#
# Copyright (c) 2005 Junio C Hamano
# Copyright (c) 2010 Notmuch Developers
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program.  If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/ .

if [ ${BASH_VERSINFO[0]} -lt 4 ]; then
    echo "Error: The notmuch test suite requires a bash version >= 4.0"
    echo "due to use of associative arrays within the test suite."
    echo "Please try again with a newer bash (or help us fix the"
    echo "test suite to be more portable). Thanks."
    exit 1
fi

# Make sure echo builtin does not expand backslash-escape sequences by default.
shopt -u xpg_echo

this_test=${0##*/}
this_test=${this_test%.sh}
this_test_bare=${this_test#T[0-9][0-9][0-9]-}

# if --tee was passed, write the output not only to the terminal, but
# additionally to the file test-results/$BASENAME.out, too.
case "$GIT_TEST_TEE_STARTED, $* " in
done,*)
	# do not redirect again
	;;
*' --tee '*|*' --va'*)
	mkdir -p test-results
	BASE=test-results/$this_test
	(GIT_TEST_TEE_STARTED=done "$BASH" "$0" "$@" 2>&1;
	 echo $? > $BASE.exit) | tee $BASE.out
	test "$(cat $BASE.exit)" = 0
	exit
	;;
esac

# Save STDOUT to fd 6 and STDERR to fd 7.
exec 6>&1 7>&2
# Make xtrace debugging (when used) use redirected STDERR, with verbose lead:
BASH_XTRACEFD=7
export PS4='+(${BASH_SOURCE}:${LINENO}): ${FUNCNAME[0]:+${FUNCNAME[0]}(): }'

# Keep the original TERM for say_color and test_emacs
ORIGINAL_TERM=$TERM

# Set SMART_TERM to vt100 for known dumb/unknown terminal.
# Otherwise use whatever TERM is currently used so that
# users' actual TERM environments are being used in tests.
case ${TERM-} in
	'' | dumb | unknown )
		SMART_TERM=vt100 ;;
	*)
		SMART_TERM=$TERM ;;
esac

# For repeatability, reset the environment to known value.
LANG=C
LC_ALL=C
PAGER=cat
TZ=UTC
TERM=dumb
export LANG LC_ALL PAGER TERM TZ
GIT_TEST_CMP=${GIT_TEST_CMP:-diff -u}
if [[ ( -n "$TEST_EMACS" && -z "$TEST_EMACSCLIENT" ) || \
      ( -z "$TEST_EMACS" && -n "$TEST_EMACSCLIENT" ) ]]; then
    echo "error: must specify both or neither of TEST_EMACS and TEST_EMACSCLIENT" >&2
    exit 1
fi
TEST_EMACS=${TEST_EMACS:-${EMACS:-emacs}}
TEST_EMACSCLIENT=${TEST_EMACSCLIENT:-emacsclient}
TEST_GDB=${TEST_GDB:-gdb}
TEST_CC=${TEST_CC:-cc}
TEST_CFLAGS=${TEST_CFLAGS:-"-g -O0"}

# Protect ourselves from common misconfiguration to export
# CDPATH into the environment
unset CDPATH

unset GREP_OPTIONS

# For emacsclient
unset ALTERNATE_EDITOR

# Each test should start with something like this, after copyright notices:
#
# test_description='Description of this test...
# This test checks if command xyzzy does the right thing...
# '
# . ./test-lib.sh || exit 1

[ "x$ORIGINAL_TERM" != "xdumb" ] && (
		TERM=$ORIGINAL_TERM &&
		export TERM &&
		[ -t 1 ] &&
		tput bold >/dev/null 2>&1 &&
		tput setaf 1 >/dev/null 2>&1 &&
		tput sgr0 >/dev/null 2>&1
	) &&
	color=t

while test "$#" -ne 0
do
	case "$1" in
	-d|--debug)
		debug=t; shift ;;
	-i|--immediate)
		immediate=t; shift ;;
	-h|--help)
		help=t; shift ;;
	-v|--verbose)
		verbose=t; shift ;;
	-q|--quiet)
		quiet=t; shift ;;
	--with-dashes)
		with_dashes=t; shift ;;
	--no-color)
		color=; shift ;;
	--no-python)
		# noop now...
		shift ;;
	--valgrind)
		valgrind=t; verbose=t; shift ;;
	--tee)
		shift ;; # was handled already
	--root=*)
		root=$(expr "z$1" : 'z[^=]*=\(.*\)')
		shift ;;
	*)
		echo "error: unknown test option '$1'" >&2; exit 1 ;;
	esac
done

if test -n "$debug"; then
    print_subtest () {
	printf " %-4s" "[$((test_count - 1))]"
    }
else
    print_subtest () {
	true
    }
fi

if test -n "$color"; then
	say_color () {
		(
		TERM=$ORIGINAL_TERM
		export TERM
		case "$1" in
			error) tput bold; tput setaf 1;; # bold red
			skip)  tput bold; tput setaf 2;; # bold green
			pass)  tput setaf 2;;            # green
			info)  tput setaf 3;;            # brown
			*) test -n "$quiet" && return;;
		esac
		shift
		printf " "
		printf "$@"
		tput sgr0
		print_subtest
		)
	}
else
	say_color() {
		test -z "$1" && test -n "$quiet" && return
		shift
		printf " "
		printf "$@"
		print_subtest
	}
fi

error () {
	say_color error "error: $*\n"
	GIT_EXIT_OK=t
	exit 1
}

say () {
	say_color info "$*"
}

test "${test_description}" != "" ||
error "Test script did not set test_description."

if test "$help" = "t"
then
	echo "Tests ${test_description}"
	exit 0
fi

test_description_printed=
print_test_description ()
{
	test -z "$test_description_printed" || return 0
	echo
	echo $this_test: "Testing ${test_description}"
	test_description_printed=1
}
if [ -z "$NOTMUCH_TEST_QUIET" ]
then
	print_test_description
fi

test_failure=0
test_count=0
test_fixed=0
test_broken=0
test_success=0

declare -a _exit_functions=()

at_exit_function () {
	_exit_functions=($1 ${_exit_functions[@]/$1})
}

rm_exit_function () {
	_exit_functions=(${_exit_functions[@]/$1})
}

_exit_common () {
	code=$?
	trap - EXIT
	set +ex
	for _fn in ${_exit_functions[@]}; do $_fn; done
	rm -rf "$TEST_TMPDIR"
}

trap_exit () {
	_exit_common
	if test -n "$GIT_EXIT_OK"
	then
		exit $code
	else
		exec >&6
		say_color error '%-6s' FATAL
		echo " $test_subtest_name"
		echo
		echo "Unexpected exit while executing $0. Exit code $code."
		exit 1
	fi
}

trap_signal () {
	_exit_common
	echo >&6 "FATAL: $0: interrupted by signal" $((code - 128))
	exit $code
}

die () {
	_exit_common
	exec >&6
	say_color error '%-6s' FATAL
	echo " $*"
	echo
	echo "Unexpected exit while executing $0."
	exit 1
}

GIT_EXIT_OK=
# Note: TEST_TMPDIR *NOT* exported!
TEST_TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d "${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/notmuch-test-$$.XXXXXX")
# Put GNUPGHOME in TMPDIR to avoid problems with long paths.
export GNUPGHOME="${TEST_TMPDIR}/gnupg"
trap 'trap_exit' EXIT
trap 'trap_signal' HUP INT TERM

# Generate a new message in the mail directory, with a unique message
# ID and subject. The message is not added to the index.
#
# After this function returns, the filename of the generated message
# is available as $gen_msg_filename and the message ID is available as
# $gen_msg_id .
#
# This function supports named parameters with the bash syntax for
# assigning a value to an associative array ([name]=value). The
# supported parameters are:
#
#  [dir]=directory/of/choice
#
#	Generate the message in directory 'directory/of/choice' within
#	the mail store. The directory will be created if necessary.
#
#  [filename]=name
#
#	Store the message in file 'name'. The default is to store it
#	in 'msg-<count>', where <count> is three-digit number of the
#	message.
#
#  [body]=text
#
#	Text to use as the body of the email message
#
#  '[from]="Some User <user@example.com>"'
#  '[to]="Some User <user@example.com>"'
#  '[subject]="Subject of email message"'
#  '[date]="RFC 822 Date"'
#
#	Values for email headers. If not provided, default values will
#	be generated instead.
#
#  '[cc]="Some User <user@example.com>"'
#  [reply-to]=some-address
#  [in-reply-to]=<message-id>
#  [references]=<message-id>
#  [content-type]=content-type-specification
#  '[header]=full header line, including keyword'
#
#	Additional values for email headers. If these are not provided
#	then the relevant headers will simply not appear in the
#	message.
#
#  '[id]=message-id'
#
#	Controls the message-id of the created message.
gen_msg_cnt=0
gen_msg_filename=""
gen_msg_id=""
generate_message ()
{
    # This is our (bash-specific) magic for doing named parameters
    local -A template="($@)"
    local additional_headers

    gen_msg_cnt=$((gen_msg_cnt + 1))
    if [ -z "${template[filename]}" ]; then
	gen_msg_name="msg-$(printf "%03d" $gen_msg_cnt)"
    else
	gen_msg_name=${template[filename]}
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[id]}" ]; then
	gen_msg_id="${gen_msg_name%:2,*}@notmuch-test-suite"
    else
	gen_msg_id="${template[id]}"
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[dir]}" ]; then
	gen_msg_filename="${MAIL_DIR}/$gen_msg_name"
    else
	gen_msg_filename="${MAIL_DIR}/${template[dir]}/$gen_msg_name"
	mkdir -p "$(dirname "$gen_msg_filename")"
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[body]}" ]; then
	template[body]="This is just a test message (#${gen_msg_cnt})"
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[from]}" ]; then
	template[from]="Notmuch Test Suite <test_suite@notmuchmail.org>"
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[to]}" ]; then
	template[to]="Notmuch Test Suite <test_suite@notmuchmail.org>"
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[subject]}" ]; then
	if [ -n "$test_subtest_name" ]; then
	    template[subject]="$test_subtest_name"
	else
	    template[subject]="Test message #${gen_msg_cnt}"
	fi
    elif [ "${template[subject]}" = "@FORCE_EMPTY" ]; then
	template[subject]=""
    fi

    if [ -z "${template[date]}" ]; then
	# we use decreasing timestamps here for historical reasons;
	# the existing test suite when we converted to unique timestamps just
	# happened to have signicantly fewer failures with that choice.
	local date_secs=$((978709437 - gen_msg_cnt))
	# printf %(..)T is bash 4.2+ feature. use perl fallback if needed...
	TZ=UTC printf -v template[date] "%(%a, %d %b %Y %T %z)T" $date_secs 2>/dev/null ||
	    template[date]=`perl -le 'use POSIX "strftime";
				@time = gmtime '"$date_secs"';
				print strftime "%a, %d %b %Y %T +0000", @time'`
    fi

    additional_headers=""
    if [ ! -z "${template[header]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="${template[header]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[reply-to]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="Reply-To: ${template[reply-to]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[in-reply-to]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="In-Reply-To: ${template[in-reply-to]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[cc]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="Cc: ${template[cc]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[bcc]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="Bcc: ${template[bcc]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[references]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="References: ${template[references]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[content-type]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="Content-Type: ${template[content-type]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    if [ ! -z "${template[content-transfer-encoding]}" ]; then
	additional_headers="Content-Transfer-Encoding: ${template[content-transfer-encoding]}
${additional_headers}"
    fi

    # Note that in the way we're setting it above and using it below,
    # `additional_headers' will also serve as the header / body separator
    # (empty line in between).

    cat <<EOF >"$gen_msg_filename"
From: ${template[from]}
To: ${template[to]}
Message-Id: <${gen_msg_id}>
Subject: ${template[subject]}
Date: ${template[date]}
${additional_headers}
${template[body]}
EOF
}

# Generate a new message and add it to the database.
#
# All of the arguments and return values supported by generate_message
# are also supported here, so see that function for details.
add_message ()
{
    generate_message "$@" &&
    notmuch new > /dev/null
}

# Deliver a message with emacs and add it to the database
#
# Uses emacs to generate and deliver a message to the mail store.
# Accepts arbitrary extra emacs/elisp functions to modify the message
# before sending, which is useful to doing things like attaching files
# to the message and encrypting/signing.
emacs_deliver_message ()
{
    local subject="$1"
    local body="$2"
    shift 2
    # before we can send a message, we have to prepare the FCC maildir
    mkdir -p "$MAIL_DIR"/sent/{cur,new,tmp}
    # eval'ing smtp-dummy --background will set smtp_dummy_pid
    smtp_dummy_pid=
    eval `$TEST_DIRECTORY/smtp-dummy --background sent_message`
    test -n "$smtp_dummy_pid" || return 1

    test_emacs \
	"(let ((message-send-mail-function 'message-smtpmail-send-it)
               (mail-host-address \"example.com\")
	       (smtpmail-smtp-server \"localhost\")
	       (smtpmail-smtp-service \"25025\"))
	   (notmuch-mua-mail)
	   (message-goto-to)
	   (insert \"test_suite@notmuchmail.org\nDate: 01 Jan 2000 12:00:00 -0000\")
	   (message-goto-subject)
	   (insert \"${subject}\")
	   (message-goto-body)
	   (insert \"${body}\")
	   $@
	   (notmuch-mua-send-and-exit))"

    # In case message was sent properly, client waits for confirmation
    # before exiting and resuming control here; therefore making sure
    # that server exits by sending (KILL) signal to it is safe.
    kill -9 $smtp_dummy_pid
    notmuch new >/dev/null
}

# Pretend to deliver a message with emacs. Really save it to a file
# and add it to the database
#
# Uses emacs to generate and deliver a message to the mail store.
# Accepts arbitrary extra emacs/elisp functions to modify the message
# before sending, which is useful to doing things like attaching files
# to the message and encrypting/signing.
emacs_fcc_message ()
{
    local subject="$1"
    local body="$2"
    shift 2
    # before we can send a message, we have to prepare the FCC maildir
    mkdir -p "$MAIL_DIR"/sent/{cur,new,tmp}

    test_emacs \
	"(let ((message-send-mail-function (lambda () t))
               (mail-host-address \"example.com\"))
	   (notmuch-mua-mail)
	   (message-goto-to)
	   (insert \"test_suite@notmuchmail.org\nDate: 01 Jan 2000 12:00:00 -0000\")
	   (message-goto-subject)
	   (insert \"${subject}\")
	   (message-goto-body)
	   (insert \"${body}\")
	   $@
	   (notmuch-mua-send-and-exit))" || return 1
    notmuch new >/dev/null
}

# Add an existing, fixed corpus of email to the database.
#
# $1 is the corpus dir under corpora to add, using "default" if unset.
#
# The default corpus is based on about 50 messages from early in the
# history of the notmuch mailing list, which allows for reliably
# testing commands that need to operate on a not-totally-trivial
# number of messages.
add_email_corpus ()
{
    corpus=${1:-default}

    rm -rf ${MAIL_DIR}
    if [ -d $TEST_DIRECTORY/corpora.mail/$corpus ]; then
	cp -a $TEST_DIRECTORY/corpora.mail/$corpus ${MAIL_DIR}
    else
	cp -a $TEST_DIRECTORY/corpora/$corpus ${MAIL_DIR}
	notmuch new >/dev/null || die "'notmuch new' failed while adding email corpus"
	mkdir -p $TEST_DIRECTORY/corpora.mail
	cp -a ${MAIL_DIR} $TEST_DIRECTORY/corpora.mail/$corpus
    fi
}

test_begin_subtest ()
{
    if [ -n "$inside_subtest" ]; then
	exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
	error "bug in test script: Missing test_expect_equal in ${BASH_SOURCE[1]}:${BASH_LINENO[0]}"
    fi
    test_subtest_name="$1"
    test_reset_state_
    # Redirect test output to the previously prepared file descriptors
    # 3 and 4 (see below)
    if test "$verbose" != "t"; then exec 4>test.output 3>&4; fi
    exec >&3 2>&4
    inside_subtest=t
}

# Pass test if two arguments match
#
# Note: Unlike all other test_expect_* functions, this function does
# not accept a test name. Instead, the caller should call
# test_begin_subtest before calling this function in order to set the
# name.
test_expect_equal ()
{
	exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
	if [ -z "$inside_subtest" ]; then
		error "bug in the test script: test_expect_equal without test_begin_subtest"
	fi
	inside_subtest=
	test "$#" = 2 ||
	error "bug in the test script: not 2 parameters to test_expect_equal"

	output="$1"
	expected="$2"
	if ! test_skip "$test_subtest_name"
	then
		if [ "$output" = "$expected" ]; then
			test_ok_
		else
			testname=$this_test.$test_count
			echo "$expected" > $testname.expected
			echo "$output" > $testname.output
			test_failure_ "$(diff -u $testname.expected $testname.output)"
		fi
    fi
}

# Like test_expect_equal, but takes two filenames.
test_expect_equal_file ()
{
	exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
	if [ -z "$inside_subtest" ]; then
		error "bug in the test script: test_expect_equal_file without test_begin_subtest"
	fi
	inside_subtest=
	test "$#" = 2 ||
	error "bug in the test script: not 2 parameters to test_expect_equal_file"

	file1="$1"
	file2="$2"
	if ! test_skip "$test_subtest_name"
	then
		if diff -q "$file1" "$file2" >/dev/null ; then
			test_ok_
		else
			testname=$this_test.$test_count
			basename1=`basename "$file1"`
			basename2=`basename "$file2"`
			cp "$file1" "$testname.$basename1"
			cp "$file2" "$testname.$basename2"
			test_failure_ "$(diff -u "$testname.$basename1" "$testname.$basename2")"
		fi
    fi
}

# Like test_expect_equal, but arguments are JSON expressions to be
# canonicalized before diff'ing.  If an argument cannot be parsed, it
# is used unchanged so that there's something to diff against.
test_expect_equal_json () {
    # The test suite forces LC_ALL=C, but this causes Python 3 to
    # decode stdin as ASCII.  We need to read JSON in UTF-8, so
    # override Python's stdio encoding defaults.
    output=$(echo "$1" | PYTHONIOENCODING=utf-8 $NOTMUCH_PYTHON -mjson.tool \
        || echo "$1")
    expected=$(echo "$2" | PYTHONIOENCODING=utf-8 $NOTMUCH_PYTHON -mjson.tool \
        || echo "$2")
    shift 2
    test_expect_equal "$output" "$expected" "$@"
}

# Sort the top-level list of JSON data from stdin.
test_sort_json () {
    PYTHONIOENCODING=utf-8 $NOTMUCH_PYTHON -c \
        "import sys, json; json.dump(sorted(json.load(sys.stdin)),sys.stdout)"
}

test_emacs_expect_t () {
	test "$#" = 1 ||
	error "bug in the test script: not 1 parameter to test_emacs_expect_t"
	if [ -z "$inside_subtest" ]; then
		error "bug in the test script: test_emacs_expect_t without test_begin_subtest"
	fi

	# Run the test.
	if ! test_skip "$test_subtest_name"
	then
		test_emacs "(notmuch-test-run $1)" >/dev/null

		# Restore state after the test.
		exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
		inside_subtest=

		# Report success/failure.
		result=$(cat OUTPUT)
		if [ "$result" = t ]
		then
			test_ok_
		else
			test_failure_ "${result}"
		fi
	else
		# Restore state after the (non) test.
		exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
		inside_subtest=
	fi
}

NOTMUCH_NEW ()
{
    notmuch new "${@}" | grep -v -E -e '^Processed [0-9]*( total)? file|Found [0-9]* total file'
}

NOTMUCH_DUMP_TAGS ()
{
    # this relies on the default format being batch-tag, otherwise some tests will break
    notmuch dump --include=tags "${@}" | sed '/^#/d' | sort
}

notmuch_search_sanitize ()
{
    perl -pe 's/("?thread"?: ?)("?)................("?)/\1\2XXX\3/'
}

notmuch_search_files_sanitize ()
{
    notmuch_dir_sanitize
}

notmuch_dir_sanitize ()
{
    sed -e "s,$MAIL_DIR,MAIL_DIR," -e "s,${PWD},CWD,g" "$@"
}

NOTMUCH_SHOW_FILENAME_SQUELCH='s,filename:.*/mail,filename:/XXX/mail,'
notmuch_show_sanitize ()
{
    sed -e "$NOTMUCH_SHOW_FILENAME_SQUELCH"
}
notmuch_show_sanitize_all ()
{
    sed \
	-e 's| filename:.*| filename:XXXXX|' \
	-e 's| id:[^ ]* | id:XXXXX |' | \
	notmuch_date_sanitize
}

notmuch_json_show_sanitize ()
{
    sed \
	-e 's|"id": "[^"]*",|"id": "XXXXX",|g' \
	-e 's|"Date": "Fri, 05 Jan 2001 [^"]*0000"|"Date": "GENERATED_DATE"|g' \
	-e 's|"filename": "signature.asc",||g' \
	-e 's|"filename": \["/[^"]*"\],|"filename": \["YYYYY"\],|g' \
	-e 's|"timestamp": 97.......|"timestamp": 42|g' \
        -e 's|"content-length": [1-9][0-9]*|"content-length": "NONZERO"|g'
}

notmuch_emacs_error_sanitize ()
{
    local command=$1
    shift
    for file in "$@"; do
	echo "=== $file ==="
	cat "$file"
    done | sed  \
	-e 's/^\[.*\]$/[XXX]/' \
	-e "s|^\(command: \)\{0,1\}/.*/$command|\1YYY/$command|"
}

notmuch_date_sanitize ()
{
    sed \
	-e 's/^Date: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 .*0000/Date: GENERATED_DATE/'
}

notmuch_uuid_sanitize ()
{
    sed 's/[0-9a-f]\{8\}-[0-9a-f]\{4\}-[0-9a-f]\{4\}-[0-9a-f]\{4\}-[0-9a-f]\{12\}/UUID/g'
}

notmuch_built_with_sanitize ()
{
    sed 's/^built_with[.]\(.*\)=.*$/built_with.\1=something/'
}

notmuch_config_sanitize ()
{
    notmuch_dir_sanitize | notmuch_built_with_sanitize
}

# End of notmuch helper functions

# Use test_set_prereq to tell that a particular prerequisite is available.
#
# The prerequisite can later be checked for by using test_have_prereq.
#
# The single parameter is the prerequisite tag (a simple word, in all
# capital letters by convention).

test_set_prereq () {
	satisfied="$satisfied$1 "
}
satisfied=" "

test_have_prereq () {
	case $satisfied in
	*" $1 "*)
		: yes, have it ;;
	*)
		! : nope ;;
	esac
}

declare -A test_missing_external_prereq_
declare -A test_subtest_missing_external_prereq_

# declare prerequisite for the given external binary
test_declare_external_prereq () {
	binary="$1"
	test "$#" = 2 && name=$2 || name="$binary(1)"

	if ! hash $binary 2>/dev/null; then
		test_missing_external_prereq_["${binary}"]=t
		eval "
$binary () {
	test_subtest_missing_external_prereq_[\"${name}\"]=t
	false
}"
	fi
}

# Explicitly require external prerequisite.  Useful when binary is
# called indirectly (e.g. from emacs).
# Returns success if dependency is available, failure otherwise.
test_require_external_prereq () {
	binary="$1"
	if [[ ${test_missing_external_prereq_["${binary}"]} == t ]]; then
		# dependency is missing, call the replacement function to note it
		eval "$binary"
	else
		true
	fi
}

# You are not expected to call test_ok_ and test_failure_ directly, use
# the text_expect_* functions instead.

test_ok_ () {
	if test "$test_subtest_known_broken_" = "t"; then
		test_known_broken_ok_
		return
	fi
	test_success=$(($test_success + 1))
	if test -n "$NOTMUCH_TEST_QUIET"; then
		return 0
	fi
	say_color pass "%-6s" "PASS"
	echo " $test_subtest_name"
}

test_failure_ () {
	print_test_description
	if test "$test_subtest_known_broken_" = "t"; then
		test_known_broken_failure_ "$@"
		return
	fi
	test_failure=$(($test_failure + 1))
	test_failure_message_ "FAIL" "$test_subtest_name" "$@"
	test "$immediate" = "" || { GIT_EXIT_OK=t; exit 1; }
	return 1
}

test_failure_message_ () {
	say_color error "%-6s" "$1"
	echo " $2"
	shift 2
	if [ "$#" != "0" ]; then
		echo "$@" | sed -e 's/^/	/'
	fi
	if test "$verbose" != "t"; then cat test.output; fi
}

test_known_broken_ok_ () {
	test_reset_state_
	test_fixed=$(($test_fixed+1))
	say_color pass "%-6s" "FIXED"
	echo " $test_subtest_name"
}

test_known_broken_failure_ () {
	test_reset_state_
	test_broken=$(($test_broken+1))
	if [ -z "$NOTMUCH_TEST_QUIET" ]; then
		test_failure_message_ "BROKEN" "$test_subtest_name" "$@"
	else
		test_failure_message_ "BROKEN" "$test_subtest_name"
	fi
	return 1
}

test_debug () {
	test "$debug" = "" || eval "$1"
}

test_run_ () {
	test_cleanup=:
	if test "$verbose" != "t"; then exec 4>test.output 3>&4; fi
	eval >&3 2>&4 "$1"
	eval_ret=$?
	eval >&3 2>&4 "$test_cleanup"
	return 0
}

test_skip () {
	test_count=$(($test_count+1))
	to_skip=
	for skp in $NOTMUCH_SKIP_TESTS
	do
		case $this_test.$test_count in
		$skp)
			to_skip=t
			break
		esac
		case $this_test_bare.$test_count in
		$skp)
			to_skip=t
			break
		esac
	done
	case "$to_skip" in
	t)
		test_report_skip_ "$@"
		;;
	*)
		test_check_missing_external_prereqs_ "$@"
		;;
	esac
}

test_check_missing_external_prereqs_ () {
	if [[ ${#test_subtest_missing_external_prereq_[@]} != 0 ]]; then
		say_color skip >&1 "missing prerequisites: "
		echo ${!test_subtest_missing_external_prereq_[@]} >&1
		test_report_skip_ "$@"
	else
		false
	fi
}

test_report_skip_ () {
	test_reset_state_
	say_color skip >&3 "skipping test:"
	echo " $@" >&3
	say_color skip "%-6s" "SKIP"
	echo " $1"
}

test_subtest_known_broken () {
	test_subtest_known_broken_=t
}

test_expect_success () {
	exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
	if [ -z "$inside_subtest" ]; then
		error "bug in the test script: test_expect_success without test_begin_subtest"
	fi
	inside_subtest=
	test "$#" = 1 ||
	error "bug in the test script: not 1 parameters to test_expect_success"

	if ! test_skip "$test_subtest_name"
	then
		test_run_ "$1"
		run_ret="$?"
		# test_run_ may update missing external prerequisites
		test_check_missing_external_prereqs_ "$@" ||
		if [ "$run_ret" = 0 -a "$eval_ret" = 0 ]
		then
			test_ok_
		else
			test_failure_ "$1"
		fi
	fi
}

test_expect_code () {
	exec 1>&6 2>&7		# Restore stdout and stderr
	if [ -z "$inside_subtest" ]; then
		error "bug in the test script: test_expect_code without test_begin_subtest"
	fi
	inside_subtest=
	test "$#" = 2 ||
	error "bug in the test script: not 2 parameters to test_expect_code"

	if ! test_skip "$test_subtest_name"
	then
		test_run_ "$2"
		run_ret="$?"
		# test_run_ may update missing external prerequisites,
		test_check_missing_external_prereqs_ "$@" ||
		if [ "$run_ret" = 0 -a "$eval_ret" = "$1" ]
		then
			test_ok_
		else
			test_failure_ "exit code $eval_ret, expected $1" "$2"
		fi
	fi
}

# This is not among top-level (test_expect_success)
# but is a prefix that can be used in the test script, like:
#
#	test_expect_success 'complain and die' '
#           do something &&
#           do something else &&
#	    test_must_fail git checkout ../outerspace
#	'
#
# Writing this as "! git checkout ../outerspace" is wrong, because
# the failure could be due to a segv.  We want a controlled failure.

test_must_fail () {
	"$@"
	test $? -gt 0 -a $? -le 129 -o $? -gt 192
}

# test_cmp is a helper function to compare actual and expected output.
# You can use it like:
#
#	test_expect_success 'foo works' '
#		echo expected >expected &&
#		foo >actual &&
#		test_cmp expected actual
#	'
#
# This could be written as either "cmp" or "diff -u", but:
# - cmp's output is not nearly as easy to read as diff -u
# - not all diff versions understand "-u"

test_cmp() {
	$GIT_TEST_CMP "$@"
}

# This function can be used to schedule some commands to be run
# unconditionally at the end of the test to restore sanity:
#
#	test_expect_success 'test core.capslock' '
#		git config core.capslock true &&
#		test_when_finished "git config --unset core.capslock" &&
#		hello world
#	'
#
# That would be roughly equivalent to
#
#	test_expect_success 'test core.capslock' '
#		git config core.capslock true &&
#		hello world
#		git config --unset core.capslock
#	'
#
# except that the greeting and config --unset must both succeed for
# the test to pass.

test_when_finished () {
	test_cleanup="{ $*
		} && (exit \"\$eval_ret\"); eval_ret=\$?; $test_cleanup"
}

test_done () {
	GIT_EXIT_OK=t
	test_results_dir="$TEST_DIRECTORY/test-results"
	mkdir -p "$test_results_dir"
	test_results_path="$test_results_dir/$this_test"

	echo "total $test_count" >> $test_results_path
	echo "success $test_success" >> $test_results_path
	echo "fixed $test_fixed" >> $test_results_path
	echo "broken $test_broken" >> $test_results_path
	echo "failed $test_failure" >> $test_results_path
	echo "" >> $test_results_path

	[ -n "$EMACS_SERVER" ] && test_emacs '(kill-emacs)'

	if [ "$test_failure" = "0" ]; then
	    if [ "$test_broken" = "0" ]; then
		rm -rf "$remove_tmp"
	    fi
	    exit 0
	else
	    exit 1
	fi
}

emacs_generate_script () {
	# Construct a little test script here for the benefit of the user,
	# (who can easily run "run_emacs" to get the same emacs environment
	# for investigating any failures).
	cat <<EOF >"$TMP_DIRECTORY/run_emacs"
#!/bin/sh
export PATH=$PATH
export NOTMUCH_CONFIG=$NOTMUCH_CONFIG

# Here's what we are using here:
#
# --quick              Use minimal customization. This implies --no-init-file,
#		       --no-site-file and (emacs 24) --no-site-lisp
#
# --directory		Ensure that the local elisp sources are found
#
# --load		Force loading of notmuch.el and test-lib.el

exec ${TEST_EMACS} --quick \
	--directory "$TEST_DIRECTORY/../emacs" --load notmuch.el \
	--directory "$TEST_DIRECTORY" --load test-lib.el \
	"\$@"
EOF
	chmod a+x "$TMP_DIRECTORY/run_emacs"
}

test_emacs () {
	# test dependencies beforehand to avoid the waiting loop below
	missing_dependencies=
	test_require_external_prereq dtach || missing_dependencies=1
	test_require_external_prereq emacs || missing_dependencies=1
	test_require_external_prereq ${TEST_EMACSCLIENT} || missing_dependencies=1
	test -z "$missing_dependencies" || return

	if [ -z "$EMACS_SERVER" ]; then
		emacs_tests="${this_test_bare}.el"
		if [ -f "$TEST_DIRECTORY/$emacs_tests" ]; then
			load_emacs_tests="--eval '(load \"$emacs_tests\")'"
		else
			load_emacs_tests=
		fi
		server_name="notmuch-test-suite-$$"
		# start a detached session with an emacs server
		# user's TERM (or 'vt100' in case user's TERM is known dumb
		# or unknown) is given to dtach which assumes a minimally
		# VT100-compatible terminal -- and emacs inherits that
		TERM=$SMART_TERM dtach -n "$TEST_TMPDIR/emacs-dtach-socket.$$" \
			sh -c "stty rows 24 cols 80; exec '$TMP_DIRECTORY/run_emacs' \
				--no-window-system \
				$load_emacs_tests \
				--eval '(setq server-name \"$server_name\")' \
				--eval '(server-start)' \
				--eval '(orphan-watchdog $$)'" || return
		EMACS_SERVER="$server_name"
		# wait until the emacs server is up
		until test_emacs '()' >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; do
			sleep 1
		done
	fi

	# Clear test-output output file.  Most Emacs tests end with a
	# call to (test-output).  If the test code fails with an
	# exception before this call, the output file won't get
	# updated.  Since we don't want to compare against an output
	# file from another test, so start out with an empty file.
	rm -f OUTPUT
	touch OUTPUT

	${TEST_EMACSCLIENT} --socket-name="$EMACS_SERVER" --eval "(notmuch-test-progn $@)"
}

test_python() {
    # Note: if there is need to print debug information from python program,
    # use stdout = os.fdopen(6, 'w') or stderr = os.fdopen(7, 'w')
    PYTHONPATH="$NOTMUCH_SRCDIR/bindings/python${PYTHONPATH:+:$PYTHONPATH}" \
	$NOTMUCH_PYTHON -B - > OUTPUT
}

test_ruby() {
    MAIL_DIR=$MAIL_DIR ruby -I $TEST_DIRECTORY/../bindings/ruby> OUTPUT
}

test_C () {
    exec_file="test${test_count}"
    test_file="${exec_file}.c"
    cat > ${test_file}
    ${TEST_CC} ${TEST_CFLAGS} -I${TEST_DIRECTORY} -I${NOTMUCH_SRCDIR}/lib -o ${exec_file} ${test_file} -L${TEST_DIRECTORY}/../lib/ -lnotmuch -ltalloc
    echo "== stdout ==" > OUTPUT.stdout
    echo "== stderr ==" > OUTPUT.stderr
    ./${exec_file} "$@" 1>>OUTPUT.stdout 2>>OUTPUT.stderr
    notmuch_dir_sanitize OUTPUT.stdout OUTPUT.stderr > OUTPUT
}


# Creates a script that counts how much time it is executed and calls
# notmuch.  $notmuch_counter_command is set to the path to the
# generated script.  Use notmuch_counter_value() function to get the
# current counter value.
notmuch_counter_reset () {
	notmuch_counter_command="$TMP_DIRECTORY/notmuch_counter"
	if [ ! -x "$notmuch_counter_command" ]; then
		notmuch_counter_state_path="$TMP_DIRECTORY/notmuch_counter.state"
		cat >"$notmuch_counter_command" <<EOF || return
#!/bin/sh

read count < "$notmuch_counter_state_path"
echo \$((count + 1)) > "$notmuch_counter_state_path"

exec notmuch "\$@"
EOF
		chmod +x "$notmuch_counter_command" || return
	fi

	echo 0 > "$notmuch_counter_state_path"
}

# Returns the current notmuch counter value.
notmuch_counter_value () {
	if [ -r "$notmuch_counter_state_path" ]; then
		read count < "$notmuch_counter_state_path"
	else
		count=0
	fi
	echo $count
}

test_reset_state_ () {
	test -z "$test_init_done_" && test_init_

	test_subtest_known_broken_=
	test_subtest_missing_external_prereq_=()
}

# called once before the first subtest
test_init_ () {
	test_init_done_=t

	# skip all tests if there were external prerequisites missing during init
	test_check_missing_external_prereqs_ "all tests in $this_test" && test_done
}


. ./test-lib-common.sh || exit 1

if [ "${NOTMUCH_GMIME_MAJOR}" = 3 ]; then
    test_subtest_broken_gmime_3 () {
	test_subtest_known_broken
    }
    test_subtest_broken_gmime_2 () {
	true
    }
else
    test_subtest_broken_gmime_3 () {
	true
    }
    test_subtest_broken_gmime_2 () {
	test_subtest_known_broken
    }
fi

emacs_generate_script


# Use -P to resolve symlinks in our working directory so that the cwd
# in subprocesses like git equals our $PWD (for pathname comparisons).
cd -P "$test" || error "Cannot set up test environment"

if test "$verbose" = "t"
then
	exec 4>&2 3>&1
else
	exec 4>test.output 3>&4
fi

for skp in $NOTMUCH_SKIP_TESTS
do
	to_skip=
	for skp in $NOTMUCH_SKIP_TESTS
	do
		case "$this_test" in
		$skp)
			to_skip=t
			break
		esac
		case "$this_test_bare" in
		$skp)
			to_skip=t
			break
		esac
	done
	case "$to_skip" in
	t)
		say_color skip >&3 "skipping test $this_test altogether"
		say_color skip "skip all tests in $this_test"
		test_done
	esac
done

# Provide an implementation of the 'yes' utility
yes () {
	if test $# = 0
	then
		y=y
	else
		y="$*"
	fi

	while echo "$y"
	do
		:
	done
}

# Fix some commands on Windows
case $(uname -s) in
*MINGW*)
	# Windows has its own (incompatible) sort and find
	sort () {
		/usr/bin/sort "$@"
	}
	find () {
		/usr/bin/find "$@"
	}
	sum () {
		md5sum "$@"
	}
	# git sees Windows-style pwd
	pwd () {
		builtin pwd -W
	}
	# no POSIX permissions
	# backslashes in pathspec are converted to '/'
	# exec does not inherit the PID
	;;
*)
	test_set_prereq POSIXPERM
	test_set_prereq BSLASHPSPEC
	test_set_prereq EXECKEEPSPID
	;;
esac

test -z "$NO_PERL" && test_set_prereq PERL
test -z "$NO_PYTHON" && test_set_prereq PYTHON

# test whether the filesystem supports symbolic links
ln -s x y 2>/dev/null && test -h y 2>/dev/null && test_set_prereq SYMLINKS
rm -f y

# convert variable from configure to more convenient form
case "$NOTMUCH_DEFAULT_XAPIAN_BACKEND" in
    glass)
	db_ending=glass
    ;;
    chert)
	db_ending=DB
    ;;
    *)
	error "Unknown Xapian backend $NOTMUCH_DEFAULT_XAPIAN_BACKEND"
esac
# declare prerequisites for external binaries used in tests
test_declare_external_prereq dtach
test_declare_external_prereq emacs
test_declare_external_prereq ${TEST_EMACSCLIENT}
test_declare_external_prereq ${TEST_GDB}
test_declare_external_prereq gpg
test_declare_external_prereq openssl
test_declare_external_prereq gpgsm
test_declare_external_prereq ${NOTMUCH_PYTHON}