freebsd-skq/contrib/bmake/unit-tests/var-op-shell.mk
Simon J. Gerraty dba7b0ef92 Merge bmake-20210206
Changes of interest

  o unit-tests: use private TMPDIR to avoid errors from other users
  o avoid strdup in mkTempFile
  o always use vfork
  o job.c: do not create empty shell files in jobs mode
    reduce unnecessary calls to waitpid
  o cond.c: fix debug output for comparison operators in conditionals
2021-02-10 22:03:22 -08:00

82 lines
2.2 KiB
Makefile

# $NetBSD: var-op-shell.mk,v 1.4 2021/02/06 04:55:08 sjg Exp $
#
# Tests for the != variable assignment operator, which runs its right-hand
# side through the shell.
# The variable OUTPUT gets the output from running the shell command.
OUTPUT!= echo "success"'ful'
.if ${OUTPUT} != "successful"
. error
.endif
# Since 2014-08-20, the output of the shell command may be empty.
#
# On 1996-05-29, when the '!=' assignment operator and Cmd_Exec were added,
# an empty output produced the error message "Couldn't read shell's output
# for \"%s\"".
#
# The error message is still there but reserved for technical errors.
# It may be possible to trigger the error message by killing the shell after
# reading part of its output.
OUTPUT!= true
.if ${OUTPUT} != ""
. error
.endif
# The output of a shell command that failed is processed nevertheless.
# TODO: Make this an error in lint mode.
OUTPUT!= echo "failed"; false
.if ${OUTPUT} != "failed"
. error
.endif
# A command with empty output may fail as well.
OUTPUT!= false
.if ${OUTPUT} != ""
. error
.endif
# In the output of the command, each newline is replaced with a space.
# Except for the very last one, which is discarded.
OUTPUT!= echo "line 1"; echo "line 2"
.if ${OUTPUT} != "line 1 line 2"
. error
.endif
# A failing command in the middle results in the exit status 0, which in the
# end means that the whole sequence of commands succeeded.
OUTPUT!= echo "before"; false; echo "after"
.if ${OUTPUT} != "before after"
. error
.endif
# This should result in a warning about "exited on a signal".
# This used to be kill -14 (SIGALRM), but that stopped working on
# Darwin18 after recent update.
OUTPUT!= kill $$$$
.if ${OUTPUT} != ""
. error
.endif
# A nonexistent command produces a non-zero exit status.
OUTPUT!= /bin/no/such/command
.if ${OUTPUT} != ""
. error
.endif
# The output from the shell's stderr is not captured, it just passes through.
OUTPUT!= echo "stdout"; echo "stderr" 1>&2
.if ${OUTPUT} != "stdout"
. error
.endif
# The 8 dollar signs end up as 4 dollar signs when expanded. The shell sees
# the command "echo '$$$$'". The 4 dollar signs are stored in OUTPUT, and
# when that variable is expanded, they expand to 2 dollar signs.
OUTPUT!= echo '$$$$$$$$'
.if ${OUTPUT} != "\$\$"
. error
.endif
all: