bash-it/test/plugins/base.plugin.bats

79 lines
2.1 KiB
Bash

# shellcheck shell=bats
load "${MAIN_BASH_IT_DIR?}/test/test_helper.bash"
function local_setup_file() {
setup_libs "helpers"
load "${BASH_IT?}/plugins/available/base.plugin.bash"
}
@test 'plugins base: ips()' {
readonly localhost='127.0.0.1'
run ips
assert_success
assert_line "$localhost"
}
@test 'plugins base: myip()' {
local mask_ip
run myip
assert_success
shopt -s extglob
mask_ip="${output//+([[:digit:]]|[[:digit:]][[:digit:]]|[[:digit:]][[:digit:]][[:digit:]])/?}" #$(echo "$output" | tr -s '0-9' '?')
[[ $mask_ip == 'Your public IP is: ?.?.?.? ' ]]
}
@test 'plugins base: pickfrom()' {
stub_file="${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR?}/stub_file"
printf "l1\nl2\nl3" > "$stub_file"
run pickfrom "$stub_file"
assert_success
[[ $output == l? ]]
}
@test 'plugins base: mkcd()' {
cd "${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR?}"
declare -r dir_name="-dir_with_dash"
# Make sure that the directory does not exist prior to the test
rm -rf "${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR:?}/${dir_name}"
run mkcd "${dir_name}"
assert_success
assert_dir_exist "${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR?}/${dir_name}"
mkcd "${dir_name}"
assert_equal "${PWD}" "${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR//\/\///}/${dir_name}"
}
@test 'plugins base: lsgrep()' {
for i in 1 2 3; do mkdir -p "${BASH_IT}/${i}"; done
cd "${BASH_IT?}"
run lsgrep 2
assert_success
assert_equal "$output" 2
}
@test 'plugins base: buf()' {
declare -r file="${BATS_TEST_TMPDIR?}/file"
touch "$file"
# Take one timestamp before running the `buf` function
declare -r stamp1=$(date +%Y%m%d_%H%M%S)
run buf "$file"
# Take another timestamp after running `buf`.
declare -r stamp2=$(date +%Y%m%d_%H%M%S)
# Verify that the backup file ends with one of the two timestamps.
# This is done to avoid race conditions where buf is run close to the end
# of a second, in which case the second timestamp might be in the next second,
# causing the test to fail.
# By using `or` for the two checks, we can verify that one of the two files is present.
# In most cases, it's going to have the same timestamp anyway.
# We can't use `assert_file_exist` here, since it only checks for a single file name.
assert [ -e "${file}_${stamp1}" \
-o -e "${file}_${stamp2}" ]
}