git/t/chainlint/token-pasting.test
Jeff King a5e450144d chainlint.pl: add test_expect_success call to test snippets
The chainlint tests are a series of individual files, each holding a
test body. The "make check-chainlint" target assembles them into a
single file, adding a "test_expect_success" function call around each.
Let's instead include that function call in the files themselves. This
is a little more boilerplate, but has several advantages:

  1. You can now run chainlint manually on snippets with just "perl
     chainlint.perl chainlint/foo.test". This can make developing and
     debugging a little easier.

  2. Many of the tests implicitly relied on the syntax of the lines
     added by the Makefile (in particular the use of single-quotes).
     This assumption is much easier to see when the single-quotes are
     alongside the test body.

  3. We had no way to test how the chainlint program handled
     various test_expect_success lines themselves. Now we'll be able to
     check variations.

The change to the .test files was done mechanically, using the same
test names they would have been assigned by the Makefile (this is
important to match the expected output). The Makefile has the minimal
change to drop the extra lines; there are more cleanups possible but a
future patch in this series will rewrite this substantially anyway.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-07-10 10:14:21 -07:00

34 lines
1,021 B
Text

test_expect_success 'token-pasting' '
# LINT: single token; composite of multiple strings
git config filter.rot13.smudge ./rot13.sh &&
git config filter.rot13.clean ./rot13.sh &&
{
echo "*.t filter=rot13"
echo "*.i ident"
} >.gitattributes &&
{
echo a b c d e f g h i j k l m
echo n o p q r s t u v w x y z
# LINT: exit/enter string context and escaped-quote outside of string
echo '\''$Id$'\''
} >test &&
cat test >test.t &&
cat test >test.o &&
cat test >test.i &&
git add test test.t test.i &&
rm -f test test.t test.i &&
git checkout -- test test.t test.i &&
echo "content-test2" >test2.o &&
# LINT: exit/enter string context and escaped-quote outside of string
echo "content-test3 - filename with special characters" >"test3 '\''sq'\'',\$x=.o"
# LINT: single token; composite of multiple strings
downstream_url_for_sed=$(
printf "%s\n" "$downstream_url" |
# LINT: exit/enter string context; "&" inside string not command terminator
sed -e '\''s/\\/\\\\/g'\'' -e '\''s/[[/.*^$]/\\&/g'\''
)
'