mirror of
https://github.com/mikefarah/yq.git
synced 2024-11-14 23:28:06 +00:00
286 lines
8.3 KiB
Bash
286 lines
8.3 KiB
Bash
|
#!/bin/bash
|
||
|
|
||
|
setUp() {
|
||
|
rm test*.yml || true
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Convenient bash shortcut to read records of NUL separated values
|
||
|
## from stdin the safe way. See example usage in the next tests.
|
||
|
read-0() {
|
||
|
local eof="" IFS=''
|
||
|
while [ "$1" ]; do
|
||
|
## - The `-r` avoids bad surprise with '\n' and other interpreted
|
||
|
## sequences that can be read.
|
||
|
## - The `-d ''` is the (strange?) way to refer to NUL delimiter.
|
||
|
## - The `--` is how to avoid unpleasant surprises if your
|
||
|
## "$1" starts with "-" (minus) sign. This protection also
|
||
|
## will produce a readable error if you want to try to start
|
||
|
## your variable names with a "-".
|
||
|
read -r -d '' -- "$1" || eof=1
|
||
|
shift
|
||
|
done
|
||
|
[ -z "$eof" ] ## fail on EOF
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Convenient bash shortcut to be used with the next function `p-err`
|
||
|
## to read NUL separated values the safe way AND catch any errors from
|
||
|
## the process creating the stream of NUL separated data. See example
|
||
|
## usage in the tests.
|
||
|
read-0-err() {
|
||
|
local ret="$1" eof="" idx=0 last=
|
||
|
read -r -- "${ret?}" <<<"0"
|
||
|
shift
|
||
|
while [ "$1" ]; do
|
||
|
last=$idx
|
||
|
read -r -d '' -- "$1" || {
|
||
|
## Put this last value in ${!ret}
|
||
|
eof="$1"
|
||
|
read -r -- "$ret" <<<"${!eof}"
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
((idx++))
|
||
|
shift
|
||
|
done
|
||
|
[ -z "$eof" ] || {
|
||
|
if [ "$last" != 0 ]; then
|
||
|
## Uhoh, we have no idea if the errorlevel of the internal
|
||
|
## command was properly delimited with a NUL char, and
|
||
|
## anyway something went really wrong at least about the
|
||
|
## number of fields separated by NUL char and the one
|
||
|
## expected.
|
||
|
echo "Error: read-0-err couldn't fill all value $ret = '${!ret}', '$eof', '${!eof}'" >&2
|
||
|
read -r -- "$ret" <<<"not-enough-values"
|
||
|
else
|
||
|
if ! [[ "${!ret}" =~ ^[0-9]+$ && "${!ret}" -ge 0 && "${!ret}" -le 127 ]]; then
|
||
|
## This could happen if you don't use `p-err` wrapper,
|
||
|
## or used stdout in unexpected ways in your inner
|
||
|
## command.
|
||
|
echo "Error: last value is not a number, did you finish with an errorlevel ?" >&2
|
||
|
read -r -- "$ret" <<<"last-value-not-a-number"
|
||
|
fi
|
||
|
fi
|
||
|
false
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Simply runs command given as argument and adds errorlevel in the
|
||
|
## standard output. Is expected to be used in tandem with
|
||
|
## `read-0-err`.
|
||
|
p-err() {
|
||
|
local exp="$1"
|
||
|
"$@"
|
||
|
printf "%s" "$?"
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
wyq-r() {
|
||
|
local exp="$1"
|
||
|
./yq e -0 -r=false "$1"
|
||
|
printf "%s" "$?"
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testBasicUsageRaw() {
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
a: foo
|
||
|
b: bar
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
printf "foo\0bar\0" > expected.out
|
||
|
|
||
|
## We need to compare binary content here. We have to filter the compared
|
||
|
## content through a representation that gets rid of NUL chars but accurately
|
||
|
## transcribe the content.
|
||
|
## Also as it would be nice to have a pretty output in case the test fails,
|
||
|
## we use here 'hd': a widely available shortcut to 'hexdump' that will
|
||
|
## pretty-print any binary to it's hexadecimal representation.
|
||
|
##
|
||
|
## Note that the standard `assertEquals` compare its arguments
|
||
|
## value, but they can't hold NUL characters (this comes from the
|
||
|
## limitation of the C API of `exec*(..)` functions that requires
|
||
|
## `const char *arv[]`). And these are NUL terminated strings. As a
|
||
|
## consequence, the NUL characters gets removed in bash arguments.
|
||
|
assertEquals "$(hd expected.out)" \
|
||
|
"$(./yq e -0 '.a, .b' test.yml | hd)"
|
||
|
|
||
|
rm expected.out
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testBasicUsage() {
|
||
|
local a b
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
a: foo
|
||
|
b: bar
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
## We provide 2 values, and ask to fill 2 variables.
|
||
|
read-0 a b < <(./yq e -0 '.a, .b' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "$?" "0" ## Everything is fine
|
||
|
assertEquals "foo" "$a" ## Values are correctly parsed
|
||
|
assertEquals "bar" "$b"
|
||
|
|
||
|
a=YYY ; b=XXX
|
||
|
## Not enough values provided to fill `a` and `b`.
|
||
|
read-0 a b < <(./yq e -0 '.a' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "$?" "1" ## An error was emitted
|
||
|
assertEquals "foo" "$a" ## First value was correctly parsed
|
||
|
assertEquals "" "$b" ## Second was still reset
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Error from inner command are not catchable !. Use
|
||
|
## `read-0-err`/`p-err` for that.
|
||
|
read-0 a < <(printf "\0"; ./yq e -0 'xxx' test.yml; )
|
||
|
assertEquals "$?" "0"
|
||
|
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testBasicUsageJson() {
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
a:
|
||
|
x: foo
|
||
|
b: bar
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
read-0 a b < <(./yq e -0 -o=json '.a, .b' test.yml)
|
||
|
|
||
|
assertEquals '{
|
||
|
"x": "foo"
|
||
|
}' "$a"
|
||
|
assertEquals '"bar"' "$b"
|
||
|
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testFailWithValueContainingNUL() {
|
||
|
local a b c
|
||
|
## Note that value of field 'a' actually contains a NUL char !
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
a: "foo\u0000bar"
|
||
|
b: 1
|
||
|
c: |
|
||
|
wiz
|
||
|
boom
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
## We are looking for trouble with asking to separated fields with NUL
|
||
|
## char and requested value `.a` actually contains itself a NUL char !
|
||
|
read-0 a b c < <(./yq e -0 '.a, .b, .c' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertNotEquals "0" "$?" ## read-0 failed to fill all values
|
||
|
|
||
|
## But here, we can request for one value, even if `./yq` fails
|
||
|
read-0 b < <(./yq e -0 '.b, .a' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "0" "$?" ## read-0 succeeds at feeding the first value
|
||
|
## Note: to catch the failure of `yq`, see in the next tests the usage
|
||
|
## of `read-0-err`.
|
||
|
|
||
|
## using -r=false solves any NUL containing value issues, but keeps
|
||
|
## all in YAML representation:
|
||
|
read-0 a b c < <(./yq e -0 -r=false '.a, .b, .c' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "0" "$?" ## All goes well despite asking for `a` value
|
||
|
|
||
|
assertEquals '"foo\0bar"' "$a" ## This is a YAML string representation
|
||
|
assertEquals '1' "$b"
|
||
|
assertEquals '|
|
||
|
wiz
|
||
|
boom' "$c"
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testStandardLoop() {
|
||
|
local E a b res
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Here everything is normal: 4 values, that will be paired
|
||
|
## in key/values.
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
- yay
|
||
|
- wiz
|
||
|
- hop
|
||
|
- pow
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
res=""
|
||
|
while read-0-err E a b; do
|
||
|
res+="$a: $b;"
|
||
|
done < <(p-err ./yq -0 '.[]' test.yml)
|
||
|
|
||
|
assertEquals "0" "$E" ## errorlevel of internal command
|
||
|
assertEquals "yay: wiz;hop: pow;" "$res" ## expected result
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testStandardLoopWithoutEnoughValues() {
|
||
|
local E a b res
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Here 5 values, there will be a missing value when reading
|
||
|
## pairs of value.
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
- yay
|
||
|
- wiz
|
||
|
- hop
|
||
|
- pow
|
||
|
- kwak
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
res=""
|
||
|
## The loop will succeed 2 times then fail
|
||
|
while read-0-err E a b; do
|
||
|
res+="$a: $b;"
|
||
|
done < <(p-err ./yq -0 '.[]' test.yml)
|
||
|
|
||
|
assertEquals "not-enough-values" "$E" ## Not enough value error
|
||
|
assertEquals "yay: wiz;hop: pow;" "$res" ## the 2 full key/value pairs
|
||
|
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testStandardLoopWithInternalCmdError() {
|
||
|
local E a b res
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Note the third value contains a NUL char !
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
- yay
|
||
|
- wiz
|
||
|
- "foo\0bar"
|
||
|
- hop
|
||
|
- pow
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
res=""
|
||
|
## It should be only upon the second pass in the loop that
|
||
|
## read-0-err will catch the fact that there is an error !
|
||
|
while read-0-err E a b; do
|
||
|
res+="$a: $b;"
|
||
|
done < <(p-err ./yq -0 '.[]' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "1" "$E" ## Internal command errorlevel (from `./yq`)
|
||
|
assertEquals "yay: wiz;" "$res" ## first 2 values were ok at least
|
||
|
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
testStandardLoopNotEnoughErrorEatsCmdError() {
|
||
|
local E a b res
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Because of possible edge cases where the internal errorlevel
|
||
|
## reported by `p-err` in the standard output might be mangled
|
||
|
## with the unfinished record, `read-0-err E ...` will NOT report
|
||
|
## the internal command error in the variable E and instead will
|
||
|
## store the value 'not-enough-values'. In real world, anyway, you
|
||
|
## will want to react the same if the internal command failed
|
||
|
## and/or you didn't get as much values as expected while
|
||
|
## reading. Keep in mind also that standard error is not
|
||
|
## swallowed, so you can read reports from the inner command AND
|
||
|
## from `read-0-err`.
|
||
|
|
||
|
## Here, note that the fourth value contains a NUL char !
|
||
|
cat >test.yml <<EOL
|
||
|
- yay
|
||
|
- wiz
|
||
|
- hop
|
||
|
- "foo\0bar"
|
||
|
- pow
|
||
|
EOL
|
||
|
|
||
|
res=""
|
||
|
## It should be only upon the second loop that read-0-err will catch
|
||
|
## the fact that there are not enough data to fill the requested variables
|
||
|
while read-0-err E a b; do
|
||
|
res+="$a: $b;"
|
||
|
done < <(p-err ./yq -0 '.[]' test.yml)
|
||
|
assertEquals "not-enough-values" "$E" ## Not enough values error eats internal error !
|
||
|
assertEquals "yay: wiz;" "$res" ## first 2 values were ok at least
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
source ./scripts/shunit2
|