#*************************************************************************** # _ _ ____ _ # Project ___| | | | _ \| | # / __| | | | |_) | | # | (__| |_| | _ <| |___ # \___|\___/|_| \_\_____| # # Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. # # This software is licensed as described in the file COPYING, which # you should have received as part of this distribution. The terms # are also available at https://curl.se/docs/copyright.html. # # You may opt to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and/or sell # copies of the Software, and permit persons to whom the Software is # furnished to do so, under the terms of the COPYING file. # # This software is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY # KIND, either express or implied. # # SPDX-License-Identifier: curl # ########################################################################### # This module contains miscellanous functions needed in several parts of # the test suite. package testutil; use strict; use warnings; BEGIN { use base qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT = qw( runclient runclientoutput setlogfunc shell_quote subbase64 subnewlines ); our @EXPORT_OK = qw( clearlogs logmsg ); } use MIME::Base64; use globalconfig qw( $torture $verbose ); my $logfunc; # optional reference to function for logging my @logmessages; # array holding logged messages ####################################################################### # Log an informational message # If a log callback function was set in setlogfunc, it is called. If not, # then the log message is buffered until retrieved by clearlogs. # # logmsg must only be called by one of the runner_* entry points and functions # called by them, or else logs risk being lost, since those are the only # functions that know about and will return buffered logs. sub logmsg { if(!scalar(@_)) { return; } if(defined $logfunc) { &$logfunc(@_); return; } push @logmessages, @_; } ####################################################################### # Set the function to use for logging sub setlogfunc { ($logfunc)=@_; } ####################################################################### # Clear the buffered log messages after returning them sub clearlogs { my $loglines = join('', @logmessages); undef @logmessages; return $loglines; } ####################################################################### sub subbase64 { my ($thing) = @_; # cut out the base64 piece if($$thing =~ s/%b64\[(.*)\]b64%/%%B64%%/i) { my $d = $1; # encode %NN characters $d =~ s/%([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})/chr(hex($1))/eg; my $enc = encode_base64($d, ""); # put the result into there $$thing =~ s/%%B64%%/$enc/; } # hex decode if($$thing =~ s/%hex\[(.*)\]hex%/%%HEX%%/i) { # decode %NN characters my $d = $1; $d =~ s/%([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})/chr(hex($1))/eg; $$thing =~ s/%%HEX%%/$d/; } if($$thing =~ s/%repeat\[(\d+) x (.*)\]%/%%REPEAT%%/i) { # decode %NN characters my ($d, $n) = ($2, $1); $d =~ s/%([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})/chr(hex($1))/eg; my $all = $d x $n; $$thing =~ s/%%REPEAT%%/$all/; } } my $prevupdate; # module scope so it remembers the last value sub subnewlines { my ($force, $thing) = @_; if($force) { # enforce CRLF newline $$thing =~ s/\x0d*\x0a/\x0d\x0a/; return; } # When curl is built with Hyper, it gets all response headers delivered as # name/value pairs and curl "invents" the newlines when it saves the # headers. Therefore, curl will always save headers with CRLF newlines # when built to use Hyper. By making sure we deliver all tests using CRLF # as well, all test comparisons will survive without knowing about this # little quirk. if(($$thing =~ /^HTTP\/(1.1|1.0|2|3) [1-5][^\x0d]*\z/) || ($$thing =~ /^(GET|POST|PUT|DELETE) \S+ HTTP\/\d+(\.\d+)?/) || (($$thing =~ /^[a-z0-9_-]+: [^\x0d]*\z/i) && # skip curl error messages ($$thing !~ /^curl: \(\d+\) /))) { # enforce CRLF newline $$thing =~ s/\x0d*\x0a/\x0d\x0a/; $prevupdate = 1; } else { if(($$thing =~ /^\n\z/) && $prevupdate) { # if there's a blank link after a line we update, we hope it is # the empty line following headers $$thing =~ s/\x0a/\x0d\x0a/; } $prevupdate = 0; } } ####################################################################### # Run the application under test and return its return code # sub runclient { my ($cmd)=@_; my $ret = system($cmd); print "CMD ($ret): $cmd\n" if($verbose && !$torture); return $ret; # This is one way to test curl on a remote machine # my $out = system("ssh $CLIENTIP cd \'$pwd\' \\; \'$cmd\'"); # sleep 2; # time to allow the NFS server to be updated # return $out; } ####################################################################### # Run the application under test and return its stdout # sub runclientoutput { my ($cmd)=@_; return `$cmd 2>/dev/null`; # This is one way to test curl on a remote machine # my @out = `ssh $CLIENTIP cd \'$pwd\' \\; \'$cmd\'`; # sleep 2; # time to allow the NFS server to be updated # return @out; } ####################################################################### # Quote an argument for passing safely to a Bourne shell # This does the same thing as String::ShellQuote but doesn't need a package. # sub shell_quote { my ($s)=@_; if($s !~ m/^[-+=.,_\/:a-zA-Z0-9]+$/) { # string contains a "dangerous" character--quote it $s =~ s/'/'"'"'/g; $s = "'" . $s . "'"; } return $s; } 1;