use Config;
use File::Spec;
-plan tests => 69;
+plan tests => 73;
my $Perl = which_perl();
$Is_Amiga = $^O eq 'amigaos';
$Is_Cygwin = $^O eq 'cygwin';
+$Is_Darwin = $^O eq 'darwin';
$Is_Dos = $^O eq 'dos';
+$Is_MacOS = $^O eq 'MacOS';
$Is_MPE = $^O eq 'mpeix';
$Is_MSWin32 = $^O eq 'MSWin32';
$Is_NetWare = $^O eq 'NetWare';
$Is_OS2 = $^O eq 'os2';
$Is_Solaris = $^O eq 'solaris';
$Is_VMS = $^O eq 'VMS';
+$Is_DGUX = $^O eq 'dgux';
$Is_Dosish = $Is_Dos || $Is_OS2 || $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare || $Is_Cygwin;
+$Is_UFS = $Is_Darwin && (() = `df -t ufs .`) == 2;
+
my($DEV, $INO, $MODE, $NLINK, $UID, $GID, $RDEV, $SIZE,
$ATIME, $MTIME, $CTIME, $BLKSIZE, $BLOCKS) = (0..12);
# no ctime concept $ctime is ALWAYS == $mtime
# expect netware to be the same ...
skip "No ctime concept on this OS", 2
- if $Is_MSWin32;
+ if $Is_MSWin32 ||
+ ($Is_Darwin && $Is_UFS);
+
if( !ok($mtime, 'hard link mtime') ||
!isnt($mtime, $ctime, 'hard link ctime != mtime') ) {
- print <<DIAG;
+ print STDERR <<DIAG;
# Check if you are on a tmpfs of some sort. Building in /tmp sometimes
# has this problem. Also building on the ClearCase VOBS filesystem may
# cause this failure.
+# Darwins UFS doesn't have a ctime concept, and thus is
+# expected to fail this test.
DIAG
}
}
SKIP: {
skip "-x simply determins if a file ends in an executable suffix", 1
- if $Is_Dosish;
+ if $Is_Dosish || $Is_MacOS;
ok(-x $tmpfile, ' -x');
}
ok(! -e $tmpfile_link, ' -e on unlinked file');
SKIP: {
- skip "No character, socket or block special files", 3
+ skip "No character, socket or block special files", 6
if $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare || $Is_Dos;
- skip "/dev isn't available to test against", 3
+ skip "/dev isn't available to test against", 6
unless -d '/dev' && -r '/dev' && -x '/dev';
my $LS = $Config{d_readlink} ? "ls -lL" : "ls -l";
my $CMD = "$LS /dev 2>/dev/null";
my $DEV = qx($CMD);
- skip "$CMD failed", 3 if $DEV eq '';
+ skip "$CMD failed", 6 if $DEV eq '';
my @DEV = do { my $dev; opendir($dev, "/dev") ? readdir($dev) : () };
- skip "opendir failed: $!", 3 if @DEV == 0;
+ skip "opendir failed: $!", 6 if @DEV == 0;
# /dev/stdout might be either character special or a named pipe,
# or a symlink, or a socket, depending on which OS and how are
# you running the test, so let's censor that one away.
+ # Similar remarks hold for stderr.
$DEV =~ s{^[cpls].+?\sstdout$}{}m;
@DEV = grep { $_ ne 'stdout' } @DEV;
+ $DEV =~ s{^[cpls].+?\sstderr$}{}m;
+ @DEV = grep { $_ ne 'stderr' } @DEV;
# /dev/printer is also naughty: in IRIX it shows up as
# Srwx-----, not srwx------.
is($c1, $c2, "ls and $_[1] agreeing on /dev ($c1 $c2)");
};
+SKIP: {
+ skip("DG/UX ls -L broken", 3) if $Is_DGUX;
+
$try->('b', '-b');
$try->('c', '-c');
$try->('s', '-S');
+
}
ok(! -b $Curdir, '!-b cwd');
ok(! -c $Curdir, '!-c cwd');
ok(! -S $Curdir, '!-S cwd');
+}
+
SKIP: {
my($cnt, $uid);
$cnt = $uid = 0;
# These aren't strictly "stat" calls, but so what?
+my $statfile = File::Spec->catfile($Curdir, 'op', 'stat.t');
+ok( -T $statfile, '-T');
+ok(! -B $statfile, '!-B');
-ok(-T 'op/stat.t', '-T');
-ok(! -B 'op/stat.t', '!-B');
-
+SKIP: {
+ skip("DG/UX", 1) if $Is_DGUX;
ok(-B $Perl, '-B');
+}
+
ok(! -T $Perl, '!-T');
-open(FOO,'op/stat.t');
+open(FOO,$statfile);
SKIP: {
eval { -T FOO; };
skip "-T/B on filehandle not implemented", 15 if $@ =~ /not implemented/;
ok(! -B FOO, ' !-B');
$_ = <FOO>;
- ok(/perl/, 'after readline');
+ like($_, qr/perl/, 'after readline');
ok(-T FOO, ' still -T');
ok(! -B FOO, ' still -B');
close(FOO);
- open(FOO,'op/stat.t');
+ open(FOO,$statfile);
$_ = <FOO>;
- ok(/perl/, 'reopened and after readline');
+ like($_, qr/perl/, 'reopened and after readline');
ok(-T FOO, ' still -T');
ok(! -B FOO, ' still !-B');
unlink $tmpfile or print "# unlink failed: $!\n";
# bug id 20011101.069
-my @r = \stat(".");
+my @r = \stat($Curdir);
is(scalar @r, 13, 'stat returns full 13 elements');
+
+SKIP: {
+ skip "No lstat", 4 unless $Config{d_lstat};
+
+ stat $0;
+ eval { lstat _ };
+ like( $@, qr/^The stat preceding lstat\(\) wasn't an lstat/,
+ 'lstat _ croaks after stat' );
+ eval { -l _ };
+ like( $@, qr/^The stat preceding -l _ wasn't an lstat/,
+ '-l _ croaks after stat' );
+
+ # bug id 20020124.004
+ # If we have d_lstat, we should have symlink()
+ my $linkname = 'dolzero';
+ symlink $0, $linkname or die "# Can't symlink $0: $!";
+ lstat $linkname;
+ -T _;
+ eval { lstat _ };
+ like( $@, qr/^The stat preceding lstat\(\) wasn't an lstat/,
+ 'lstat croaks after -T _' );
+ eval { -l _ };
+ like( $@, qr/^The stat preceding -l _ wasn't an lstat/,
+ '-l _ croaks after -T _' );
+ unlink $linkname or print "# unlink $linkname failed: $!\n";
+}