postgresql/src/test/perl/TestLib.pm

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=pod
=head1 NAME
TestLib - helper module for writing PostgreSQL's C<prove> tests.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use TestLib;
# Test basic output of a command
program_help_ok('initdb');
program_version_ok('initdb');
program_options_handling_ok('initdb');
# Test option combinations
command_fails(['initdb', '--invalid-option'],
'command fails with invalid option');
my $tempdir = TestLib::tempdir;
command_ok('initdb', '-D', $tempdir);
# Miscellanea
print "on Windows" if $TestLib::windows_os;
my $path = TestLib::perl2host($backup_dir);
ok(check_mode_recursive($stream_dir, 0700, 0600),
"check stream dir permissions");
TestLib::system_log('pg_ctl', 'kill', 'QUIT', $slow_pid);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
C<TestLib> contains a set of routines dedicated to environment setup for
a PostgreSQL regression test run and includes some low-level routines
aimed at controlling command execution, logging and test functions.
=cut
# This module should never depend on any other PostgreSQL regression test
# modules.
package TestLib;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Config;
use Cwd;
use Exporter 'import';
use Fcntl qw(:mode);
use File::Basename;
use File::Find;
use File::Spec;
use File::stat qw(stat);
use File::Temp ();
use IPC::Run;
use SimpleTee;
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# specify a recent enough version of Test::More to support the
# done_testing() function
use Test::More 0.87;
our @EXPORT = qw(
generate_ascii_string
slurp_dir
slurp_file
append_to_file
check_mode_recursive
chmod_recursive
check_pg_config
system_or_bail
system_log
run_log
run_command
command_ok
command_fails
command_exit_is
program_help_ok
program_version_ok
program_options_handling_ok
command_like
command_like_safe
command_fails_like
command_checks_all
$windows_os
);
our ($windows_os, $tmp_check, $log_path, $test_logfile);
BEGIN
{
# Set to untranslated messages, to be able to compare program output
# with expected strings.
delete $ENV{LANGUAGE};
delete $ENV{LC_ALL};
$ENV{LC_MESSAGES} = 'C';
delete $ENV{PGCONNECT_TIMEOUT};
delete $ENV{PGDATA};
delete $ENV{PGDATABASE};
delete $ENV{PGHOSTADDR};
delete $ENV{PGREQUIRESSL};
delete $ENV{PGSERVICE};
delete $ENV{PGSSLMODE};
delete $ENV{PGUSER};
delete $ENV{PGPORT};
delete $ENV{PGHOST};
Unified logging system for command-line programs This unifies the various ad hoc logging (message printing, error printing) systems used throughout the command-line programs. Features: - Program name is automatically prefixed. - Message string does not end with newline. This removes a common source of inconsistencies and omissions. - Additionally, a final newline is automatically stripped, simplifying use of PQerrorMessage() etc., another common source of mistakes. - I converted error message strings to use %m where possible. - As a result of the above several points, more translatable message strings can be shared between different components and between frontends and backend, without gratuitous punctuation or whitespace differences. - There is support for setting a "log level". This is not meant to be user-facing, but can be used internally to implement debug or verbose modes. - Lazy argument evaluation, so no significant overhead if logging at some level is disabled. - Some color in the messages, similar to gcc and clang. Set PG_COLOR=auto to try it out. Some colors are predefined, but can be customized by setting PG_COLORS. - Common files (common/, fe_utils/, etc.) can handle logging much more simply by just using one API without worrying too much about the context of the calling program, requiring callbacks, or having to pass "progname" around everywhere. - Some programs called setvbuf() to make sure that stderr is unbuffered, even on Windows. But not all programs did that. This is now done centrally. Soft goals: - Reduces vertical space use and visual complexity of error reporting in the source code. - Encourages more deliberate classification of messages. For example, in some cases it wasn't clear without analyzing the surrounding code whether a message was meant as an error or just an info. - Concepts and terms are vaguely aligned with popular logging frameworks such as log4j and Python logging. This is all just about printing stuff out. Nothing affects program flow (e.g., fatal exits). The uses are just too varied to do that. Some existing code had wrappers that do some kind of print-and-exit, and I adapted those. I tried to keep the output mostly the same, but there is a lot of historical baggage to unwind and special cases to consider, and I might not always have succeeded. One significant change is that pg_rewind used to write all error messages to stdout. That is now changed to stderr. Reviewed-by: Donald Dong <xdong@csumb.edu> Reviewed-by: Arthur Zakirov <a.zakirov@postgrespro.ru> Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6a609b43-4f57-7348-6480-bd022f924310@2ndquadrant.com
2019-04-01 14:24:37 +02:00
delete $ENV{PG_COLOR};
$ENV{PGAPPNAME} = basename($0);
# Must be set early
$windows_os = $Config{osname} eq 'MSWin32' || $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
if ($windows_os)
{
require Win32API::File;
Win32API::File->import(qw(createFile OsFHandleOpen CloseHandle));
}
}
=pod
=head1 EXPORTED VARIABLES
=over
=item C<$windows_os>
Set to true when running under Windows, except on Cygwin.
=back
=cut
INIT
{
# Return EPIPE instead of killing the process with SIGPIPE. An affected
# test may still fail, but it's more likely to report useful facts.
$SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE';
# Determine output directories, and create them. The base path is the
# TESTDIR environment variable, which is normally set by the invoking
# Makefile.
$tmp_check = $ENV{TESTDIR} ? "$ENV{TESTDIR}/tmp_check" : "tmp_check";
$log_path = "$tmp_check/log";
mkdir $tmp_check;
mkdir $log_path;
# Open the test log file, whose name depends on the test name.
$test_logfile = basename($0);
$test_logfile =~ s/\.[^.]+$//;
$test_logfile = "$log_path/regress_log_$test_logfile";
open my $testlog, '>', $test_logfile
or die "could not open STDOUT to logfile \"$test_logfile\": $!";
# Hijack STDOUT and STDERR to the log file
open(my $orig_stdout, '>&', \*STDOUT);
open(my $orig_stderr, '>&', \*STDERR);
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open(STDOUT, '>&', $testlog);
open(STDERR, '>&', $testlog);
# The test output (ok ...) needs to be printed to the original STDOUT so
# that the 'prove' program can parse it, and display it to the user in
# real time. But also copy it to the log file, to provide more context
# in the log.
my $builder = Test::More->builder;
my $fh = $builder->output;
tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", $orig_stdout, $testlog;
$fh = $builder->failure_output;
tie *$fh, "SimpleTee", $orig_stderr, $testlog;
# Enable auto-flushing for all the file handles. Stderr and stdout are
# redirected to the same file, and buffering causes the lines to appear
# in the log in confusing order.
autoflush STDOUT 1;
autoflush STDERR 1;
autoflush $testlog 1;
}
END
{
# Preserve temporary directory for this test on failure
$File::Temp::KEEP_ALL = 1 unless all_tests_passing();
}
=pod
=head1 ROUTINES
=over
=item all_tests_passing()
Return 1 if all the tests run so far have passed. Otherwise, return 0.
=cut
sub all_tests_passing
{
foreach my $status (Test::More->builder->summary)
{
return 0 unless $status;
}
return 1;
}
=pod
=item tempdir(prefix)
Securely create a temporary directory inside C<$tmp_check>, like C<mkdtemp>,
and return its name. The directory will be removed automatically at the
end of the tests.
If C<prefix> is given, the new directory is templated as C<${prefix}_XXXX>.
Otherwise the template is C<tmp_test_XXXX>.
=cut
sub tempdir
{
my ($prefix) = @_;
$prefix = "tmp_test" unless defined $prefix;
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return File::Temp::tempdir(
$prefix . '_XXXX',
DIR => $tmp_check,
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CLEANUP => 1);
}
=pod
=item tempdir_short()
As above, but the directory is outside the build tree so that it has a short
name, to avoid path length issues.
=cut
sub tempdir_short
{
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return File::Temp::tempdir(CLEANUP => 1);
}
=pod
=item perl2host()
Translate a Perl file name to a host file name. Currently, this is a no-op
except for the case of Perl=msys and host=mingw32. The subject need not
exist, but its parent directory must exist.
=cut
sub perl2host
{
my ($subject) = @_;
return $subject unless $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
my $here = cwd;
my $leaf;
if (chdir $subject)
{
$leaf = '';
}
else
{
$leaf = '/' . basename $subject;
my $parent = dirname $subject;
chdir $parent or die "could not chdir \"$parent\": $!";
}
# this odd way of calling 'pwd -W' is the only way that seems to work.
my $dir = qx{sh -c "pwd -W"};
chomp $dir;
chdir $here;
return $dir . $leaf;
}
=pod
=item system_log(@cmd)
Run (via C<system()>) the command passed as argument; the return
value is passed through.
=cut
sub system_log
{
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @_) . "\n");
return system(@_);
}
=pod
=item system_or_bail(@cmd)
Run (via C<system()>) the command passed as argument, and returns
if the command is successful.
On failure, abandon further tests and exit the program.
=cut
sub system_or_bail
{
if (system_log(@_) != 0)
{
BAIL_OUT("system $_[0] failed");
}
return;
}
=pod
=item run_log(@cmd)
Run the given command via C<IPC::Run::run()>, noting it in the log.
The return value from the command is passed through.
=cut
sub run_log
{
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{ $_[0] }) . "\n");
return IPC::Run::run(@_);
}
=pod
=item run_command(cmd)
Run (via C<IPC::Run::run()>) the command passed as argument.
The return value from the command is ignored.
The return value is C<($stdout, $stderr)>.
=cut
sub run_command
{
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr;
chomp($stdout);
chomp($stderr);
return ($stdout, $stderr);
}
=pod
=item generate_ascii_string(from_char, to_char)
Generate a string made of the given range of ASCII characters.
=cut
sub generate_ascii_string
{
my ($from_char, $to_char) = @_;
my $res;
for my $i ($from_char .. $to_char)
{
$res .= sprintf("%c", $i);
}
return $res;
}
=pod
=item slurp_dir(dir)
Return the complete list of entries in the specified directory.
=cut
sub slurp_dir
{
my ($dir) = @_;
opendir(my $dh, $dir)
or die "could not opendir \"$dir\": $!";
my @direntries = readdir $dh;
closedir $dh;
return @direntries;
}
=pod
=item slurp_file(filename)
Return the full contents of the specified file.
=cut
sub slurp_file
{
my ($filename) = @_;
local $/;
my $contents;
if ($Config{osname} ne 'MSWin32')
{
open(my $in, '<', $filename)
or die "could not read \"$filename\": $!";
$contents = <$in>;
close $in;
}
else
{
my $fHandle = createFile($filename, "r", "rwd")
or die "could not open \"$filename\": $^E";
OsFHandleOpen(my $fh = IO::Handle->new(), $fHandle, 'r')
or die "could not read \"$filename\": $^E\n";
$contents = <$fh>;
CloseHandle($fHandle)
or die "could not close \"$filename\": $^E\n";
}
$contents =~ s/\r//g if $Config{osname} eq 'msys';
return $contents;
}
=pod
=item append_to_file(filename, str)
Append a string at the end of a given file. (Note: no newline is appended at
end of file.)
=cut
sub append_to_file
{
my ($filename, $str) = @_;
open my $fh, ">>", $filename
or die "could not write \"$filename\": $!";
print $fh $str;
close $fh;
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return;
}
=pod
=item check_mode_recursive(dir, expected_dir_mode, expected_file_mode, ignore_list)
Check that all file/dir modes in a directory match the expected values,
ignoring files in C<ignore_list> (basename only).
=cut
sub check_mode_recursive
{
my ($dir, $expected_dir_mode, $expected_file_mode, $ignore_list) = @_;
# Result defaults to true
my $result = 1;
find(
{
follow_fast => 1,
wanted => sub {
# Is file in the ignore list?
foreach my $ignore ($ignore_list ? @{$ignore_list} : [])
{
if ("$dir/$ignore" eq $File::Find::name)
{
return;
}
}
# Allow ENOENT. A running server can delete files, such as
# those in pg_stat. Other stat() failures are fatal.
my $file_stat = stat($File::Find::name);
unless (defined($file_stat))
{
my $is_ENOENT = $!{ENOENT};
my $msg = "unable to stat $File::Find::name: $!";
if ($is_ENOENT)
{
warn $msg;
return;
}
else
{
die $msg;
}
}
my $file_mode = S_IMODE($file_stat->mode);
# Is this a file?
if (S_ISREG($file_stat->mode))
{
if ($file_mode != $expected_file_mode)
{
print(
*STDERR,
sprintf("$File::Find::name mode must be %04o\n",
$expected_file_mode));
$result = 0;
return;
}
}
# Else a directory?
elsif (S_ISDIR($file_stat->mode))
{
if ($file_mode != $expected_dir_mode)
{
print(
*STDERR,
sprintf("$File::Find::name mode must be %04o\n",
$expected_dir_mode));
$result = 0;
return;
}
}
# Else something we can't handle
else
{
die "unknown file type for $File::Find::name";
}
}
},
$dir);
return $result;
}
=pod
=item chmod_recursive(dir, dir_mode, file_mode)
C<chmod> recursively each file and directory within the given directory.
=cut
sub chmod_recursive
{
my ($dir, $dir_mode, $file_mode) = @_;
find(
{
follow_fast => 1,
wanted => sub {
my $file_stat = stat($File::Find::name);
if (defined($file_stat))
{
chmod(
S_ISDIR($file_stat->mode) ? $dir_mode : $file_mode,
$File::Find::name
) or die "unable to chmod $File::Find::name";
}
}
},
$dir);
return;
}
=pod
=item check_pg_config(regexp)
Return the number of matches of the given regular expression
within the installation's C<pg_config.h>.
=cut
sub check_pg_config
{
my ($regexp) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ 'pg_config', '--includedir' ], '>',
\$stdout, '2>', \$stderr
or die "could not execute pg_config";
chomp($stdout);
$stdout =~ s/\r$//;
open my $pg_config_h, '<', "$stdout/pg_config.h" or die "$!";
my $match = (grep { /^$regexp/ } <$pg_config_h>);
close $pg_config_h;
return $match;
}
=pod
=back
=head1 Test::More-LIKE METHODS
=over
=item command_ok(cmd, test_name)
Check that the command runs (via C<run_log>) successfully.
=cut
sub command_ok
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_;
my $result = run_log($cmd);
ok($result, $test_name);
return;
}
=pod
=item command_fails(cmd, test_name)
Check that the command fails (when run via C<run_log>).
=cut
sub command_fails
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $test_name) = @_;
my $result = run_log($cmd);
ok(!$result, $test_name);
return;
}
=pod
=item command_exit_is(cmd, expected, test_name)
Check that the command exit code matches the expected exit code.
=cut
sub command_exit_is
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $expected, $test_name) = @_;
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $h = IPC::Run::start $cmd;
$h->finish();
# On Windows, the exit status of the process is returned directly as the
# process's exit code, while on Unix, it's returned in the high bits
# of the exit code (see WEXITSTATUS macro in the standard <sys/wait.h>
# header file). IPC::Run's result function always returns exit code >> 8,
# assuming the Unix convention, which will always return 0 on Windows as
# long as the process was not terminated by an exception. To work around
# that, use $h->full_results on Windows instead.
my $result =
($Config{osname} eq "MSWin32")
? ($h->full_results)[0]
: $h->result(0);
is($result, $expected, $test_name);
return;
}
=pod
=item program_help_ok(cmd)
Check that the command supports the C<--help> option.
=cut
sub program_help_ok
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --help\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--help' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>',
\$stderr;
ok($result, "$cmd --help exit code 0");
isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --help goes to stdout");
is($stderr, '', "$cmd --help nothing to stderr");
return;
}
=pod
=item program_version_ok(cmd)
Check that the command supports the C<--version> option.
=cut
sub program_version_ok
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --version\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--version' ], '>', \$stdout, '2>',
\$stderr;
ok($result, "$cmd --version exit code 0");
isnt($stdout, '', "$cmd --version goes to stdout");
is($stderr, '', "$cmd --version nothing to stderr");
return;
}
=pod
=item program_options_handling_ok(cmd)
Check that a command with an invalid option returns a non-zero
exit code and error message.
=cut
sub program_options_handling_ok
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: $cmd --not-a-valid-option\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run [ $cmd, '--not-a-valid-option' ], '>',
\$stdout,
'2>', \$stderr;
ok(!$result, "$cmd with invalid option nonzero exit code");
isnt($stderr, '', "$cmd with invalid option prints error message");
return;
}
=pod
=item command_like(cmd, expected_stdout, test_name)
Check that the command runs successfully and the output
matches the given regular expression.
=cut
sub command_like
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $expected_stdout, $test_name) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr;
ok($result, "$test_name: exit code 0");
is($stderr, '', "$test_name: no stderr");
like($stdout, $expected_stdout, "$test_name: matches");
return;
}
=pod
=item command_like_safe(cmd, expected_stdout, test_name)
Check that the command runs successfully and the output
matches the given regular expression. Doesn't assume that the
output files are closed.
=cut
sub command_like_safe
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
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# Doesn't rely on detecting end of file on the file descriptors,
# which can fail, causing the process to hang, notably on Msys
# when used with 'pg_ctl start'
my ($cmd, $expected_stdout, $test_name) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
my $stdoutfile = File::Temp->new();
my $stderrfile = File::Temp->new();
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', $stdoutfile, '2>', $stderrfile;
$stdout = slurp_file($stdoutfile);
$stderr = slurp_file($stderrfile);
ok($result, "$test_name: exit code 0");
is($stderr, '', "$test_name: no stderr");
like($stdout, $expected_stdout, "$test_name: matches");
return;
}
=pod
=item command_fails_like(cmd, expected_stderr, test_name)
Check that the command fails and the error message matches
the given regular expression.
=cut
sub command_fails_like
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $expected_stderr, $test_name) = @_;
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
my $result = IPC::Run::run $cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr;
ok(!$result, "$test_name: exit code not 0");
like($stderr, $expected_stderr, "$test_name: matches");
return;
}
=pod
=item command_checks_all(cmd, ret, out, err, test_name)
Run a command and check its status and outputs.
Arguments:
=over
=item C<cmd>: Array reference of command and arguments to run
=item C<ret>: Expected exit code
=item C<out>: Expected stdout from command
=item C<err>: Expected stderr from command
=item C<test_name>: test name
=back
=cut
sub command_checks_all
{
local $Test::Builder::Level = $Test::Builder::Level + 1;
my ($cmd, $expected_ret, $out, $err, $test_name) = @_;
# run command
my ($stdout, $stderr);
print("# Running: " . join(" ", @{$cmd}) . "\n");
IPC::Run::run($cmd, '>', \$stdout, '2>', \$stderr);
# See http://perldoc.perl.org/perlvar.html#%24CHILD_ERROR
my $ret = $?;
die "command exited with signal " . ($ret & 127)
if $ret & 127;
$ret = $ret >> 8;
# check status
ok($ret == $expected_ret,
"$test_name status (got $ret vs expected $expected_ret)");
# check stdout
for my $re (@$out)
{
like($stdout, $re, "$test_name stdout /$re/");
}
# check stderr
for my $re (@$err)
{
like($stderr, $re, "$test_name stderr /$re/");
}
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return;
}
=pod
=back
=cut
1;