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1 | # Copyright 2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
2 | # | |
3 | # Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use | |
4 | # this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy | |
5 | # in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at | |
6 | # https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html | |
7 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
8 | package OpenSSL::Test; |
9 | ||
10 | use strict; | |
11 | use warnings; | |
12 | ||
fd99c6b5 RL |
13 | use Test::More 0.96; |
14 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
15 | use Exporter; |
16 | use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK %EXPORT_TAGS); | |
42e0ccdf | 17 | $VERSION = "0.8"; |
aec27d4d | 18 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
9ddf67f3 | 19 | @EXPORT = (@Test::More::EXPORT, qw(setup run indir cmd app fuzz test |
208d721a | 20 | perlapp perltest subtest)); |
42e0ccdf RL |
21 | @EXPORT_OK = (@Test::More::EXPORT_OK, qw(bldtop_dir bldtop_file |
22 | srctop_dir srctop_file | |
6c6a2ae6 | 23 | data_file |
42e0ccdf | 24 | pipe with cmdstr quotify)); |
aec27d4d | 25 | |
f5098edb | 26 | =head1 NAME |
aec27d4d | 27 | |
f5098edb | 28 | OpenSSL::Test - a private extension of Test::More |
aec27d4d | 29 | |
f5098edb | 30 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
aec27d4d | 31 | |
f5098edb | 32 | use OpenSSL::Test; |
aec27d4d | 33 | |
f5098edb | 34 | setup("my_test_name"); |
aec27d4d | 35 | |
f5098edb | 36 | ok(run(app(["openssl", "version"])), "check for openssl presence"); |
caadc543 | 37 | |
f5098edb RL |
38 | indir "subdir" => sub { |
39 | ok(run(test(["sometest", "arg1"], stdout => "foo.txt")), | |
40 | "run sometest with output to foo.txt"); | |
41 | }; | |
aec27d4d | 42 | |
f5098edb | 43 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
aec27d4d | 44 | |
f5098edb RL |
45 | This module is a private extension of L<Test::More> for testing OpenSSL. |
46 | In addition to the Test::More functions, it also provides functions that | |
47 | easily find the diverse programs within a OpenSSL build tree, as well as | |
48 | some other useful functions. | |
aec27d4d | 49 | |
42e0ccdf RL |
50 | This module I<depends> on the environment variables C<$TOP> or C<$SRCTOP> |
51 | and C<$BLDTOP>. Without one of the combinations it refuses to work. | |
52 | See L</ENVIRONMENT> below. | |
aec27d4d | 53 | |
6c6a2ae6 RL |
54 | With each test recipe, a parallel data directory with (almost) the same name |
55 | as the recipe is possible in the source directory tree. For example, for a | |
56 | recipe C<$SRCTOP/test/recipes/99-foo.t>, there could be a directory | |
57 | C<$SRCTOP/test/recipes/99-foo_data/>. | |
58 | ||
f5098edb | 59 | =cut |
aec27d4d | 60 | |
f5098edb RL |
61 | use File::Copy; |
62 | use File::Spec::Functions qw/file_name_is_absolute curdir canonpath splitdir | |
63 | catdir catfile splitpath catpath devnull abs2rel | |
64 | rel2abs/; | |
4500a4cd | 65 | use File::Path 2.00 qw/rmtree mkpath/; |
6c6a2ae6 | 66 | use File::Basename; |
aec27d4d | 67 | |
208d721a | 68 | my $level = 0; |
aec27d4d | 69 | |
f5098edb RL |
70 | # The name of the test. This is set by setup() and is used in the other |
71 | # functions to verify that setup() has been used. | |
72 | my $test_name = undef; | |
aec27d4d | 73 | |
f5098edb RL |
74 | # Directories we want to keep track of TOP, APPS, TEST and RESULTS are the |
75 | # ones we're interested in, corresponding to the environment variables TOP | |
42e0ccdf | 76 | # (mandatory), BIN_D, TEST_D, UTIL_D and RESULT_D. |
f5098edb | 77 | my %directories = (); |
aec27d4d | 78 | |
d1094383 RL |
79 | # The environment variables that gave us the contents in %directories. These |
80 | # get modified whenever we change directories, so that subprocesses can use | |
81 | # the values of those environment variables as well | |
82 | my @direnv = (); | |
83 | ||
f5098edb RL |
84 | # A bool saying if we shall stop all testing if the current recipe has failing |
85 | # tests or not. This is set by setup() if the environment variable STOPTEST | |
86 | # is defined with a non-empty value. | |
87 | my $end_with_bailout = 0; | |
aec27d4d | 88 | |
f5098edb RL |
89 | # A set of hooks that is affected by with() and may be used in diverse places. |
90 | # All hooks are expected to be CODE references. | |
91 | my %hooks = ( | |
aec27d4d | 92 | |
f5098edb RL |
93 | # exit_checker is used by run() directly after completion of a command. |
94 | # it receives the exit code from that command and is expected to return | |
089a45c5 | 95 | # 1 (for success) or 0 (for failure). This is the status value that run() |
46f4e1be | 96 | # will give back (through the |statusvar| reference and as returned value |
089a45c5 | 97 | # when capture => 1 doesn't apply). |
f5098edb | 98 | exit_checker => sub { return shift == 0 ? 1 : 0 }, |
aec27d4d | 99 | |
f5098edb | 100 | ); |
aec27d4d | 101 | |
a00c84f6 RL |
102 | # Debug flag, to be set manually when needed |
103 | my $debug = 0; | |
104 | ||
f5098edb | 105 | =head2 Main functions |
aec27d4d | 106 | |
f5098edb | 107 | The following functions are exported by default when using C<OpenSSL::Test>. |
aec27d4d | 108 | |
f5098edb | 109 | =cut |
aec27d4d | 110 | |
f5098edb | 111 | =over 4 |
aec27d4d | 112 | |
f5098edb | 113 | =item B<setup "NAME"> |
aec27d4d | 114 | |
f5098edb RL |
115 | C<setup> is used for initial setup, and it is mandatory that it's used. |
116 | If it's not used in a OpenSSL test recipe, the rest of the recipe will | |
117 | most likely refuse to run. | |
118 | ||
119 | C<setup> checks for environment variables (see L</ENVIRONMENT> below), | |
42e0ccdf RL |
120 | checks that C<$TOP/Configure> or C<$SRCTOP/Configure> exists, C<chdir> |
121 | into the results directory (defined by the C<$RESULT_D> environment | |
122 | variable if defined, otherwise C<$BLDTOP/test> or C<$TOP/test>, whichever | |
123 | is defined). | |
f5098edb RL |
124 | |
125 | =back | |
126 | ||
127 | =cut | |
aec27d4d RL |
128 | |
129 | sub setup { | |
fa657fc8 | 130 | my $old_test_name = $test_name; |
aec27d4d RL |
131 | $test_name = shift; |
132 | ||
133 | BAIL_OUT("setup() must receive a name") unless $test_name; | |
fa657fc8 RL |
134 | warn "setup() detected test name change. Innocuous, so we continue...\n" |
135 | if $old_test_name && $old_test_name ne $test_name; | |
136 | ||
137 | return if $old_test_name; | |
138 | ||
42e0ccdf RL |
139 | BAIL_OUT("setup() needs \$TOP or \$SRCTOP and \$BLDTOP to be defined") |
140 | unless $ENV{TOP} || ($ENV{SRCTOP} && $ENV{BLDTOP}); | |
141 | BAIL_OUT("setup() found both \$TOP and \$SRCTOP or \$BLDTOP...") | |
142 | if $ENV{TOP} && ($ENV{SRCTOP} || $ENV{BLDTOP}); | |
aec27d4d | 143 | |
f5098edb | 144 | __env(); |
caadc543 | 145 | |
fa657fc8 RL |
146 | BAIL_OUT("setup() expects the file Configure in the source top directory") |
147 | unless -f srctop_file("Configure"); | |
aec27d4d RL |
148 | |
149 | __cwd($directories{RESULTS}); | |
aec27d4d RL |
150 | } |
151 | ||
f5098edb RL |
152 | =over 4 |
153 | ||
154 | =item B<indir "SUBDIR" =E<gt> sub BLOCK, OPTS> | |
155 | ||
156 | C<indir> is used to run a part of the recipe in a different directory than | |
157 | the one C<setup> moved into, usually a subdirectory, given by SUBDIR. | |
158 | The part of the recipe that's run there is given by the codeblock BLOCK. | |
159 | ||
160 | C<indir> takes some additional options OPTS that affect the subdirectory: | |
161 | ||
162 | =over 4 | |
163 | ||
164 | =item B<create =E<gt> 0|1> | |
165 | ||
166 | When set to 1 (or any value that perl preceives as true), the subdirectory | |
167 | will be created if it doesn't already exist. This happens before BLOCK | |
168 | is executed. | |
169 | ||
170 | =item B<cleanup =E<gt> 0|1> | |
171 | ||
172 | When set to 1 (or any value that perl preceives as true), the subdirectory | |
173 | will be cleaned out and removed. This happens both before and after BLOCK | |
174 | is executed. | |
175 | ||
176 | =back | |
177 | ||
178 | An example: | |
179 | ||
180 | indir "foo" => sub { | |
181 | ok(run(app(["openssl", "version"]), stdout => "foo.txt")); | |
182 | if (ok(open(RESULT, "foo.txt"), "reading foo.txt")) { | |
183 | my $line = <RESULT>; | |
184 | close RESULT; | |
185 | is($line, qr/^OpenSSL 1\./, | |
186 | "check that we're using OpenSSL 1.x.x"); | |
187 | } | |
188 | }, create => 1, cleanup => 1; | |
189 | ||
190 | =back | |
191 | ||
192 | =cut | |
193 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
194 | sub indir { |
195 | my $subdir = shift; | |
196 | my $codeblock = shift; | |
197 | my %opts = @_; | |
198 | ||
199 | my $reverse = __cwd($subdir,%opts); | |
200 | BAIL_OUT("FAILURE: indir, \"$subdir\" wasn't possible to move into") | |
201 | unless $reverse; | |
202 | ||
203 | $codeblock->(); | |
204 | ||
205 | __cwd($reverse); | |
206 | ||
207 | if ($opts{cleanup}) { | |
4500a4cd | 208 | rmtree($subdir, { safe => 0 }); |
aec27d4d RL |
209 | } |
210 | } | |
211 | ||
f5098edb | 212 | =over 4 |
aec27d4d | 213 | |
9ddf67f3 | 214 | =item B<cmd ARRAYREF, OPTS> |
aec27d4d | 215 | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
216 | This functions build up a platform dependent command based on the |
217 | input. It takes a reference to a list that is the executable or | |
218 | script and its arguments, and some additional options (described | |
28e0f6eb RL |
219 | further on). Where necessary, the command will be wrapped in a |
220 | suitable environment to make sure the correct shared libraries are | |
221 | used (currently only on Unix). | |
aec27d4d | 222 | |
9ddf67f3 | 223 | It returns a CODEREF to be used by C<run>, C<pipe> or C<cmdstr>. |
aec27d4d | 224 | |
9ddf67f3 | 225 | The options that C<cmd> can take are in the form of hash values: |
aec27d4d | 226 | |
f5098edb | 227 | =over 4 |
aec27d4d | 228 | |
f5098edb | 229 | =item B<stdin =E<gt> PATH> |
aec27d4d | 230 | |
f5098edb | 231 | =item B<stdout =E<gt> PATH> |
aec27d4d | 232 | |
f5098edb | 233 | =item B<stderr =E<gt> PATH> |
aec27d4d | 234 | |
f5098edb RL |
235 | In all three cases, the corresponding standard input, output or error is |
236 | redirected from (for stdin) or to (for the others) a file given by the | |
237 | string PATH, I<or>, if the value is C<undef>, C</dev/null> or similar. | |
aec27d4d | 238 | |
f5098edb | 239 | =back |
aec27d4d | 240 | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
241 | =item B<app ARRAYREF, OPTS> |
242 | ||
243 | =item B<test ARRAYREF, OPTS> | |
244 | ||
245 | Both of these are specific applications of C<cmd>, with just a couple | |
246 | of small difference: | |
247 | ||
248 | C<app> expects to find the given command (the first item in the given list | |
249 | reference) as an executable in C<$BIN_D> (if defined, otherwise C<$TOP/apps> | |
250 | or C<$BLDTOP/apps>). | |
251 | ||
252 | C<test> expects to find the given command (the first item in the given list | |
253 | reference) as an executable in C<$TEST_D> (if defined, otherwise C<$TOP/test> | |
254 | or C<$BLDTOP/test>). | |
255 | ||
256 | Also, for both C<app> and C<test>, the command may be prefixed with | |
257 | the content of the environment variable C<$EXE_SHELL>, which is useful | |
258 | in case OpenSSL has been cross compiled. | |
259 | ||
a00c84f6 RL |
260 | =item B<perlapp ARRAYREF, OPTS> |
261 | ||
262 | =item B<perltest ARRAYREF, OPTS> | |
263 | ||
9ddf67f3 RL |
264 | These are also specific applications of C<cmd>, where the interpreter |
265 | is predefined to be C<perl>, and they expect the script to be | |
266 | interpreted to reside in the same location as C<app> and C<test>. | |
267 | ||
268 | C<perlapp> and C<perltest> will also take the following option: | |
b8fcd4f0 RL |
269 | |
270 | =over 4 | |
271 | ||
272 | =item B<interpreter_args =E<gt> ARRAYref> | |
273 | ||
9ddf67f3 RL |
274 | The array reference is a set of arguments for the interpreter rather |
275 | than the script. Take care so that none of them can be seen as a | |
276 | script! Flags and their eventual arguments only! | |
b8fcd4f0 RL |
277 | |
278 | =back | |
279 | ||
280 | An example: | |
281 | ||
282 | ok(run(perlapp(["foo.pl", "arg1"], | |
283 | interpreter_args => [ "-I", srctop_dir("test") ]))); | |
a00c84f6 | 284 | |
f5098edb | 285 | =back |
aec27d4d | 286 | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
287 | =begin comment |
288 | ||
289 | One might wonder over the complexity of C<apps>, C<fuzz>, C<test>, ... | |
290 | with all the lazy evaluations and all that. The reason for this is that | |
291 | we want to make sure the directory in which those programs are found are | |
292 | correct at the time these commands are used. Consider the following code | |
293 | snippet: | |
294 | ||
295 | my $cmd = app(["openssl", ...]); | |
296 | ||
297 | indir "foo", sub { | |
298 | ok(run($cmd), "Testing foo") | |
299 | }; | |
300 | ||
301 | If there wasn't this lazy evaluation, the directory where C<openssl> is | |
302 | found would be incorrect at the time C<run> is called, because it was | |
303 | calculated before we moved into the directory "foo". | |
304 | ||
305 | =end comment | |
306 | ||
f5098edb | 307 | =cut |
aec27d4d | 308 | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
309 | sub cmd { |
310 | my $cmd = shift; | |
311 | my %opts = @_; | |
312 | return sub { | |
313 | my $num = shift; | |
314 | # Make a copy to not destroy the caller's array | |
315 | my @cmdargs = ( @$cmd ); | |
316 | my @prog = __wrap_cmd(shift @cmdargs, $opts{exe_shell} // ()); | |
317 | ||
318 | return __decorate_cmd($num, [ @prog, quotify(@cmdargs) ], | |
319 | %opts); | |
320 | } | |
321 | } | |
322 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
323 | sub app { |
324 | my $cmd = shift; | |
325 | my %opts = @_; | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
326 | return sub { |
327 | my @cmdargs = ( @{$cmd} ); | |
328 | my @prog = __fixup_prg(__apps_file(shift @cmdargs, __exeext())); | |
329 | return cmd([ @prog, @cmdargs ], | |
330 | exe_shell => $ENV{EXE_SHELL}, %opts) -> (shift); | |
331 | } | |
aec27d4d RL |
332 | } |
333 | ||
90d28f05 BL |
334 | sub fuzz { |
335 | my $cmd = shift; | |
336 | my %opts = @_; | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
337 | return sub { |
338 | my @cmdargs = ( @{$cmd} ); | |
339 | my @prog = __fixup_prg(__fuzz_file(shift @cmdargs, __exeext())); | |
340 | return cmd([ @prog, @cmdargs ], | |
341 | exe_shell => $ENV{EXE_SHELL}, %opts) -> (shift); | |
342 | } | |
90d28f05 BL |
343 | } |
344 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
345 | sub test { |
346 | my $cmd = shift; | |
347 | my %opts = @_; | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
348 | return sub { |
349 | my @cmdargs = ( @{$cmd} ); | |
350 | my @prog = __fixup_prg(__test_file(shift @cmdargs, __exeext())); | |
351 | return cmd([ @prog, @cmdargs ], | |
352 | exe_shell => $ENV{EXE_SHELL}, %opts) -> (shift); | |
353 | } | |
aec27d4d RL |
354 | } |
355 | ||
a00c84f6 RL |
356 | sub perlapp { |
357 | my $cmd = shift; | |
358 | my %opts = @_; | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
359 | return sub { |
360 | my @interpreter_args = defined $opts{interpreter_args} ? | |
361 | @{$opts{interpreter_args}} : (); | |
362 | my @interpreter = __fixup_prg($^X); | |
363 | my @cmdargs = ( @{$cmd} ); | |
364 | my @prog = __apps_file(shift @cmdargs, undef); | |
365 | return cmd([ @interpreter, @interpreter_args, | |
366 | @prog, @cmdargs ], %opts) -> (shift); | |
367 | } | |
a00c84f6 RL |
368 | } |
369 | ||
370 | sub perltest { | |
371 | my $cmd = shift; | |
372 | my %opts = @_; | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
373 | return sub { |
374 | my @interpreter_args = defined $opts{interpreter_args} ? | |
375 | @{$opts{interpreter_args}} : (); | |
376 | my @interpreter = __fixup_prg($^X); | |
377 | my @cmdargs = ( @{$cmd} ); | |
378 | my @prog = __test_file(shift @cmdargs, undef); | |
379 | return cmd([ @interpreter, @interpreter_args, | |
380 | @prog, @cmdargs ], %opts) -> (shift); | |
381 | } | |
a00c84f6 RL |
382 | } |
383 | ||
f5098edb | 384 | =over 4 |
aec27d4d | 385 | |
f5098edb RL |
386 | =item B<run CODEREF, OPTS> |
387 | ||
9ddf67f3 RL |
388 | CODEREF is expected to be the value return by C<cmd> or any of its |
389 | derivatives, anything else will most likely cause an error unless you | |
390 | know what you're doing. | |
f5098edb RL |
391 | |
392 | C<run> executes the command returned by CODEREF and return either the | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
393 | resulting output (if the option C<capture> is set true) or a boolean |
394 | indicating if the command succeeded or not. | |
f5098edb RL |
395 | |
396 | The options that C<run> can take are in the form of hash values: | |
397 | ||
398 | =over 4 | |
399 | ||
400 | =item B<capture =E<gt> 0|1> | |
401 | ||
402 | If true, the command will be executed with a perl backtick, and C<run> will | |
403 | return the resulting output as an array of lines. If false or not given, | |
404 | the command will be executed with C<system()>, and C<run> will return 1 if | |
405 | the command was successful or 0 if it wasn't. | |
406 | ||
f75f007c RL |
407 | =item B<prefix =E<gt> EXPR> |
408 | ||
409 | If specified, EXPR will be used as a string to prefix the output from the | |
410 | command. This is useful if the output contains lines starting with C<ok > | |
411 | or C<not ok > that can disturb Test::Harness. | |
412 | ||
34a6a9b1 RL |
413 | =item B<statusvar =E<gt> VARREF> |
414 | ||
415 | If used, B<VARREF> must be a reference to a scalar variable. It will be | |
416 | assigned a boolean indicating if the command succeeded or not. This is | |
417 | particularly useful together with B<capture>. | |
418 | ||
f5098edb RL |
419 | =back |
420 | ||
421 | For further discussion on what is considered a successful command or not, see | |
422 | the function C<with> further down. | |
423 | ||
424 | =back | |
425 | ||
426 | =cut | |
aec27d4d RL |
427 | |
428 | sub run { | |
b843cdb1 | 429 | my ($cmd, $display_cmd) = shift->(0); |
aec27d4d RL |
430 | my %opts = @_; |
431 | ||
432 | return () if !$cmd; | |
433 | ||
434 | my $prefix = ""; | |
435 | if ( $^O eq "VMS" ) { # VMS | |
436 | $prefix = "pipe "; | |
aec27d4d RL |
437 | } |
438 | ||
439 | my @r = (); | |
440 | my $r = 0; | |
441 | my $e = 0; | |
2ef157af | 442 | |
34a6a9b1 RL |
443 | die "OpenSSL::Test::run(): statusvar value not a scalar reference" |
444 | if $opts{statusvar} && ref($opts{statusvar}) ne "SCALAR"; | |
445 | ||
78e91586 RL |
446 | # In non-verbose, we want to shut up the command interpreter, in case |
447 | # it has something to complain about. On VMS, it might complain both | |
448 | # on stdout and stderr | |
81b538e5 RL |
449 | my $save_STDOUT; |
450 | my $save_STDERR; | |
78e91586 | 451 | if ($ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} && !$ENV{HARNESS_VERBOSE}) { |
81b538e5 RL |
452 | open $save_STDOUT, '>&', \*STDOUT or die "Can't dup STDOUT: $!"; |
453 | open $save_STDERR, '>&', \*STDERR or die "Can't dup STDERR: $!"; | |
78e91586 RL |
454 | open STDOUT, ">", devnull(); |
455 | open STDERR, ">", devnull(); | |
456 | } | |
457 | ||
208d721a RL |
458 | $ENV{HARNESS_OSSL_LEVEL} = $level + 1; |
459 | ||
2ef157af RL |
460 | # The dance we do with $? is the same dance the Unix shells appear to |
461 | # do. For example, a program that gets aborted (and therefore signals | |
462 | # SIGABRT = 6) will appear to exit with the code 134. We mimic this | |
463 | # to make it easier to compare with a manual run of the command. | |
f75f007c RL |
464 | if ($opts{capture} || defined($opts{prefix})) { |
465 | my $pipe; | |
93f725a3 | 466 | local $_; |
f75f007c RL |
467 | |
468 | open($pipe, '-|', "$prefix$cmd") or die "Can't start command: $!"; | |
469 | while(<$pipe>) { | |
470 | my $l = ($opts{prefix} // "") . $_; | |
471 | if ($opts{capture}) { | |
472 | push @r, $l; | |
473 | } else { | |
474 | print STDOUT $l; | |
475 | } | |
476 | } | |
477 | close $pipe; | |
aec27d4d RL |
478 | } else { |
479 | system("$prefix$cmd"); | |
34a6a9b1 RL |
480 | } |
481 | $e = ($? & 0x7f) ? ($? & 0x7f)|0x80 : ($? >> 8); | |
482 | $r = $hooks{exit_checker}->($e); | |
483 | if ($opts{statusvar}) { | |
484 | ${$opts{statusvar}} = $r; | |
aec27d4d RL |
485 | } |
486 | ||
78e91586 RL |
487 | if ($ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} && !$ENV{HARNESS_VERBOSE}) { |
488 | close STDOUT; | |
489 | close STDERR; | |
81b538e5 RL |
490 | open STDOUT, '>&', $save_STDOUT or die "Can't restore STDOUT: $!"; |
491 | open STDERR, '>&', $save_STDERR or die "Can't restore STDERR: $!"; | |
78e91586 | 492 | } |
78e91586 | 493 | |
349232d1 | 494 | print STDERR "$prefix$display_cmd => $e\n" |
3eefcea1 RL |
495 | if !$ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} || $ENV{HARNESS_VERBOSE}; |
496 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
497 | # At this point, $? stops being interesting, and unfortunately, |
498 | # there are Test::More versions that get picky if we leave it | |
499 | # non-zero. | |
500 | $? = 0; | |
501 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
502 | if ($opts{capture}) { |
503 | return @r; | |
504 | } else { | |
505 | return $r; | |
506 | } | |
507 | } | |
508 | ||
f5098edb RL |
509 | END { |
510 | my $tb = Test::More->builder; | |
511 | my $failure = scalar(grep { $_ == 0; } $tb->summary); | |
512 | if ($failure && $end_with_bailout) { | |
513 | BAIL_OUT("Stoptest!"); | |
514 | } | |
515 | } | |
516 | ||
517 | =head2 Utility functions | |
518 | ||
519 | The following functions are exported on request when using C<OpenSSL::Test>. | |
520 | ||
42e0ccdf RL |
521 | # To only get the bldtop_file and srctop_file functions. |
522 | use OpenSSL::Test qw/bldtop_file srctop_file/; | |
f5098edb | 523 | |
42e0ccdf RL |
524 | # To only get the bldtop_file function in addition to the default ones. |
525 | use OpenSSL::Test qw/:DEFAULT bldtop_file/; | |
f5098edb RL |
526 | |
527 | =cut | |
528 | ||
529 | # Utility functions, exported on request | |
530 | ||
531 | =over 4 | |
532 | ||
42e0ccdf | 533 | =item B<bldtop_dir LIST> |
f5098edb RL |
534 | |
535 | LIST is a list of directories that make up a path from the top of the OpenSSL | |
42e0ccdf RL |
536 | build directory (as indicated by the environment variable C<$TOP> or |
537 | C<$BLDTOP>). | |
538 | C<bldtop_dir> returns the resulting directory as a string, adapted to the local | |
f5098edb RL |
539 | operating system. |
540 | ||
541 | =back | |
542 | ||
543 | =cut | |
544 | ||
42e0ccdf RL |
545 | sub bldtop_dir { |
546 | return __bldtop_dir(@_); # This caters for operating systems that have | |
f5098edb RL |
547 | # a very distinct syntax for directories. |
548 | } | |
549 | ||
550 | =over 4 | |
551 | ||
42e0ccdf | 552 | =item B<bldtop_file LIST, FILENAME> |
f5098edb RL |
553 | |
554 | LIST is a list of directories that make up a path from the top of the OpenSSL | |
42e0ccdf RL |
555 | build directory (as indicated by the environment variable C<$TOP> or |
556 | C<$BLDTOP>) and FILENAME is the name of a file located in that directory path. | |
557 | C<bldtop_file> returns the resulting file path as a string, adapted to the local | |
f5098edb RL |
558 | operating system. |
559 | ||
560 | =back | |
561 | ||
562 | =cut | |
563 | ||
42e0ccdf RL |
564 | sub bldtop_file { |
565 | return __bldtop_file(@_); | |
566 | } | |
567 | ||
568 | =over 4 | |
569 | ||
570 | =item B<srctop_dir LIST> | |
571 | ||
572 | LIST is a list of directories that make up a path from the top of the OpenSSL | |
573 | source directory (as indicated by the environment variable C<$TOP> or | |
574 | C<$SRCTOP>). | |
575 | C<srctop_dir> returns the resulting directory as a string, adapted to the local | |
576 | operating system. | |
577 | ||
578 | =back | |
579 | ||
580 | =cut | |
581 | ||
582 | sub srctop_dir { | |
583 | return __srctop_dir(@_); # This caters for operating systems that have | |
584 | # a very distinct syntax for directories. | |
585 | } | |
586 | ||
587 | =over 4 | |
588 | ||
589 | =item B<srctop_file LIST, FILENAME> | |
590 | ||
591 | LIST is a list of directories that make up a path from the top of the OpenSSL | |
592 | source directory (as indicated by the environment variable C<$TOP> or | |
593 | C<$SRCTOP>) and FILENAME is the name of a file located in that directory path. | |
594 | C<srctop_file> returns the resulting file path as a string, adapted to the local | |
595 | operating system. | |
596 | ||
597 | =back | |
598 | ||
599 | =cut | |
600 | ||
601 | sub srctop_file { | |
602 | return __srctop_file(@_); | |
f5098edb RL |
603 | } |
604 | ||
605 | =over 4 | |
606 | ||
6c6a2ae6 RL |
607 | =item B<data_file LIST, FILENAME> |
608 | ||
609 | LIST is a list of directories that make up a path from the data directory | |
610 | associated with the test (see L</DESCRIPTION> above) and FILENAME is the name | |
611 | of a file located in that directory path. C<data_file> returns the resulting | |
612 | file path as a string, adapted to the local operating system. | |
613 | ||
614 | =back | |
615 | ||
616 | =cut | |
617 | ||
618 | sub data_file { | |
619 | return __data_file(@_); | |
620 | } | |
621 | ||
622 | =over 4 | |
623 | ||
f5098edb RL |
624 | =item B<pipe LIST> |
625 | ||
626 | LIST is a list of CODEREFs returned by C<app> or C<test>, from which C<pipe> | |
627 | creates a new command composed of all the given commands put together in a | |
628 | pipe. C<pipe> returns a new CODEREF in the same manner as C<app> or C<test>, | |
629 | to be passed to C<run> for execution. | |
630 | ||
631 | =back | |
632 | ||
633 | =cut | |
634 | ||
aec27d4d RL |
635 | sub pipe { |
636 | my @cmds = @_; | |
637 | return | |
638 | sub { | |
639 | my @cs = (); | |
640 | my @dcs = (); | |
641 | my @els = (); | |
642 | my $counter = 0; | |
643 | foreach (@cmds) { | |
644 | my ($c, $dc, @el) = $_->(++$counter); | |
645 | ||
646 | return () if !$c; | |
647 | ||
648 | push @cs, $c; | |
649 | push @dcs, $dc; | |
650 | push @els, @el; | |
651 | } | |
652 | return ( | |
653 | join(" | ", @cs), | |
654 | join(" | ", @dcs), | |
655 | @els | |
656 | ); | |
657 | }; | |
658 | } | |
659 | ||
f5098edb RL |
660 | =over 4 |
661 | ||
662 | =item B<with HASHREF, CODEREF> | |
663 | ||
46f4e1be | 664 | C<with> will temporarily install hooks given by the HASHREF and then execute |
f5098edb RL |
665 | the given CODEREF. Hooks are usually expected to have a coderef as value. |
666 | ||
667 | The currently available hoosk are: | |
668 | ||
669 | =over 4 | |
670 | ||
671 | =item B<exit_checker =E<gt> CODEREF> | |
672 | ||
673 | This hook is executed after C<run> has performed its given command. The | |
674 | CODEREF receives the exit code as only argument and is expected to return | |
675 | 1 (if the exit code indicated success) or 0 (if the exit code indicated | |
676 | failure). | |
677 | ||
678 | =back | |
679 | ||
680 | =back | |
681 | ||
682 | =cut | |
683 | ||
684 | sub with { | |
685 | my $opts = shift; | |
686 | my %opts = %{$opts}; | |
687 | my $codeblock = shift; | |
688 | ||
689 | my %saved_hooks = (); | |
690 | ||
691 | foreach (keys %opts) { | |
692 | $saved_hooks{$_} = $hooks{$_} if exists($hooks{$_}); | |
693 | $hooks{$_} = $opts{$_}; | |
694 | } | |
695 | ||
696 | $codeblock->(); | |
697 | ||
698 | foreach (keys %saved_hooks) { | |
699 | $hooks{$_} = $saved_hooks{$_}; | |
700 | } | |
701 | } | |
702 | ||
703 | =over 4 | |
704 | ||
cb2ceb18 | 705 | =item B<cmdstr CODEREF, OPTS> |
f5098edb RL |
706 | |
707 | C<cmdstr> takes a CODEREF from C<app> or C<test> and simply returns the | |
708 | command as a string. | |
709 | ||
46f4e1be | 710 | C<cmdstr> takes some additional options OPTS that affect the string returned: |
cb2ceb18 RL |
711 | |
712 | =over 4 | |
713 | ||
714 | =item B<display =E<gt> 0|1> | |
715 | ||
716 | When set to 0, the returned string will be with all decorations, such as a | |
717 | possible redirect of stderr to the null device. This is suitable if the | |
718 | string is to be used directly in a recipe. | |
719 | ||
720 | When set to 1, the returned string will be without extra decorations. This | |
721 | is suitable for display if that is desired (doesn't confuse people with all | |
722 | internal stuff), or if it's used to pass a command down to a subprocess. | |
723 | ||
724 | Default: 0 | |
725 | ||
726 | =back | |
727 | ||
f5098edb RL |
728 | =back |
729 | ||
730 | =cut | |
731 | ||
732 | sub cmdstr { | |
b843cdb1 | 733 | my ($cmd, $display_cmd) = shift->(0); |
cb2ceb18 | 734 | my %opts = @_; |
f5098edb | 735 | |
cb2ceb18 RL |
736 | if ($opts{display}) { |
737 | return $display_cmd; | |
738 | } else { | |
739 | return $cmd; | |
740 | } | |
f5098edb RL |
741 | } |
742 | ||
743 | =over 4 | |
744 | ||
745 | =item B<quotify LIST> | |
746 | ||
747 | LIST is a list of strings that are going to be used as arguments for a | |
748 | command, and makes sure to inject quotes and escapes as necessary depending | |
749 | on the content of each string. | |
750 | ||
751 | This can also be used to put quotes around the executable of a command. | |
752 | I<This must never ever be done on VMS.> | |
753 | ||
754 | =back | |
755 | ||
756 | =cut | |
aec27d4d RL |
757 | |
758 | sub quotify { | |
759 | # Unix setup (default if nothing else is mentioned) | |
760 | my $arg_formatter = | |
761 | sub { $_ = shift; /\s|[\{\}\\\$\[\]\*\?\|\&:;<>]/ ? "'$_'" : $_ }; | |
762 | ||
763 | if ( $^O eq "VMS") { # VMS setup | |
764 | $arg_formatter = sub { | |
765 | $_ = shift; | |
766 | if (/\s|["[:upper:]]/) { | |
767 | s/"/""/g; | |
768 | '"'.$_.'"'; | |
769 | } else { | |
770 | $_; | |
771 | } | |
772 | }; | |
773 | } elsif ( $^O eq "MSWin32") { # MSWin setup | |
774 | $arg_formatter = sub { | |
775 | $_ = shift; | |
776 | if (/\s|["\|\&\*\;<>]/) { | |
777 | s/(["\\])/\\$1/g; | |
778 | '"'.$_.'"'; | |
779 | } else { | |
780 | $_; | |
781 | } | |
782 | }; | |
783 | } | |
784 | ||
785 | return map { $arg_formatter->($_) } @_; | |
786 | } | |
787 | ||
f5098edb RL |
788 | ###################################################################### |
789 | # private functions. These are never exported. | |
790 | ||
791 | =head1 ENVIRONMENT | |
792 | ||
793 | OpenSSL::Test depends on some environment variables. | |
794 | ||
795 | =over 4 | |
796 | ||
797 | =item B<TOP> | |
798 | ||
799 | This environment variable is mandatory. C<setup> will check that it's | |
800 | defined and that it's a directory that contains the file C<Configure>. | |
801 | If this isn't so, C<setup> will C<BAIL_OUT>. | |
802 | ||
803 | =item B<BIN_D> | |
804 | ||
805 | If defined, its value should be the directory where the openssl application | |
806 | is located. Defaults to C<$TOP/apps> (adapted to the operating system). | |
807 | ||
808 | =item B<TEST_D> | |
809 | ||
810 | If defined, its value should be the directory where the test applications | |
811 | are located. Defaults to C<$TOP/test> (adapted to the operating system). | |
812 | ||
f5098edb RL |
813 | =item B<STOPTEST> |
814 | ||
815 | If defined, it puts testing in a different mode, where a recipe with | |
816 | failures will result in a C<BAIL_OUT> at the end of its run. | |
817 | ||
818 | =back | |
819 | ||
820 | =cut | |
821 | ||
822 | sub __env { | |
6c6a2ae6 RL |
823 | (my $recipe_datadir = basename($0)) =~ s/\.t$/_data/i; |
824 | ||
42e0ccdf RL |
825 | $directories{SRCTOP} = $ENV{SRCTOP} || $ENV{TOP}; |
826 | $directories{BLDTOP} = $ENV{BLDTOP} || $ENV{TOP}; | |
fbd361ea RL |
827 | $directories{BLDAPPS} = $ENV{BIN_D} || __bldtop_dir("apps"); |
828 | $directories{SRCAPPS} = __srctop_dir("apps"); | |
90d28f05 BL |
829 | $directories{BLDFUZZ} = __bldtop_dir("fuzz"); |
830 | $directories{SRCFUZZ} = __srctop_dir("fuzz"); | |
fbd361ea RL |
831 | $directories{BLDTEST} = $ENV{TEST_D} || __bldtop_dir("test"); |
832 | $directories{SRCTEST} = __srctop_dir("test"); | |
6c6a2ae6 RL |
833 | $directories{SRCDATA} = __srctop_dir("test", "recipes", |
834 | $recipe_datadir); | |
fbd361ea | 835 | $directories{RESULTS} = $ENV{RESULT_D} || $directories{BLDTEST}; |
f5098edb | 836 | |
d1094383 RL |
837 | push @direnv, "TOP" if $ENV{TOP}; |
838 | push @direnv, "SRCTOP" if $ENV{SRCTOP}; | |
839 | push @direnv, "BLDTOP" if $ENV{BLDTOP}; | |
840 | push @direnv, "BIN_D" if $ENV{BIN_D}; | |
841 | push @direnv, "TEST_D" if $ENV{TEST_D}; | |
842 | push @direnv, "RESULT_D" if $ENV{RESULT_D}; | |
843 | ||
f5098edb RL |
844 | $end_with_bailout = $ENV{STOPTEST} ? 1 : 0; |
845 | }; | |
846 | ||
28e0f6eb RL |
847 | # __srctop_file and __srctop_dir are helpers to build file and directory |
848 | # names on top of the source directory. They depend on $SRCTOP, and | |
849 | # therefore on the proper use of setup() and when needed, indir(). | |
850 | # __bldtop_file and __bldtop_dir do the same thing but relative to $BLDTOP. | |
851 | # __srctop_file and __bldtop_file take the same kind of argument as | |
852 | # File::Spec::Functions::catfile. | |
853 | # Similarly, __srctop_dir and __bldtop_dir take the same kind of argument | |
854 | # as File::Spec::Functions::catdir | |
42e0ccdf RL |
855 | sub __srctop_file { |
856 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
857 | ||
858 | my $f = pop; | |
859 | return catfile($directories{SRCTOP},@_,$f); | |
860 | } | |
861 | ||
862 | sub __srctop_dir { | |
863 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
864 | ||
865 | return catdir($directories{SRCTOP},@_); | |
866 | } | |
867 | ||
868 | sub __bldtop_file { | |
f5098edb RL |
869 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); |
870 | ||
871 | my $f = pop; | |
42e0ccdf | 872 | return catfile($directories{BLDTOP},@_,$f); |
f5098edb RL |
873 | } |
874 | ||
42e0ccdf | 875 | sub __bldtop_dir { |
4ada8be2 AP |
876 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); |
877 | ||
42e0ccdf | 878 | return catdir($directories{BLDTOP},@_); |
4ada8be2 AP |
879 | } |
880 | ||
28e0f6eb RL |
881 | # __exeext is a function that returns the platform dependent file extension |
882 | # for executable binaries, or the value of the environment variable $EXE_EXT | |
883 | # if that one is defined. | |
d8a52304 RL |
884 | sub __exeext { |
885 | my $ext = ""; | |
886 | if ($^O eq "VMS" ) { # VMS | |
887 | $ext = ".exe"; | |
888 | } elsif ($^O eq "MSWin32") { # Windows | |
889 | $ext = ".exe"; | |
890 | } | |
891 | return $ENV{"EXE_EXT"} || $ext; | |
892 | } | |
893 | ||
28e0f6eb RL |
894 | # __test_file, __apps_file and __fuzz_file return the full path to a file |
895 | # relative to the test/, apps/ or fuzz/ directory in the build tree or the | |
896 | # source tree, depending on where the file is found. Note that when looking | |
897 | # in the build tree, the file name with an added extension is looked for, if | |
898 | # an extension is given. The intent is to look for executable binaries (in | |
899 | # the build tree) or possibly scripts (in the source tree). | |
900 | # These functions all take the same arguments as File::Spec::Functions::catfile, | |
901 | # *plus* a mandatory extension argument. This extension argument can be undef, | |
902 | # and is ignored in such a case. | |
f5098edb RL |
903 | sub __test_file { |
904 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
905 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 906 | my $e = pop || ""; |
3732f12c | 907 | my $f = pop; |
9b9a8a71 RL |
908 | my $out = catfile($directories{BLDTEST},@_,$f . $e); |
909 | $out = catfile($directories{SRCTEST},@_,$f) unless -f $out; | |
910 | return $out; | |
a00c84f6 RL |
911 | } |
912 | ||
f5098edb RL |
913 | sub __apps_file { |
914 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
915 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 916 | my $e = pop || ""; |
3732f12c | 917 | my $f = pop; |
9b9a8a71 RL |
918 | my $out = catfile($directories{BLDAPPS},@_,$f . $e); |
919 | $out = catfile($directories{SRCAPPS},@_,$f) unless -f $out; | |
920 | return $out; | |
f5098edb RL |
921 | } |
922 | ||
90d28f05 BL |
923 | sub __fuzz_file { |
924 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
925 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 926 | my $e = pop || ""; |
90d28f05 | 927 | my $f = pop; |
9b9a8a71 RL |
928 | my $out = catfile($directories{BLDFUZZ},@_,$f . $e); |
929 | $out = catfile($directories{SRCFUZZ},@_,$f) unless -f $out; | |
930 | return $out; | |
90d28f05 BL |
931 | } |
932 | ||
6c6a2ae6 RL |
933 | sub __data_file { |
934 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
935 | ||
936 | my $f = pop; | |
937 | return catfile($directories{SRCDATA},@_,$f); | |
938 | } | |
939 | ||
f5098edb RL |
940 | sub __results_file { |
941 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); | |
942 | ||
943 | my $f = pop; | |
944 | return catfile($directories{RESULTS},@_,$f); | |
945 | } | |
946 | ||
28e0f6eb RL |
947 | # __cwd DIR |
948 | # __cwd DIR, OPTS | |
949 | # | |
950 | # __cwd changes directory to DIR (string) and changes all the relative | |
951 | # entries in %directories accordingly. OPTS is an optional series of | |
952 | # hash style arguments to alter __cwd's behavior: | |
953 | # | |
954 | # create = 0|1 The directory we move to is created if 1, not if 0. | |
955 | # cleanup = 0|1 The directory we move from is removed if 1, not if 0. | |
956 | ||
f5098edb | 957 | sub __cwd { |
11b3313c | 958 | my $dir = catdir(shift); |
f5098edb RL |
959 | my %opts = @_; |
960 | my $abscurdir = rel2abs(curdir()); | |
961 | my $absdir = rel2abs($dir); | |
962 | my $reverse = abs2rel($abscurdir, $absdir); | |
963 | ||
964 | # PARANOIA: if we're not moving anywhere, we do nothing more | |
965 | if ($abscurdir eq $absdir) { | |
966 | return $reverse; | |
967 | } | |
968 | ||
969 | # Do not support a move to a different volume for now. Maybe later. | |
970 | BAIL_OUT("FAILURE: \"$dir\" moves to a different volume, not supported") | |
971 | if $reverse eq $abscurdir; | |
972 | ||
973 | # If someone happened to give a directory that leads back to the current, | |
974 | # it's extremely silly to do anything more, so just simulate that we did | |
975 | # move. | |
976 | # In this case, we won't even clean it out, for safety's sake. | |
977 | return "." if $reverse eq ""; | |
978 | ||
979 | $dir = canonpath($dir); | |
980 | if ($opts{create}) { | |
981 | mkpath($dir); | |
982 | } | |
983 | ||
3da9eeb1 RL |
984 | # We are recalculating the directories we keep track of, but need to save |
985 | # away the result for after having moved into the new directory. | |
986 | my %tmp_directories = (); | |
987 | my %tmp_ENV = (); | |
f5098edb RL |
988 | |
989 | # For each of these directory variables, figure out where they are relative | |
990 | # to the directory we want to move to if they aren't absolute (if they are, | |
991 | # they don't change!) | |
42e0ccdf | 992 | my @dirtags = sort keys %directories; |
f5098edb RL |
993 | foreach (@dirtags) { |
994 | if (!file_name_is_absolute($directories{$_})) { | |
995 | my $newpath = abs2rel(rel2abs($directories{$_}), rel2abs($dir)); | |
3da9eeb1 | 996 | $tmp_directories{$_} = $newpath; |
f5098edb RL |
997 | } |
998 | } | |
999 | ||
d1094383 RL |
1000 | # Treat each environment variable that was used to get us the values in |
1001 | # %directories the same was as the paths in %directories, so any sub | |
1002 | # process can use their values properly as well | |
1003 | foreach (@direnv) { | |
1004 | if (!file_name_is_absolute($ENV{$_})) { | |
1005 | my $newpath = abs2rel(rel2abs($ENV{$_}), rel2abs($dir)); | |
3da9eeb1 | 1006 | $tmp_ENV{$_} = $newpath; |
d1094383 RL |
1007 | } |
1008 | } | |
1009 | ||
3da9eeb1 RL |
1010 | # Should we just bail out here as well? I'm unsure. |
1011 | return undef unless chdir($dir); | |
1012 | ||
1013 | if ($opts{cleanup}) { | |
1014 | rmtree(".", { safe => 0, keep_root => 1 }); | |
1015 | } | |
1016 | ||
768a3eca | 1017 | # We put back new values carefully. Doing the obvious |
46f4e1be | 1018 | # %directories = ( %tmp_directories ) |
768a3eca RL |
1019 | # will clear out any value that happens to be an absolute path |
1020 | foreach (keys %tmp_directories) { | |
1021 | $directories{$_} = $tmp_directories{$_}; | |
1022 | } | |
3da9eeb1 RL |
1023 | foreach (keys %tmp_ENV) { |
1024 | $ENV{$_} = $tmp_ENV{$_}; | |
1025 | } | |
1026 | ||
a00c84f6 | 1027 | if ($debug) { |
f5098edb | 1028 | print STDERR "DEBUG: __cwd(), directories and files:\n"; |
fbd361ea RL |
1029 | print STDERR " \$directories{BLDTEST} = \"$directories{BLDTEST}\"\n"; |
1030 | print STDERR " \$directories{SRCTEST} = \"$directories{SRCTEST}\"\n"; | |
6c6a2ae6 | 1031 | print STDERR " \$directories{SRCDATA} = \"$directories{SRCDATA}\"\n"; |
f5098edb | 1032 | print STDERR " \$directories{RESULTS} = \"$directories{RESULTS}\"\n"; |
fbd361ea RL |
1033 | print STDERR " \$directories{BLDAPPS} = \"$directories{BLDAPPS}\"\n"; |
1034 | print STDERR " \$directories{SRCAPPS} = \"$directories{SRCAPPS}\"\n"; | |
42e0ccdf RL |
1035 | print STDERR " \$directories{SRCTOP} = \"$directories{SRCTOP}\"\n"; |
1036 | print STDERR " \$directories{BLDTOP} = \"$directories{BLDTOP}\"\n"; | |
f5098edb RL |
1037 | print STDERR "\n"; |
1038 | print STDERR " current directory is \"",curdir(),"\"\n"; | |
1039 | print STDERR " the way back is \"$reverse\"\n"; | |
1040 | } | |
1041 | ||
1042 | return $reverse; | |
1043 | } | |
1044 | ||
9ddf67f3 RL |
1045 | # __wrap_cmd CMD |
1046 | # __wrap_cmd CMD, EXE_SHELL | |
1047 | # | |
1048 | # __wrap_cmd "wraps" CMD (string) with a beginning command that makes sure | |
1049 | # the command gets executed with an appropriate environment. If EXE_SHELL | |
1050 | # is given, it is used as the beginning command. | |
1051 | # | |
1052 | # __wrap_cmd returns a list that should be used to build up a larger list | |
1053 | # of command tokens, or be joined together like this: | |
1054 | # | |
1055 | # join(" ", __wrap_cmd($cmd)) | |
1056 | sub __wrap_cmd { | |
1057 | my $cmd = shift; | |
ec307bcc | 1058 | my $exe_shell = shift; |
f5098edb | 1059 | |
9ddf67f3 | 1060 | my @prefix = ( __bldtop_file("util", "shlib_wrap.sh") ); |
f5098edb | 1061 | |
9ddf67f3 RL |
1062 | if(defined($exe_shell)) { |
1063 | @prefix = ( $exe_shell ); | |
1064 | } elsif ($^O eq "VMS" || $^O eq "MSWin32") { | |
1065 | # VMS and Windows don't use any wrapper script for the moment | |
1066 | @prefix = (); | |
1067 | } | |
1068 | ||
1069 | return (@prefix, $cmd); | |
1070 | } | |
1071 | ||
1072 | # __fixup_prg PROG | |
1073 | # | |
1074 | # __fixup_prg does whatever fixup is needed to execute an executable binary | |
1075 | # given by PROG (string). | |
1076 | # | |
1077 | # __fixup_prg returns a string with the possibly prefixed program path spec. | |
1078 | sub __fixup_prg { | |
1079 | my $prog = shift; | |
1080 | ||
1081 | my $prefix = ""; | |
1082 | ||
1083 | if ($^O eq "VMS" ) { | |
c10d1bc8 | 1084 | $prefix = ($prog =~ /^(?:[\$a-z0-9_]+:)?[<\[]/i ? "mcr " : "mcr []"); |
f5098edb RL |
1085 | } |
1086 | ||
a00c84f6 RL |
1087 | if (defined($prog)) { |
1088 | # Make sure to quotify the program file on platforms that may | |
1089 | # have spaces or similar in their path name. | |
1090 | # To our knowledge, VMS is the exception where quotifying should | |
69687aa8 | 1091 | # never happen. |
a00c84f6 RL |
1092 | ($prog) = quotify($prog) unless $^O eq "VMS"; |
1093 | return $prefix.$prog; | |
f5098edb RL |
1094 | } |
1095 | ||
1096 | print STDERR "$prog not found\n"; | |
1097 | return undef; | |
1098 | } | |
1099 | ||
28e0f6eb RL |
1100 | # __decorate_cmd NUM, CMDARRAYREF |
1101 | # | |
1102 | # __decorate_cmd takes a command number NUM and a command token array | |
1103 | # CMDARRAYREF, builds up a command string from them and decorates it | |
1104 | # with necessary redirections. | |
1105 | # __decorate_cmd returns a list of two strings, one with the command | |
1106 | # string to actually be used, the other to be displayed for the user. | |
1107 | # The reason these strings might differ is that we redirect stderr to | |
1108 | # the null device unless we're verbose and unless the user has | |
1109 | # explicitly specified a stderr redirection. | |
9ddf67f3 | 1110 | sub __decorate_cmd { |
f5098edb RL |
1111 | BAIL_OUT("Must run setup() first") if (! $test_name); |
1112 | ||
1113 | my $num = shift; | |
9ddf67f3 | 1114 | my $cmd = shift; |
b8fcd4f0 | 1115 | my %opts = @_; |
a00c84f6 | 1116 | |
9ddf67f3 | 1117 | my $cmdstr = join(" ", @$cmd); |
f5098edb | 1118 | my $null = devnull(); |
f5098edb RL |
1119 | my $fileornull = sub { $_[0] ? $_[0] : $null; }; |
1120 | my $stdin = ""; | |
1121 | my $stdout = ""; | |
1122 | my $stderr = ""; | |
1123 | my $saved_stderr = undef; | |
1124 | $stdin = " < ".$fileornull->($opts{stdin}) if exists($opts{stdin}); | |
1125 | $stdout= " > ".$fileornull->($opts{stdout}) if exists($opts{stdout}); | |
1126 | $stderr=" 2> ".$fileornull->($opts{stderr}) if exists($opts{stderr}); | |
1127 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 1128 | my $display_cmd = "$cmdstr$stdin$stdout$stderr"; |
b843cdb1 RL |
1129 | |
1130 | $stderr=" 2> ".$null | |
1131 | unless $stderr || !$ENV{HARNESS_ACTIVE} || $ENV{HARNESS_VERBOSE}; | |
1132 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 1133 | $cmdstr .= "$stdin$stdout$stderr"; |
f5098edb | 1134 | |
a00c84f6 | 1135 | if ($debug) { |
9ddf67f3 RL |
1136 | print STDERR "DEBUG[__decorate_cmd]: \$cmdstr = \"$cmdstr\"\n"; |
1137 | print STDERR "DEBUG[__decorate_cmd]: \$display_cmd = \"$display_cmd\"\n"; | |
a00c84f6 RL |
1138 | } |
1139 | ||
9ddf67f3 | 1140 | return ($cmdstr, $display_cmd); |
f5098edb RL |
1141 | } |
1142 | ||
1143 | =head1 SEE ALSO | |
1144 | ||
1145 | L<Test::More>, L<Test::Harness> | |
1146 | ||
1147 | =head1 AUTHORS | |
1148 | ||
e3713c36 | 1149 | Richard Levitte E<lt>levitte@openssl.orgE<gt> with assistance and |
f5098edb RL |
1150 | inspiration from Andy Polyakov E<lt>appro@openssl.org<gt>. |
1151 | ||
1152 | =cut | |
1153 | ||
208d721a RL |
1154 | no warnings 'redefine'; |
1155 | sub subtest { | |
1156 | $level++; | |
1157 | ||
1158 | Test::More::subtest @_; | |
1159 | ||
1160 | $level--; | |
1161 | }; | |
1162 | ||
aec27d4d | 1163 | 1; |