bb4efbc5df
The --chain-lint option uses heuristics and knowledge of shell syntax to detect broken &&-chains in subshells by pure textual inspection. The heuristics handle a range of stylistic variations in existing tests (evolved over the years), however, they are still best-guesses. As such, it is possible for future changes to accidentally break assumptions upon which the heuristics are based. Protect against this possibility by adding tests which check the linter itself for correctness. In addition to protecting against regressions, these tests help document (for humans) expected behavior, which is important since the linter's implementation language ('sed') does not necessarily lend itself to easy comprehension. Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
24 lines
322 B
Plaintext
24 lines
322 B
Plaintext
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# LINT: inner "EOF" not misintrepreted as closing INPUT_END here-doc
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cat <<-\INPUT_END &&
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fish are mice
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but geese go slow
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data <<EOF
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perl is lerp
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and nothing else
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EOF
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toink
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INPUT_END
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# LINT: same but missing "&&"
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cat <<-\EOT
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text goes here
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data <<EOF
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data goes here
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EOF
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more test here
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EOT
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foobar
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)
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