BAIL_OUT "You haven't built things yet, have you?" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if ! test -x "$GIT_BUILD_DIR"/t/helper/test-tool$X | 
|  | then | 
|  | BAIL_OUT 'You need to build test-tool; Run "make t/helper/test-tool" in the source (toplevel) directory' | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Are we running this test at all? | 
|  | remove_trash= | 
|  | this_test=${0##*/} | 
|  | this_test=${this_test%%-*} | 
|  | if match_pattern_list "$this_test" "$GIT_SKIP_TESTS" | 
|  | then | 
|  | say_color info >&3 "skipping test $this_test altogether" | 
|  | skip_all="skip all tests in $this_test" | 
|  | test_done | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -n "$SANITIZE_LEAK" | 
|  | then | 
|  | rm -rf "$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR" | 
|  | if ! mkdir -p "$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR" | 
|  | then | 
|  | BAIL_OUT "cannot create $TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR" | 
|  | fi && | 
|  | TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE="$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR/$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE_PFX" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Don't litter *.leak dirs if there was nothing to report | 
|  | test_atexit "rmdir \"$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_DIR\" 2>/dev/null || :" | 
|  |  | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : dedup_token_length=9999 | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : log_exe_name=1 | 
|  | prepend_var LSAN_OPTIONS : log_path="'$TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE'" | 
|  | export LSAN_OPTIONS | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$PERL_PATH" | 
|  | then | 
|  | case "${GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT:-unset}" in | 
|  | unset) | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT=0 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | 0) | 
|  | # The user has explicitly disabled the chain linter, so we | 
|  | # don't have anything to worry about. | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | BAIL_OUT 'You need Perl for the chain linter' | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test "${GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT:-1}" != 0 && | 
|  | test "${GIT_TEST_EXT_CHAIN_LINT:-1}" != 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | "$PERL_PATH" "$TEST_DIRECTORY/chainlint.pl" "$0" || | 
|  | BUG "lint error (see 'LINT' annotations above)" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Last-minute variable setup | 
|  | USER_HOME="$HOME" | 
|  | HOME="$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | GNUPGHOME="$HOME/gnupg-home-not-used" | 
|  | export HOME GNUPGHOME USER_HOME | 
|  |  | 
|  | # "rm -rf" existing trash directory, even if a previous run left it | 
|  | # with bad permissions. | 
|  | remove_trash_directory () { | 
|  | dir="$1" | 
|  | if ! rm -rf "$dir" 2>/dev/null | 
|  | then | 
|  | chmod -R u+rwx "$dir" | 
|  | rm -rf "$dir" | 
|  | fi | 
|  | ! test -d "$dir" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Test repository | 
|  | remove_trash_directory "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" || { | 
|  | BAIL_OUT 'cannot prepare test area' | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | remove_trash=t | 
|  | if test -z "$TEST_NO_CREATE_REPO" | 
|  | then | 
|  | git init \ | 
|  | ${TEST_CREATE_REPO_NO_TEMPLATE:+--template=} \ | 
|  | "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" >&3 2>&4 || | 
|  | error "cannot run git init" | 
|  | else | 
|  | mkdir -p "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Use -P to resolve symlinks in our working directory so that the cwd | 
|  | # in subprocesses like git equals our $PWD (for pathname comparisons). | 
|  | cd -P "$TRASH_DIRECTORY" || BAIL_OUT "cannot cd -P to \"$TRASH_DIRECTORY\"" | 
|  | TRASH_DIRECTORY=$(pwd) | 
|  | HOME="$TRASH_DIRECTORY" | 
|  |  | 
|  | start_test_output "$0" | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Convenience | 
|  | # A regexp to match 5 and 35 hexdigits | 
|  | _x05='[0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f][0-9a-f]' | 
|  | _x35="$_x05$_x05$_x05$_x05$_x05$_x05$_x05" | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_oid_init | 
|  |  | 
|  | ZERO_OID=$(test_oid zero) | 
|  | OID_REGEX=$(echo $ZERO_OID | sed -e 's/0/[0-9a-f]/g') | 
|  | OIDPATH_REGEX=$(test_oid_to_path $ZERO_OID | sed -e 's/0/[0-9a-f]/g') | 
|  | EMPTY_TREE=$(test_oid empty_tree) | 
|  | EMPTY_BLOB=$(test_oid empty_blob) | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Provide an implementation of the 'yes' utility; the upper bound | 
|  | # limit is there to help Windows that cannot stop this loop from | 
|  | # wasting cycles when the downstream stops reading, so do not be | 
|  | # tempted to turn it into an infinite loop. cf. 6129c930 ("test-lib: | 
|  | # limit the output of the yes utility", 2016-02-02) | 
|  | yes () { | 
|  | if test $# = 0 | 
|  | then | 
|  | y=y | 
|  | else | 
|  | y="$*" | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | i=0 | 
|  | while test $i -lt 99 | 
|  | do | 
|  | echo "$y" | 
|  | i=$(($i+1)) | 
|  | done | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | # The GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS code hooks into test_set_prereq(), and | 
|  | # thus needs to be set up really early, and set an internal variable | 
|  | # for convenience so the hot test_set_prereq() codepath doesn't need | 
|  | # to call "test-tool env-helper" (via test_bool_env). Only do that work | 
|  | # if needed by seeing if GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS is set at all. | 
|  | GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS_INTERNAL= | 
|  | if test -n "$GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS" | 
|  | then | 
|  | if test_bool_env GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS false | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS_INTERNAL=true | 
|  | test_set_prereq FAIL_PREREQS | 
|  | fi | 
|  | else | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq FAIL_PREREQS ' | 
|  | test_bool_env GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS false | 
|  | ' | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Fix some commands on Windows, and other OS-specific things | 
|  | uname_s=$(uname -s) | 
|  | case $uname_s in | 
|  | Darwin) | 
|  | test_set_prereq MACOS | 
|  | test_set_prereq POSIXPERM | 
|  | test_set_prereq BSLASHPSPEC | 
|  | test_set_prereq EXECKEEPSPID | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *MINGW*) | 
|  | # Windows has its own (incompatible) sort and find | 
|  | sort () { | 
|  | /usr/bin/sort "$@" | 
|  | } | 
|  | find () { | 
|  | /usr/bin/find "$@" | 
|  | } | 
|  | # git sees Windows-style pwd | 
|  | pwd () { | 
|  | builtin pwd -W | 
|  | } | 
|  | # no POSIX permissions | 
|  | # backslashes in pathspec are converted to '/' | 
|  | # exec does not inherit the PID | 
|  | test_set_prereq MINGW | 
|  | test_set_prereq NATIVE_CRLF | 
|  | test_set_prereq SED_STRIPS_CR | 
|  | test_set_prereq GREP_STRIPS_CR | 
|  | test_set_prereq WINDOWS | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CMP="GIT_DIR=/dev/null git diff --no-index --ignore-cr-at-eol --" | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *CYGWIN*) | 
|  | test_set_prereq POSIXPERM | 
|  | test_set_prereq EXECKEEPSPID | 
|  | test_set_prereq CYGWIN | 
|  | test_set_prereq SED_STRIPS_CR | 
|  | test_set_prereq GREP_STRIPS_CR | 
|  | test_set_prereq WINDOWS | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | test_set_prereq POSIXPERM | 
|  | test_set_prereq BSLASHPSPEC | 
|  | test_set_prereq EXECKEEPSPID | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Detect arches where a few things don't work | 
|  | uname_m=$(uname -m) | 
|  | case $uname_m in | 
|  | parisc* | hppa*) | 
|  | test_set_prereq HPPA | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | case "$GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT" in | 
|  | files) | 
|  | test_set_prereq REFFILES;; | 
|  | reftable) | 
|  | test_set_prereq REFTABLE;; | 
|  | *) | 
|  | echo 2>&1 "error: unknown ref format $GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT" | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  |  | 
|  | ( COLUMNS=1 && test $COLUMNS = 1 ) && test_set_prereq COLUMNS_CAN_BE_1 | 
|  | test -z "$NO_CURL" && test_set_prereq LIBCURL | 
|  | test -z "$NO_GITWEB" && test_set_prereq GITWEB | 
|  | test -z "$NO_ICONV" && test_set_prereq ICONV | 
|  | test -z "$NO_PERL" && test_set_prereq PERL | 
|  | test -z "$NO_PTHREADS" && test_set_prereq PTHREADS | 
|  | test -z "$NO_PYTHON" && test_set_prereq PYTHON | 
|  | test -n "$USE_LIBPCRE2" && test_set_prereq PCRE | 
|  | test -n "$USE_LIBPCRE2" && test_set_prereq LIBPCRE2 | 
|  | test -z "$NO_GETTEXT" && test_set_prereq GETTEXT | 
|  | test -n "$SANITIZE_LEAK" && test_set_prereq SANITIZE_LEAK | 
|  | test -n "$GIT_VALGRIND_ENABLED" && test_set_prereq VALGRIND | 
|  | test -n "$PERL_PATH" && test_set_prereq PERL_TEST_HELPERS | 
|  |  | 
|  | if test -z "$GIT_TEST_CHECK_CACHE_TREE" | 
|  | then | 
|  | GIT_TEST_CHECK_CACHE_TREE=true | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_CHECK_CACHE_TREE | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq PIPE ' | 
|  | # test whether the filesystem supports FIFOs | 
|  | test_have_prereq !MINGW,!CYGWIN && | 
|  | rm -f testfifo && mkfifo testfifo | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq SYMLINKS ' | 
|  | # test whether the filesystem supports symbolic links | 
|  | ln -s x y && test -h y | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq SYMLINKS_WINDOWS ' | 
|  | # test whether symbolic links are enabled on Windows | 
|  | test_have_prereq MINGW && | 
|  | cmd //c "mklink y x" &> /dev/null && test -h y | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq FILEMODE ' | 
|  | test "$(git config --bool core.filemode)" = true | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq CASE_INSENSITIVE_FS ' | 
|  | echo good >CamelCase && | 
|  | echo bad >camelcase && | 
|  | test "$(cat CamelCase)" != good | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq FUNNYNAMES ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq !MINGW && | 
|  | touch -- \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES tab	embedded" \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES \"quote embedded\"" \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES newline | 
|  | embedded" 2>/dev/null && | 
|  | rm -- \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES tab	embedded" \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES \"quote embedded\"" \ | 
|  | "FUNNYNAMES newline | 
|  | embedded" 2>/dev/null | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq UTF8_NFD_TO_NFC ' | 
|  | # check whether FS converts nfd unicode to nfc | 
|  | auml=$(printf "\303\244") | 
|  | aumlcdiar=$(printf "\141\314\210") | 
|  | >"$auml" && | 
|  | test -f "$aumlcdiar" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq AUTOIDENT ' | 
|  | sane_unset GIT_AUTHOR_NAME && | 
|  | sane_unset GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL && | 
|  | git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq EXPENSIVE ' | 
|  | test -n "$GIT_TEST_LONG" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq EXPENSIVE_ON_WINDOWS ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq EXPENSIVE || test_have_prereq !MINGW,!CYGWIN | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq USR_BIN_TIME ' | 
|  | test -x /usr/bin/time | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq NOT_ROOT ' | 
|  | uid=$(id -u) && | 
|  | test "$uid" != 0 | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq JGIT ' | 
|  | jgit --version | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | # SANITY is about "can you correctly predict what the filesystem would | 
|  | # do by only looking at the permission bits of the files and | 
|  | # directories?"  A typical example of !SANITY is running the test | 
|  | # suite as root, where a test may expect "chmod -r file && cat file" | 
|  | # to fail because file is supposed to be unreadable after a successful | 
|  | # chmod.  In an environment (i.e. combination of what filesystem is | 
|  | # being used and who is running the tests) that lacks SANITY, you may | 
|  | # be able to delete or create a file when the containing directory | 
|  | # doesn't have write permissions, or access a file even if the | 
|  | # containing directory doesn't have read or execute permissions. | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq SANITY ' | 
|  | mkdir SANETESTD.1 SANETESTD.2 && | 
|  |  | 
|  | chmod +w SANETESTD.1 SANETESTD.2 && | 
|  | >SANETESTD.1/x 2>SANETESTD.2/x && | 
|  | chmod -w SANETESTD.1 && | 
|  | chmod -r SANETESTD.1/x && | 
|  | chmod -rx SANETESTD.2 || | 
|  | BUG "cannot prepare SANETESTD" | 
|  |  | 
|  | ! test -r SANETESTD.1/x && | 
|  | ! rm SANETESTD.1/x && ! test -f SANETESTD.2/x | 
|  | status=$? | 
|  |  | 
|  | chmod +rwx SANETESTD.1 SANETESTD.2 && | 
|  | rm -rf SANETESTD.1 SANETESTD.2 || | 
|  | BUG "cannot clean SANETESTD" | 
|  | return $status | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test FreeBSD != $uname_s || GIT_UNZIP=${GIT_UNZIP:-/usr/local/bin/unzip} | 
|  | GIT_UNZIP=${GIT_UNZIP:-unzip} | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq UNZIP ' | 
|  | "$GIT_UNZIP" -v | 
|  | test $? -ne 127 | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | run_with_limited_cmdline () { | 
|  | (ulimit -s 128 && "$@") | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq CMDLINE_LIMIT ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq !HPPA,!MINGW,!CYGWIN && | 
|  | run_with_limited_cmdline true | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | run_with_limited_stack () { | 
|  | (ulimit -s 128 && "$@") | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq !HPPA,!MINGW,!CYGWIN && | 
|  | run_with_limited_stack true | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | run_with_limited_open_files () { | 
|  | (ulimit -n 32 && "$@") | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq ULIMIT_FILE_DESCRIPTORS ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq !MINGW,!CYGWIN && | 
|  | run_with_limited_open_files true | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | build_option () { | 
|  | git version --build-options | | 
|  | sed -ne "s/^$1: //p" | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq SIZE_T_IS_64BIT ' | 
|  | test 8 -eq "$(build_option sizeof-size_t)" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq LONG_IS_64BIT ' | 
|  | test 8 -le "$(build_option sizeof-long)" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq TIME_IS_64BIT 'test-tool date is64bit' | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq TIME_T_IS_64BIT 'test-tool date time_t-is64bit' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq CURL ' | 
|  | curl --version | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES ' | 
|  | test -n "$WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq WITHOUT_BREAKING_CHANGES ' | 
|  | # Signal that this prereq should not be used. | 
|  | exit 125 | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | # SHA1 is a test if the hash algorithm in use is SHA-1.  This is both for tests | 
|  | # which will not work with other hash algorithms and tests that work but don't | 
|  | # test anything meaningful (e.g. special values which cause short collisions). | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq SHA1 ' | 
|  | case "$GIT_DEFAULT_HASH" in | 
|  | sha1) true ;; | 
|  | "") test $(git hash-object /dev/null) = e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 ;; | 
|  | *) false ;; | 
|  | esac | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq DEFAULT_HASH_ALGORITHM ' | 
|  | test "$GIT_TEST_BUILTIN_HASH" = "$GIT_DEFAULT_HASH" | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq DEFAULT_REPO_FORMAT ' | 
|  | test_have_prereq SHA1,REFFILES | 
|  | ' | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Ensure that no test accidentally triggers a Git command | 
|  | # that runs the actual maintenance scheduler, affecting a user's | 
|  | # system permanently. | 
|  | # Tests that verify the scheduler integration must set this locally | 
|  | # to avoid errors. | 
|  | GIT_TEST_MAINT_SCHEDULER="none:exit 1" | 
|  | export GIT_TEST_MAINT_SCHEDULER | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Does this platform support `git fsmonitor--daemon` | 
|  | # | 
|  | test_lazy_prereq FSMONITOR_DAEMON ' | 
|  | git version --build-options >output && | 
|  | grep "feature: fsmonitor--daemon" output | 
|  | ' |