use Config;
use File::Spec;
-plan tests => 82;
+plan tests => 95;
my $Perl = which_perl();
$Is_Dosish = $Is_Dos || $Is_OS2 || $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare || $Is_Cygwin;
-$Is_UFS = $Is_Darwin && (() = `df -t ufs .`) == 2;
+$Is_UFS = $Is_Darwin && (() = `df -t ufs . 2>/dev/null`) == 2;
my($DEV, $INO, $MODE, $NLINK, $UID, $GID, $RDEV, $SIZE,
$ATIME, $MTIME, $CTIME, $BLKSIZE, $BLOCKS) = (0..12);
my $tmpfile = 'Op_stat.tmp';
my $tmpfile_link = $tmpfile.'2';
-
+chmod 0666, $tmpfile;
1 while unlink $tmpfile;
open(FOO, ">$tmpfile") || DIE("Can't open temp test file: $!");
close FOO;
open(FOO, ">$tmpfile") || DIE("Can't open temp test file: $!");
my($nlink, $mtime, $ctime) = (stat(FOO))[$NLINK, $MTIME, $CTIME];
+
+#VMS Fix-me: nlink should work on VMS if applicable link support configured.
SKIP: {
skip "No link count", 1 if $Is_VMS;
SKIP: {
skip "mtime and ctime not reliable", 2
- if $Is_MSWin32 or $Is_NetWare or $Is_Cygwin or $Is_Dos or $Is_MacOS;
+ if $Is_MSWin32 or $Is_NetWare or $Is_Cygwin or $Is_Dos or $Is_MacOS or $Is_Darwin;
ok( $mtime, 'mtime' );
is( $mtime, $ctime, 'mtime == ctime' );
# truncate and touch $tmpfile.
open(F, ">$tmpfile") || DIE("Can't open temp test file: $!");
+ok(-z \*F, '-z on empty filehandle');
+ok(! -s \*F, ' and -s');
close F;
ok(-z $tmpfile, '-z on empty file');
print F "hi\n";
close F;
+open(F, "<$tmpfile") || DIE("Can't open temp test file: $!");
+ok(!-z *F, '-z on empty filehandle');
+ok( -s *F, ' and -s');
+close F;
+
ok(! -z $tmpfile, '-z on non-empty file');
ok(-s $tmpfile, ' and -s');
-
-# in ms windows, $tmpfile inherits owner uid from directory
-# not sure about os/2, but chown is harmless anyway
-eval { chown $>,$tmpfile; 1 } or print "# $@" ;
-
ok(chmod(0700,$tmpfile), 'chmod 0700');
ok(-r $tmpfile, ' -r');
ok(-w $tmpfile, ' -w');
skip "Skipping: unexpected ls output in MP-RAS", 6
if $Is_MPRAS;
+ # VMS problem: If GNV or other UNIX like tool is installed, then
+ # sometimes Perl will find /bin/ls, and will try to run it.
+ # But since Perl on VMS does not know to run it under Bash, it will
+ # try to run the DCL verb LS. And if the VMS product Language
+ # Sensitive Editor is installed, or some other LS verb, that will
+ # be run instead. So do not do this until we can teach Perl
+ # when to use BASH on VMS.
+ skip "ls command not available to Perl in OpenVMS right now.", 6
+ if $Is_VMS;
+
my $LS = $Config{d_readlink} ? "ls -lL" : "ls -l";
my $CMD = "$LS /dev 2>/dev/null";
my $DEV = qx($CMD);
-T _;
my $s2 = -s _;
is($s1, $s2, q(-T _ doesn't break the statbuffer));
- unlink $file;
+ unlink $tmpfile;
+}
+
+SKIP: {
+ skip "No dirfd()", 3 unless $Config{d_dirfd};
+ ok(opendir(DIR, "."), 'Can open "." dir') || diag "Can't open '.': $!";
+ ok(stat(DIR), "stat() on dirhandle works");
+ ok(-d -r _ , "chained -x's on dirhandle");
+ closedir DIR;
+}
+
+{
+ # RT #8244: *FILE{IO} does not behave like *FILE for stat() and -X() operators
+ ok(open(F, ">", $tmpfile), 'can create temp file');
+ my @thwap = stat *F{IO};
+ ok(@thwap, "stat(*F{IO}) works");
+ ok( -f *F{IO} , "single file tests work with *F{IO}");
+ close F;
+ unlink $tmpfile;
+
+ #PVIO's hold dirhandle information, so let's test them too.
+
+ SKIP: {
+ skip "No dirfd()", 3 unless $Config{d_dirfd};
+ ok(opendir(DIR, "."), 'Can open "." dir') || diag "Can't open '.': $!";
+ ok(stat(*DIR{IO}), "stat() on *DIR{IO} works");
+ ok(-d -r *DIR{IO} , "chained -x's on *DIR{IO}");
+ closedir DIR;
+ }
}
END {
+ chmod 0666, $tmpfile;
1 while unlink $tmpfile;
}