#!./perl
# Test $!
-print "1..14\n";
+print "1..16\n";
$teststring = "1\n12\n123\n1234\n1234\n12345\n\n123456\n1234567\n";
# Create our test datafile
+1 while unlink 'foo'; # in case junk left around
+rmdir 'foo';
open TESTFILE, ">./foo" or die "error $! $^E opening";
binmode TESTFILE;
print TESTFILE $teststring;
-close TESTFILE;
+close TESTFILE or die "error $! $^E closing";
open TESTFILE, "<./foo";
binmode TESTFILE;
if ($bar eq "12\n") {print "ok 2\n";} else {print "not ok 2\n";}
# Try a non line terminator
-$/ = "3";
+$/ = 3;
$bar = <TESTFILE>;
if ($bar eq "123") {print "ok 3\n";} else {print "not ok 3\n";}
$bar = <TESTFILE>;
if ($bar eq "78") {print "ok 10\n";} else {print "not ok 10\n";}
-# Get rid of the temp file
close TESTFILE;
-unlink "./foo";
# Now for the tricky bit--full record reading
if ($^O eq 'VMS') {
if ($bar eq "z\n") {print "ok 14\n";} else {print "not ok 14\n";}
close TESTFILE;
- unlink "./foo.bar";
- unlink "./foo.com";
+ 1 while unlink qw(foo.bar foo.com foo.fdl);
} else {
# Nobody else does this at the moment (well, maybe OS/390, but they can
# put their own tests in) so we just punt
foreach $test (11..14) {print "ok $test # skipped on non-VMS system\n"};
}
+
+$/ = "\n";
+
+# see if open/readline/close work on our and my variables
+{
+ if (open our $T, "./foo") {
+ my $line = <$T>;
+ print "# $line\n";
+ length($line) == 40 or print "not ";
+ close $T or print "not ";
+ }
+ else {
+ print "not ";
+ }
+ print "ok 15\n";
+}
+
+{
+ if (open my $T, "./foo") {
+ my $line = <$T>;
+ print "# $line\n";
+ length($line) == 40 or print "not ";
+ close $T or print "not ";
+ }
+ else {
+ print "not ";
+ }
+ print "ok 16\n";
+}
+
+# Get rid of the temp file
+END { unlink "./foo"; }