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authorLibravatar Jeff King <peff@peff.net>2021-11-21 17:54:39 -0500
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2021-11-22 15:43:44 -0800
commitf7991f01f2d1bc800a47adcf66a1b29a1f7cf697 (patch)
treed3ad943dafe50bc0179948d9c83fa0a7f7f9a771 /t/t0063-string-list.sh
parentrun-command: unify signal and regular logic for wait_or_whine() (diff)
downloadtgif-f7991f01f2d1bc800a47adcf66a1b29a1f7cf697.tar.xz
t7006: clean up SIGPIPE handling in trace2 tests
Comit c24b7f6736 (pager: test for exit code with and without SIGPIPE, 2021-02-02) introduced some tests that don't reliably generate SIGPIPE where we expect it (i.e., when our pager doesn't read all of the output from git-log). There are two problems that somewhat cancel each other out. First is that the output of git-log isn't very large (only around 800 bytes). So even if the pager doesn't read all of our output, it's racy whether or not we'll actually get a SIGPIPE (we won't if we write all of the output into the pipe buffer before the pager exits). But we wrap git-log with test_terminal, which is supposed to propagate the exit status of git-log. However, it doesn't always do so; test_terminal will copy to stdout any lines that it got from our fake pager, and it pipes to an empty command. So most of the time we are seeing a SIGPIPE from test_terminal itself (though this is likewise racy). Let's try to make this more robust in two ways: 1. We'll put a commit with a huge message at the tip of history. Since this is over a megabyte, it should fill the OS pipe buffer completely, causing git-log to keep trying to write even after the pager has exited. 2. We'll redirect the output of test_terminal to /dev/null. That means it can never get SIGPIPE itself, and will always be giving us the exit code from git-log. These two changes reveal that one of the tests was looking for the wrong behavior. If we try to start a pager that does not exist (according to execve()), then the error propagates from start_command() back to the pager code as an error, and we avoid redirecting git-log's stdout to the broken pager entirely. Instead, it goes straight to the original stdout (test_terminal's pty in this case), and we do not see a SIGPIPE at all. So the test "git attempts to page to nonexisting pager command, gets SIGPIPE" is checking the wrong outcome; it should be looking for a successful exit (and was only confused by test_terminal's SIGPIPE). There's a related test, "git discards nonexisting pager without SIGPIPE", which sets the pager to a shell command which will read all input and _then_ run a non-existing command. But that doesn't trigger the same execve() behavior. We really do run the shell there and redirect git-log's stdout to it. And the fact that the shell then exits 127 is not interesting. It is not different at that point than the earlier test to check for "exit 1". So we can drop that test entirely. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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