| #!/bin/bash |
| |
| [ -f testing.sh ] && . testing.sh |
| |
| #testing "name" "command" "result" "infile" "stdin" |
| |
| # timeout's exit value is complicated! |
| testcmd "times out" '.1 sleep 100 ; echo $?' '124\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "failure" '-s MONKEY .1 sleep 100 2>/dev/null ; echo $?' '125\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "early failure" '2>/dev/null ; echo $?' '125\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "can't execute" '.1 / 2>/dev/null ; echo $?' '126\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "can't find" '.1 /does/not/exist 2>/dev/null ; echo $?' '127\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "custom signal" '-s 3 .1 sleep 100; echo $?' '124\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "killed" '-s 9 .1 sleep 100; echo $?' '137\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "TERM" '-s TERM .1 sleep 100; echo $?' '124\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "exit 0" '.1 true ; echo $?' '0\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "exit 1" '.1 false ; echo $?' '1\n' '' '' |
| |
| testcmd "--preserve-status" '--preserve-status .1 sleep 100 ; echo $?' '143\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "--preserve-status killed" '--preserve-status -s 9 .1 sleep 100 ; echo $?' '137\n' '' '' |
| |
| # There's another special case where if the subprocess catches our timeout |
| # signal and exits, we need to report that as a timeout (unless overridden). |
| cat > loop.sh <<EOF |
| #!/bin/sh |
| trap "exit 3" SIGTERM |
| while true; do |
| : |
| done |
| EOF |
| chmod a+x loop.sh |
| testcmd "trap-and-exit" '1 ./loop.sh ; echo $?' '124\n' '' '' |
| testcmd "trap-and-exit --preserve-status" \ |
| '--preserve-status 1 ./loop.sh ; echo $?' '3\n' '' '' |
| rm loop.sh |