192 lines
6.2 KiB
Go
192 lines
6.2 KiB
Go
package terminal
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import (
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"fmt"
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"io"
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"os"
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"strings"
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"sync"
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"testing"
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)
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// StreamsForTesting is a helper for test code that is aiming to test functions
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// that interact with the input and output streams.
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//
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// This particular function is for the simple case of a function that only
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// produces output: the returned input stream is connected to the system's
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// "null device", as if a user had run Terraform with I/O redirection like
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// </dev/null on Unix. It also configures the output as a pipe rather than
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// as a terminal, and so can't be used to test whether code is able to adapt
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// to different terminal widths.
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//
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// The return values are a Streams object ready to pass into a function under
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// test, and a callback function for the test itself to call afterwards
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// in order to obtain any characters that were written to the streams. Once
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// you call the close function, the Streams object becomes invalid and must
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// not be used anymore. Any caller of this function _must_ call close before
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// its test concludes, even if it doesn't intend to check the output, or else
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// it will leak resources.
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//
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// Since this function is for testing only, for convenience it will react to
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// any setup errors by logging a message to the given testing.T object and
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// then failing the test, preventing any later code from running.
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func StreamsForTesting(t *testing.T) (streams *Streams, close func(*testing.T) *TestOutput) {
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stdinR, err := os.Open(os.DevNull)
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if err != nil {
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t.Fatalf("failed to open /dev/null to represent stdin: %s", err)
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}
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// (Although we only have StreamsForTesting right now, it seems plausible
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// that we'll want some other similar helpers for more complicated
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// situations, such as codepaths that need to read from Stdin or
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// tests for whether a function responds properly to terminal width.
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// In that case, we'd probably want to factor out the core guts of this
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// which set up the pipe *os.File values and the goroutines, but then
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// let each caller produce its own Streams wrapping around those. For
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// now though, it's simpler to just have this whole implementation together
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// in one function.)
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// Our idea of streams is only a very thin wrapper around OS-level file
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// descriptors, so in order to produce a realistic implementation for
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// the code under test while still allowing us to capture the output
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// we'll OS-level pipes and concurrently copy anything we read from
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// them into the output object.
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outp := &TestOutput{}
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var lock sync.Mutex // hold while appending to outp
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stdoutR, stdoutW, err := os.Pipe()
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if err != nil {
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t.Fatalf("failed to create stdout pipe: %s", err)
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}
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stderrR, stderrW, err := os.Pipe()
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if err != nil {
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t.Fatalf("failed to create stderr pipe: %s", err)
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}
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var wg sync.WaitGroup // for waiting until our goroutines have exited
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// We need an extra goroutine for each of the pipes so we can block
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// on reading both of them alongside the caller hopefully writing to
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// the write sides.
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wg.Add(2)
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consume := func(r *os.File, isErr bool) {
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var buf [1024]byte
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for {
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n, err := r.Read(buf[:])
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if err != nil {
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if err != io.EOF {
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// We aren't allowed to write to the testing.T from
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// a different goroutine than it was created on, but
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// encountering other errors would be weird here anyway
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// so we'll just panic. (If we were to just ignore this
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// and then drop out of the loop then we might deadlock
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// anyone still trying to write to the write end.)
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panic(fmt.Sprintf("failed to read from pipe: %s", err))
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}
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break
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}
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lock.Lock()
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outp.parts = append(outp.parts, testOutputPart{
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isErr: isErr,
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bytes: append(([]byte)(nil), buf[:n]...), // copy so we can reuse the buffer
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})
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lock.Unlock()
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}
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wg.Done()
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}
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go consume(stdoutR, false)
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go consume(stderrR, true)
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close = func(t *testing.T) *TestOutput {
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err := stdinR.Close()
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if err != nil {
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t.Errorf("failed to close stdin handle: %s", err)
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}
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// We'll close both of the writer streams now, which should in turn
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// cause both of the "consume" goroutines above to terminate by
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// encountering io.EOF.
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err = stdoutW.Close()
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if err != nil {
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t.Errorf("failed to close stdout pipe: %s", err)
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}
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err = stderrW.Close()
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if err != nil {
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t.Errorf("failed to close stderr pipe: %s", err)
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}
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// The above error cases still allow this to complete and thus
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// potentially allow the test to report its own result, but will
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// ensure that the test doesn't pass while also leaking resources.
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// Wait for the stream-copying goroutines to finish anything they
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// are working on before we return, or else we might miss some
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// late-arriving writes.
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wg.Wait()
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return outp
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}
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return &Streams{
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Stdout: &OutputStream{
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File: stdoutW,
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},
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Stderr: &OutputStream{
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File: stderrW,
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},
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Stdin: &InputStream{
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File: stdinR,
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},
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}, close
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}
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// TestOutput is a type used to return the results from the various stream
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// testing helpers. It encapsulates any captured writes to the output and
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// error streams, and has methods to consume that data in some different ways
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// to allow for a few different styles of testing.
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type TestOutput struct {
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parts []testOutputPart
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}
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type testOutputPart struct {
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// isErr is true if this part was written to the error stream, or false
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// if it was written to the output stream.
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isErr bool
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// bytes are the raw bytes that were written
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bytes []byte
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}
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// All returns the output written to both the Stdout and Stderr streams,
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// interleaved together in the order of writing in a single string.
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func (o TestOutput) All() string {
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buf := &strings.Builder{}
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for _, part := range o.parts {
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buf.Write(part.bytes)
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}
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return buf.String()
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}
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// Stdout returns the output written to just the Stdout stream, ignoring
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// anything that was written to the Stderr stream.
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func (o TestOutput) Stdout() string {
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buf := &strings.Builder{}
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for _, part := range o.parts {
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if part.isErr {
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continue
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}
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buf.Write(part.bytes)
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}
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return buf.String()
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}
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// Stderr returns the output written to just the Stderr stream, ignoring
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// anything that was written to the Stdout stream.
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func (o TestOutput) Stderr() string {
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buf := &strings.Builder{}
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for _, part := range o.parts {
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if !part.isErr {
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continue
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}
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buf.Write(part.bytes)
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}
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return buf.String()
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}
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