1#!/bin/sh - 2# 3# Copyright (c) 1992 Diomidis Spinellis. 4# Copyright (c) 1992, 1993 5# The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 6# 7# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 8# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 9# are met: 10# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15# 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 16# may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 17# without specific prior written permission. 18# 19# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 20# ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 21# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 22# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 23# FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 24# DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 25# OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 26# HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 27# LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 28# OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 29# SUCH DAMAGE. 30# 31# @(#)sed.test 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93 32# 33# $FreeBSD$ 34# 35 36# sed Regression Tests 37# 38# The directory regress.test.out contains the expected test results 39# 40# These are the regression tests mostly created during the development 41# of the BSD sed. Each test should have a unique mark name, which is 42# used for naming the corresponding file in regress.multitest.out. 43 44SRCDIR=$(dirname $0) 45 46main() 47{ 48 REGRESS=${SRCDIR}/regress.multitest.out 49 DICT=/usr/share/dict/words 50 51 awk 'END { for (i = 1; i < 15; i++) print "l1_" i}' </dev/null >lines1 52 awk 'END { for (i = 1; i < 10; i++) print "l2_" i}' </dev/null >lines2 53 54 echo "1..130" 55 56 exec 4>&1 5>&2 57 tests 58 exec 1>&4 2>&5 59 60 # Remove temporary files 61 rm -f current.out lines[1-4] script[1-2] 62} 63 64tests() 65{ 66 SED=sed 67 MARK=0 68 69 test_args 70 test_addr 71 test_group 72 test_acid 73 test_branch 74 test_pattern 75 test_print 76 test_subst 77 test_error 78 # Handle the result of the last test 79 result 80} 81 82# Display a test's result 83result() 84{ 85 if [ "$TODO" = '1' ] ; then 86 TODO='TODO ' 87 else 88 TODO='' 89 fi 90 if ! [ -r $REGRESS/${TESTNAME} ] ; then 91 echo "Seeding $REGRESS/${TESTNAME} with current result" 1>&2 92 cp current.out $REGRESS/${TESTNAME} 93 fi 94 if diff -c $REGRESS/${TESTNAME} current.out ; then 95 echo "ok $MARK $TESTNAME # $TODO$OCOMMENT" 96 else 97 echo "not ok $MARK $TESTNAME # $TODO$OCOMMENT" 98 fi 1>&4 2>&5 99} 100 101# Mark the beginning of each test 102mark() 103{ 104 [ $MARK -gt 0 ] && result 105 OCOMMENT=$COMMENT 106 MARK=`expr $MARK + 1` 107 TESTNAME=$1 108 exec 1>&4 2>&5 109 exec >"current.out" 110} 111 112test_args() 113{ 114 COMMENT='Argument parsing - first type' 115 mark '1.1' 116 $SED 's/^/e1_/p' lines1 117 mark '1.2' ; $SED -n 's/^/e1_/p' lines1 118 mark '1.3' 119 $SED 's/^/e1_/p' <lines1 120 mark '1.4' ; $SED -n 's/^/e1_/p' <lines1 121 COMMENT='Argument parsing - second type' 122 mark '1.4.1' 123 $SED -e '' <lines1 124 echo 's/^/s1_/p' >script1 125 echo 's/^/s2_/p' >script2 126 mark '1.5' 127 $SED -f script1 lines1 128 mark '1.6' 129 $SED -f script1 <lines1 130 mark '1.7' 131 $SED -e 's/^/e1_/p' lines1 132 mark '1.8' 133 $SED -e 's/^/e1_/p' <lines1 134 mark '1.9' ; $SED -n -f script1 lines1 135 mark '1.10' ; $SED -n -f script1 <lines1 136 mark '1.11' ; $SED -n -e 's/^/e1_/p' lines1 137 mark '1.12' 138 $SED -n -e 's/^/e1_/p' <lines1 139 mark '1.13' 140 $SED -e 's/^/e1_/p' -e 's/^/e2_/p' lines1 141 mark '1.14' 142 $SED -f script1 -f script2 lines1 143 mark '1.15' 144 $SED -e 's/^/e1_/p' -f script1 lines1 145 mark '1.16' 146 $SED -e 's/^/e1_/p' lines1 lines1 147 # POSIX D11.2:11251 148 mark '1.17' ; $SED p <lines1 lines1 149cat >script1 <<EOF 150#n 151# A comment 152 153p 154EOF 155 mark '1.18' ; $SED -f script1 <lines1 lines1 156} 157 158test_addr() 159{ 160 COMMENT='Address ranges' 161 mark '2.1' ; $SED -n -e '4p' lines1 162 mark '2.2' ; $SED -n -e '20p' lines1 lines2 163 mark '2.3' ; $SED -n -e '$p' lines1 164 mark '2.4' ; $SED -n -e '$p' lines1 lines2 165 mark '2.5' ; $SED -n -e '$a\ 166hello' /dev/null 167 mark '2.6' ; $SED -n -e '$p' lines1 /dev/null lines2 168 # Should not print anything 169 mark '2.7' ; $SED -n -e '20p' lines1 170 mark '2.8' ; $SED -n -e '/NOTFOUND/p' lines1 171 mark '2.9' ; $SED -n '/l1_7/p' lines1 172 mark '2.10' ; $SED -n ' /l1_7/ p' lines1 173 mark '2.11' ; $SED -n '\_l1\_7_p' lines1 174 mark '2.12' ; $SED -n '1,4p' lines1 175 mark '2.13' ; $SED -n '1,$p' lines1 lines2 176 mark '2.14' ; $SED -n '1,/l2_9/p' lines1 lines2 177 mark '2.15' ; $SED -n '/4/,$p' lines1 lines2 178 mark '2.16' ; $SED -n '/4/,20p' lines1 lines2 179 mark '2.17' ; $SED -n '/4/,/10/p' lines1 lines2 180 mark '2.18' ; $SED -n '/l2_3/,/l1_8/p' lines1 lines2 181 mark '2.19' ; $SED -n '12,3p' lines1 lines2 182 mark '2.20' ; $SED -n '/l1_7/,3p' lines1 lines2 183 mark '2.21' ; $SED -n '13,+4p' lines1 lines2 184 mark '2.22' ; $SED -n '/l1_6/,+2p' lines1 lines2 185 # For PR bin/192108 186 mark '2.23'; $SED -n '12,+1p' lines1 187} 188 189test_group() 190{ 191 COMMENT='Brace and other grouping' 192 mark '3.1' ; $SED -e ' 1934,12 { 194 s/^/^/ 195 s/$/$/ 196 s/_/T/ 197}' lines1 198 mark '3.2' ; $SED -e ' 1994,12 { 200 s/^/^/ 201 /6/,/10/ { 202 s/$/$/ 203 /8/ s/_/T/ 204 } 205}' lines1 206 mark '3.3' ; $SED -e ' 2074,12 !{ 208 s/^/^/ 209 /6/,/10/ !{ 210 s/$/$/ 211 /8/ !s/_/T/ 212 } 213}' lines1 214 mark '3.4' ; $SED -e '4,12!s/^/^/' lines1 215} 216 217test_acid() 218{ 219 COMMENT='Commands a c d and i' 220 mark '4.1' ; $SED -n -e ' 221s/^/before_i/p 22220i\ 223inserted 224s/^/after_i/p 225' lines1 lines2 226 mark '4.2' ; $SED -n -e ' 2275,12s/^/5-12/ 228s/^/before_a/p 229/5-12/a\ 230appended 231s/^/after_a/p 232' lines1 lines2 233 mark '4.3' 234 $SED -n -e ' 235s/^/^/p 236/l1_/a\ 237appended 2388,10N 239s/$/$/p 240' lines1 lines2 241 mark '4.4' ; $SED -n -e ' 242c\ 243hello 244' lines1 245 mark '4.5' ; $SED -n -e ' 2468c\ 247hello 248' lines1 249 mark '4.6' ; $SED -n -e ' 2503,14c\ 251hello 252' lines1 253# SunOS and GNU sed behave differently. We follow POSIX 254 mark '4.7' ; $SED -n -e ' 2558,3c\ 256hello 257' lines1 258 mark '4.8' ; $SED d <lines1 259} 260 261test_branch() 262{ 263 COMMENT='Labels and branching' 264 mark '5.1' ; $SED -n -e ' 265b label4 266:label3 267s/^/label3_/p 268b end 269:label4 2702,12b label1 271b label2 272:label1 273s/^/label1_/p 274b 275:label2 276s/^/label2_/p 277b label3 278:end 279' lines1 280 mark '5.2' 281 $SED -n -e ' 282s/l1_/l2_/ 283t ok 284b 285:ok 286s/^/tested /p 287' lines1 lines2 288# SunOS and GNU sed behave as follows: lines 9-$ aren't printed at all 289 mark '5.3' ; $SED -n -e ' 2905,8b inside 2911,5 { 292 s/^/^/p 293 :inside 294 s/$/$/p 295} 296' lines1 297# Check that t clears the substitution done flag 298 mark '5.4' ; $SED -n -e ' 2991,8s/^/^/ 300t l1 301:l1 302t l2 303s/$/$/p 304b 305:l2 306s/^/ERROR/ 307' lines1 308# Check that reading a line clears the substitution done flag 309 mark '5.5' 310 $SED -n -e ' 311t l2 3121,8s/^/^/p 3132,7N 314b 315:l2 316s/^/ERROR/p 317' lines1 318 mark '5.6' ; $SED 5q lines1 319 mark '5.7' ; $SED -e ' 3205i\ 321hello 3225q' lines1 323# Branch across block boundary 324 mark '5.8' ; $SED -e ' 325{ 326:b 327} 328s/l/m/ 329tb' lines1 330} 331 332test_pattern() 333{ 334COMMENT='Pattern space commands' 335# Check that the pattern space is deleted 336 mark '6.1' ; $SED -n -e ' 337c\ 338changed 339p 340' lines1 341 mark '6.2' ; $SED -n -e ' 3424d 343p 344' lines1 345 mark '6.3' 346 $SED -e 'N;N;N;D' lines1 347 mark '6.4' ; $SED -e ' 3482h 3493H 3504g 3515G 3526x 3536p 3546x 3556p 356' lines1 357 mark '6.5' ; $SED -e '4n' lines1 358 mark '6.6' ; $SED -n -e '4n' lines1 359} 360 361test_print() 362{ 363 COMMENT='Print and file routines' 364 awk 'END {for (i = 1; i < 256; i++) printf("%c", i);print "\n"}' \ 365 </dev/null >lines3 366 # GNU and SunOS sed behave differently here 367 mark '7.1' 368 $SED -n l lines3 369 mark '7.2' ; $SED -e '/l2_/=' lines1 lines2 370 rm -f lines4 371 mark '7.3' ; $SED -e '3,12w lines4' lines1 372 COMMENT='w results' 373 cat lines4 374 mark '7.4' ; $SED -e '4r lines2' lines1 375 mark '7.5' ; $SED -e '5r /dev/dds' lines1 376 mark '7.6' ; $SED -e '6r /dev/null' lines1 377 mark '7.7' 378 sed '200q' $DICT | sed 's$.*$s/^/&/w tmpdir/&$' >script1 379 rm -rf tmpdir 380 mkdir tmpdir 381 $SED -f script1 lines1 382 cat tmpdir/* 383 rm -rf tmpdir 384 mark '7.8' 385 echo line1 > lines3 386 echo "" >> lines3 387 $SED -n -e '$p' lines3 /dev/null 388 389} 390 391test_subst() 392{ 393 COMMENT='Substitution commands' 394 mark '8.1' ; $SED -e 's/./X/g' lines1 395 mark '8.2' ; $SED -e 's,.,X,g' lines1 396# SunOS sed thinks we are escaping . as wildcard, not as separator 397 mark '8.3' 398 $SED -e 's.\..X.g' lines1 399 mark '8.4' ; $SED -e 's/[\/]/Q/' lines1 400 mark '8.5' ; $SED -e 's_\__X_' lines1 401 mark '8.6' ; $SED -e 's/./(&)/g' lines1 402 mark '8.7' ; $SED -e 's/./(\&)/g' lines1 403 mark '8.8' ; $SED -e 's/\(.\)\(.\)\(.\)/x\3x\2x\1/g' lines1 404 mark '8.9' ; $SED -e 's/_/u0\ 405u1\ 406u2/g' lines1 407 mark '8.10' 408 $SED -e 's/./X/4' lines1 409 rm -f lines4 410 mark '8.11' ; $SED -e 's/1/X/w lines4' lines1 411 COMMENT='s wfile results' 412 cat lines4 413 mark '8.12' ; $SED -e 's/[123]/X/g' lines1 414 mark '8.13' ; $SED -e 'y/0123456789/9876543210/' lines1 415 mark '8.14' ; 416 $SED -e 'y10\123456789198765432\101' lines1 417 mark '8.15' ; $SED -e '1N;2y/\n/X/' lines1 418 mark '8.16' 419 echo 'eeefff' | $SED -e ' 420 p 421 s/e/X/p 422 :x 423 s//Y/p 424 # Establish limit counter in the hold space 425 # GNU sed version 3.02 enters into an infinite loop here 426 x 427 /.\{10\}/ { 428 s/.*/ERROR/ 429 b 430 } 431 s/.*/&./ 432 x 433 /f/bx 434 ' 435 # POSIX does not say that this should work, 436 # but it does for GNU, BSD, and SunOS 437 mark '8.17' ; $SED -e 's/[/]/Q/' lines1 438 439 COMMENT='[ as an s delimiter and its escapes' 440 mark '8.18' ; $SED -e 's[_[X[' lines1 441 # This is a matter of interpretation 442 # POSIX 1003.1, 2004 says "Within the BRE and the replacement, 443 # the BRE delimiter itself can be used as a *literal* character 444 # if it is preceded by a backslash" 445 # SunOS 5.1 /usr/bin/sed and Mac OS X follow the literal POSIX 446 # interpretation. 447 # GNU sed version 4.1.5 treats \[ as the beginning of a character 448 # set specification (both with --posix and without). 449 mark '8.19' ; sed 's/l/[/' lines1 | $SED -e 's[\[.[X[' 450 mark '8.20' ; sed 's/l/[/' lines1 | $SED -e 's[\[.[X\[[' 451 COMMENT='\ in y command' 452 mark '8.21' 453 echo 'a\b(c' | 454 $SED 'y%ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ, /\\()"%abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz,------%' 455 COMMENT='\n in a character class and a BRE' 456 mark '8.22' ; (echo 1; echo 2) | $SED -n '1{;N;s/[\n]/X/;p;}' 457 mark '8.23' ; (echo 1; echo 2) | $SED -n '1{;N;s/\n/X/;p;}' 458} 459 460test_error() 461{ 462 COMMENT='Error cases' 463 mark '9.1' ; $SED -x 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 464 mark '9.2' ; $SED -f 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 465 mark '9.3' ; $SED -e 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 466 mark '9.4' ; $SED -f /dev/xyzzyxyzy 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 467 mark '9.5' ; $SED p /dev/xyzzyxyzy 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 468 mark '9.6' ; $SED -f /bin/sh 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 469 mark '9.7' ; $SED '{' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 470 mark '9.8' ; $SED '{' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 471 mark '9.9' ; $SED '/hello/' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 472 mark '9.10' ; $SED '1,/hello/' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 473 mark '9.11' ; $SED -e '-5p' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 474 mark '9.12' ; $SED '/jj' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 475 mark '9.13' ; $SED 'a hello' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 476 mark '9.14' ; $SED 'a \ hello' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 477 mark '9.15' ; $SED 'b foo' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 478 mark '9.16' ; $SED 'd hello' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 479 mark '9.17' ; $SED 's/aa' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 480 mark '9.18' ; $SED 's/aa/' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 481 mark '9.19' ; $SED 's/a/b' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 482 mark '9.20' ; $SED 's/a/b/c/d' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 483 mark '9.21' ; $SED 's/a/b/ 1 2' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 484 mark '9.22' ; $SED 's/a/b/ 1 g' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 485 mark '9.23' ; $SED 's/a/b/w' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 486 mark '9.24' ; $SED 'y/aa' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 487 mark '9.25' ; $SED 'y/aa/b/' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 488 mark '9.26' ; $SED 'y/aa/' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 489 mark '9.27' ; $SED 'y/a/b' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 490 mark '9.28' ; $SED 'y/a/b/c/d' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 491 mark '9.29' ; $SED '!' 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 492 mark '9.30' ; $SED supercalifrangolisticexprialidociussupercalifrangolisticexcius 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 493 mark '9.31' ; $SED '' /dev/null 2>/dev/null ; echo $? 494} 495 496main 497