sed.tests 12 KB

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  1. #!/bin/sh
  2. # SUSv3 compliant sed tests.
  3. # Copyright 2005 by Rob Landley <rob@landley.net>
  4. # Licensed under GPLv2, see file LICENSE in this source tree.
  5. . ./testing.sh
  6. # testing "description" "commands" "result" "infile" "stdin"
  7. # Corner cases
  8. testing "sed no files (stdin)" 'sed ""' "hello\n" "" "hello\n"
  9. testing "sed explicit stdin" 'sed "" -' "hello\n" "" "hello\n"
  10. testing "sed handles empty lines" "sed -e 's/\$/@/'" "@\n" "" "\n"
  11. testing "sed stdin twice" 'sed "" - -' "hello" "" "hello"
  12. # Trailing EOF.
  13. # Match $, at end of each file or all files?
  14. # -e corner cases
  15. # without -e
  16. # multiple -e
  17. # interact with a
  18. # -eee arg1 arg2 arg3
  19. # -f corner cases
  20. # -e -f -e
  21. # -n corner cases
  22. # no newline at EOF?
  23. # -r corner cases
  24. # Just make sure it works.
  25. # -i corner cases:
  26. # sed -i -
  27. # permissions
  28. # -i on a symlink
  29. # on a directory
  30. # With $ last-line test
  31. # Continue with \
  32. # End of script with trailing \
  33. # command list
  34. testing "sed accepts blanks before command" "sed -e '1 d'" "" "" ""
  35. testing "sed accepts newlines in -e" "sed -e 'i\
  36. 1
  37. a\
  38. 3'" "1\n2\n3\n" "" "2\n"
  39. testing "sed accepts multiple -e" "sed -e 'i\' -e '1' -e 'a\' -e '3'" \
  40. "1\n2\n3\n" "" "2\n"
  41. # substitutions
  42. testing "sed -n" "sed -n -e s/foo/bar/ -e s/bar/baz/" "" "" "foo\n"
  43. testing "sed with empty match" "sed 's/z*//g'" "string\n" "" "string\n"
  44. testing "sed s//p" "sed -e s/foo/bar/p -e s/bar/baz/p" "bar\nbaz\nbaz\n" \
  45. "" "foo\n"
  46. testing "sed -n s//p" "sed -ne s/abc/def/p" "def\n" "" "abc\n"
  47. testing "sed s//g (exhaustive)" "sed -e 's/[[:space:]]*/,/g'" ",1,2,3,4,5,\n" \
  48. "" "12345\n"
  49. testing "sed s arbitrary delimiter" "sed -e 's woo boing '" "boing\n" "" "woo\n"
  50. testing "sed s chains" "sed -e s/foo/bar/ -e s/bar/baz/" "baz\n" "" "foo\n"
  51. testing "sed s chains2" "sed -e s/foo/bar/ -e s/baz/nee/" "bar\n" "" "foo\n"
  52. testing "sed s [delimiter]" "sed -e 's@[@]@@'" "onetwo" "" "one@two"
  53. testing "sed s with \\t (GNU ext)" "sed 's/\t/ /'" "one two" "" "one\ttwo"
  54. # branch
  55. testing "sed b (branch)" "sed -e 'b one;p;: one'" "foo\n" "" "foo\n"
  56. testing "sed b (branch with no label jumps to end)" "sed -e 'b;p'" \
  57. "foo\n" "" "foo\n"
  58. # test and branch
  59. testing "sed t (test/branch)" "sed -e 's/a/1/;t one;p;: one;p'" \
  60. "1\n1\nb\nb\nb\nc\nc\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  61. testing "sed t (test/branch clears test bit)" "sed -e 's/a/b/;:loop;t loop'" \
  62. "b\nb\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  63. testing "sed T (!test/branch)" "sed -e 's/a/1/;T notone;p;: notone;p'" \
  64. "1\n1\n1\nb\nb\nc\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  65. test x"$SKIP_KNOWN_BUGS" = x"" && {
  66. # Normal sed end-of-script doesn't print "c" because n flushed the pattern
  67. # space. If n hits EOF, pattern space is empty when script ends.
  68. # Query: how does this interact with no newline at EOF?
  69. testing "sed n (flushes pattern space, terminates early)" "sed -e 'n;p'" \
  70. "a\nb\nb\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  71. }
  72. # non-GNU sed: N does _not_ flush pattern space, therefore c is eaten @ script end
  73. # GNU sed: N flushes pattern space, therefore c is printed too @ script end
  74. testing "sed N (flushes pattern space (GNU behavior))" "sed -e 'N;p'" \
  75. "a\nb\na\nb\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  76. testing "sed N test2" "sed ':a;N;s/\n/ /;ta'" \
  77. "a b c\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  78. testing "sed N test3" "sed 'N;s/\n/ /'" \
  79. "a b\nc\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  80. testing "sed address match newline" 'sed "/b/N;/b\\nc/i woo"' \
  81. "a\nwoo\nb\nc\nd\n" "" "a\nb\nc\nd\n"
  82. # Multiple lines in pattern space
  83. testing "sed N (stops at end of input) and P (prints to first newline only)" \
  84. "sed -n 'N;P;p'" "a\na\nb\n" "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  85. # Hold space
  86. testing "sed G (append hold space to pattern space)" 'sed G' "a\n\nb\n\nc\n\n" \
  87. "" "a\nb\nc\n"
  88. #testing "sed g/G (swap/append hold and patter space)"
  89. #testing "sed g (swap hold/pattern space)"
  90. testing "sed d ends script iteration" \
  91. "sed -e '/ook/d;s/ook/ping/p;i woot'" "" "" "ook\n"
  92. testing "sed d ends script iteration (2)" \
  93. "sed -e '/ook/d;a\' -e 'bang'" "woot\nbang\n" "" "ook\nwoot\n"
  94. # Multiple files, with varying newlines and NUL bytes
  95. test x"$SKIP_KNOWN_BUGS" = x"" && {
  96. testing "sed embedded NUL" "sed -e 's/woo/bang/'" "\0bang\0woo\0" "" \
  97. "\0woo\0woo\0"
  98. }
  99. testing "sed embedded NUL g" "sed -e 's/woo/bang/g'" "bang\0bang\0" "" \
  100. "woo\0woo\0"
  101. test x"$SKIP_KNOWN_BUGS" = x"" && {
  102. $ECHO -e "/woo/a he\0llo" > sed.commands
  103. testing "sed NUL in command" "sed -f sed.commands" "woo\nhe\0llo\n" "" "woo"
  104. rm sed.commands
  105. }
  106. # sed has funky behavior with newlines at the end of file. Test lots of
  107. # corner cases with the optional newline appending behavior.
  108. testing "sed normal newlines" "sed -e 's/woo/bang/' input -" "bang\nbang\n" \
  109. "woo\n" "woo\n"
  110. testing "sed leave off trailing newline" "sed -e 's/woo/bang/' input -" \
  111. "bang\nbang" "woo\n" "woo"
  112. testing "sed autoinsert newline" "sed -e 's/woo/bang/' input -" "bang\nbang" \
  113. "woo" "woo"
  114. testing "sed empty file plus cat" "sed -e 's/nohit//' input -" "one\ntwo" \
  115. "" "one\ntwo"
  116. testing "sed cat plus empty file" "sed -e 's/nohit//' input -" "one\ntwo" \
  117. "one\ntwo" ""
  118. test x"$SKIP_KNOWN_BUGS" = x"" && {
  119. testing "sed append autoinserts newline" "sed -e '/woot/a woo' -" \
  120. "woot\nwoo\n" "" "woot"
  121. }
  122. testing "sed insert doesn't autoinsert newline" "sed -e '/woot/i woo' -" \
  123. "woo\nwoot" "" "woot"
  124. testing "sed print autoinsert newlines" "sed -e 'p' -" "one\none" "" "one"
  125. testing "sed print autoinsert newlines two files" "sed -e 'p' input -" \
  126. "one\none\ntwo\ntwo" "one" "two"
  127. testing "sed noprint, no match, no newline" "sed -ne 's/woo/bang/' input" \
  128. "" "no\n" ""
  129. testing "sed selective matches with one nl" "sed -ne 's/woo/bang/p' input -" \
  130. "a bang\nc bang\n" "a woo\nb no" "c woo\nd no"
  131. testing "sed selective matches insert newline" \
  132. "sed -ne 's/woo/bang/p' input -" "a bang\nb bang\nd bang" \
  133. "a woo\nb woo" "c no\nd woo"
  134. testing "sed selective matches noinsert newline" \
  135. "sed -ne 's/woo/bang/p' input -" "a bang\nb bang" "a woo\nb woo" \
  136. "c no\nd no"
  137. testing "sed clusternewline" \
  138. "sed -e '/one/a 111' -e '/two/i 222' -e p input -" \
  139. "one\none\n111\n222\ntwo\ntwo" "one" "two"
  140. testing "sed subst+write" \
  141. "sed -e 's/i/z/' -e 'woutputw' input -; $ECHO -n X; cat outputw" \
  142. "thzngy\nagaznXthzngy\nagazn" "thingy" "again"
  143. rm outputw
  144. testing "sed trailing NUL" \
  145. "sed 's/i/z/' input -" \
  146. "a\0b\0\nc" "a\0b\0" "c"
  147. testing "sed escaped newline in command" \
  148. "sed 's/a/z\\
  149. z/' input" \
  150. "z\nz" "a" ""
  151. # Test end-of-file matching behavior
  152. testing "sed match EOF" "sed -e '"'$p'"'" "hello\nthere\nthere" "" \
  153. "hello\nthere"
  154. testing "sed match EOF two files" "sed -e '"'$p'"' input -" \
  155. "one\ntwo\nthree\nfour\nfour" "one\ntwo" "three\nfour"
  156. # sed match EOF inline: gnu sed 4.1.5 outputs this:
  157. #00000000 6f 6e 65 0a 6f 6f 6b 0a 6f 6f 6b 0a 74 77 6f 0a |one.ook.ook.two.|
  158. #00000010 0a 74 68 72 65 65 0a 6f 6f 6b 0a 6f 6f 6b 0a 66 |.three.ook.ook.f|
  159. #00000020 6f 75 72 |our|
  160. # which looks buggy to me.
  161. $ECHO -ne "three\nfour" > input2
  162. testing "sed match EOF inline" \
  163. "sed -e '"'$i ook'"' -i input input2 && cat input input2" \
  164. "one\nook\ntwothree\nook\nfour" "one\ntwo" ""
  165. rm input2
  166. # Test lie-to-autoconf
  167. testing "sed lie-to-autoconf" "sed --version | grep -o 'GNU sed version '" \
  168. "GNU sed version \n" "" ""
  169. # Jump to nonexistent label
  170. test x"$SKIP_KNOWN_BUGS" = x"" && {
  171. # Incompatibility: illegal jump is not detected if input is ""
  172. # (that is, no lines at all). GNU sed 4.1.5 complains even in this case
  173. testing "sed nonexistent label" "sed -e 'b walrus' 2>/dev/null || echo yes" \
  174. "yes\n" "" ""
  175. }
  176. testing "sed backref from empty s uses range regex" \
  177. "sed -e '/woot/s//eep \0 eep/'" "eep woot eep" "" "woot"
  178. testing "sed backref from empty s uses range regex with newline" \
  179. "sed -e '/woot/s//eep \0 eep/'" "eep woot eep\n" "" "woot\n"
  180. # -i with no filename
  181. touch ./- # Detect gnu failure mode here.
  182. testing "sed -i with no arg [GNUFAIL]" "sed -e '' -i 2> /dev/null || echo yes" \
  183. "yes\n" "" ""
  184. rm ./- # Clean up
  185. testing "sed s/xxx/[/" "sed -e 's/xxx/[/'" "[\n" "" "xxx\n"
  186. # Ponder this a bit more, why "woo not found" from gnu version?
  187. #testing "sed doesn't substitute in deleted line" \
  188. # "sed -e '/ook/d;s/ook//;t woo;a bang;'" "bang" "" "ook\n"
  189. # This makes both seds very unhappy. Why?
  190. #testing "sed -g (exhaustive)" "sed -e 's/[[:space:]]*/,/g'" ",1,2,3,4,5," \
  191. # "" "12345"
  192. # testing "description" "commands" "result" "infile" "stdin"
  193. testing "sed n command must reset 'substituted' bit" \
  194. "sed 's/1/x/;T;n;: next;s/3/y/;t quit;n;b next;: quit;q'" \
  195. "0\nx\n2\ny\n" "" "0\n1\n2\n3\n"
  196. testing "sed d does not break n,m matching" \
  197. "sed -n '1d;1,3p'" \
  198. "second\nthird\n" "" "first\nsecond\nthird\nfourth\n"
  199. testing "sed d does not break n,regex matching" \
  200. "sed -n '1d;1,/hir/p'" \
  201. "second\nthird\n" "" "first\nsecond\nthird\nfourth\n"
  202. testing "sed d does not break n,regex matching #2" \
  203. "sed -n '1,5d;1,/hir/p'" \
  204. "second2\nthird2\n" "" \
  205. "first\nsecond\nthird\nfourth\n""first2\nsecond2\nthird2\nfourth2\n"
  206. testing "sed 2d;2,1p (gnu compat)" \
  207. "sed -n '2d;2,1p'" \
  208. "third\n" "" \
  209. "first\nsecond\nthird\nfourth\n"
  210. # Regex means: "match / at BOL or nothing, then one or more not-slashes".
  211. # The bug was that second slash in /usr/lib was treated as "at BOL" too.
  212. testing "sed beginning (^) matches only once" \
  213. "sed 's,\(^/\|\)[^/][^/]*,>\0<,g'" \
  214. ">/usr</>lib<\n" "" \
  215. "/usr/lib\n"
  216. testing "sed c" \
  217. "sed 'crepl'" \
  218. "repl\nrepl\n" "" \
  219. "first\nsecond\n"
  220. testing "sed nested {}s" \
  221. "sed '/asd/ { p; /s/ { s/s/c/ }; p; q }'" \
  222. "qwe\nasd\nacd\nacd\n" "" \
  223. "qwe\nasd\nzxc\n"
  224. testing "sed a cmd ended by double backslash" \
  225. "sed -e '/| one /a \\
  226. | three \\\\' -e '/| one-/a \\
  227. | three-* \\\\'" \
  228. ' | one \\
  229. | three \\
  230. | two \\
  231. ' '' \
  232. ' | one \\
  233. | two \\
  234. '
  235. # first three lines are deleted; 4th line is matched and printed by "2,3" and by "4" ranges
  236. testing "sed with N skipping lines past ranges on next cmds" \
  237. "sed -n '1{N;N;d};1p;2,3p;3p;4p'" \
  238. "4\n4\n" "" "1\n2\n3\n4\n"
  239. testing "sed -i with address modifies all files, not only first" \
  240. "cp input input2; sed -i -e '1s/foo/bar/' input input2 && cat input input2; rm input2" \
  241. "bar\nbar\n" "foo\n" ""
  242. testing "sed understands \r" \
  243. "sed 's/r/\r/'" \
  244. "\rrr\n" "" "rrr\n"
  245. testing "sed -i finishes ranges correctly" \
  246. "sed '1,2d' -i input; echo \$?; cat input" \
  247. "0\n3\n4\n" "1\n2\n3\n4\n" ""
  248. testing "sed zero chars match/replace advances correctly 1" \
  249. "sed 's/l*/@/g'" \
  250. "@h@e@o@\n" "" "helllo\n"
  251. testing "sed zero chars match/replace advances correctly 2" \
  252. "sed 's [^ .]* x g'" \
  253. "x x.x\n" "" " a.b\n"
  254. testing "sed zero chars match/replace logic must not falsely trigger here 1" \
  255. "sed 's/a/A/g'" \
  256. "_AAA1AA\n" "" "_aaa1aa\n"
  257. testing "sed zero chars match/replace logic must not falsely trigger here 2" \
  258. "sed 's/ *$/_/g'" \
  259. "qwerty_\n" "" "qwerty\n"
  260. testing "sed /\$_in_regex/ should not match newlines, only end-of-line" \
  261. "sed ': testcont; /\\\\$/{ =; N; b testcont }'" \
  262. "\
  263. this is a regular line
  264. 2
  265. line with \\
  266. continuation
  267. more regular lines
  268. 5
  269. line with \\
  270. continuation
  271. " \
  272. "" "\
  273. this is a regular line
  274. line with \\
  275. continuation
  276. more regular lines
  277. line with \\
  278. continuation
  279. "
  280. testing "sed s///NUM test" \
  281. "sed -e 's/a/b/2; s/a/c/g'" \
  282. "cb\n" "" "aa\n"
  283. testing "sed /regex/,N{...} addresses work" \
  284. "sed /^2/,2{d}" \
  285. "1\n3\n4\n5\n" \
  286. "" \
  287. "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n"
  288. testing "sed /regex/,+N{...} addresses work" \
  289. "sed /^2/,+2{d}" \
  290. "1\n5\n" \
  291. "" \
  292. "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n"
  293. testing "sed /regex/,+N{...} -i works" \
  294. "cat - >input2; sed /^4/,+2{d} -i input input2; echo \$?; cat input input2; rm input2" \
  295. "0\n""1\n2\n3\n7\n8\n""1\n2\n7\n8\n" \
  296. "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  297. "1\n2\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  298. # GNU sed 4.2.1 would also accept "/^4/,+{d}" with the same meaning, we don't
  299. testing "sed /regex/,+0{...} -i works" \
  300. "cat - >input2; sed /^4/,+0{d} -i input input2; echo \$?; cat input input2; rm input2" \
  301. "0\n""1\n2\n3\n5\n6\n7\n8\n""1\n2\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  302. "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  303. "1\n2\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  304. # GNU sed 4.2.1 would also accept "/^4/,+d" with the same meaning, we don't
  305. testing "sed /regex/,+0<cmd> -i works" \
  306. "cat - >input2; sed /^4/,+0d -i input input2; echo \$?; cat input input2; rm input2" \
  307. "0\n""1\n2\n3\n5\n6\n7\n8\n""1\n2\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  308. "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  309. "1\n2\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n" \
  310. # testing "description" "commands" "result" "infile" "stdin"
  311. exit $FAILCOUNT