notmuch/test/test-lib-common.sh
David Bremner 1e4e8e3bf5 test: unbreak performance tests
In 8e7fb88237 Jani replaced the use of $(pwd -P) to find the
TEST_DIRECTORY in order to better support out of tree
builds. Unfortunately the performance-tests need a different value for
the variable and were thus broken.

This commit splits out the setting of this variable for the two sets
of tests.  Performance tests still don't work out of tree, because
the handling of the downloaded corpus needs to be updated.
2017-12-04 21:04:38 -04:00

334 lines
9.3 KiB
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#
# 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/ .
# This file contains common code to be used by both the regular
# (correctness) tests and the performance tests.
# test-lib.sh defines die() which echoes to nonstandard fd where
# output was redirected earlier in that file. If test-lib.sh is not
# loaded, neither this redirection nor die() function were defined.
#
type die >/dev/null 2>&1 || die () { echo "$@" >&2; exit 1; }
if [[ -z "$NOTMUCH_SRCDIR" ]] || [[ -z "$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR" ]]; then
echo "internal: srcdir or builddir not set" >&2
exit 1
fi
backup_database () {
test_name=$(basename $0 .sh)
rm -rf $TMP_DIRECTORY/notmuch-dir-backup."$test_name"
cp -pR ${MAIL_DIR}/.notmuch $TMP_DIRECTORY/notmuch-dir-backup."${test_name}"
}
restore_database () {
test_name=$(basename $0 .sh)
rm -rf ${MAIL_DIR}/.notmuch
cp -pR $TMP_DIRECTORY/notmuch-dir-backup."${test_name}" ${MAIL_DIR}/.notmuch
}
# Prepend $TEST_DIRECTORY/../lib to LD_LIBRARY_PATH, to make tests work
# on systems where ../notmuch depends on LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${TEST_DIRECTORY%/*}/lib${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
# configure output
. "$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR/sh.config" || exit 1
# load OS specifics
if [[ -e "$NOTMUCH_SRCDIR/test/test-lib-$PLATFORM.sh" ]]; then
. "$NOTMUCH_SRCDIR/test/test-lib-$PLATFORM.sh" || exit 1
fi
# 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
}
if test -n "$valgrind"
then
make_symlink () {
test -h "$2" &&
test "$1" = "$(readlink "$2")" || {
# be super paranoid
if mkdir "$2".lock
then
rm -f "$2" &&
ln -s "$1" "$2" &&
rm -r "$2".lock
else
while test -d "$2".lock
do
say "Waiting for lock on $2."
sleep 1
done
fi
}
}
make_valgrind_symlink () {
# handle only executables
test -x "$1" || return
base=$(basename "$1")
symlink_target=$TEST_DIRECTORY/../$base
# do not override scripts
if test -x "$symlink_target" &&
test ! -d "$symlink_target" &&
test "#!" != "$(head -c 2 < "$symlink_target")"
then
symlink_target=$TEST_DIRECTORY/valgrind.sh
fi
case "$base" in
*.sh|*.perl)
symlink_target=$TEST_DIRECTORY/unprocessed-script
esac
# create the link, or replace it if it is out of date
make_symlink "$symlink_target" "$GIT_VALGRIND/bin/$base" || exit
}
# override notmuch executable in TEST_DIRECTORY/..
GIT_VALGRIND=$TEST_DIRECTORY/valgrind
mkdir -p "$GIT_VALGRIND"/bin
make_valgrind_symlink $TEST_DIRECTORY/../notmuch
OLDIFS=$IFS
IFS=:
for path in $PATH
do
ls "$path"/notmuch 2> /dev/null |
while read file
do
make_valgrind_symlink "$file"
done
done
IFS=$OLDIFS
PATH=$GIT_VALGRIND/bin:$PATH
GIT_EXEC_PATH=$GIT_VALGRIND/bin
export GIT_VALGRIND
test -n "$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR" && MANPATH="$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR/doc/_build/man"
else # normal case
if test -n "$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR"
then
PATH="$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR:$PATH"
MANPATH="$NOTMUCH_BUILDDIR/doc/_build/man"
fi
fi
export PATH MANPATH
# Test repository
test="tmp.$(basename "$0" .sh)"
TMP_DIRECTORY="$TEST_DIRECTORY/$test"
test ! -z "$debug" || remove_tmp=$TMP_DIRECTORY
rm -rf "$TMP_DIRECTORY" || {
GIT_EXIT_OK=t
echo >&6 "FATAL: Cannot prepare test area"
exit 1
}
# A temporary home directory is needed by at least:
# - emacs/"Sending a message via (fake) SMTP"
# - emacs/"Reply within emacs"
# - crypto/emacs_deliver_message
export HOME="${TMP_DIRECTORY}/home"
mkdir -p "${HOME}"
MAIL_DIR="${TMP_DIRECTORY}/mail"
export NOTMUCH_CONFIG="${TMP_DIRECTORY}/notmuch-config"
mkdir -p "${MAIL_DIR}"
cat <<EOF >"${NOTMUCH_CONFIG}"
[database]
path=${MAIL_DIR}
[user]
name=Notmuch Test Suite
primary_email=test_suite@notmuchmail.org
other_email=test_suite_other@notmuchmail.org;test_suite@otherdomain.org
EOF