* Makefile.am (SUBDIRS): Remove 'tests'.
(include): The '$(top_srcdir)/tests/local.mk' file.
(check-root): Remove this convenience target, it's no longer needed
now that the "real" check-root target once in 'tests/Makefile' will
land in the top-level makefile.
* configure.ac (AC_CONFIG_FILES): Remove 'tests/Makefile'.
* tests/Makefile.am: Rename ...
* tests/local.mk: ... like this, with a lot of adjustments.
* tests/init.cfg: Move ...
* init.cfg: ... here. This is necessary, for a limitation of the
gnulib-provided 'tests/init.sh', which unconditionally look for
'init.cfg' in the $(srcdir) directory.
* tests/*/*.sh: Adjust: expect init.sh to be in '$srcdir/tests',
not in '$srcdir', and extend $PATH with './src', not with '../src'.
* tests/Coreutils.pm: Adjust similarly.
* tests/pr/pr-tests.pl ($pfx): Likewise.
Not only this shrinks the size of the generated Makefile (from > 6300
lines to ~3000), but will allow further simplifications in future
changes.
* tests/Makefile.am (TEST_EXTENSIONS): Add '.sh' and '.pl'.
(PL_LOG_COMPILER, SH_LOG_COMPILER): New, still defined simply to
$(LOG_COMPILER) for the time being.
(TESTS, root_tests): Adjust as described.
* All tests: Rename as described.
The format used is the BSD traditional format which looks like:
MD5 (/dev/null) = d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
* NEWS: Add new feature info.
* doc/coreutils.texi (md5sum invocation): Add detailed information
about the new --tag option.
* src/md5sum.c: Add the new --tag option for BSD-style output.
(bsd_split_3): Add ESCAPED_FILENAME parameter.
(print_filename): New function refactored from main().
(filename_unescape): New function refactored from split_3().
* tests/misc/md5sum-bsd: Add tests for the new feature.
We use print_ver_ to run "PROG --version" for each program under
test. Some tests have been derived from others, while the
argument(s) to print_ver_ have not been adapted.
Add a new cfg.mk rule to prohibit this.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_test_calls_print_ver_with_irrelevant_argument):
New rule, to prohibit a test script from calling print_env_ for a
program not actually used by that test.
* tests/chown/basic: s/\(print_ver_\) chgrp/\1 chown/
* tests/cp/acl: s/\(print_ver_\) mv/\1 cp/
* tests/cp/capability: s/\(print_ver_\) ls/\1 cp/
* tests/cp/cp-parents: s/(print_ver_\) mv/\1 cp/
* tests/du/bind-mount-dir-cycle: s/(print_ver_\) rm/\1 du/
* tests/misc/wc-parallel: s/(print_ver_\) md5sum/\1 wc/
sort -u could omit one or more lines of expected output.
This bug arose because sort recorded the most recently printed line via
reference, and if you were unlucky, the storage for that line would be
reused (overwritten) as additional input was read into memory. If you
were doubly unlucky, the new value of the "saved" line would not only
match the very next line, but if that next line were also the first in
a series of identical, not-yet-printed lines, then the corrupted "saved"
line value would result in the omission of all matching lines.
* src/sort.c (saved_line): New static/global, renamed and moved from...
(write_unique): ...here. Old name was "saved", which was too generic
for its new role as file-scoped global.
(fillbuf): With --unique, when we're about to read into a buffer that
overlaps the saved "preceding" line (saved_line), copy the line's .text
member to a realloc'd-as-needed temporary buffer and adjust the line's
key-defining members if they're set.
(overlap): New function.
* tests/misc/sort: New tests.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* THANKS.in: Update.
Bug introduced via commit v8.5-89-g9face83.
Reported by Rasmus Borup Hansen in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/23173/focus=24647
Add a test and NEWS entry for a bug inadvertently fixed in
a refactoring in commit v8.9-32-gd4db0cb
* tests/misc/join (v2-format): Add a new test.
* THANKS.in: Add the reporter.
* NEWS: Mention the old bug.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Update.
Reported-by: Jean-Pierre Tosoni
date -d "$(printf '\xb0')" would print 00:00:00 with today's date
rather than diagnosing the invalid input. Now it reports this:
date: invalid date '\260'
* gnulib: Update submodule to latest for fixed parse-datetime.y.
* tests/misc/date [invalid-high-bit-set]: New test.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* bootstrap, tests/init.sh: Also update to latest.
Reported by Peter Evans in http://bugs.gnu.org/11843
* src/sort.c (check_inputs): A new function to verify all inputs
are accessible before further processing.
(check_output): A new function to open or create a specified
output file, before futher processing.
(stream_open): Adjust to truncating the previously opened
output file rather than opening directly.
(avoid_trashing_input): Optimize to stat the output file
descriptor, rather than the file name.
(main): Call the new functions to check accessibility of
inputs and output, before processing starts.
* tests/misc/sort: Adjust to the changed error message.
* tests/misc/sort-merge-fdlimit: Account for the earlier opened
file descriptor of the specified output file.
* tests/misc/sort-exit-early: A new test to exercise the improvements.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the improvement.
Suggested-by: Bernhard Voelker
* src/head.c (elide_tail_lines_seekable): Reset file pointer
after printing up to an end-relative line-counted offset.
Anoop Sharma reported the problem and suggested the fix.
* tests/misc/head-pos: Add coverage via a very similar, existing test.
Also add coverage for a previously untested block of code.
* tests/misc/head-elide-tail ($READ_BUFSIZE): Update to 8192, to
match the value of BUFSIZ I see today on Fedora 17/x86_64 (unrelated
to this fix).
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Improved-by: Pádraig Brady
* tests/misc/tty-eof: Increase timeout from 1s to 10s, to avoid
unwarranted failure under heavy load.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Move misc/tty-eof "up" to nearer the
beginning of the list (from near the middle) so that it is started
earlier in parallel test runs. Otherwise, it would frequently be
among the last two tests to complete.
Problem reported by Samuel Thibault in <http://bugs.gnu.org/11424>.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/dd.c (skip): Handle skipping past EOF on shared or typed
memory objects the same way as with regular files.
(dd_copy): It's OK to truncate shared memory objects.
* src/du.c (duinfo_add): Check for overflow.
(print_only_size): Report overflow.
(process_file): Ignore negative file sizes in the --apparent-size case.
* src/od.c (skip): Fix comment about st_size.
* src/split.c (main):
* src/truncate.c (do_ftruncate, main):
On files where st_size is not portable, fall back on using lseek
with SEEK_END to determine the size. Although strictly speaking
POSIX says the behavior is implementation-defined, in practice
if lseek returns a nonnegative value it's a reasonable one to
use for the file size.
* src/system.h (usable_st_size): Symlinks have reliable st_size too.
* tests/misc/truncate-dir-fail: Don't assume that getting the size
of a dir is not allowed, as it's now allowed on many platforms,
e.g., GNU/Linux.
... i.e., don't use the getpw* functions.
Before this change, running groups or id with no user name argument
would include a group name or ID from /etc/passwd. Thus, under unusual
circumstances (default group is changed, but has not taken effect for a
given session), those programs could print a name or ID that is neither
real nor effective.
To demonstrate, run this:
echo 'for i in 1 2; do id -G; sleep 1.5; done' \
|su -s /bin/sh ftp - &
sleep 1; perl -pi -e 's/^(ftp❌\d+):(\d+)/$1:9876/' /etc/passwd
Those id -G commands printed the following:
50
50 9876
With this change, they print this:
50
50
Similarly, running those programs set-GID could make them
print one ID too many.
* src/group-list.c (print_group_list): When username is NULL, pass
egid, not getpwuid(ruid)->pw_gid), to xgetgroups, per the API
requirements of xgetgroups callee, mgetgroups.
When not using the password database, don't call getpwuid.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/id-setgid: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
(root_tests): It's a root-only test, so add it here, too.
Originally reported by Brynnen Owen as http://bugs.gnu.org/7320.
Raised again by Marc Mengel in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/816708.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/stty-pairs.
* tests/init.cfg (stty_reversible_init_): New function.
(stty_reversible_query_): New function.
* tests/misc/stty: Factor out expensive "pairs" code into new test.
Use new stty_reversible_* functions instead of evaluating static
REV_* variables.
* tests/misc/stty-pairs: Add new test. Code added from misc/stty.
Mark this as an expensive test. Skip 'parenb' and 'cread' options,
as these tests are known to fail. Like in misc/stty, also use
the new stty_reversible_* functions.
Accept -g for BSD/Plan9 compatibility.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* tests/fmt/goal-option: New test.
* tests/fmt/long-line: Rename from tests/fmt-long-line.
* tests/fmt/base: Rename from tests/misc/fmt.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Document it.
* src/fmt.c (main): Accept the new option
(check_for_goals): new function to implement the operands
Based on BSD's and Plan-9's fmt programs.
* tests/misc/sort-discrim: Correct reversed args to "compare".
This nit was masked by a bug in maint.mk that effectively disabled
many of the syntax-check rules.
Exempt init.sh because it runs before we're assured to have a
shell that groks $(...). Exempt *.mk because "$" would have to
be doubled, and besides, any `...` expression in a .mk file is
almost certainly evaluated before init.sh is run. Finally, also
exempt the perl-based tests, because perl's `...` cannot be
converted to $(...). Do that by running this command:
git grep -l '`.*`' tests \
| grep -Ev 'init\.sh|\.mk$' | xargs grep -Lw perl \
| xargs perl -pi -e 's/`(.*?)`/\$($1)/g'
One minor fix-up change was required after that, due to how
quoting differs:
diff --git a/tests/chmod/equals b/tests/chmod/equals
- expected_perms=$(eval 'echo \$expected_'$dest)
+ expected_perms=$(eval 'echo $expected_'$dest)
Another was to make these required quoting adjustments:
diff --git a/tests/misc/stty b/tests/misc/stty
...
- rev=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt")
+ rev=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt")
...
- rev1=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt1")
- rev2=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt2")
+ rev1=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt1")
+ rev2=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt2")
Also, transform two files that were needlessly excluded above:
(both use perl, but are mostly bourne shell)
perl -pi -e 's/`(.*?)`/\$($1)/g' \
tests/du/long-from-unreadable tests/init.cfg
Most of the time, if someone wants to filter which paths are
relative while leaving all others absolute, they also want to
to the filtering based on the same --relative-to directory.
Make this easier to specify.
* src/realpath.c (main): Convert error to default.
* doc/coreutils.texi (realpath invocation): Document this.
* tests/misc/realpath: Adjust test to match.
* NEWS: Document it.
'realpath --relative-base --relative-to' is identical to
--relative-base=--relative-to, so the test wasn't covering what
it claimed. Expose recent fixes for handling of // on systems
where // is distinct, and for --relative-base=/. Add test that
exposes our design decision that --relative-base that is not a
prefix of --relative-to is a no-op (if we later change behavior,
we will also have to change that part of the test).
* tests/misc/realpath: Fix typo. Add some tests.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-02/msg00038.html
detailed a couple of bugs in gnulib's canonicalize that were visible
through coreutils' readlink, but only on systems where // is distinct
from /. This particular test assumes the POSIX fix which requires
canonicalization of a symlink containing just slashes to behave as
if slashes separating the symlink from the rest of the name are
elided (see http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=541), as that is
the only useful (and current) behavior on Cygwin. That is,
ln -s / root
ls root/dev
must list the contents of /dev, not //dev.
* tests/misc/readlink-root: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Run it.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-discrim.
* tests/misc/sort-discrim: New file, which tests a discriminator-based
implementation of 'sort'. Coreutils doesn't use this implementation
yet, but the test is useful anyway.
Co-authored-by: Drew Kutilek <dkutilek@ucla.edu>
Co-authored-by: James Wendt <jwendt@cs.ucla.edu>
* src/dirname.c (main): Handle new -z option and manage more than one
argument.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dirname invocation): Mention it.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* tests/misc/dirname: Add a two arguments test.
* src/basename.c (perform_basename): New function refactored from
main() that performs the basename work on a STRING, optionally
removes a trailing SUFFIX and outputs the result.
(main): Handle new options.
* doc/coreutils.texi (basename invocation): Mention new options.
* test/misc/basename: Add new options test cases.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* src/realpath.c (path_common_prefix): Be consistent and
always include a leading '/' in the count returned.
(relpath): Account for the change in path_common_prefix()
and avoid outputting extra '/' chars in relative paths that
span the root dir.
* tests/misc/realpath: Add the two reported cases.
Reported by Mike Frysinger