tcpdump/tests/TESTonce
2015-03-10 23:21:04 -07:00

69 lines
1.8 KiB
Perl
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env perl
system("mkdir -p NEW DIFF");
if(@ARGV != 4) {
print "Usage: TESTonce name input output options\n";
exit 20;
}
$name=$ARGV[0];
$input=$ARGV[1];
$output=$ARGV[2];
$options=$ARGV[3];
my $r;
if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
$r = system "..\\windump -n -r $input $options 2>NUL | sed 's/\\r//' | tee NEW/$output | diff $output - >DIFF/$output.diff";
# need to do same as below for Cygwin.
}
else {
# we used to do this as a nice pipeline, but the problem is that $r fails to
# to be set properly if the tcpdump core dumps.
$r = system "../tcpdump 2>/dev/null -n -r $input $options >NEW/$output";
if($r == 0x100) {
# this means tcpdump exited with code 1.
open(OUTPUT, ">>"."NEW/$output") || die "fail to open $output\n";
printf OUTPUT "EXIT CODE %08x\n", $r;
close(OUTPUT);
$r = 0;
}
if($r == 0) {
$r = system "cat NEW/$output | diff $output - >DIFF/$output.diff";
}
#print sprintf("END: %08x\n", $r);
}
if($r == 0) {
printf " %-30s: passed\n", $name;
unlink "DIFF/$output.diff";
exit 0;
}
printf " %-30s: TEST FAILED", $name;
open FOUT, '>>failure-outputs.txt';
printf FOUT "Failed test: $name\n\n";
close FOUT;
if(-f "DIFF/$output.diff") {
system "cat DIFF/$output.diff >> failure-outputs.txt";
}
if($r == -1) {
print " (failed to execute: $!)\n";
exit 30;
}
# this is not working right, $r == 0x8b00 when there is a core dump.
# clearly, we need some platform specific perl magic to take this apart, so look for "core"
# too.
if($r & 127 || -f "core") {
my $with = ($r & 128) ? 'with' : 'without';
if(-f "core") {
$with = "with";
}
printf " (terminated with signal %u, %s coredump)\n", ($r & 127), $with;
exit ($r & 128) ? 10 : 20;
}
print "\n";
exit $r >> 8;