ATF-CHECK(1) | General Commands Manual | ATF-CHECK(1) |
atf-check
—
executes a command and analyzes its results
atf-check |
[-s qual:value]
[-o action:arg ...]
[-e action:arg ...]
[-x ] command |
atf-check
executes a given command and
analyzes its results, including exit code, stdout and stderr.
Test
cases must use atf-sh(3)'s
atf_check
builtin
function instead of calling this utility directly.
In the first synopsis form, atf-check
will
execute the provided command and apply checks specified by arguments. By
default it will act as if it was run with -s
exit:0 -o
empty -e
empty. Multiple checks for the same output channel are
allowed and, if specified, their results will be combined as a logical and
(meaning that the output must match all the provided checks).
In the second synopsis form, atf-check
will print information about all supported options and their purpose.
The following options are available:
-s
qual:valueMost of these checkers can be prefixed by the ‘not-’ string, which effectively reverses the check.
-o
action:argMost of these checkers can be prefixed by the ‘not-’ string, which effectively reverses the check.
-e
action:arg-x
atf-check
exits 0 on success, and other
(unspecified) value on failure.
-x
is
given to run commands.The following are sample invocations from within a test case. Note
that we use the atf_check
function provided by
atf-sh(3) instead of executing
atf-check
directly:
# Exit code 0, nothing on stdout/stderr atf_check 'true' # Typical usage if failure is expected atf_check -s not-exit:0 'false' # Checking stdout/stderr echo foobar >expout atf_check -o file:expout -e inline:"xx\tyy\n" \ 'echo foobar ; printf "xx\tyy\n" >&2' # Checking for a crash atf_check -s signal:sigsegv my_program # Combined checks atf_check -o match:foo -o not-match:bar echo foo baz
October 5, 2014 | Debian |