Add project files.
This commit is contained in:
442
3rd-party/curl-7.52.1/tests/FILEFORMAT
vendored
Normal file
442
3rd-party/curl-7.52.1/tests/FILEFORMAT
vendored
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,442 @@
|
||||
The test suite's file format is very simple and extensible, closely
|
||||
resembling XML. All data for a single test case resides in a single
|
||||
ASCII file. Labels mark the beginning and the end of all sections, and each
|
||||
label must be written in its own line. Comments are either XML-style
|
||||
(enclosed with <!-- and -->) or C-style (beginning with #) and must appear
|
||||
on their own lines and not alongside actual test data. Most test data files
|
||||
are syntactically valid XML, although a few files are not (lack of
|
||||
support for character entities and the preservation of CR/LF characters at
|
||||
the end of lines are the biggest differences).
|
||||
|
||||
The file begins with a 'testcase' tag, which encompasses the remainder of
|
||||
the file.
|
||||
|
||||
<testcase>
|
||||
|
||||
Each file is split up in three main sections: reply, client and verify. The
|
||||
reply section is used for the server to know what to send as a reply for the
|
||||
requests curl sends, the client section defines how the client should behave
|
||||
while the verify section defines how to verify that the data stored after a
|
||||
command has been run ended up correctly.
|
||||
|
||||
Each main section has a number of available subsections that can be
|
||||
specified, that will be checked/used if specified. This document includes all
|
||||
the subsections currently supported.
|
||||
|
||||
Main sections are 'info', 'reply', 'client' and 'verify'.
|
||||
|
||||
<info>
|
||||
<keywords>
|
||||
A newline-separated list of keywords describing what this test case uses and
|
||||
tests. Try to use an already used keyword. These keywords will be used for
|
||||
statistical/informational purposes and for choosing or skipping classes
|
||||
of tests. "Keywords" must begin with an alphabetic character, "-", "["
|
||||
or "{" and may actually consist of multiple words separated by spaces
|
||||
which are treated together as a single identifier.
|
||||
</keywords>
|
||||
</info>
|
||||
|
||||
<reply>
|
||||
<data [nocheck="yes"] [sendzero="yes"] [base64="yes"]>
|
||||
data to be sent to the client on its request and later verified that it arrived
|
||||
safely. Set nocheck="yes" to prevent the test script from verifying the arrival
|
||||
of this data.
|
||||
|
||||
If the data contains 'swsclose' anywhere within the start and end tag, and
|
||||
this is a HTTP test, then the connection will be closed by the server after
|
||||
this response is sent. If not, the connection will be kept persistent.
|
||||
|
||||
If the data contains 'swsbounce' anywhere within the start and end tag, the
|
||||
HTTP server will detect if this is a second request using the same test and
|
||||
part number and will then increase the part number with one. This is useful
|
||||
for auth tests and similar.
|
||||
|
||||
'sendzero' set to yes means that the (FTP) server will "send" the data even if
|
||||
the size is zero bytes. Used to verify curl's behaviour on zero bytes
|
||||
transfers.
|
||||
|
||||
'base64' set to yes means that the data provided in the test-file is a chunk
|
||||
of data encoded with base64. It is the only way a test case can contain binary
|
||||
data. (This attribute can in fact be used on any section, but it doesn't make
|
||||
much sense for other sections than "data").
|
||||
|
||||
For FTP file listings, the <data> section will be used *only* if you make sure
|
||||
that there has been a CWD done first to a directory named 'test-[num]' where
|
||||
[num] is the test case number. Otherwise the ftp server can't know from which
|
||||
test file to load the list content.
|
||||
|
||||
</data>
|
||||
<dataNUM>
|
||||
Send back this contents instead of the <data> one. The num is set by:
|
||||
A) The test number in the request line is >10000 and this is the remainder
|
||||
of [test case number]%10000.
|
||||
B) The request was HTTP and included digest details, which adds 1000 to NUM
|
||||
C) If a HTTP request is NTLM type-1, it adds 1001 to num
|
||||
D) If a HTTP request is NTLM type-3, it adds 1002 to num
|
||||
E) If a HTTP request is Basic and num is already >=1000, it adds 1 to num
|
||||
|
||||
Dynamically changing num in this way allows the test harness to be used to
|
||||
test authentication negotiation where several different requests must be sent
|
||||
to complete a transfer. The response to each request is found in its own data
|
||||
section. Validating the entire negotiation sequence can be done by
|
||||
specifying a datacheck section.
|
||||
</dataNUM>
|
||||
<connect>
|
||||
The connect section is used instead of the 'data' for all CONNECT
|
||||
requests. The remainder of the rules for the data section then apply but with
|
||||
a connect prefix.
|
||||
</connect>
|
||||
<datacheck [nonewline="yes"]>
|
||||
if the data is sent but this is what should be checked afterwards. If
|
||||
'nonewline' is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data
|
||||
before comparing with the one actually received by the client
|
||||
</datacheck>
|
||||
<size>
|
||||
number to return on a ftp SIZE command (set to -1 to make this command fail)
|
||||
</size>
|
||||
<mdtm>
|
||||
what to send back if the client sends a (FTP) MDTM command, set to -1 to
|
||||
have it return that the file doesn't exist
|
||||
</mdtm>
|
||||
<postcmd>
|
||||
special purpose server-command to control its behavior *after* the
|
||||
reply is sent
|
||||
For HTTP/HTTPS, these are supported:
|
||||
|
||||
wait [secs]
|
||||
- Pause for the given time
|
||||
</postcmd>
|
||||
<servercmd>
|
||||
Special-commands for the server.
|
||||
For FTP/SMTP/POP/IMAP, these are supported:
|
||||
|
||||
REPLY [command] [return value] [response string]
|
||||
- Changes how the server responds to the [command]. [response string] is
|
||||
evaluated as a perl string, so it can contain embedded \r\n, for example.
|
||||
There's a special [command] named "welcome" (without quotes) which is the
|
||||
string sent immediately on connect as a welcome.
|
||||
COUNT [command] [num]
|
||||
- Do the REPLY change for [command] only [num] times and then go back to the
|
||||
built-in approach
|
||||
DELAY [command] [secs]
|
||||
- Delay responding to this command for the given time
|
||||
RETRWEIRDO
|
||||
- Enable the "weirdo" RETR case when multiple response lines appear at once
|
||||
when a file is transferred
|
||||
RETRNOSIZE
|
||||
- Make sure the RETR response doesn't contain the size of the file
|
||||
NOSAVE
|
||||
- Don't actually save what is received
|
||||
SLOWDOWN
|
||||
- Send FTP responses with 0.01 sec delay between each byte
|
||||
PASVBADIP
|
||||
- makes PASV send back an illegal IP in its 227 response
|
||||
CAPA [capabilities]
|
||||
- Enables support for and specifies a list of space separated capabilities to
|
||||
return to the client for the IMAP CAPABILITY, POP3 CAPA and SMTP EHLO
|
||||
commands
|
||||
AUTH [mechanisms]
|
||||
- Enables support for SASL authentication and specifies a list of space
|
||||
separated mechanisms for IMAP, POP3 and SMTP
|
||||
|
||||
For HTTP/HTTPS:
|
||||
auth_required if this is set and a POST/PUT is made without auth, the
|
||||
server will NOT wait for the full request body to get sent
|
||||
idle do nothing after receiving the request, just "sit idle"
|
||||
stream continuously send data to the client, never-ending
|
||||
writedelay: [secs] delay this amount between reply packets
|
||||
pipe: [num] tell the server to expect this many HTTP requests before
|
||||
sending back anything, to allow pipelining tests
|
||||
skip: [num] instructs the server to ignore reading this many bytes from a PUT
|
||||
or POST request
|
||||
|
||||
rtp: part [num] channel [num] size [num]
|
||||
stream a fake RTP packet for the given part on a chosen channel
|
||||
with the given payload size
|
||||
|
||||
connection-monitor When used, this will log [DISCONNECT] to the server.input
|
||||
log when the connection is disconnected.
|
||||
upgrade when an HTTP upgrade header is found, the server will upgrade
|
||||
to http2
|
||||
|
||||
For TFTP:
|
||||
writedelay: [secs] delay this amount between reply packets (each packet being
|
||||
512 bytes payload)
|
||||
</servercmd>
|
||||
</reply>
|
||||
|
||||
<client>
|
||||
|
||||
<server>
|
||||
What server(s) this test case requires/uses:
|
||||
|
||||
file
|
||||
ftp
|
||||
ftp-ipv6
|
||||
ftps
|
||||
http
|
||||
http-ipv6
|
||||
http-proxy
|
||||
http-unix
|
||||
https
|
||||
httptls+srp
|
||||
httptls+srp-ipv6
|
||||
http/2
|
||||
imap
|
||||
none
|
||||
pop3
|
||||
rtsp
|
||||
rtsp-ipv6
|
||||
scp
|
||||
sftp
|
||||
smtp
|
||||
socks4
|
||||
socks5
|
||||
|
||||
Give only one per line. This subsection is mandatory.
|
||||
</server>
|
||||
|
||||
<features>
|
||||
A list of features that MUST be present in the client/library for this test to
|
||||
be able to run. If a required feature is not present then the test will be
|
||||
SKIPPED.
|
||||
|
||||
Alternatively a feature can be prefixed with an exclamation mark to indicate a
|
||||
feature is NOT required. If the feature is present then the test will be
|
||||
SKIPPED.
|
||||
|
||||
Features testable here are:
|
||||
|
||||
axTLS
|
||||
crypto
|
||||
debug
|
||||
getrlimit
|
||||
GnuTLS
|
||||
GSS-API
|
||||
http2
|
||||
idn
|
||||
ipv6
|
||||
Kerberos
|
||||
large_file
|
||||
libz
|
||||
Metalink
|
||||
NSS
|
||||
NTLM
|
||||
OpenSSL
|
||||
PSL
|
||||
socks
|
||||
SPNEGO
|
||||
SSL
|
||||
SSLpinning
|
||||
SSPI
|
||||
TLS-SRP
|
||||
TrackMemory
|
||||
unittest
|
||||
unix-sockets
|
||||
WinSSL
|
||||
|
||||
as well as each protocol that curl supports. A protocol only needs to be
|
||||
specified if it is different from the server (useful when the server
|
||||
is 'none').
|
||||
</features>
|
||||
|
||||
<killserver>
|
||||
Using the same syntax as in <server> but when mentioned here these servers
|
||||
are explicitly KILLED when this test case is completed. Only use this if there
|
||||
is no other alternatives. Using this of course requires subsequent tests to
|
||||
restart servers.
|
||||
</killserver>
|
||||
|
||||
<precheck>
|
||||
A command line that if set gets run by the test script before the test. If an
|
||||
output is displayed by the command or if the return code is non-zero, the test
|
||||
will be skipped and the (single-line) output will be displayed as reason for
|
||||
not running the test. Variables are substituted as in the <command> section.
|
||||
</precheck>
|
||||
|
||||
<postcheck>
|
||||
A command line that if set gets run by the test script after the test. If
|
||||
the command exists with a non-zero status code, the test will be considered
|
||||
to have failed. Variables are substituted as in the <command> section.
|
||||
</postcheck>
|
||||
|
||||
<tool>
|
||||
Name of tool to use instead of "curl". This tool must be built and exist
|
||||
either in the libtest/ directory (if the tool starts with 'lib') or in the
|
||||
unit/ directory (if the tool starts with 'unit').
|
||||
</tool>
|
||||
|
||||
<name>
|
||||
test case description
|
||||
</name>
|
||||
|
||||
<setenv>
|
||||
variable1=contents1
|
||||
variable2=contents2
|
||||
|
||||
Set the given environment variables to the specified value before the actual
|
||||
command is run. They are cleared again after the command has been run.
|
||||
Variables are first substituted as in the <command> section.
|
||||
</setenv>
|
||||
|
||||
<command [option="no-output/no-include"] [timeout="secs"] [delay="secs"]
|
||||
[type="perl"]>
|
||||
command line to run, there's a bunch of %variables that get replaced
|
||||
accordingly.
|
||||
|
||||
Note that the URL that gets passed to the server actually controls what data
|
||||
that is returned. The last slash in the URL must be followed by a number. That
|
||||
number (N) will be used by the test-server to load test case N and return the
|
||||
data that is defined within the <reply><data></data></reply> section.
|
||||
|
||||
If there's no test number found above, the HTTP test server will use the
|
||||
number following the last dot in the given hostname (made so that a CONNECT
|
||||
can still pass on test number) so that "foo.bar.123" gets treated as test case
|
||||
123. Alternatively, if an IPv6 address is provided to CONNECT, the last
|
||||
hexadecimal group in the address will be used as the test number! For example
|
||||
the address "[1234::ff]" would be treated as test case 255.
|
||||
|
||||
Set type="perl" to write the test case as a perl script. It implies that
|
||||
there's no memory debugging and valgrind gets shut off for this test.
|
||||
|
||||
Set option="no-output" to prevent the test script to slap on the --output
|
||||
argument that directs the output to a file. The --output is also not added if
|
||||
the verify/stdout section is used.
|
||||
|
||||
Set option="no-include" to prevent the test script to slap on the --include
|
||||
argument.
|
||||
|
||||
Set timeout="secs" to override default server logs advisor read lock timeout.
|
||||
This timeout is used by the test harness, once that the command has completed
|
||||
execution, to wait for the test server to write out server side log files and
|
||||
remove the lock that advised not to read them. The "secs" parameter is the not
|
||||
negative integer number of seconds for the timeout. This 'timeout' attribute
|
||||
is documented for completeness sake, but is deep test harness stuff and only
|
||||
needed for very singular and specific test cases. Avoid using it.
|
||||
|
||||
Set delay="secs" to introduce a time delay once that the command has completed
|
||||
execution and before the <postcheck> section runs. The "secs" parameter is the
|
||||
not negative integer number of seconds for the delay. This 'delay' attribute
|
||||
is intended for very specific test cases, and normally not needed.
|
||||
|
||||
Available substitute variables include:
|
||||
%CLIENT6IP - IPv6 address of the client running curl
|
||||
%CLIENTIP - IPv4 address of the client running curl
|
||||
%CURL - Path to the curl executable
|
||||
%FTP2PORT - Port number of the FTP server 2
|
||||
%FTP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the FTP server
|
||||
%FTPPORT - Port number of the FTP server
|
||||
%FTPSPORT - Port number of the FTPS server
|
||||
%FTPTIME2 - Timeout in seconds that should be just sufficient to receive
|
||||
a response from the test FTP server
|
||||
%FTPTIME3 - Even longer than %FTPTIME2
|
||||
%GOPHER6PORT - IPv6 port number of the Gopher server
|
||||
%GOPHERPORT - Port number of the Gopher server
|
||||
%HOST6IP - IPv6 address of the host running this test
|
||||
%HOSTIP - IPv4 address of the host running this test
|
||||
%HTTP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the HTTP server
|
||||
%HTTPPIPEPORT - Port number of the HTTP pipelining server
|
||||
%HTTPUNIXPATH - Path to the Unix socket of the HTTP server
|
||||
%HTTPPORT - Port number of the HTTP server
|
||||
%HTTPSPORT - Port number of the HTTPS server
|
||||
%HTTPTLS6PORT - IPv6 port number of the HTTP TLS server
|
||||
%HTTPTLSPORT - Port number of the HTTP TLS server
|
||||
%IMAP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the IMAP server
|
||||
%IMAPPORT - Port number of the IMAP server
|
||||
%POP36PORT - IPv6 port number of the POP3 server
|
||||
%POP3PORT - Port number of the POP3 server
|
||||
%PROXYPORT - Port number of the HTTP proxy
|
||||
%PWD - Current directory
|
||||
%RTSP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the RTSP server
|
||||
%RTSPPORT - Port number of the RTSP server
|
||||
%SMTP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the SMTP server
|
||||
%SMTPPORT - Port number of the SMTP server
|
||||
%SOCKSPORT - Port number of the SOCKS4/5 server
|
||||
%SRCDIR - Full path to the source dir
|
||||
%SSHPORT - Port number of the SCP/SFTP server
|
||||
%TFTP6PORT - IPv6 port number of the TFTP server
|
||||
%TFTPPORT - Port number of the TFTP server
|
||||
%USER - Login ID of the user running the test
|
||||
</command>
|
||||
|
||||
<file name="log/filename">
|
||||
This creates the named file with this content before the test case is run,
|
||||
which is useful if the test case needs a file to act on.
|
||||
Variables are substituted on the contents of the file as in the <command>
|
||||
section.
|
||||
</file>
|
||||
|
||||
<stdin [nonewline="yes"]>
|
||||
Pass this given data on stdin to the tool.
|
||||
|
||||
If 'nonewline' is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data
|
||||
before comparing with the one actually received by the client
|
||||
</stdin>
|
||||
|
||||
</client>
|
||||
|
||||
<verify>
|
||||
<errorcode>
|
||||
numerical error code curl is supposed to return. Specify a list of accepted
|
||||
error codes by separating multiple numbers with comma. See test 237 for an
|
||||
example.
|
||||
</errorcode>
|
||||
<strip>
|
||||
One regex per line that is removed from the protocol dumps before the
|
||||
comparison is made. This is very useful to remove dependencies on dynamically
|
||||
changing protocol data such as port numbers or user-agent strings.
|
||||
</strip>
|
||||
<strippart>
|
||||
One perl op per line that operates on the protocol dump. This is pretty
|
||||
advanced. Example: "s/^EPRT .*/EPRT stripped/"
|
||||
</strippart>
|
||||
|
||||
<protocol [nonewline="yes"]>
|
||||
|
||||
the protocol dump curl should transmit, if 'nonewline' is set, we will cut off
|
||||
the trailing newline of this given data before comparing with the one actually
|
||||
sent by the client Variables are substituted as in the <command> section. The
|
||||
<strip> and <strippart> rules are applied before comparisons are made.
|
||||
|
||||
</protocol>
|
||||
|
||||
<proxy [nonewline="yes"]>
|
||||
|
||||
The protocol dump curl should transmit to a HTTP proxy (when the http-proxy
|
||||
server is used), if 'nonewline' is set, we will cut off the trailing newline
|
||||
of this given data before comparing with the one actually sent by the client
|
||||
Variables are substituted as in the <command> section. The <strip> and
|
||||
<strippart> rules are applied before comparisons are made.
|
||||
|
||||
</proxy>
|
||||
|
||||
<stdout [mode="text"] [nonewline="yes"]>
|
||||
This verifies that this data was passed to stdout. Variables are
|
||||
substituted as in the <command> section.
|
||||
|
||||
Use the mode="text" attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms that
|
||||
have a text/binary difference.
|
||||
|
||||
If 'nonewline' is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data
|
||||
before comparing with the one actually received by the client
|
||||
</stdout>
|
||||
<file name="log/filename" [mode="text"]>
|
||||
The file's contents must be identical to this after the test is complete.
|
||||
Use the mode="text" attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms that
|
||||
have a text/binary difference.
|
||||
Variables are substituted as in the <command> section.
|
||||
</file>
|
||||
<stripfile>
|
||||
One perl op per line that operates on the output file or stdout before being
|
||||
compared with what is stored in the test file. This is pretty
|
||||
advanced. Example: "s/^EPRT .*/EPRT stripped/"
|
||||
</stripfile>
|
||||
<upload>
|
||||
the contents of the upload data curl should have sent
|
||||
</upload>
|
||||
<valgrind>
|
||||
disable - disables the valgrind log check for this test
|
||||
</valgrind>
|
||||
</verify>
|
||||
|
||||
</testcase>
|
Reference in New Issue
Block a user