X-Git-Url: https://mattmccutchen.net/rsync/rsync.git/blobdiff_plain/a217ad3095f621eca116ce19e47cfccbb9c09836..dfef3f1099468a3b57f69840002184c527259558:/testsuite/rsync.fns diff --git a/testsuite/rsync.fns b/testsuite/rsync.fns index 5525062a..e7f753a9 100644 --- a/testsuite/rsync.fns +++ b/testsuite/rsync.fns @@ -24,6 +24,9 @@ TO=${TMP}/to LOG=${TMP}/log RSYNC="$rsync_bin" +# Berkley's nice. +PATH="$PATH:/usr/ucb" + runtest() { echo $ECHO_N "Test $1: $ECHO_C" if eval "$2" @@ -42,7 +45,11 @@ printmsg() { rsync_ls_lR() { - find "$@" -print | sort | xargs $TLS + find "$@" -print | sort | xargs "$TOOLDIR/tls" +} + +rsync_getgroups() { + "$TOOLDIR/getgroups" } @@ -134,6 +141,11 @@ makepath () { # Run a test (in '$1') then compare directories $2 and $3 to see if # there are any difference. If there are, explain them. +# So normally basically $1 should be an rsync command, and $2 and $3 +# the source and destination directories. This is only good when you +# expect to transfer the whole directory exactly as is. If some files +# should be excluded, you might need to use something else. + checkit() { failed= @@ -150,7 +162,11 @@ checkit() { echo "-------------" echo "check how the files compare with diff:" echo "" - diff -cr $2 $3 || failed=YES + for f in `cd "$2"; find . -type f -print ` + do + diff -c "$2"/"$f" "$3"/"$f" || failed=YES + done + echo "-------------" echo "check how the directory listings compare with diff:" echo "" @@ -197,10 +213,18 @@ use chroot = no hosts allow = localhost, 127.0.0.1 log file = $logfile -[test-from] = $scratchdir/daemon-from/ +# We don't know if this machine has "nobody" or "nogroup", so use the quasi-canonical +# values of (uint16_t) -2. + +uid = 65534 +gid = 65534 + +[test-from] + path = $FROM read only = yes -[test-to] = $scratchdir/daemon-to/ +[test-to] + path = $TO read only = no EOF } @@ -224,6 +248,7 @@ test_fail() { test_skipped() { echo "$@" >&2 + echo "$@" > "$TMP/whyskipped" exit 77 } @@ -235,5 +260,16 @@ test_xfail() { exit 78 } -# be reproducible -umask 077 \ No newline at end of file +# Test whether something is a link, allowing for shell peculiarities +is_a_link() { + test -L "$1" || test -h "$1" || /usr/bin/test -L "$1" || /usr/bin/test -h "$1" +} + + +# We need to set the umask to be reproducible. Note also that when we +# do some daemon tests as root, we will setuid() and therefore the +# directory has to be writable by the nobody user in some cases. The +# best thing is probably to explicitly chmod those directories after +# creation. + +umask 022 \ No newline at end of file