use Config;
use File::Spec;
-plan tests => 78;
+plan tests => 82;
my $Perl = which_perl();
$Is_VMS = $^O eq 'VMS';
$Is_DGUX = $^O eq 'dgux';
$Is_MPRAS = $^O =~ /svr4/ && -f '/etc/.relid';
+$Is_Rhapsody= $^O eq 'rhapsody';
$Is_Dosish = $Is_Dos || $Is_OS2 || $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare || $Is_Cygwin;
print FOO "Now is the time for all good men to come to.\n";
close(FOO);
-sleep 2 unless $funky_FAT_timestamps;
+sleep 2;
SKIP: {
!isnt($mtime, $ctime, 'hard link ctime != mtime') ) {
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
+# has this problem. Building on the ClearCase VOBS filesystem may also
# cause this failure.
-# Darwins UFS doesn't have a ctime concept, and thus is
-# expected to fail this test.
+#
+# Darwin's UFS doesn't have a ctime concept, and thus is expected to fail
+# this test.
DIAG
}
}
-
-# 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: {
- skip "-x simply determins if a file ends in an executable suffix", 1
+ skip "-x simply determines if a file ends in an executable suffix", 1
if $Is_Dosish || $Is_MacOS;
ok(-x $tmpfile, ' -x');
if $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare || $Is_Dos;
skip "/dev isn't available to test against", 6
unless -d '/dev' && -r '/dev' && -x '/dev';
- skip "Skipping; unexpected ls output in MP-RAS", 6
+ skip "Skipping: unexpected ls output in MP-RAS", 6
if $Is_MPRAS;
my $LS = $Config{d_readlink} ? "ls -lL" : "ls -l";
SKIP: {
skip "These tests require a TTY", 4 if $ENV{PERL_SKIP_TTY_TEST};
- my $TTY = $^O eq 'rhapsody' ? "/dev/ttyp0" : "/dev/tty";
+ my $TTY = $Is_Rhapsody ? "/dev/ttyp0" : "/dev/tty";
SKIP: {
skip "Test uses unixisms", 2 if $Is_MSWin32 || $Is_NetWare;
my @r = \stat($Curdir);
is(scalar @r, 13, 'stat returns full 13 elements');
+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' );
+
+lstat $0;
+eval { lstat _ };
+is( "$@", "", "lstat _ ok after lstat" );
+eval { -l _ };
+is( "$@", "", "-l _ ok after lstat" );
+
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' );
+ skip "No lstat", 2 unless $Config{d_lstat};
# bug id 20020124.004
# If we have d_lstat, we should have symlink()
ok( (-C _) < 0, 'negative -C works');
ok(unlink($f), 'unlink tmp file');
+{
+ ok(open(F, ">", $tmpfile), 'can create temp file');
+ close F;
+ chmod 0077, $tmpfile;
+ my @a = stat($tmpfile);
+ my $s1 = -s _;
+ -T _;
+ my $s2 = -s _;
+ is($s1, $s2, q(-T _ doesn't break the statbuffer));
+ unlink $tmpfile;
+}
+
END {
1 while unlink $tmpfile;
}