# This test confirms that compiling code that searches /usr/include for headers
# will result in compiler errors. This recipe should will fail to build and
# oe-selftest has a test that verifies that.
-do_compile() {
- bbnote Testing preprocessor
- echo "int main(int argc, char** argv) {}" | ${CPP} -I/usr/include -
- bbnote Testing C compiler
- echo "int main(int argc, char** argv) {}" | ${CC} -x c -I/usr/include -
- bbnote Testing C++ compiler
- echo "int main(int argc, char** argv) {}" | ${CC} -x c++ -I/usr/include -
+python do_compile() {
+ import subprocess
+
+ tests = {
+ "Preprocessor": "${CPP} -I/usr/include -",
+ "C Compiler": "${CC} -I/usr/include -x c -",
+ "C++ Compiler": "${CXX} -I/usr/include -x c++ -",
+ }
+
+ for name, cmd in tests.items():
+ cmd = d.expand(cmd)
+ bb.note("Test command: " + cmd)
+ testcode = "int main(int argc, char** argv) {}"
+ proc = subprocess.run(cmd, shell=True, input=testcode, capture_output=True, text=True)
+
+ if proc.returncode != 0 and "is unsafe for cross-compilation" in proc.stderr:
+ bb.note(f"{name} passed: {proc.stderr}")
+ else:
+ bb.error(f"{name} is not poisoned. Exit status {proc.returncode}, output: {proc.stdout} {proc.stderr}")
}
EXCLUDE_FROM_WORLD = "1"
class Poisoning(OESelftestTestCase):
def test_poisoning(self):
- res = bitbake("poison", ignore_status=True)
- self.assertNotEqual(res.status, 0)
- self.assertTrue("is unsafe for cross-compilation" in res.output)
+ # The poison recipe fails if the poisoning didn't work
+ bitbake("poison")