Fix parsing of cmdline -os & -pr options. Bug 2538
[exim.git] / test / runtest
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1#! /usr/bin/env perl
2# We use env, because in some environments of our build farm
3# the Perl 5.010 interpreter is only reachable via $PATH
151b83f8 4
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5###############################################################################
6# This is the controlling script for the "new" test suite for Exim. It should #
7# be possible to export this suite for running on a wide variety of hosts, in #
8# contrast to the old suite, which was very dependent on the environment of #
9# Philip Hazel's desktop computer. This implementation inspects the version #
10# of Exim that it finds, and tests only those features that are included. The #
11# surrounding environment is also tested to discover what is available. See #
12# the README file for details of how it all works. #
13# #
14# Implementation started: 03 August 2005 by Philip Hazel #
15# Placed in the Exim CVS: 06 February 2006 #
16###############################################################################
17
3ff2360f 18#use strict;
4d8393c0 19use v5.10.1;
b057ad11 20use warnings;
4d8393c0 21use if $^V >= v5.19.11, experimental => 'smartmatch';
b057ad11 22
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23use Errno;
24use FileHandle;
25use Socket;
f675bf30 26use Time::Local;
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27use Cwd;
28use File::Basename;
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29use Pod::Usage;
30use Getopt::Long;
9a8a6839 31use FindBin qw'$RealBin';
1f187290 32
9a8a6839 33use lib "$RealBin/lib";
1f187290 34use Exim::Runtest;
4d8393c0 35use Exim::Utils qw(uniq numerically);
1f187290 36
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37use if $ENV{DEBUG} && scalar($ENV{DEBUG} =~ /\bruntest\b/) => 'Smart::Comments' => '####';
38use if $ENV{DEBUG} && scalar($ENV{DEBUG} =~ /\bruntest\b/) => 'Data::Dumper';
151b83f8 39
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40use constant TEST_TOP => 8999;
41use constant TEST_SPECIAL_TOP => 9999;
42
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43
44# Start by initializing some global variables
45
9a8a6839 46chomp(my $testversion = `git describe --always --dirty 2>&1` || '<unknown>');
151b83f8 47
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48# This gets embedded in the D-H params filename, and the value comes
49# from asking GnuTLS for "normal", but there appears to be no way to
50# use certtool/... to ask what that value currently is. *sigh*
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51# We also clamp it because of NSS interop, see addition of tls_dh_max_bits.
52# This value is correct as of GnuTLS 2.12.18 as clamped by tls_dh_max_bits.
53# normal = 2432 tls_dh_max_bits = 2236
9a8a6839 54my $gnutls_dh_bits_normal = 2236;
83e2f8a2 55
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56my $cf = 'bin/cf -exact';
57my $cr = "\r";
58my $debug = 0;
59my $flavour = do {
c1395714 60 my $f = Exim::Runtest::flavour() // '';
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61 (grep { $f eq $_ } Exim::Runtest::flavours()) ? $f : 'FOO';
62};
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63my $force_continue = 0;
64my $force_update = 0;
65my $log_failed_filename = 'failed-summary.log';
a4ecb6a7 66my $log_summary_filename = 'run-summary.log';
a31c0dcd 67my @more = qw'less -XF';
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68my $optargs = '';
69my $save_output = 0;
70my $server_opts = '';
1a13c13c 71my $slow = 0;
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72my $valgrind = 0;
73
74my $have_ipv4 = 1;
75my $have_ipv6 = 1;
76my $have_largefiles = 0;
77
9a8a6839 78my @test_list = ();
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79
80
81# Networks to use for DNS tests. We need to choose some networks that will
82# never be used so that there is no chance that the host on which we are
83# running is actually in one of the test networks. Private networks such as
84# the IPv4 10.0.0.0/8 network are no good because hosts may well use them.
85# Rather than use some unassigned numbers (that might become assigned later),
86# I have chosen some multicast networks, in the belief that such addresses
87# won't ever be assigned to hosts. This is the only place where these numbers
88# are defined, so it is trivially possible to change them should that ever
89# become necessary.
90
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91my $parm_ipv4_test_net = 224;
92my $parm_ipv6_test_net = 'ff00';
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93
94# Port numbers are currently hard-wired
95
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96my $parm_port_n = 1223; # Nothing listening on this port
97my $parm_port_s = 1224; # Used for the "server" command
98my $parm_port_d = 1225; # Used for the Exim daemon
99my $parm_port_d2 = 1226; # Additional for daemon
100my $parm_port_d3 = 1227; # Additional for daemon
101my $parm_port_d4 = 1228; # Additional for daemon
df613eb4 102my $dynamic_socket; # allocated later for PORT_DYNAMIC
151b83f8 103
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104# Find a suiteable group name for test (currently only 0001
105# uses a group name. A numeric group id would do
106my $parm_mailgroup = Exim::Runtest::mailgroup('mail');
107
df88d501 108# Manually set locale
d63a9563 109$ENV{LC_ALL} = 'C';
df88d501 110
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111# In some environments USER does not exist, but we need it for some test(s)
112$ENV{USER} = getpwuid($>) if not exists $ENV{USER};
151b83f8 113
d63a9563 114my ($parm_configure_owner, $parm_configure_group);
40e3c5bf 115my ($parm_ipv4, $parm_ipv6, $parm_ipv6_stripped);
d63a9563 116my $parm_hostname;
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117
118###############################################################################
119###############################################################################
120
121# Define a number of subroutines
122
123###############################################################################
124###############################################################################
125
126
127##################################################
128# Handle signals #
129##################################################
130
131sub pipehandler { $sigpipehappened = 1; }
132
133sub inthandler { print "\n"; tests_exit(-1, "Caught SIGINT"); }
134
135
136##################################################
137# Do global macro substitutions #
138##################################################
139
140# This function is applied to configurations, command lines and data lines in
141# scripts, and to lines in the files of the aux-var-src and the dnszones-src
142# directory. It takes one argument: the current test number, or zero when
143# setting up files before running any tests.
144
145sub do_substitute{
146s?\bCALLER\b?$parm_caller?g;
1b781f48 147s?\bCALLERGROUP\b?$parm_caller_group?g;
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148s?\bCALLER_UID\b?$parm_caller_uid?g;
149s?\bCALLER_GID\b?$parm_caller_gid?g;
150s?\bCLAMSOCKET\b?$parm_clamsocket?g;
151s?\bDIR/?$parm_cwd/?g;
152s?\bEXIMGROUP\b?$parm_eximgroup?g;
153s?\bEXIMUSER\b?$parm_eximuser?g;
154s?\bHOSTIPV4\b?$parm_ipv4?g;
155s?\bHOSTIPV6\b?$parm_ipv6?g;
156s?\bHOSTNAME\b?$parm_hostname?g;
157s?\bPORT_D\b?$parm_port_d?g;
158s?\bPORT_D2\b?$parm_port_d2?g;
159s?\bPORT_D3\b?$parm_port_d3?g;
160s?\bPORT_D4\b?$parm_port_d4?g;
161s?\bPORT_N\b?$parm_port_n?g;
162s?\bPORT_S\b?$parm_port_s?g;
163s?\bTESTNUM\b?$_[0]?g;
164s?(\b|_)V4NET([\._])?$1$parm_ipv4_test_net$2?g;
165s?\bV6NET:?$parm_ipv6_test_net:?g;
df613eb4 166s?\bPORT_DYNAMIC\b?$dynamic_socket->sockport()?eg;
1f187290 167s?\bMAILGROUP\b?$parm_mailgroup?g;
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168}
169
170
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171##################################################
172# Any state to be preserved across tests #
173##################################################
174
175my $TEST_STATE = {};
176
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177
178##################################################
179# Subroutine to tidy up and exit #
180##################################################
181
182# In all cases, we check for any Exim daemons that have been left running, and
183# kill them. Then remove all the spool data, test output, and the modified Exim
184# binary if we are ending normally.
185
186# Arguments:
187# $_[0] = 0 for a normal exit; full cleanup done
188# $_[0] > 0 for an error exit; no files cleaned up
189# $_[0] < 0 for a "die" exit; $_[1] contains a message
190
191sub tests_exit{
192my($rc) = $_[0];
193my($spool);
194
195# Search for daemon pid files and kill the daemons. We kill with SIGINT rather
196# than SIGTERM to stop it outputting "Terminated" to the terminal when not in
197# the background.
198
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199if (exists $TEST_STATE->{exim_pid})
200 {
201 $pid = $TEST_STATE->{exim_pid};
202 print "Tidyup: killing wait-mode daemon pid=$pid\n";
ee15e974 203 system("sudo kill -INT $pid");
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204 }
205
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206if (opendir(DIR, "spool"))
207 {
208 my(@spools) = sort readdir(DIR);
209 closedir(DIR);
210 foreach $spool (@spools)
211 {
212 next if $spool !~ /^exim-daemon./;
213 open(PID, "spool/$spool") || die "** Failed to open \"spool/$spool\": $!\n";
214 chomp($pid = <PID>);
215 close(PID);
216 print "Tidyup: killing daemon pid=$pid\n";
ee15e974 217 system("sudo rm -f spool/$spool; sudo kill -INT $pid");
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218 }
219 }
220else
221 { die "** Failed to opendir(\"spool\"): $!\n" unless $!{ENOENT}; }
222
223# Close the terminal input and remove the test files if all went well, unless
224# the option to save them is set. Always remove the patched Exim binary. Then
225# exit normally, or die.
226
227close(T);
228system("sudo /bin/rm -rf ./spool test-* ./dnszones/*")
229 if ($rc == 0 && !$save_output);
230
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231system("sudo /bin/rm -rf ./eximdir/*")
232 if (!$save_output);
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233
234print "\nYou were in test $test at the end there.\n\n" if defined $test;
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235exit $rc if ($rc >= 0);
236die "** runtest error: $_[1]\n";
237}
238
239
240
241##################################################
242# Subroutines used by the munging subroutine #
243##################################################
244
245# This function is used for things like message ids, where we want to generate
246# more than one value, but keep a consistent mapping throughout.
247#
248# Arguments:
249# $oldid the value from the file
250# $base a base string into which we insert a sequence
251# $sequence the address of the current sequence counter
252
253sub new_value {
254my($oldid, $base, $sequence) = @_;
255my($newid) = $cache{$oldid};
256if (! defined $newid)
257 {
258 $newid = sprintf($base, $$sequence++);
259 $cache{$oldid} = $newid;
260 }
261return $newid;
262}
263
264
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265# This is used while munging the output from exim_dumpdb.
266# May go wrong across DST changes.
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267
268sub date_seconds {
269my($day,$month,$year,$hour,$min,$sec) =
270 $_[0] =~ /^(\d\d)-(\w\w\w)-(\d{4})\s(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)/;
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271my($mon);
272if ($month =~ /Jan/) {$mon = 0;}
273elsif($month =~ /Feb/) {$mon = 1;}
274elsif($month =~ /Mar/) {$mon = 2;}
275elsif($month =~ /Apr/) {$mon = 3;}
276elsif($month =~ /May/) {$mon = 4;}
277elsif($month =~ /Jun/) {$mon = 5;}
278elsif($month =~ /Jul/) {$mon = 6;}
279elsif($month =~ /Aug/) {$mon = 7;}
280elsif($month =~ /Sep/) {$mon = 8;}
281elsif($month =~ /Oct/) {$mon = 9;}
282elsif($month =~ /Nov/) {$mon = 10;}
283elsif($month =~ /Dec/) {$mon = 11;}
284return timelocal($sec,$min,$hour,$day,$mon,$year);
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285}
286
287
288# This is a subroutine to sort maildir files into time-order. The second field
289# is the microsecond field, and may vary in length, so must be compared
290# numerically.
291
292sub maildirsort {
293return $a cmp $b if ($a !~ /^\d+\.H\d/ || $b !~ /^\d+\.H\d/);
294my($x1,$y1) = $a =~ /^(\d+)\.H(\d+)/;
295my($x2,$y2) = $b =~ /^(\d+)\.H(\d+)/;
296return ($x1 != $x2)? ($x1 <=> $x2) : ($y1 <=> $y2);
297}
298
299
300
301##################################################
302# Subroutine list files below a directory #
303##################################################
304
305# This is used to build up a list of expected mail files below a certain path
306# in the directory tree. It has to be recursive in order to deal with multiple
307# maildir mailboxes.
308
309sub list_files_below {
310my($dir) = $_[0];
311my(@yield) = ();
312my(@sublist, $file);
313
314opendir(DIR, $dir) || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $dir: $!");
315@sublist = sort maildirsort readdir(DIR);
316closedir(DIR);
317
318foreach $file (@sublist)
319 {
320 next if $file eq "." || $file eq ".." || $file eq "CVS";
321 if (-d "$dir/$file")
322 { @yield = (@yield, list_files_below("$dir/$file")); }
323 else
324 { push @yield, "$dir/$file"; }
325 }
326
327return @yield;
328}
329
330
331
332##################################################
333# Munge a file before comparing #
334##################################################
335
336# The pre-processing turns all dates, times, Exim versions, message ids, and so
337# on into standard values, so that the compare works. Perl's substitution with
338# an expression provides a neat way to do some of these changes.
339
340# We keep a global associative array for repeatedly turning the same values
341# into the same standard values throughout the data from a single test.
342# Message ids get this treatment (can't be made reliable for times), and
343# times in dumped retry databases are also handled in a special way, as are
344# incoming port numbers.
345
346# On entry to the subroutine, the file to write to is already opened with the
347# name MUNGED. The input file name is the only argument to the subroutine.
348# Certain actions are taken only when the name contains "stderr", "stdout",
349# or "log". The yield of the function is 1 if a line matching "*** truncated
350# ***" is encountered; otherwise it is 0.
351
352sub munge {
353my($file) = $_[0];
c9a55f6a 354my($extra) = $_[1];
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355my($yield) = 0;
356my(@saved) = ();
357
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358local $_;
359
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360open(IN, "$file") || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $file: $!");
361
362my($is_log) = $file =~ /log/;
363my($is_stdout) = $file =~ /stdout/;
364my($is_stderr) = $file =~ /stderr/;
87cb4a16 365my($is_mail) = $file =~ /mail/;
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366
367# Date pattern
368
369$date = "\\d{2}-\\w{3}-\\d{4}\\s\\d{2}:\\d{2}:\\d{2}";
370
371# Pattern for matching pids at start of stderr lines; initially something
372# that won't match.
373
374$spid = "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx";
375
376# Scan the file and make the changes. Near the bottom there are some changes
377# that are specific to certain file types, though there are also some of those
378# inline too.
379
bc3c7bb7 380LINE: while(<IN>)
151b83f8 381 {
8f1cff48 382RESET_AFTER_EXTRA_LINE_READ:
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383 # Custom munges
384 if ($extra)
385 {
386 next if $extra =~ m%^/% && eval $extra;
387 eval $extra if $extra =~ m/^s/;
388 }
389
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390 # Check for "*** truncated ***"
391 $yield = 1 if /\*\*\* truncated \*\*\*/;
392
393 # Replace the name of this host
394 s/\Q$parm_hostname\E/the.local.host.name/g;
395
396 # But convert "name=the.local.host address=127.0.0.1" to use "localhost"
397 s/name=the\.local\.host address=127\.0\.0\.1/name=localhost address=127.0.0.1/g;
398
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399 # The name of the shell may vary
400 s/\s\Q$parm_shell\E\b/ ENV_SHELL/;
401
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402 # Replace the path to the testsuite directory
403 s?\Q$parm_cwd\E?TESTSUITE?g;
404
405 # Replace the Exim version number (may appear in various places)
a769a501 406 # patchexim should have fixed this for us
026d45f5 407 #s/(Exim) \d+\.\d+[\w_-]*/$1 x.yz/i;
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408
409 # Replace Exim message ids by a unique series
410 s/((?:[^\W_]{6}-){2}[^\W_]{2})
411 /new_value($1, "10Hm%s-0005vi-00", \$next_msgid)/egx;
412
413 # The names of lock files appear in some error and debug messages
414 s/\.lock(\.[-\w]+)+(\.[\da-f]+){2}/.lock.test.ex.dddddddd.pppppppp/;
415
416 # Unless we are in an IPv6 test, replace IPv4 and/or IPv6 in "listening on
417 # port" message, because it is not always the same.
418 s/port (\d+) \([^)]+\)/port $1/g
419 if !$is_ipv6test && m/listening for SMTP(S?) on port/;
420
421 # Challenges in SPA authentication
422 s/TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAAAAAAAoAAABgg[\w+\/]+/TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAAAAAAAoAAABggAAAEbBRwqFwwIAAAAAAAAAAAAt1sgAAAAA/;
423
424 # PRVS values
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425 s?prvs=([^/]+)/[\da-f]{10}@?prvs=$1/xxxxxxxxxx@?g; # Old form
426 s?prvs=[\da-f]{10}=([^@]+)@?prvs=xxxxxxxxxx=$1@?g; # New form
151b83f8 427
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428 # There are differences in error messages between OpenSSL versions
429 s/SSL_CTX_set_cipher_list/SSL_connect/;
430
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431 # One error test in expansions mentions base 62 or 36
432 s/is not a base (36|62) number/is not a base 36\/62 number/;
433
434 # This message sometimes has a different number of seconds
435 s/forced fail after \d seconds/forced fail after d seconds/;
436
437 # This message may contain a different DBM library name
438 s/Failed to open \S+( \([^\)]+\))? file/Failed to open DBM file/;
439
440 # The message for a non-listening FIFO varies
441 s/:[^:]+: while opening named pipe/: Error: while opening named pipe/;
442
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443 # Debugging output of lists of hosts may have different sort keys
444 s/sort=\S+/sort=xx/ if /^\S+ (?:\d+\.){3}\d+ mx=\S+ sort=\S+/;
445
446 # Random local part in callout cache testing
447 s/myhost.test.ex-\d+-testing/myhost.test.ex-dddddddd-testing/;
9bfc60eb 448 s/the.local.host.name-\d+-testing/the.local.host.name-dddddddd-testing/;
151b83f8 449
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450 # File descriptor numbers may vary
451 s/^writing data block fd=\d+/writing data block fd=dddd/;
fc43746d 452 s/(running as transport filter:) fd_write=\d+ fd_read=\d+/$1 fd_write=dddd fd_read=dddd/;
1b781f48 453
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454
455 # ======== Dumpdb output ========
456 # This must be before the general date/date munging.
457 # Time data lines, which look like this:
458 # 25-Aug-2000 12:11:37 25-Aug-2000 12:11:37 26-Aug-2000 12:11:37
459 if (/^($date)\s+($date)\s+($date)(\s+\*)?\s*$/)
460 {
461 my($date1,$date2,$date3,$expired) = ($1,$2,$3,$4);
9a8a6839 462 $expired = '' if !defined $expired;
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463
464 # Round the time-difference up to nearest even value
465 my($increment) = ((date_seconds($date3) - date_seconds($date2) + 1) >> 1) << 1;
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466
467 # We used to use globally unique replacement values, but timing
468 # differences make this impossible. Just show the increment on the
469 # last one.
470
471 printf MUNGED ("first failed = time last try = time2 next try = time2 + %s%s\n",
472 $increment, $expired);
473 next;
474 }
475
476 # more_errno values in exim_dumpdb output which are times
477 s/T:(\S+)\s-22\s(\S+)\s/T:$1 -22 xxxx /;
478
fc1c0820 479 # port numbers in dumpdb output
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480 s/T:([a-z.]+(:[0-9.]+)?):$parm_port_n /T:$1:PORT_N /;
481
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482 # port numbers in stderr
483 s/^set_process_info: .*\]:\K$parm_port_d /PORT_D /;
484 s/^set_process_info: .*\]:\K$parm_port_s /PORT_S /;
485
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486
487 # ======== Dates and times ========
488
489 # Dates and times are all turned into the same value - trying to turn
490 # them into different ones cannot be done repeatedly because they are
491 # real time stamps generated while running the test. The actual date and
492 # time used was fixed when I first started running automatic Exim tests.
493
494 # Date/time in header lines and SMTP responses
eebcfa1c 495 s/[A-Z][a-z]{2},\s\d\d?\s[A-Z][a-z]{2}\s\d{4}\s\d\d\:\d\d:\d\d\s[-+]\d{4}
151b83f8 496 /Tue, 2 Mar 1999 09:44:33 +0000/gx;
efc8902f 497 # and in a French locale
eebcfa1c 498 s/\S{4},\s\d\d?\s[^,]+\s\d{4}\s\d\d\:\d\d:\d\d\s[-+]\d{4}
efc8902f 499 /dim., 10 f\xE9vr 2019 20:05:49 +0000/gx;
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500
501 # Date/time in logs and in one instance of a filter test
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502 s/^\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d(\s[+-]\d\d\d\d)?\s/1999-03-02 09:44:33 /gx;
503 s/^\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\.\d{3}(\s[+-]\d\d\d\d)?\s/2017-07-30 18:51:05.712 /gx;
151b83f8 504 s/^Logwrite\s"\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/Logwrite "1999-03-02 09:44:33/gx;
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505 # Date/time in syslog test
506 s/^SYSLOG:\s\'\K\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\s/2017-07-30 18:51:05 /gx;
507 s/^SYSLOG:\s\'\K\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\.\d{3}\s/2017-07-30 18:51:05.712 /gx;
508 s/^SYSLOG:\s\'\K\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\s[+-]\d\d\d\d\s/2017-07-30 18:51:05 +9999 /gx;
509 s/^SYSLOG:\s\'\K\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\.\d{3}\s[+-]\d\d\d\d\s/2017-07-30 18:51:05.712 +9999 /gx;
151b83f8 510
306c6c77
JH
511 s/((D|[RQD]T)=)\d+s/$1qqs/g;
512 s/((D|[RQD]T)=)\d\.\d{3}s/$1q.qqqs/g;
32dfdf8b 513
151b83f8
PH
514 # Date/time in message separators
515 s/(?:[A-Z][a-z]{2}\s){2}\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\s\d\d\d\d
516 /Tue Mar 02 09:44:33 1999/gx;
517
518 # Date of message arrival in spool file as shown by -Mvh
519 s/^\d{9,10}\s0$/ddddddddd 0/;
520
521 # Date/time in mbx mailbox files
522 s/\d\d-\w\w\w-\d\d\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\s[-+]\d\d\d\d,/06-Sep-1999 15:52:48 +0100,/gx;
523
ea49d0e1 524 # Dates/times in debugging output for writing retry records
151b83f8
PH
525 if (/^ first failed=(\d+) last try=(\d+) next try=(\d+) (.*)$/)
526 {
527 my($next) = $3 - $2;
528 $_ = " first failed=dddd last try=dddd next try=+$next $4\n";
529 }
de6f74f2 530 s/^(\s*)now=\d+ first_failed=\d+ next_try=\d+ expired=(\w)/$1now=tttt first_failed=tttt next_try=tttt expired=$2/;
148e1ac6 531 s/^(\s*)received_time=\d+ diff=\d+ timeout=(\d+)/$1received_time=tttt diff=tttt timeout=$2/;
151b83f8
PH
532
533 # Time to retry may vary
ea49d0e1
PH
534 s/time to retry = \S+/time to retry = tttt/;
535 s/retry record exists: age=\S+/retry record exists: age=ttt/;
727071f8 536 s/failing_interval=\S+ message_age=\S+/failing_interval=ttt message_age=ttt/;
151b83f8
PH
537
538 # Date/time in exim -bV output
539 s/\d\d-[A-Z][a-z]{2}-\d{4}\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/07-Mar-2000 12:21:52/g;
540
f3f065bb
PH
541 # Eximstats heading
542 s/Exim\sstatistics\sfrom\s\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\sto\s
543 \d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/Exim statistics from <time> to <time>/x;
544
7f8794a2
JH
545 # Treat ECONNRESET the same as ECONNREFUSED. At least some systems give
546 # us the former on a new connection.
547 s/(could not connect to .*: Connection) reset by peer$/$1 refused/;
151b83f8 548
6bf5d8f2 549 # ======== TLS certificate algorithms ========
f1be21cf
JH
550 #
551 # In Received: headers, convert RFC 8314 style ciphersuite to
552 # the older (comment) style, keeping only the Auth element
553 # (discarding kex, cipher, mac). For TLS 1.3 there is no kex
554 # element (and no _WITH); insert a spurious "RSA".
da40b1ec 555 # Also in $tls_X_cipher_std reporting.
f1be21cf 556
da40b1ec
JH
557 s/^\s+by \S+ with .+ \K \(TLS1(?:\.[0-3])?\) tls TLS_.*?([^_]+)_WITH.+$/(TLS1.x:ke-$1-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx)/;
558 s/^\s+by \S+ with .+ \K \(TLS1(?:\.[0-3])?\) tls TLS_.+$/(TLS1.x:ke-RSA-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx)/;
559
560 s/ cipher_ TLS_.*?([^_]+)_WITH.+$/ cipher_ TLS1.x:ke_$1_WITH_ci_mac/;
561 s/ cipher_ TLS_.*$/ cipher_ TLS1.x:ke_RSA_WITH_ci_mac/;
f1be21cf 562
6bf5d8f2
PP
563 # Test machines might have various different TLS library versions supporting
564 # different protocols; can't rely upon TLS 1.2's AES256-GCM-SHA384, so we
565 # treat the standard algorithms the same.
9e9ad3ee 566 #
da40b1ec 567 # TLSversion : KeyExchange? - Authentication/Signature - C_iph_er - MAC : bits
9e9ad3ee 568 #
6bf5d8f2 569 # So far, have seen:
d7e464f4 570 # TLSv1:AES128-GCM-SHA256:128
6bf5d8f2 571 # TLSv1:AES256-SHA:256
ce42f3ed 572 # TLSv1.1:AES256-SHA:256
6bf5d8f2 573 # TLSv1.2:AES256-GCM-SHA384:256
1508acb8 574 # TLSv1.2:DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:256
0c3807a8 575 # TLSv1.3:TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:256
75fe387d 576 # TLS1.2:DHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1:128
6bf5d8f2
PP
577 # We also need to handle the ciphersuite without the TLS part present, for
578 # client-ssl's output. We also see some older forced ciphersuites, but
579 # negotiating TLS 1.2 instead of 1.0.
580 # Mail headers (...), log-lines X=..., client-ssl output ...
581 # (and \b doesn't match between ' ' and '(' )
b60b2eea
JH
582 #
583 # Retain the authentication algorith field as we want to test that.
6bf5d8f2 584
da40b1ec 585 s/( (?: (?:\b|\s) [\(=] ) | \s )TLS1(\.[123])?:/$1TLS1.x:/xg;
826cb8c2
JH
586 s/(?<!ke-)((EC)?DHE-)?(RSA|ECDSA)-AES(128|256)-(GCM-SHA(256|384)|SHA)(?!:)/ke-$3-AES256-SHAnnn/g;
587 s/(?<!ke-)((EC)?DHE-)?(RSA|ECDSA)-AES(128|256)-(GCM-SHA(256|384)|SHA):(128|256)/ke-$3-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx/g;
6bf5d8f2 588
0c3807a8 589 # OpenSSL TLSv1.3 - unsure what to do about the authentication-variant testcases now,
9e9ad3ee
JH
590 # as it seems the protocol no longer supports a user choice. Replace the "TLS" field with "RSA".
591 # Also insert a key-exchange field for back-compat, even though 1.3 doesn't do that.
592 #
593 # TLSversion : "TLS" - C_iph_er - MAC : ???
594 #
826cb8c2
JH
595 s/TLS_AES(_256)?_GCM_SHA384(?!:)/ke-RSA-AES256-SHAnnn/g;
596 s/:TLS_AES(_256)?_GCM_SHA384:256/:ke-RSA-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx/g;
0c3807a8 597
4cc77633 598 # LibreSSL
205aba45 599 # TLSv1:AES256-GCM-SHA384:256
4cc77633 600 # TLSv1:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:256
205aba45
JH
601 #
602 # ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305
603 # AES256-GCM-SHA384
604
605 s/(?<!-)(AES256-GCM-SHA384)/RSA-$1/;
826cb8c2
JH
606 s/(?<!ke-)((EC)?DHE-)?(RSA|ECDSA)-(AES256|CHACHA20)-(GCM-SHA384|POLY1305)(?!:)/ke-$3-AES256-SHAnnn/g;
607 s/(?<!ke-)((EC)?DHE-)?(RSA|ECDSA)-(AES256|CHACHA20)-(GCM-SHA384|POLY1305):256/ke-$3-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx/g;
4cc77633 608
75fe387d 609 # GnuTLS have seen:
826cb8c2 610 # TLS1.3:ECDHE_RSA_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:256
d9acfc1c
JH
611 # TLS1.3:ECDHE_SECP256R1__RSA_PSS_RSAE_SHA256__AES_256_GCM__AEAD:256
612 # TLS1.3:ECDHE_X25519__RSA_PSS_RSAE_SHA256__AES_256_GCM:256
613 # TLS1.3:ECDHE_PSK_SECP256R1__AES_256_GCM__AEAD:256
826cb8c2 614 #
62b56dbf
JH
615 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_RSA_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:256
616 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_RSA_AES_128_GCM_SHA256:128
75fe387d
PP
617 # TLS1.2:RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:256 (canonical)
618 # TLS1.2:DHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1:128
d9acfc1c
JH
619 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_SECP256R1__RSA_SHA256__AES_256_GCM:256
620 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_SECP256R1__RSA_SHA256__AES_128_CBC__SHA256:128
621 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_SECP256R1__ECDSA_SHA512__AES_256_GCM:256
b10c87b3
JH
622 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_SECP256R1__AES_256_GCM:256 (3.6.7 resumption)
623 # TLS1.2:ECDHE_RSA_SECP256R1__AES_256_GCM:256 (! 3.5.18 !)
624 # TLS1.2:RSA__CAMELLIA_256_GCM:256 (leave the cipher name)
625 # TLS1.2-PKIX:RSA__AES_128_GCM__AEAD:128 (the -PKIX seems to be a 3.1.20 thing)
0565fc5a 626 # TLS1.2-PKIX:ECDHE_RSA_SECP521R1__AES_256_GCM__AEAD:256
75fe387d
PP
627 #
628 # X=TLS1.2:DHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA256:256
bc9a5bcb
JH
629 # X=TLS1.2:RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:256
630 # X=TLS1.1:RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:256
0565fc5a 631 # X=TLS1.0:RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:256
75fe387d 632 # X=TLS1.0:DHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:256
0565fc5a 633 # X=TLS1.0-PKIX:RSA__AES_256_CBC__SHA1:256
75fe387d 634 # and as stand-alone cipher:
62b56dbf 635 # ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA
75fe387d
PP
636 # DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256
637 # DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA
638 # picking latter as canonical simply because regex easier that way.
826cb8c2 639 s/\bDHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1:128/RSA-AES256-SHA1:256/g;
da40b1ec 640 s/TLS1.[x0123](-PKIX)?: # TLS version
0565fc5a
JH
641 ((EC)?DHE(_((?<psk>PSK)_)?((?<auth>RSA|ECDSA)_)?
642 (SECP(256|521)R1|X25519))?__?)? # key-exchange
643 ((?<auth>RSA|ECDSA)((_PSS_RSAE)?_SHA(512|256))?__?)? # authentication
da40b1ec 644 (?<with>WITH_)? # stdname-with
0565fc5a
JH
645 AES_(256|128)_(CBC|GCM) # cipher
646 (__?AEAD)? # pseudo-MAC
647 (__?SHA(1|256|384))? # PRF
648 :(256|128) # cipher strength
d9acfc1c
JH
649 /"TLS1.x:ke-"
650 . (defined($+{psk}) ? $+{psk} : "")
651 . (defined($+{auth}) ? $+{auth} : "")
da40b1ec 652 . (defined($+{with}) ? $+{with} : "")
6010e708 653 . "-AES256-SHAnnn:xxx"/gex;
d9acfc1c 654 s/TLS1.2:RSA__CAMELLIA_256_GCM(_SHA384)?:256/TLS1.2:RSA_CAMELLIA_256_GCM-SHAnnn:256/g;
826cb8c2 655 s/\b(ECDHE-(RSA|ECDSA)-AES256-SHA|DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256)\b/ke-$2-AES256-SHAnnn/g;
62b56dbf 656
da40b1ec
JH
657 # Separate reporting of TLS version
658 s/ver: TLS1(\.[0-3])?$/ver: TLS1.x/;
659 s/ \(TLS1(\.[0-3])?\) / (TLS1.x) /;
660
62b56dbf 661 # GnuTLS library error message changes
57eb2f64 662 s/(No certificate was found|Certificate is required)/The peer did not send any certificate/g;
62b56dbf
JH
663#(dodgy test?) s/\(certificate verification failed\): invalid/\(gnutls_handshake\): The peer did not send any certificate./g;
664 s/\(gnutls_priority_set\): No or insufficient priorities were set/\(gnutls_handshake\): Could not negotiate a supported cipher suite/g;
8008accd 665 s/\(gnutls_handshake\): \KNo supported cipher suites have been found.$/Could not negotiate a supported cipher suite./;
62b56dbf 666
2b4a568d
JH
667 # (this new one is a generic channel-read error, but the testsuite
668 # only hits it in one place)
c562fd30 669 s/TLS error on connection \(gnutls_handshake\): Error in the pull function\./a TLS session is required but an attempt to start TLS failed/g;
2b4a568d 670
62b56dbf 671 # (replace old with new, hoping that old only happens in one situation)
09b16492
JH
672 s/TLS error on connection to \d{1,3}(.\d{1,3}){3} \[\d{1,3}(.\d{1,3}){3}\] \(gnutls_handshake\): A TLS packet with unexpected length was received./a TLS session is required for ip4.ip4.ip4.ip4 [ip4.ip4.ip4.ip4], but an attempt to start TLS failed/g;
673 s/TLS error on connection from \[127.0.0.1\] \(recv\): A TLS packet with unexpected length was received./TLS error on connection from [127.0.0.1] (recv): The TLS connection was non-properly terminated./g;
75fe387d 674
348051ad 675 # signature algorithm names
2335af87 676 s/RSA-SHA1/RSA-SHA/;
348051ad 677
6bf5d8f2 678
eeeda78a 679 # ======== Caller's login, uid, gid, home, gecos ========
151b83f8
PH
680
681 s/\Q$parm_caller_home\E/CALLER_HOME/g; # NOTE: these must be done
682 s/\b\Q$parm_caller\E\b/CALLER/g; # in this order!
683 s/\b\Q$parm_caller_group\E\b/CALLER/g; # In case group name different
684
685 s/\beuid=$parm_caller_uid\b/euid=CALLER_UID/g;
686 s/\begid=$parm_caller_gid\b/egid=CALLER_GID/g;
687
688 s/\buid=$parm_caller_uid\b/uid=CALLER_UID/g;
689 s/\bgid=$parm_caller_gid\b/gid=CALLER_GID/g;
690
903546d8 691 s/\bname="?$parm_caller_gecos"?/name=CALLER_GECOS/g;
eeeda78a 692
151b83f8
PH
693 # When looking at spool files with -Mvh, we will find not only the caller
694 # login, but also the uid and gid. It seems that $) in some Perls gives all
695 # the auxiliary gids as well, so don't bother checking for that.
696
697 s/^CALLER $> \d+$/CALLER UID GID/;
698
699 # There is one case where the caller's login is forced to something else,
700 # in order to test the processing of logins that contain spaces. Weird what
701 # some people do, isn't it?
702
703 s/^spaced user $> \d+$/CALLER UID GID/;
704
705
706 # ======== Exim's login ========
ebeaf996
PH
707 # For messages received by the daemon, this is in the -H file, which some
708 # tests inspect. For bounce messages, this will appear on the U= lines in
709 # logs and also after Received: and in addresses. In one pipe test it appears
710 # after "Running as:". It also appears in addresses, and in the names of lock
151b83f8
PH
711 # files.
712
713 s/U=$parm_eximuser/U=EXIMUSER/;
714 s/user=$parm_eximuser/user=EXIMUSER/;
715 s/login=$parm_eximuser/login=EXIMUSER/;
716 s/Received: from $parm_eximuser /Received: from EXIMUSER /;
717 s/Running as: $parm_eximuser/Running as: EXIMUSER/;
718 s/\b$parm_eximuser@/EXIMUSER@/;
719 s/\b$parm_eximuser\.lock\./EXIMUSER.lock./;
720
721 s/\beuid=$parm_exim_uid\b/euid=EXIM_UID/g;
722 s/\begid=$parm_exim_gid\b/egid=EXIM_GID/g;
723
724 s/\buid=$parm_exim_uid\b/uid=EXIM_UID/g;
725 s/\bgid=$parm_exim_gid\b/gid=EXIM_GID/g;
726
ebeaf996
PH
727 s/^$parm_eximuser $parm_exim_uid $parm_exim_gid/EXIMUSER EXIM_UID EXIM_GID/;
728
151b83f8
PH
729
730 # ======== General uids, gids, and pids ========
731 # Note: this must come after munges for caller's and exim's uid/gid
732
a4dc33a8
PH
733 # These are for systems where long int is 64
734 s/\buid=4294967295/uid=-1/;
735 s/\beuid=4294967295/euid=-1/;
736 s/\bgid=4294967295/gid=-1/;
737 s/\begid=4294967295/egid=-1/;
738
151b83f8
PH
739 s/\bgid=\d+/gid=gggg/;
740 s/\begid=\d+/egid=gggg/;
f63e7252 741 s/\b(pid=|PID: )\d+/$1pppp/;
151b83f8
PH
742 s/\buid=\d+/uid=uuuu/;
743 s/\beuid=\d+/euid=uuuu/;
744 s/set_process_info:\s+\d+/set_process_info: pppp/;
745 s/queue run pid \d+/queue run pid ppppp/;
746 s/process \d+ running as transport filter/process pppp running as transport filter/;
747 s/process \d+ writing to transport filter/process pppp writing to transport filter/;
748 s/reading pipe for subprocess \d+/reading pipe for subprocess pppp/;
749 s/remote delivery process \d+ ended/remote delivery process pppp ended/;
750
751 # Pid in temp file in appendfile transport
752 s"test-mail/temp\.\d+\."test-mail/temp.pppp.";
753
f3f065bb 754 # Optional pid in log lines
777e3bea
JH
755 s/^(\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d\s\d\d:\d\d:\d\d)(\.\d{3}|)(\s[+-]\d{4}|)(\s\[\d+\])/
756 "$1$2$3 [" . new_value($4, "%s", \$next_pid) . "]"/gxe;
757
758 # Optional pid in syslog test lines
759 s/^(SYSLOG:\s\'([-0-9]{10}\s[:.0-9]{8,12}\s([-+]\d{4}\s)?|))(\[\d+\] )/
760 "$1\[" . new_value($4, "%s", \$next_pid) . "]"/gxe;
f3f065bb 761
151b83f8
PH
762 # Detect a daemon stderr line with a pid and save the pid for subsequent
763 # removal from following lines.
764 $spid = $1 if /^(\s*\d+) (?:listening|LOG: MAIN|(?:daemon_smtp_port|local_interfaces) overridden by)/;
765 s/^$spid //;
766
767 # Queue runner waiting messages
768 s/waiting for children of \d+/waiting for children of pppp/;
769 s/waiting for (\S+) \(\d+\)/waiting for $1 (pppp)/;
770
e9da1794
JH
771 # Most builds are without HAVE_LOCAL_SCAN
772 next if /^calling local_scan\(\); timeout=300$/;
773 next if /^local_scan\(\) returned 0 NULL$/;
774
151b83f8
PH
775 # ======== Port numbers ========
776 # Incoming port numbers may vary, but not in daemon startup line.
777
778 s/^Port: (\d+)/"Port: " . new_value($1, "%s", \$next_port)/e;
779 s/\(port=(\d+)/"(port=" . new_value($1, "%s", \$next_port)/e;
780
781 # This handles "connection from" and the like, when the port is given
4311097e
PH
782 if (!/listening for SMTP on/ && !/Connecting to/ && !/=>/ && !/->/
783 && !/\*>/ && !/Connection refused/)
151b83f8
PH
784 {
785 s/\[([a-z\d:]+|\d+(?:\.\d+){3})\]:(\d+)/"[".$1."]:".new_value($2,"%s",\$next_port)/ie;
786 }
787
788 # Port in host address in spool file output from -Mvh
f3ebb786 789 s/^(--?host_address) (.*)\.\d+/$1 $2.9999/;
151b83f8 790
df613eb4
HSHR
791 if ($dynamic_socket and $dynamic_socket->opened and my $port = $dynamic_socket->sockport) {
792 s/^Connecting to 127\.0\.0\.1 port \K$port/<dynamic port>/;
793 }
794
151b83f8
PH
795
796 # ======== Local IP addresses ========
797 # The amount of space between "host" and the address in verification output
798 # depends on the length of the host name. We therefore reduce it to one space
799 # for all of them.
37acd760
JJ
800 # Also, the length of space at the end of the host line is dependent
801 # on the length of the longest line, so strip it also on otherwise
802 # un-rewritten lines like localhost
cc49c697
HSHR
803 #
804 # host 127.0.0.1 [127.0.0.1]
805 # host 10.0.0.1 [10.0.0.1]-
806 #
807 # host 127.0.0.1 [127.0.0.1]--
808 # host 169.16.16.16 [169.16.16.10]
151b83f8
PH
809
810 s/^\s+host\s(\S+)\s+(\S+)/ host $1 $2/;
811 s/^\s+(host\s\S+\s\S+)\s+(port=.*)/ host $1 $2/;
812 s/^\s+(host\s\S+\s\S+)\s+(?=MX=)/ $1 /;
813 s/host\s\Q$parm_ipv4\E\s\[\Q$parm_ipv4\E\]/host ipv4.ipv4.ipv4.ipv4 [ipv4.ipv4.ipv4.ipv4]/;
814 s/host\s\Q$parm_ipv6\E\s\[\Q$parm_ipv6\E\]/host ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6 [ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6]/;
815 s/\b\Q$parm_ipv4\E\b/ip4.ip4.ip4.ip4/g;
48dc5470 816 s/(^|\W)\K\Q$parm_ipv6\E/ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6/g;
40e3c5bf 817 s/(^|\W)\K\Q$parm_ipv6_stripped\E/ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6:ip6/g;
75758eeb 818 s/\b\Q$parm_ipv4r\E\b/ip4-reverse/g;
48dc5470 819 s/(^|\W)\K\Q$parm_ipv6r\E/ip6-reverse/g;
cc49c697 820 s/^\s+host\s\S+\s+\[\S+\]\K +$//; # strip, not collapse the trailing whitespace
151b83f8
PH
821
822
823 # ======== Test network IP addresses ========
824 s/(\b|_)\Q$parm_ipv4_test_net\E(?=\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+\b|_|\.rbl|\.in-addr|\.test\.again\.dns)/$1V4NET/g;
825 s/\b\Q$parm_ipv6_test_net\E(?=:[\da-f]+:[\da-f]+:[\da-f]+)/V6NET/gi;
826
827
828 # ======== IP error numbers and messages ========
829 # These vary between operating systems
830 s/Can't assign requested address/Network Error/;
831 s/Cannot assign requested address/Network Error/;
832 s/Operation timed out/Connection timed out/;
833 s/Address family not supported by protocol family/Network Error/;
834 s/Network is unreachable/Network Error/;
835 s/Invalid argument/Network Error/;
836
837 s/\(\d+\): Network/(dd): Network/;
838 s/\(\d+\): Connection refused/(dd): Connection refused/;
839 s/\(\d+\): Connection timed out/(dd): Connection timed out/;
840 s/\d+ 65 Connection refused/dd 65 Connection refused/;
841 s/\d+ 321 Connection timed out/dd 321 Connection timed out/;
842
843
844 # ======== Other error numbers ========
845 s/errno=\d+/errno=dd/g;
846
f4bb1d53
HSHR
847 # ======== System Error Messages ======
848 # depending on the underlaying file system the error message seems to differ
849 s/(?: is not a regular file)|(?: has too many links \(\d+\))/ not a regular file or too many links/;
151b83f8
PH
850
851 # ======== Output from ls ========
852 # Different operating systems use different spacing on long output
c1e49b79
PP
853 #s/ +/ /g if /^[-rwd]{10} /;
854 # (Bug 1226) SUSv3 allows a trailing printable char for modified access method control.
855 # Handle only the Gnu and MacOS space, dot, plus and at-sign. A full [[:graph:]]
856 # unfortunately matches a non-ls linefull of dashes.
857 # Allow the case where we've already picked out the file protection bits.
6f99d4d9 858 if (s/^([-d](?:[-r][-w][-SsTtx]){3})[.+@]?( +|$)/$1$2/) {
8dfac759
PP
859 s/ +/ /g;
860 }
151b83f8
PH
861
862
863 # ======== Message sizes =========
864 # Message sizes vary, owing to different logins and host names that get
865 # automatically inserted. I can't think of any way of even approximately
866 # comparing these.
867
868 s/([\s,])S=\d+\b/$1S=sss/;
869 s/:S\d+\b/:Ssss/;
870 s/^(\s*\d+m\s+)\d+(\s+[a-z0-9-]{16} <)/$1sss$2/i if $is_stdout;
1f253d34 871 s/\sSIZE=\d+\b/ SIZE=ssss/;
151b83f8
PH
872 s/\ssize=\d+\b/ size=sss/ if $is_stderr;
873 s/old size = \d+\b/old size = sssss/;
874 s/message size = \d+\b/message size = sss/;
875 s/this message = \d+\b/this message = sss/;
876 s/Size of headers = \d+/Size of headers = sss/;
877 s/sum=(?!0)\d+/sum=dddd/;
3b5d5078
JH
878 s/(?<=sum=dddd )count=\d+\b/count=dd/;
879 s/(?<=sum=0 )count=\d+\b/count=dd/;
151b83f8
PH
880 s/,S is \d+\b/,S is ddddd/;
881 s/\+0100,\d+;/+0100,ddd;/;
882 s/\(\d+ bytes written\)/(ddd bytes written)/;
883 s/added '\d+ 1'/added 'ddd 1'/;
f3f065bb
PH
884 s/Received\s+\d+/Received nnn/;
885 s/Delivered\s+\d+/Delivered nnn/;
151b83f8
PH
886
887
a98e6aca
HSHR
888 # ======== Values in spool space failure message ========
889 s/space=\d+ inodes=[+-]?\d+/space=xxxxx inodes=xxxxx/;
890
891
151b83f8
PH
892 # ======== Filter sizes ========
893 # The sizes of filter files may vary because of the substitution of local
894 # filenames, logins, etc.
895
f5bf7636 896 s/^\d+(?= (\(tainted\) )?bytes read from )/ssss/;
151b83f8
PH
897
898
899 # ======== OpenSSL error messages ========
900 # Different releases of the OpenSSL libraries seem to give different error
901 # numbers, or handle specific bad conditions in different ways, leading to
902 # different wording in the error messages, so we cannot compare them.
903
cf0c6164
JH
904#XXX This loses any trailing "deliving unencypted to" which is unfortunate
905# but I can't work out how to deal with that.
906 s/(TLS session: \(SSL_\w+\): error:)(.*)(?!: delivering)/$1 <<detail omitted>>/;
907 s/(TLS error on connection from .* \(SSL_\w+\): error:)(.*)/$1 <<detail omitted>>/;
5f921f97 908 next if /SSL verify error: depth=0 error=certificate not trusted/;
151b83f8 909
151b83f8
PH
910 # ======== Maildir things ========
911 # timestamp output in maildir processing
912 s/(timestamp=|\(timestamp_only\): )\d+/$1ddddddd/g;
913
914 # maildir delivery files appearing in log lines (in cases of error)
915 s/writing to(?: file)? tmp\/\d+\.[^.]+\.(\S+)/writing to tmp\/MAILDIR.$1/;
916
917 s/renamed tmp\/\d+\.[^.]+\.(\S+) as new\/\d+\.[^.]+\.(\S+)/renamed tmp\/MAILDIR.$1 as new\/MAILDIR.$1/;
918
919 # Maildir file names in general
920 s/\b\d+\.H\d+P\d+\b/dddddddddd.HddddddPddddd/;
921
922 # Maildirsize data
01c490df 923 while (/^\d+S,\d+C\s*$/)
151b83f8 924 {
21c28500 925 print MUNGED;
151b83f8
PH
926 while (<IN>)
927 {
928 last if !/^\d+ \d+\s*$/;
929 print MUNGED "ddd d\n";
930 }
931 last if !defined $_;
932 }
01c490df 933 last if !defined $_;
151b83f8
PH
934
935
53618a40
JH
936 # SRS timestamps and signatures vary by hostname and from run to run
937
938 s/SRS0=....=..=[^=]+=[^@]+\@test.ex/SRS0=ZZZZ=YY=the.local.host.name=CALLER\@test.ex/;
939
940
151b83f8
PH
941 # ======== Output from the "fd" program about open descriptors ========
942 # The statuses seem to be different on different operating systems, but
943 # at least we'll still be checking the number of open fd's.
944
945 s/max fd = \d+/max fd = dddd/;
59620376 946 s/status=[0-9a-f]+ (?:RDONLY|WRONLY|RDWR)/STATUS/g;
151b83f8
PH
947
948
949 # ======== Contents of spool files ========
950 # A couple of tests dump the contents of the -H file. The length fields
951 # will be wrong because of different user names, etc.
952 s/^\d\d\d(?=[PFS*])/ddd/;
953
954
1bad4ba4
JH
955 # ========= Exim lookups ==================
956 # Lookups have a char which depends on the number of lookup types compiled in,
957 # in stderr output. Replace with a "0". Recognising this while avoiding
958 # other output is fragile; perhaps the debug output should be revised instead.
959 s%(?<!sqlite)(?<!lsearch\*@)(?<!lsearch\*)(?<!lsearch)[0-?]TESTSUITE/aux-fixed/%0TESTSUITE/aux-fixed/%g;
44e6236d 960
bfd86064
JH
961 # ==========================================================
962 # MIME boundaries in RFC3461 DSN messages
05faa88b 963 s/\d{8,10}-eximdsn-\d+/NNNNNNNNNN-eximdsn-MMMMMMMMMM/;
bfd86064 964
151b83f8
PH
965 # ==========================================================
966 # Some munging is specific to the specific file types
967
968 # ======== stdout ========
969
970 if ($is_stdout)
971 {
f3d7df6c
PH
972 # Skip translate_ip_address and use_classresources in -bP output because
973 # they aren't always there.
151b83f8
PH
974
975 next if /translate_ip_address =/;
f3d7df6c 976 next if /use_classresources/;
151b83f8
PH
977
978 # In certain filter tests, remove initial filter lines because they just
979 # clog up by repetition.
980
981 if ($rmfiltertest)
982 {
983 next if /^(Sender\staken\sfrom|
984 Return-path\scopied\sfrom|
985 Sender\s+=|
986 Recipient\s+=)/x;
987 if (/^Testing \S+ filter/)
988 {
989 $_ = <IN>; # remove blank line
990 next;
991 }
992 }
903546d8 993
7baddd6a
JH
994 # remote IPv6 addrs vary
995 s/^(Connection request from) \[.*:.*:.*\]$/$1 \[ipv6\]/;
996
903546d8 997 # openssl version variances
12373afb
JH
998 # Error lines on stdout from SSL contain process id values and file names.
999 # They also contain a source file name and line number, which may vary from
1000 # release to release.
1001
80940bc0 1002 next if /^SSL info:/;
fc96d1e8 1003 next if /SSL verify error: depth=0 error=certificate not trusted/;
ef394e8d 1004 s/SSL3_READ_BYTES/ssl3_read_bytes/i;
503e0554
JH
1005 s/CONNECT_CR_FINISHED/ssl3_read_bytes/i;
1006 s/^\d+:error:\d+(?:E\d+)?(:SSL routines:ssl3_read_bytes:[^:]+:).*(:SSL alert number \d\d)$/pppp:error:dddddddd$1\[...\]$2/;
fd3cf789 1007 s/^error:[^:]*:(SSL routines:ssl3_read_bytes:(tls|ssl)v\d+ alert)/error:dddddddd:$1/;
503e0554 1008
fc4fcc34
JH
1009 # gnutls version variances
1010 next if /^Error in the pull function./;
a678496c
JH
1011
1012 # optional IDN2 variant conversions. Accept either IDN1 or IDN2
1013 s/conversion strasse.de/conversion xn--strae-oqa.de/;
1014 s/conversion: german.xn--strae-oqa.de/conversion: german.straße.de/;
32dfdf8b
JH
1015
1016 # subsecond timstamp info in reported header-files
1017 s/^(-received_time_usec \.)\d{6}$/$1uuuuuu/;
f63e7252 1018
f1a49684 1019 # Postgres server takes varible time to shut down; lives in various places
f63e7252 1020 s/^waiting for server to shut down\.+ done$/waiting for server to shut down.... done/;
f1a49684 1021 s/^\/.*postgres /POSTGRES /;
617d3932 1022
590fd9ee
JH
1023 # DMARC is not always supported by the build
1024 next if /^dmarc_tld_file =/;
1025
617d3932
JH
1026 # ARC is not always supported by the build
1027 next if /^arc_sign =/;
b10c87b3
JH
1028
1029 # TLS resumption is not always supported by the build
1030 next if /^tls_resumption_hosts =/;
1031 next if /^-tls_resumption/;
84a65551
JH
1032
1033 # gsasl library version may not support some methods
1034 s/250-AUTH ANONYMOUS PLAIN SCRAM-SHA-1\K SCRAM-SHA-256//;
151b83f8
PH
1035 }
1036
1037 # ======== stderr ========
1038
1039 elsif ($is_stderr)
1040 {
1041 # The very first line of debugging output will vary
1042
1043 s/^Exim version .*/Exim version x.yz ..../;
1044
d097cc73 1045 # Debugging lines for Exim terminations and process-generation
151b83f8
PH
1046
1047 s/(?<=^>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Exim pid=)\d+(?= terminating)/pppp/;
d097cc73 1048 s/^(proxy-proc \w{5}-pid) \d+$/$1 pppp/;
6471ea33 1049 s/^(?:\s*\d+ )(exec .* -oPX)$/pppp $1/;
151b83f8
PH
1050
1051 # IP address lookups use gethostbyname() when IPv6 is not supported,
1052 # and gethostbyname2() or getipnodebyname() when it is.
1053
4af1b6ca 1054 s/\b(gethostbyname2?|\bgetipnodebyname)(\(af=inet\))?/get[host|ipnode]byname[2]/;
151b83f8 1055
8f8950c3
JH
1056 # we don't care what TZ enviroment the testhost was running
1057 next if /^Reset TZ to/;
1058
f2dd649a
NM
1059 # drop gnutls version strings
1060 next if /GnuTLS compile-time version: \d+[\.\d]+$/;
1061 next if /GnuTLS runtime version: \d+[\.\d]+$/;
1062
64fa3c1f
JJ
1063 # drop openssl version strings
1064 next if /OpenSSL compile-time version: OpenSSL \d+[\.\da-z]+/;
1065 next if /OpenSSL runtime version: OpenSSL \d+[\.\da-z]+/;
1066
6471ea33
JH
1067 # this is timing-dependent
1068 next if /^OpenSSL: creating STEK$/;
1069
8f1cff48
PP
1070 # drop lookups
1071 next if /^Lookups \(built-in\):/;
a769a501
PP
1072 next if /^Loading lookup modules from/;
1073 next if /^Loaded \d+ lookup modules/;
8f1cff48
PP
1074 next if /^Total \d+ lookups/;
1075
bdf15279
PP
1076 # drop compiler information
1077 next if /^Compiler:/;
1078
8f1cff48
PP
1079 # and the ugly bit
1080 # different libraries will have different numbers (possibly 0) of follow-up
1081 # lines, indenting with more data
1082 if (/^Library version:/) {
1083 while (1) {
1084 $_ = <IN>;
1085 next if /^\s/;
1086 goto RESET_AFTER_EXTRA_LINE_READ;
1087 }
1088 }
1089
1090 # drop other build-time controls emitted for debugging
1091 next if /^WHITELIST_D_MACROS:/;
1092 next if /^TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST:/;
1093
1094 # As of Exim 4.74, we log when a setgid fails; because we invoke Exim
1095 # with -be, privileges will have been dropped, so this will always
1096 # be the case
42ec9880 1097 next if /^changing group to \d+ failed: (Operation not permitted|Not owner)/;
8f1cff48 1098
9d26b8c0
PP
1099 # We might not keep this check; rather than change all the tests, just
1100 # ignore it as long as it succeeds; then we only need to change the
1101 # TLS tests where tls_require_ciphers has been set.
1102 if (m{^changed uid/gid: calling tls_validate_require_cipher}) {
1103 my $discard = <IN>;
1104 next;
1105 }
1106 next if /^tls_validate_require_cipher child \d+ ended: status=0x0/;
1107
4c04137d 1108 # We invoke Exim with -D, so we hit this new message as of Exim 4.73:
43236f35 1109 next if /^macros_trusted overridden to true by whitelisting/;
8f1cff48 1110
151b83f8
PH
1111 # We have to omit the localhost ::1 address so that all is well in
1112 # the IPv4-only case.
1113
1114 print MUNGED "MUNGED: ::1 will be omitted in what follows\n"
1115 if (/looked up these IP addresses/);
1116 next if /name=localhost address=::1/;
1117
f2dd649a 1118 # drop pdkim debugging header
305f8921 1119 next if /^DKIM( <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<+|: no signatures)$/;
f2dd649a 1120
151b83f8
PH
1121 # Various other IPv6 lines must be omitted too
1122
1123 next if /using host_fake_gethostbyname for \S+ \(IPv6\)/;
1124 next if /get\[host\|ipnode\]byname\[2\]\(af=inet6\)/;
1125 next if /DNS lookup of \S+ \(AAAA\) using fakens/;
1126 next if / in dns_ipv4_lookup?/;
cdb844d0 1127 next if / writing neg-cache entry for .*AAAA/;
a713f766 1128 next if /^faking res_search\(AAAA\) response length as 65535/;
151b83f8
PH
1129
1130 if (/DNS lookup of \S+ \(AAAA\) gave NO_DATA/)
1131 {
1132 $_= <IN>; # Gets "returning DNS_NODATA"
1133 next;
1134 }
1135
9f6563c0 1136 # Non-TLS bulds have a different Recieved: header expansion
00ac951d 1137 s/^((.*)\t}}}}by \$primary_hostname \$\{if def:received_protocol \{with \$received_protocol }})\(Exim \$version_number\)$/$1\${if def:tls_in_cipher_std { tls \$tls_in_cipher_std\n$2\t}}(Exim \$version_number)/;
9f6563c0
JH
1138 s/^((\s*).*considering: with \$received_protocol }})\(Exim \$version_number\)$/$1\${if def:tls_in_cipher_std { tls \$tls_in_cipher_std\n$2\t}}(Exim \$version_number)/;
1139 if (/condition: def:tls_in_cipher_std$/)
1140 {
1141 $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>;
1142 $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>;
1143 $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; $_= <IN>; next;
1144 }
1145
1146
151b83f8
PH
1147 # Skip tls_advertise_hosts and hosts_require_tls checks when the options
1148 # are unset, because tls ain't always there.
1149
1150 next if /in\s(?:tls_advertise_hosts\?|hosts_require_tls\?)
23f3dc67 1151 \sno\s\((option\sunset|end\sof\slist)\)/x;
151b83f8
PH
1152
1153 # Skip auxiliary group lists because they will vary.
1154
1155 next if /auxiliary group list:/;
1156
1157 # Skip "extracted from gecos field" because the gecos field varies
1158
1159 next if /extracted from gecos field/;
1160
1161 # Skip "waiting for data on socket" and "read response data: size=" lines
1162 # because some systems pack more stuff into packets than others.
1163
1164 next if /waiting for data on socket/;
1165 next if /read response data: size=/;
1166
1167 # If Exim is compiled with readline support but it can't find the library
1168 # to load, there will be an extra debug line. Omit it.
1169
1170 next if /failed to load readline:/;
1171
1172 # Some DBM libraries seem to make DBM files on opening with O_RDWR without
1173 # O_CREAT; other's don't. In the latter case there is some debugging output
1174 # which is not present in the former. Skip the relevant lines (there are
ca9be0dc 1175 # three of them).
151b83f8 1176
ca9be0dc 1177 if (/returned from EXIM_DBOPEN: \(nil\)/)
151b83f8 1178 {
ca9be0dc
JH
1179 $_ .= <IN>;
1180 s?\Q$parm_cwd\E?TESTSUITE?g;
1181 if (/TESTSUITE\/spool\/db\/\S+ appears not to exist: trying to create/)
1182 { $_ = <IN>; next; }
151b83f8
PH
1183 }
1184
1185 # Some tests turn on +expand debugging to check on expansions.
1186 # Unfortunately, the Received: expansion varies, depending on whether TLS
1187 # is compiled or not. So we must remove the relevant debugging if it is.
1188
1189 if (/^condition: def:tls_cipher/)
1190 {
1191 while (<IN>) { last if /^condition: def:sender_address/; }
1192 }
1193 elsif (/^expanding: Received: /)
1194 {
1195 while (<IN>) { last if !/^\s/; }
1196 }
1197
a2550b67
JH
1198 # remote port numbers vary
1199 s/(Connection request from 127.0.0.1 port) \d{1,5}/$1 sssss/;
1200
ceaa36bf
JH
1201 # Platform-dependent error strings
1202 s/Operation timed out/Connection timed out/;
1203
5b799952
JH
1204 # Platform differences on disconnect
1205 s/unexpected disconnection while reading SMTP command from \[127.0.0.1\] \K\(error: Connection reset by peer\) //;
1206
27085351 1207 # Platform-dependent resolver option bits
d05b1259 1208 s/^ (?:writing|update) neg-cache entry for [^,]+-\K[0-9a-f]+, ttl/xxxx, ttl/;
27085351 1209
b6d5e1ac
JH
1210 # timing variance, run-to-run
1211 s/^time on queue = \K1s/0s/;
1212
b273058b
JH
1213 # content-scan: file order can vary in directory
1214 s%unspool_mbox\(\): unlinking 'TESTSUITE/spool/scan/[^/]*/\K[^\']*%FFFFFFFFF%;
1215
a2550b67
JH
1216 # Skip hosts_require_dane checks when the options
1217 # are unset, because dane ain't always there.
a2550b67
JH
1218 next if /in\shosts_require_dane\?\sno\s\(option\sunset\)/x;
1219
04403ab0 1220 # daemon notifier socket
2f2dd3a5
JH
1221 s/^(creating notifier socket) .*$/$1/;
1222 s/^(\s*\d+|ppppp) (creating notifier socket) .+$/ppppp $2/;
1223 next if /unlinking notifier socket/;
04403ab0 1224
6ddf7fd7 1225 # DISABLE_OCSP
625f40fc
JH
1226 next if /in hosts_requ(est|ire)_ocsp\? (no|yes)/;
1227
a2550b67
JH
1228 # SUPPORT_PROXY
1229 next if /host in hosts_proxy\?/;
1230
4e48d56c
JH
1231 # PIPE_CONNECT
1232 next if / in (pipelining_connect_advertise_hosts|hosts_pipe_connect)?\? no /;
1233
a2550b67
JH
1234 # Experimental_International
1235 next if / in smtputf8_advertise_hosts\? no \(option unset\)/;
1236
8ac90765
JH
1237 # Experimental_REQUIRETLS
1238 next if / in tls_advertise_requiretls?\? no \(end of list\)/;
1239
ca9be0dc 1240 # TCP Fast Open
9c487ba5 1241 next if /^(ppppp )?setsockopt FASTOPEN: Network Error/;
ca9be0dc 1242
a2550b67
JH
1243 # Environment cleaning
1244 next if /\w+ in keep_environment\? (yes|no)/;
1245
76003495
JH
1246 # Sizes vary with test hostname
1247 s/^cmd buf flush \d+ bytes$/cmd buf flush ddd bytes/;
1248
ddf1b11a 1249 # Spool filesystem free space changes on different systems.
ad424056 1250 s/^((?:spool|log) directory space =) -?\d+K (inodes =)\s*-?\d+/$1 nnnnnK $2 nnnnn/;
ddf1b11a 1251
7373d852 1252 # Non-TLS builds have different expansions for received_header_text
340f3113 1253 if (s/(with \$received_protocol)\}\} \$\{if def:tls_cipher \{\(\$tls_cipher\)\n$/$1/)
7373d852
JH
1254 {
1255 $_ .= <IN>;
492fd282 1256 s/[\sâ•Ž]+\}\}(?=\(Exim )/\}\} /;
7373d852 1257 }
492fd282 1258 if (/^ ├──condition: def:tls_cipher$/)
340f3113
JH
1259 {
1260 <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; <IN>;
1261 <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; <IN>; next;
1262 }
1263
1264 # Not all platforms build with DKIM enabled
305f8921 1265 next if /^DKIM >> Body data for hash, canonicalized/;
7373d852 1266
e9ae2091
JH
1267 # Not all platforms build with SPF enabled
1268 next if /^(spf_conn_init|SPF_dns_exim_new|spf_compile\.c)/;
1269
61453fd1
JH
1270 # Not all platforms have sendfile support
1271 next if /^cannot use sendfile for body: no support$/;
1272
cd1a5fe0 1273 # Parts of DKIM-specific debug output depend on the time/date
02b41d71 1274 next if /^date:\w+,\{SP\}/;
305f8921 1275 next if /^DKIM \[[^[]+\] (Header hash|b) computed:/;
cd1a5fe0 1276
ef817659 1277 # Not all platforms support TCP Fast Open, and the compile omits the check
277b9979 1278 if (s/\S+ in hosts_try_fastopen\? (no \(option unset\)|no \(end of list\)|yes \(matched "\*"\))\n$//)
ef817659 1279 {
a3da0b8f 1280 chomp;
7373d852
JH
1281 $_ .= <IN>;
1282 s/ \.\.\. >>> / ... /;
a3da0b8f 1283 if (s/ non-TFO mode connection attempt to 224.0.0.0, 0 data\b$//) { chomp; $_ .= <IN>; }
30d678d5 1284 s/Address family not supported by protocol family/Network Error/;
b3200ced 1285 s/Network is unreachable/Network Error/;
ef817659 1286 }
8170f6f7 1287 next if /^(ppppp )?setsockopt FASTOPEN: Protocol not available$/;
fc1c0820 1288 s/^(Connecting to .* \.\.\. sending) \d+ (nonTFO early-data)$/$1 dd $2/;
7373d852 1289
f7598860
JH
1290 if (/^([0-9: ]* # possible timestamp
1291 Connecting\ to\ [^ ]+\ [^ ]+(\ from\ [^ ]+)?)\ \.\.\.
6ddf7fd7 1292 \ .*TFO\ mode\x20
f7598860 1293 (sendto,\ no\ data:\ EINPROGRESS # Linux
ceaa36bf 1294 |connection\ attempt\ to\ [^,]+,\ 0\ data) # MacOS & no-support
f7598860 1295 $/x)
eebcfa1c
JH
1296 {
1297 $_ = $1 . " ... " . <IN>;
b48cf079 1298 s/^(.* \.\.\.) [0-9: ]*connected$/$1 connected/;
eebcfa1c 1299
b48cf079 1300 if (/^Connecting to .* \.\.\. connected$/)
eebcfa1c
JH
1301 {
1302 $_ .= <IN>;
b48cf079 1303 if (/^(Connecting to .* \.\.\. )connected\n\s+SMTP(\(close\)>>|\(Connection refused\)<<)$/)
eebcfa1c
JH
1304 {
1305 $_ = $1 . "failed: Connection refused\n" . <IN>;
1306 s/^(Connecting .*)\n\s+SMTP\(close\)>>$/$1/;
1307 }
b48cf079 1308 elsif (/^(Connecting to .* \.\.\. connected\n)read response data: size=/)
eebcfa1c
JH
1309 { $_ = $1; }
1310
1311 # Date/time in SMTP banner
1312 s/[A-Z][a-z]{2},\s\d\d?\s[A-Z][a-z]{2}\s\d{4}\s\d\d\:\d\d:\d\d\s[-+]\d{4}
1313 /Tue, 2 Mar 1999 09:44:33 +0000/gx;
1314 }
1315 }
1316
0a6c178c 1317 # Specific pointer values reported for DB operations change from run to run
966e829c
JH
1318 s/^(\s*returned from EXIM_DBOPEN: )(0x)?[0-9a-f]+/${1}0xAAAAAAAA/;
1319 s/^(\s*EXIM_DBCLOSE.)(0x)?[0-9a-f]+/${1}0xAAAAAAAA/;
0a6c178c 1320
ff059213
JH
1321 # Platform-dependent output during MySQL startup
1322 next if /PerconaFT file system space/;
1323 next if /^Waiting for MySQL server to answer/;
1324 next if /mysqladmin: CREATE DATABASE failed; .* database exists/;
1325
55997e6c
JH
1326 # Not all builds include DMARC
1327 next if /^DMARC: no (dmarc_tld_file|sender_host_address)$/ ;
1328
b10c87b3
JH
1329 # TLS resumption is not always supported by the build
1330 next if /in tls_resumption_hosts\?/;
1331
aa3c7e48
JH
1332 # Platform differences in errno strings
1333 s/ SMTP\(Operation timed out\)<</ SMTP(Connection timed out)<</;
1334
adf703b6
JH
1335 # Platform differences for errno values (eg. Hurd)
1336 s/^errno = \d+$/errno = EEE/;
1337 s/^writing error \d+: /writing error EEE: /;
1338
64406161
JH
1339 # Some platforms have to flip to slow-mode taint-checking
1340 next if /switching to slow-mode taint checking/;
1341
151b83f8
PH
1342 # When Exim is checking the size of directories for maildir, it uses
1343 # the check_dir_size() function to scan directories. Of course, the order
1344 # of the files that are obtained using readdir() varies from system to
1345 # system. We therefore buffer up debugging lines from check_dir_size()
1346 # and sort them before outputting them.
1347
1348 if (/^check_dir_size:/ || /^skipping TESTSUITE\/test-mail\//)
1349 {
1350 push @saved, $_;
1351 }
1352 else
1353 {
1354 if (@saved > 0)
1355 {
1356 print MUNGED "MUNGED: the check_dir_size lines have been sorted " .
1357 "to ensure consistency\n";
1358 @saved = sort(@saved);
1359 print MUNGED @saved;
1360 @saved = ();
1361 }
1362
1363 # Skip some lines that Exim puts out at the start of debugging output
1364 # because they will be different in different binaries.
1365
1366 print MUNGED
1367 unless (/^Berkeley DB: / ||
1368 /^Probably (?:Berkeley DB|ndbm|GDBM)/ ||
1369 /^Authenticators:/ ||
1370 /^Lookups:/ ||
1371 /^Support for:/ ||
1372 /^Routers:/ ||
1373 /^Transports:/ ||
c11d665d 1374 /^Malware:/ ||
151b83f8
PH
1375 /^log selectors =/ ||
1376 /^cwd=/ ||
21c28500 1377 /^Fixed never_users:/ ||
c9fb6994 1378 /^Configure owner:/ ||
21c28500 1379 /^Size of off_t:/
151b83f8 1380 );
9d4319df
JH
1381
1382
151b83f8
PH
1383 }
1384
1385 next;
1386 }
1387
42ec9880
JH
1388 # ======== log ========
1389
1390 elsif ($is_log)
1391 {
1392 # Berkeley DB version differences
1393 next if / Berkeley DB error: /;
23a217d9
JH
1394
1395 # CHUNKING: exact sizes depend on hostnames in headers
1396 s/(=>.* K C="250- \d)\d+ (byte chunk, total \d)\d+/$1nn $2nn/;
f5978b01
JH
1397
1398 # openssl version variances
42427533 1399 s/(TLS error on connection [^:]*: error:)[0-9A-F]{8}(:system library):(?:fopen|func\(4095\)):(No such file or directory)$/$1xxxxxxxx$2:fopen:$3/;
4ed67f68 1400 s/(DANE attempt failed.*error:)[0-9A-F]{8}(:SSL routines:)(?:(?i)ssl3_get_server_certificate|tls_process_server_certificate|CONNECT_CR_CERT)(?=:certificate verify failed$)/$1xxxxxxxx$2ssl3_get_server_certificate/;
1955ffa1 1401 s/(DKIM: validation error: )error:[0-9A-F]{8}:rsa routines:(?:(?i)int_rsa_verify|CRYPTO_internal):(?:bad signature|algorithm mismatch)$/$1Public key signature verification has failed./;
57827776 1402 s/ARC: AMS signing: privkey PEM-block import: error:\K[0-9A-F]{8}:(PEM routines):get_name:(no start line)/0906D06C:$1:PEM_read_bio:$2/;
2bc0f45e 1403
fc243e94 1404 # gnutls version variances
57eb2f64 1405 if (/TLS error on connection \(recv\): .* (Decode error|peer did not send any certificate)/)
fc243e94
JH
1406 {
1407 my $prev = $_;
1408 $_ = <IN>;
1409 if (/error on first read/)
1410 {
1411 s/TLS session: \Kerror on first read:/(gnutls_handshake): A TLS fatal alert has been received.:/;
1412 goto RESET_AFTER_EXTRA_LINE_READ;
1413 }
1414 else
1415 { $_ = $prev; }
1416 }
766ac2f4
JH
1417 # translate gnutls error into the openssl one
1418 s/ARC: AMS signing: privkey PEM-block import: \KThe requested data were not available.$/error:0906D06C:PEM routines:PEM_read_bio:no start line/;
fc243e94 1419
2bc0f45e 1420 # DKIM timestamps
b24eb9cd
JH
1421 if ( /(DKIM: d=.*) t=([0-9]*) x=([0-9]*) / )
1422 {
1423 my ($prefix, $t_diff) = ($1, $3 - $2);
1424 s/DKIM: d=.* t=[0-9]* x=[0-9]* /${prefix} t=T x=T+${t_diff} /;
1425 }
2e6a0ed7
JH
1426
1427 # port numbers
1428 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_d/PORT_D/;
1429 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_d2/PORT_D2/;
1430 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_d3/PORT_D3/;
1431 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_d4/PORT_D4/;
1432 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_s/PORT_S/;
1433 s/(?:\[[^\]]*\]:|port )\K$parm_port_n/PORT_N/;
1434 s/I=\[[^\]]*\]:\K\d+/ppppp/;
1435
adf703b6
JH
1436 # Platform differences for errno values (eg. Hurd). Leave 0 and negative numbers alone.
1437 s/R=\w+ T=\w+ defer\K \([1-9]\d*\): / (EEE): /;
e4a04f2a
JH
1438
1439 # Platform differences in errno strings
1440 s/Arg list too long/Argument list too long/;
2bc0f45e
JH
1441 }
1442
1443 # ======== mail ========
1444
1445 elsif ($is_mail)
1446 {
b24eb9cd
JH
1447 # DKIM timestamps, and signatures depending thereon
1448 if ( /^(\s+)t=([0-9]*); x=([0-9]*); b=[A-Za-z0-9+\/]+$/ )
1449 {
1450 my ($indent, $t_diff) = ($1, $3 - $2);
1451 s/.*/${indent}t=T; x=T+${t_diff}; b=bbbb;/;
2bc0f45e
JH
1452 <IN>;
1453 <IN>;
1454 }
42ec9880
JH
1455 }
1456
151b83f8
PH
1457 # ======== All files other than stderr ========
1458
1459 print MUNGED;
1460 }
1461
1462close(IN);
1463return $yield;
1464}
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469##################################################
1470# Subroutine to interact with caller #
1471##################################################
1472
1473# Arguments: [0] the prompt string
1474# [1] if there is a U in the prompt and $force_update is true
c1c469db 1475# [2] if there is a C in the prompt and $force_continue is true
2f8e6f30 1476# Returns: returns the answer
151b83f8 1477
0df394b5
HSHR
1478sub interact {
1479 my ($prompt, $have_u, $have_c) = @_;
1480
1481 print $prompt;
1482
1483 if ($have_u) {
1484 print "... update forced\n";
1485 return 'u';
1486 }
1487
1488 if ($have_c) {
1489 print "... continue forced\n";
1490 return 'c';
1491 }
1492
1493 return lc <T>;
151b83f8
PH
1494}
1495
1496
1497
c1c469db
TL
1498##################################################
1499# Subroutine to log in force_continue mode #
1500##################################################
1501
1502# In force_continue mode, we just want a terse output to a statically
1503# named logfile. If multiple files in same batch (stdout, stderr, etc)
1504# all have mismatches, it will log multiple times.
1505#
1506# Arguments: [0] the logfile to append to
1507# [1] the testno that failed
1508# Returns: nothing
1509
1510
1511
1512sub log_failure {
0df394b5
HSHR
1513 my ($logfile, $testno, $detail) = @_;
1514
1515 open(my $fh, '>>', $logfile) or return;
1516
1517 print $fh "Test $testno "
1518 . (defined $detail ? "$detail " : '')
1519 . "failed\n";
c1c469db
TL
1520}
1521
a4ecb6a7
JH
1522# Computer-readable summary results logfile
1523
1524sub log_test {
1525 my ($logfile, $testno, $resultchar) = @_;
1526
1527 open(my $fh, '>>', $logfile) or return;
1528 print $fh "$testno $resultchar\n";
1529}
1530
c1c469db 1531
151b83f8
PH
1532
1533##################################################
1534# Subroutine to compare one output file #
1535##################################################
1536
1537# When an Exim server is part of the test, its output is in separate files from
1538# an Exim client. The server data is concatenated with the client data as part
1539# of the munging operation.
1540#
1541# Arguments: [0] the name of the main raw output file
1542# [1] the name of the server raw output file or undef
1543# [2] where to put the munged copy
1544# [3] the name of the saved file
1545# [4] TRUE if this is a log file whose deliveries must be sorted
c9a55f6a 1546# [5] optionally, a custom munge command
151b83f8 1547#
a4ecb6a7
JH
1548# Returns: 0 comparison succeeded
1549# 1 comparison failed; differences to be ignored
1550# 2 comparison failed; files may have been updated (=> re-compare)
151b83f8
PH
1551#
1552# Does not return if the user replies "Q" to a prompt.
1553
1554sub check_file{
c9a55f6a 1555my($rf,$rsf,$mf,$sf,$sortfile,$extra) = @_;
151b83f8
PH
1556
1557# If there is no saved file, the raw files must either not exist, or be
1558# empty. The test ! -s is TRUE if the file does not exist or is empty.
1559
28e8a0f7
HSHR
1560# we check if there is a flavour specific file, but we remember
1561# the original file name as "generic"
1562$sf_generic = $sf;
1563$sf_flavour = "$sf_generic.$flavour";
1564$sf_current = -e $sf_flavour ? $sf_flavour : $sf_generic;
1565
1566if (! -e $sf_current)
151b83f8 1567 {
148e1ac6 1568 return 0 if (! -s $rf && (! defined $rsf || ! -s $rsf));
151b83f8
PH
1569
1570 print "\n";
1571 print "** $rf is not empty\n" if (-s $rf);
1572 print "** $rsf is not empty\n" if (defined $rsf && -s $rsf);
1573
1574 for (;;)
1575 {
0df394b5
HSHR
1576 $_ = interact('Continue, Show, or Quit? [Q] ', undef, $force_continue);
1577 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/;
a4ecb6a7
JH
1578 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
1579 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, $rf);
1580 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F') if ($force_continue);
1581 }
1477005f 1582 return 1 if /^c$/i && $rf !~ /paniclog/ && (!defined $rsf || $rsf !~ /paniclog/);
0aca614f 1583 last if (/^[sc]$/);
151b83f8
PH
1584 }
1585
1586 foreach $f ($rf, $rsf)
1587 {
1588 if (defined $f && -s $f)
1589 {
1590 print "\n";
1591 print "------------ $f -----------\n"
1592 if (defined $rf && -s $rf && defined $rsf && -s $rsf);
a31c0dcd 1593 system @more => $f;
151b83f8
PH
1594 }
1595 }
1596
1597 print "\n";
1598 for (;;)
1599 {
0df394b5
HSHR
1600 $_ = interact('Continue, Update & retry, Quit? [Q] ', $force_update, $force_continue);
1601 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/;
a4ecb6a7
JH
1602 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
1603 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, $rf);
1604 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
1605 }
1606 return 1 if /^c$/i;
151b83f8
PH
1607 last if (/^u$/i);
1608 }
1609 }
1610
2f8e6f30
HSHR
1611#### $_
1612
151b83f8
PH
1613# Control reaches here if either (a) there is a saved file ($sf), or (b) there
1614# was a request to create a saved file. First, create the munged file from any
1615# data that does exist.
1616
9edef117 1617open(MUNGED, '>', $mf) || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $mf: $!");
c9a55f6a 1618my($truncated) = munge($rf, $extra) if -e $rf;
4cc77633
HSHR
1619
1620# Append the raw server log, if it is non-empty
151b83f8
PH
1621if (defined $rsf && -e $rsf)
1622 {
1623 print MUNGED "\n******** SERVER ********\n";
c9a55f6a 1624 $truncated |= munge($rsf, $extra);
151b83f8
PH
1625 }
1626close(MUNGED);
1627
1628# If a saved file exists, do the comparison. There are two awkward cases:
1629#
1630# If "*** truncated ***" was found in the new file, it means that a log line
1631# was overlong, and truncated. The problem is that it may be truncated at
1632# different points on different systems, because of different user name
1633# lengths. We reload the file and the saved file, and remove lines from the new
1634# file that precede "*** truncated ***" until we reach one that matches the
1635# line that precedes it in the saved file.
1636#
1637# If $sortfile is set, we are dealing with a mainlog file where the deliveries
1638# for an individual message might vary in their order from system to system, as
1639# a result of parallel deliveries. We load the munged file and sort sequences
1640# of delivery lines.
1641
28e8a0f7 1642if (-e $sf_current)
151b83f8
PH
1643 {
1644 # Deal with truncated text items
1645
1646 if ($truncated)
1647 {
1648 my(@munged, @saved, $i, $j, $k);
1649
9edef117 1650 open(MUNGED, $mf) || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $mf: $!");
151b83f8
PH
1651 @munged = <MUNGED>;
1652 close(MUNGED);
28e8a0f7 1653 open(SAVED, $sf_current) || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $sf_current: $!");
151b83f8
PH
1654 @saved = <SAVED>;
1655 close(SAVED);
1656
1657 $j = 0;
1658 for ($i = 0; $i < @munged; $i++)
1659 {
1660 if ($munged[$i] =~ /\*\*\* truncated \*\*\*/)
1661 {
1662 for (; $j < @saved; $j++)
1663 { last if $saved[$j] =~ /\*\*\* truncated \*\*\*/; }
1664 last if $j >= @saved; # not found in saved
1665
1666 for ($k = $i - 1; $k >= 0; $k--)
1667 { last if $munged[$k] eq $saved[$j - 1]; }
1668
1669 last if $k <= 0; # failed to find previous match
1670 splice @munged, $k + 1, $i - $k - 1;
1671 $i = $k + 1;
1672 }
1673 }
1674
2dc4c388
HSHR
1675 open(my $fh, '>', $mf) or tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $mf: $!");
1676 print $fh @munged;
151b83f8
PH
1677 }
1678
1679 # Deal with log sorting
1680
1681 if ($sortfile)
1682 {
151b83f8 1683
2dc4c388
HSHR
1684 my @munged = do {
1685 open(my $fh, '<', $mf) or tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $mf: $!");
1686 <$fh>;
1687 };
151b83f8 1688
90d0db05 1689 for (my $i = 0; $i < @munged; $i++)
151b83f8
PH
1690 {
1691 if ($munged[$i] =~ /^[-\d]{10}\s[:\d]{8}\s[-A-Za-z\d]{16}\s[-=*]>/)
1692 {
90d0db05 1693 my $j;
151b83f8
PH
1694 for ($j = $i + 1; $j < @munged; $j++)
1695 {
1696 last if $munged[$j] !~
1697 /^[-\d]{10}\s[:\d]{8}\s[-A-Za-z\d]{16}\s[-=*]>/;
1698 }
1699 @temp = splice(@munged, $i, $j - $i);
1700 @temp = sort(@temp);
1701 splice(@munged, $i, 0, @temp);
1702 }
1703 }
1704
2dc4c388
HSHR
1705 open(my $fh, '>', $mf) or tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $mf: $!");
1706 print $fh "**NOTE: The delivery lines in this file have been sorted.\n";
1707 print $fh @munged;
151b83f8
PH
1708 }
1709
1710 # Do the comparison
1711
28e8a0f7 1712 return 0 if (system("$cf '$mf' '$sf_current' >test-cf") == 0);
151b83f8
PH
1713
1714 # Handle comparison failure
1715
28e8a0f7 1716 print "** Comparison of $mf with $sf_current failed";
a31c0dcd 1717 system @more => 'test-cf';
151b83f8
PH
1718
1719 print "\n";
1720 for (;;)
1721 {
0df394b5
HSHR
1722 $_ = interact('Continue, Retry, Update current'
1723 . ($sf_current ne $sf_flavour ? "/Save for flavour '$flavour'" : '')
1724 . ' & retry, Quit? [Q] ', $force_update, $force_continue);
1725 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/;
a4ecb6a7
JH
1726 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
1727 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, $sf_current);
1728 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
1729 }
1730 return 1 if /^c$/i;
1731 return 2 if /^r$/i;
28e8a0f7 1732 last if (/^[us]$/i);
151b83f8
PH
1733 }
1734 }
1735
1736# Update or delete the saved file, and give the appropriate return code.
1737
1738if (-s $mf)
28e8a0f7 1739 {
a4ecb6a7
JH
1740 my $sf = /^u/i ? $sf_current : $sf_flavour;
1741 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to cp $mf $sf") if system("cp '$mf' '$sf'") != 0;
28e8a0f7 1742 }
151b83f8 1743else
28e8a0f7 1744 {
a4ecb6a7
JH
1745 # if we deal with a flavour file, we can't delete it, because next time the generic
1746 # file would be used again
1747 if ($sf_current eq $sf_flavour) {
2dc4c388 1748 open(my $fh, '>', $sf_current);
a4ecb6a7
JH
1749 }
1750 else {
1751 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to unlink $sf_current") if !unlink($sf_current);
1752 }
28e8a0f7 1753 }
151b83f8 1754
a4ecb6a7 1755return 2;
151b83f8
PH
1756}
1757
1758
1759
c9a55f6a
JH
1760##################################################
1761# Custom munges
1762# keyed by name of munge; value is a ref to a hash
1763# which is keyed by file, value a string to look for.
1764# Usable files are:
1765# paniclog, rejectlog, mainlog, stdout, stderr, msglog, mail
1766# Search strings starting with 's' do substitutions;
1767# with '/' do line-skips.
74377a62 1768# Triggered by a scriptfile line "munge <name>"
c9a55f6a
JH
1769##################################################
1770$munges =
1771 { 'dnssec' =>
cf407cb6 1772 { 'stderr' => '/^Reverse DNS security status: unverified\n/' },
c9a55f6a
JH
1773
1774 'gnutls_unexpected' =>
cf407cb6 1775 { 'mainlog' => '/\(recv\): A TLS packet with unexpected length was received./' },
c9a55f6a
JH
1776
1777 'gnutls_handshake' =>
cf407cb6 1778 { 'mainlog' => 's/\(gnutls_handshake\): Error in the push function/\(gnutls_handshake\): A TLS packet with unexpected length was received/' },
c9a55f6a 1779
8008accd
JH
1780 'gnutls_bad_clientcert' =>
1781 { 'mainlog' => 's/\(certificate verification failed\): certificate invalid/\(gnutls_handshake\): The peer did not send any certificate./',
1782 'stdout' => 's/Succeeded in starting TLS/A TLS fatal alert has been received.\nFailed to start TLS'
1783 },
1784
74377a62 1785 'optional_events' =>
cf407cb6 1786 { 'stdout' => '/event_action =/' },
74377a62
JH
1787
1788 'optional_ocsp' =>
cf407cb6
JH
1789 { 'stderr' => '/127.0.0.1 in hosts_requ(ire|est)_ocsp/' },
1790
79547a5a
JH
1791 'optional_cert_hostnames' =>
1792 { 'stderr' => '/in tls_verify_cert_hostnames\? no/' },
1793
ac9a0d91
JH
1794 'loopback' =>
1795 { 'stdout' => 's/[[](127\.0\.0\.1|::1)]/[IP_LOOPBACK_ADDR]/' },
1796
35deab6a
JH
1797 'scanfile_size' =>
1798 { 'stdout' => 's/(Content-length:) \d\d\d/$1 ddd/' },
1799
846430d9
JH
1800 'delay_1500' =>
1801 { 'stderr' => 's/(1[5-9]|23\d)\d\d msec/ssss msec/' },
1802
b3ef41c9 1803 'tls_anycipher' =>
8ac90765
JH
1804 { 'mainlog' => 's! X=TLS\S+ ! X=TLS_proto_and_cipher !;
1805 s! DN="C=! DN="/C=!;
1806 s! DN="[^,"]*\K,!/!;
1807 s! DN="[^,"]*\K,!/!;
1808 s! DN="[^,"]*\K,!/!;
1809 ',
1810 'rejectlog' => 's/ X=TLS\S+ / X=TLS_proto_and_cipher /',
8ac90765 1811 },
b3ef41c9 1812
ae9d18bc 1813 'debug_pid' =>
bf24ce50 1814 { 'stderr' => 's/(^\s{0,4}|(?<=Process )|(?<=child ))\d+/ppppp/g' },
ae9d18bc 1815
d658adda
JH
1816 'optional_dsn_info' =>
1817 { 'mail' => '/^(X-(Remote-MTA-(smtp-greeting|helo-response)|Exim-Diagnostic|(body|message)-linecount):|Remote-MTA: X-ip;)/'
6636495c
JH
1818 },
1819
06685b44 1820 'optional_config' =>
4dce3152 1821 { 'stdout' => '/^(
2bc0f45e 1822 dkim_(canon|domain|private_key|selector|sign_headers|strict|hash|identity|timestamps)
4dce3152 1823 |gnutls_require_(kx|mac|protocols)
ee8b8090 1824 |hosts_pipe_connect
4dce3152 1825 |hosts_(requ(est|ire)|try)_(dane|ocsp)
295bebda 1826 |dane_require_tls_ciphers
c3161b1d 1827 |hosts_(avoid|nopass|noproxy|require|verify_avoid)_tls
ee8b8090 1828 |pipelining_connect_advertise_hosts
06685b44 1829 |socks_proxy
4dce3152 1830 |tls_[^ ]*
71c15846 1831 |utf8_downconvert
c3161b1d
JH
1832 )($|[ ]=)/x'
1833 },
79c904e1 1834
6636495c 1835 'sys_bindir' =>
7329ca93 1836 { 'mainlog' => 's%/(usr/(local/)?)?bin/%SYSBINDIR/%' },
d658adda 1837
a0418528
JH
1838 'sync_check_data' =>
1839 { 'mainlog' => 's/^(.* SMTP protocol synchronization error .* next input=.{8}).*$/$1<suppressed>/',
1840 'rejectlog' => 's/^(.* SMTP protocol synchronization error .* next input=.{8}).*$/$1<suppressed>/'},
1841
b0d68adc 1842 'debuglog_stdout' =>
398f9af3 1843 { 'stdout' => 's/^\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\s+\d+ //;
b0d68adc
JH
1844 s/Process \d+ is ready for new message/Process pppp is ready for new message/'
1845 },
74ba91b1
JH
1846
1847 'timeout_errno' => # actual errno differs Solaris vs. Linux
78598e6a 1848 { 'mainlog' => 's/((?:host|message) deferral .* errno) <\d+> /$1 <EEE> /' },
d0eb2d45
JH
1849
1850 'peer_terminated_conn' => # actual error differs FreedBSD vs. Linux
1851 { 'stderr' => 's/^( SMTP\()Connection reset by peer(\)<<)$/$1closed$2/' },
c3161b1d 1852
2566035f
JH
1853 'perl_variants' => # result of hash-in-scalar-context changed from bucket-fill to keycount
1854 { 'stdout' => 's%^> X/X$%> X%' },
c9a55f6a
JH
1855 };
1856
1857
a4ecb6a7
JH
1858sub max {
1859 my ($a, $b) = @_;
1860 return $a if ($a > $b);
1861 return $b;
1862}
1863
151b83f8
PH
1864##################################################
1865# Subroutine to check the output of a test #
1866##################################################
1867
1868# This function is called when the series of subtests is complete. It makes
c9a55f6a 1869# use of check_file(), whose arguments are:
151b83f8
PH
1870#
1871# [0] the name of the main raw output file
1872# [1] the name of the server raw output file or undef
1873# [2] where to put the munged copy
1874# [3] the name of the saved file
1875# [4] TRUE if this is a log file whose deliveries must be sorted
c9a55f6a 1876# [5] an optional custom munge command
151b83f8 1877#
ac9a0d91 1878# Arguments: Optionally, name of a single custom munge to run.
151b83f8 1879# Returns: 0 if the output compared equal
a4ecb6a7
JH
1880# 1 if comparison failed; differences to be ignored
1881# 2 if re-run needed (files may have been updated)
151b83f8
PH
1882
1883sub check_output{
c9a55f6a 1884my($mungename) = $_[0];
151b83f8 1885my($yield) = 0;
c9a55f6a 1886my($munge) = $munges->{$mungename} if defined $mungename;
151b83f8 1887
a4ecb6a7 1888$yield = max($yield, check_file("spool/log/paniclog",
151b83f8
PH
1889 "spool/log/serverpaniclog",
1890 "test-paniclog-munged",
c9a55f6a 1891 "paniclog/$testno", 0,
a4ecb6a7 1892 $munge->{paniclog}));
151b83f8 1893
a4ecb6a7 1894$yield = max($yield, check_file("spool/log/rejectlog",
151b83f8
PH
1895 "spool/log/serverrejectlog",
1896 "test-rejectlog-munged",
c9a55f6a 1897 "rejectlog/$testno", 0,
a4ecb6a7 1898 $munge->{rejectlog}));
151b83f8 1899
a4ecb6a7 1900$yield = max($yield, check_file("spool/log/mainlog",
151b83f8
PH
1901 "spool/log/servermainlog",
1902 "test-mainlog-munged",
c9a55f6a 1903 "log/$testno", $sortlog,
a4ecb6a7 1904 $munge->{mainlog}));
151b83f8
PH
1905
1906if (!$stdout_skip)
1907 {
a4ecb6a7 1908 $yield = max($yield, check_file("test-stdout",
151b83f8
PH
1909 "test-stdout-server",
1910 "test-stdout-munged",
c9a55f6a 1911 "stdout/$testno", 0,
a4ecb6a7 1912 $munge->{stdout}));
151b83f8
PH
1913 }
1914
1915if (!$stderr_skip)
1916 {
a4ecb6a7 1917 $yield = max($yield, check_file("test-stderr",
151b83f8
PH
1918 "test-stderr-server",
1919 "test-stderr-munged",
c9a55f6a 1920 "stderr/$testno", 0,
a4ecb6a7 1921 $munge->{stderr}));
151b83f8
PH
1922 }
1923
1924# Compare any delivered messages, unless this test is skipped.
1925
1926if (! $message_skip)
1927 {
1928 my($msgno) = 0;
1929
1930 # Get a list of expected mailbox files for this script. We don't bother with
1931 # directories, just the files within them.
1932
1933 foreach $oldmail (@oldmails)
1934 {
1935 next unless $oldmail =~ /^mail\/$testno\./;
1936 print ">> EXPECT $oldmail\n" if $debug;
1937 $expected_mails{$oldmail} = 1;
1938 }
1939
1940 # If there are any files in test-mail, compare them. Note that "." and
1941 # ".." are automatically omitted by list_files_below().
1942
1943 @mails = list_files_below("test-mail");
1944
1945 foreach $mail (@mails)
1946 {
1947 next if $mail eq "test-mail/oncelog";
1948
1949 $saved_mail = substr($mail, 10); # Remove "test-mail/"
1950 $saved_mail =~ s/^$parm_caller(\/|$)/CALLER/; # Convert caller name
1951
1952 if ($saved_mail =~ /(\d+\.[^.]+\.)/)
1953 {
1954 $msgno++;
1955 $saved_mail =~ s/(\d+\.[^.]+\.)/$msgno./gx;
1956 }
1957
1958 print ">> COMPARE $mail mail/$testno.$saved_mail\n" if $debug;
a4ecb6a7 1959 $yield = max($yield, check_file($mail, undef, "test-mail-munged",
c9a55f6a 1960 "mail/$testno.$saved_mail", 0,
a4ecb6a7 1961 $munge->{mail}));
151b83f8
PH
1962 delete $expected_mails{"mail/$testno.$saved_mail"};
1963 }
1964
1965 # Complain if not all expected mails have been found
1966
1967 if (scalar(keys %expected_mails) != 0)
1968 {
1969 foreach $key (keys %expected_mails)
1970 { print "** no test file found for $key\n"; }
1971
1972 for (;;)
1973 {
0df394b5
HSHR
1974 $_ = interact('Continue, Update & retry, or Quit? [Q] ', $force_update, $force_continue);
1975 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/;
a4ecb6a7
JH
1976 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
1977 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, "missing email");
1978 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
1979 }
0df394b5 1980 last if /^c$/;
151b83f8
PH
1981
1982 # For update, we not only have to unlink the file, but we must also
1983 # remove it from the @oldmails vector, as otherwise it will still be
1984 # checked for when we re-run the test.
1985
0df394b5 1986 if (/^u$/)
151b83f8
PH
1987 {
1988 foreach $key (keys %expected_mails)
1989 {
1990 my($i);
1991 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to unlink $key") if !unlink("$key");
1992 for ($i = 0; $i < @oldmails; $i++)
1993 {
1994 if ($oldmails[$i] eq $key)
1995 {
1996 splice @oldmails, $i, 1;
1997 last;
1998 }
1999 }
2000 }
2001 last;
2002 }
2003 }
2004 }
2005 }
2006
2007# Compare any remaining message logs, unless this test is skipped.
2008
2009if (! $msglog_skip)
2010 {
2011 # Get a list of expected msglog files for this test
2012
2013 foreach $oldmsglog (@oldmsglogs)
2014 {
2015 next unless $oldmsglog =~ /^$testno\./;
2016 $expected_msglogs{$oldmsglog} = 1;
2017 }
2018
2019 # If there are any files in spool/msglog, compare them. However, we have
2020 # to munge the file names because they are message ids, which are
2021 # time dependent.
2022
2023 if (opendir(DIR, "spool/msglog"))
2024 {
2025 @msglogs = sort readdir(DIR);
2026 closedir(DIR);
2027
2028 foreach $msglog (@msglogs)
2029 {
2030 next if ($msglog eq "." || $msglog eq ".." || $msglog eq "CVS");
2031 ($munged_msglog = $msglog) =~
2032 s/((?:[^\W_]{6}-){2}[^\W_]{2})
2033 /new_value($1, "10Hm%s-0005vi-00", \$next_msgid)/egx;
a4ecb6a7 2034 $yield = max($yield, check_file("spool/msglog/$msglog", undef,
c9a55f6a 2035 "test-msglog-munged", "msglog/$testno.$munged_msglog", 0,
a4ecb6a7 2036 $munge->{msglog}));
151b83f8
PH
2037 delete $expected_msglogs{"$testno.$munged_msglog"};
2038 }
2039 }
2040
2041 # Complain if not all expected msglogs have been found
2042
2043 if (scalar(keys %expected_msglogs) != 0)
2044 {
2045 foreach $key (keys %expected_msglogs)
2046 {
2047 print "** no test msglog found for msglog/$key\n";
2048 ($msgid) = $key =~ /^\d+\.(.*)$/;
2049 foreach $cachekey (keys %cache)
2050 {
2051 if ($cache{$cachekey} eq $msgid)
2052 {
2053 print "** original msgid $cachekey\n";
2054 last;
2055 }
2056 }
2057 }
2058
2059 for (;;)
2060 {
0df394b5
HSHR
2061 $_ = interact('Continue, Update, or Quit? [Q] ', $force_update, $force_continue);
2062 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/;
a4ecb6a7
JH
2063 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
2064 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, "missing msglog");
2065 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
2066 }
0df394b5
HSHR
2067 last if /^c$/;
2068 if (/^u$/)
151b83f8
PH
2069 {
2070 foreach $key (keys %expected_msglogs)
2071 {
2072 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to unlink msglog/$key")
2073 if !unlink("msglog/$key");
2074 }
2075 last;
2076 }
2077 }
2078 }
2079 }
2080
2081return $yield;
2082}
2083
2084
2085
2086##################################################
2087# Subroutine to run one "system" command #
2088##################################################
2089
2090# We put this in a subroutine so that the command can be reflected when
2091# debugging.
2092#
2093# Argument: the command to be run
2094# Returns: nothing
2095
2096sub run_system {
050514b5
JH
2097my($cmd) = $_[0];
2098if ($debug)
2099 {
2100 my($prcmd) = $cmd;
2101 $prcmd =~ s/; /;\n>> /;
2102 print ">> $prcmd\n";
2103 }
2104system("$cmd");
151b83f8
PH
2105}
2106
2107
2108
2109##################################################
2110# Subroutine to run one script command #
2111##################################################
2112
2113# The <SCRIPT> file is open for us to read an optional return code line,
2114# followed by the command line and any following data lines for stdin. The
2115# command line can be continued by the use of \. Data lines are not continued
4c04137d 2116# in this way. In all lines, the following substitutions are made:
151b83f8
PH
2117#
2118# DIR => the current directory
2119# CALLER => the caller of this script
2120#
2121# Arguments: the current test number
2122# reference to the subtest number, holding previous value
2123# reference to the expected return code value
2124# reference to where to put the command name (for messages)
4c04137d 2125# auxiliary information returned from a previous run
151b83f8 2126#
4c04137d 2127# Returns: 0 the command was executed inline, no subprocess was run
151b83f8
PH
2128# 1 a non-exim command was run and waited for
2129# 2 an exim command was run and waited for
2130# 3 a command was run and not waited for (daemon, server, exim_lock)
2131# 4 EOF was encountered after an initial return code line
4c04137d 2132# Optionally also a second parameter, a hash-ref, with auxiliary information:
1ca9f507 2133# exim_pid: pid of a run process
c9a55f6a 2134# munge: name of a post-script results munger
151b83f8
PH
2135
2136sub run_command{
2137my($testno) = $_[0];
2138my($subtestref) = $_[1];
2139my($commandnameref) = $_[3];
1ca9f507 2140my($aux_info) = $_[4];
151b83f8
PH
2141my($yield) = 1;
2142
bc3c7bb7
HSHR
2143our %ENV = map { $_ => $ENV{$_} } grep { /^(?:USER|SHELL|PATH|TERM|EXIM_TEST_.*)$/ } keys %ENV;
2144
151b83f8
PH
2145if (/^(\d+)\s*$/) # Handle unusual return code
2146 {
2147 my($r) = $_[2];
2148 $$r = $1 << 8;
2149 $_ = <SCRIPT>;
2150 return 4 if !defined $_; # Missing command
2151 $lineno++;
2152 }
2153
2154chomp;
2155$wait_time = 0;
2156
2157# Handle concatenated command lines
2158
2159s/\s+$//;
2160while (substr($_, -1) eq"\\")
2161 {
2162 my($temp);
2163 $_ = substr($_, 0, -1);
2164 chomp($temp = <SCRIPT>);
2165 if (defined $temp)
2166 {
2167 $lineno++;
2168 $temp =~ s/\s+$//;
2169 $temp =~ s/^\s+//;
2170 $_ .= $temp;
2171 }
2172 }
2173
2174# Do substitutions
2175
2176do_substitute($testno);
2177if ($debug) { printf ">> $_\n"; }
2178
2179# Pass back the command name (for messages)
2180
2181($$commandnameref) = /^(\S+)/;
2182
2183# Here follows code for handling the various different commands that are
2184# supported by this script. The first group of commands are all freestanding
2185# in that they share no common code and are not followed by any data lines.
2186
2187
2188###################
2189###################
2190
2191# The "dbmbuild" command runs exim_dbmbuild. This is used both to test the
2192# utility and to make DBM files for testing DBM lookups.
2193
2194if (/^dbmbuild\s+(\S+)\s+(\S+)/)
2195 {
2196 run_system("(./eximdir/exim_dbmbuild $parm_cwd/$1 $parm_cwd/$2;" .
2197 "echo exim_dbmbuild exit code = \$?)" .
2198 ">>test-stdout");
2199 return 1;
2200 }
2201
2202
2203# The "dump" command runs exim_dumpdb. On different systems, the output for
2204# some types of dump may appear in a different order because it's just hauled
2205# out of the DBM file. We can solve this by sorting. Ignore the leading
2206# date/time, as it will be flattened later during munging.
2207
2208if (/^dump\s+(\S+)/)
2209 {
2dc4c388 2210 my $which = $1;
151b83f8 2211 print ">> ./eximdir/exim_dumpdb $parm_cwd/spool $which\n" if $debug;
2dc4c388
HSHR
2212 open(my $in, "-|", './eximdir/exim_dumpdb', "$parm_cwd/spool", $which) or die "Can't run exim_dumpdb: $!";
2213 open(my $out, ">>test-stdout");
2214 print $out "+++++++++++++++++++++++++++\n";
a0ff7619
JH
2215
2216 if ($which eq "retry")
151b83f8 2217 {
3b90b1d1
HSHR
2218 # the sort key is the first part of the retry db dump line, but for
2219 # sorting we (temporarly) replace the own hosts ipv4 with a munged
2220 # version, which matches the munging that is done later
2221 # Why? We must ensure sure, that 127.0.0.1 always sorts first
2222 # map-sort-map: Schwartz's transformation
84b1b277 2223 # test 0099
3b90b1d1
HSHR
2224 my @temp = map { $_->[1] }
2225 sort { $a->[0] cmp $b->[0] }
84b1b277
HSHR
2226 #map { [ (split)[0] =~ s/\Q$parm_ipv4/ip4.ip4.ip4.ip4/gr, $_ ] } # this is too modern for 5.10.1
2227 map {
2228 (my $k = (split)[0]) =~ s/\Q$parm_ipv4/ip4.ip4.ip4.ip4/g;
2229 [ $k, $_ ]
2230 }
3b90b1d1 2231 do { local $/ = "\n "; <$in> };
a0ff7619
JH
2232 foreach $item (@temp)
2233 {
7f8794a2 2234 $item =~ s/^\s*(.*)\n(.*)\n?\s*$/$1\n$2/m;
2dc4c388 2235 print $out " $item\n";
a0ff7619 2236 }
151b83f8 2237 }
a0ff7619
JH
2238 else
2239 {
2dc4c388 2240 my @temp = <$in>;
a0ff7619
JH
2241 if ($which eq "callout")
2242 {
2243 @temp = sort {
2244 my($aa) = substr $a, 21;
2245 my($bb) = substr $b, 21;
2246 return $aa cmp $bb;
2247 } @temp;
2248 }
2dc4c388 2249 print $out @temp;
a0ff7619 2250 }
2dc4c388 2251 close($in); # close it explicitly, otherwise $? does not get set
151b83f8
PH
2252 return 1;
2253 }
2254
2255
4cc77633
HSHR
2256# verbose comments start with ###
2257if (/^###\s/) {
2258 for my $file (qw(test-stdout test-stderr test-stderr-server test-stdout-server)) {
2259 open my $fh, '>>', $file or die "Can't open >>$file: $!\n";
2260 say {$fh} $_;
2261 }
2262 return 0;
2263}
151b83f8 2264
9edef117 2265# The "echo" command is a way of writing comments to the screen.
151b83f8
PH
2266if (/^echo\s+(.*)$/)
2267 {
2268 print "$1\n";
2269 return 0;
2270 }
2271
2272
2273# The "exim_lock" command runs exim_lock in the same manner as "server",
2274# but it doesn't use any input.
2275
2276if (/^exim_lock\s+(.*)$/)
2277 {
2278 $cmd = "./eximdir/exim_lock $1 >>test-stdout";
2279 $server_pid = open SERVERCMD, "|$cmd" ||
2280 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to run $cmd\n");
2281
2282 # This gives the process time to get started; otherwise the next
2283 # process may not find it there when it expects it.
2284
6588a918 2285 select(undef, undef, undef, 0.1);
151b83f8
PH
2286 return 3;
2287 }
2288
2289
2290# The "exinext" command runs exinext
2291
2292if (/^exinext\s+(.*)/)
2293 {
2294 run_system("(./eximdir/exinext " .
2295 "-DEXIM_PATH=$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim " .
2296 "-C $parm_cwd/test-config $1;" .
2297 "echo exinext exit code = \$?)" .
2298 ">>test-stdout");
2299 return 1;
2300 }
2301
2302
f3f065bb
PH
2303# The "exigrep" command runs exigrep on the current mainlog
2304
2305if (/^exigrep\s+(.*)/)
2306 {
2307 run_system("(./eximdir/exigrep " .
2308 "$1 $parm_cwd/spool/log/mainlog;" .
2309 "echo exigrep exit code = \$?)" .
2310 ">>test-stdout");
2311 return 1;
2312 }
2313
2314
2315# The "eximstats" command runs eximstats on the current mainlog
2316
2317if (/^eximstats\s+(.*)/)
2318 {
2319 run_system("(./eximdir/eximstats " .
2320 "$1 $parm_cwd/spool/log/mainlog;" .
2321 "echo eximstats exit code = \$?)" .
2322 ">>test-stdout");
2323 return 1;
2324 }
2325
2326
151b83f8
PH
2327# The "gnutls" command makes a copy of saved GnuTLS parameter data in the
2328# spool directory, to save Exim from re-creating it each time.
2329
2330if (/^gnutls/)
2331 {
83e2f8a2
PP
2332 my $gen_fn = "spool/gnutls-params-$gnutls_dh_bits_normal";
2333 run_system "sudo cp -p aux-fixed/gnutls-params $gen_fn;" .
2334 "sudo chown $parm_eximuser:$parm_eximgroup $gen_fn;" .
2335 "sudo chmod 0400 $gen_fn";
151b83f8
PH
2336 return 1;
2337 }
2338
2339
2340# The "killdaemon" command should ultimately follow the starting of any Exim
2f2dd3a5 2341# daemon with the -bd option.
151b83f8
PH
2342
2343if (/^killdaemon/)
2344 {
1ca9f507
PP
2345 my $return_extra = {};
2346 if (exists $aux_info->{exim_pid})
2347 {
2348 $pid = $aux_info->{exim_pid};
2349 $return_extra->{exim_pid} = undef;
2350 print ">> killdaemon: recovered pid $pid\n" if $debug;
3ff2360f
JH
2351 if ($pid)
2352 {
2f2dd3a5 2353 run_system("sudo /bin/kill -TERM $pid");
3ff2360f
JH
2354 wait;
2355 }
1ca9f507
PP
2356 } else {
2357 $pid = `cat $parm_cwd/spool/exim-daemon.*`;
3ff2360f
JH
2358 if ($pid)
2359 {
2f2dd3a5 2360 run_system("sudo /bin/kill -TERM $pid");
3ff2360f
JH
2361 close DAEMONCMD; # Waits for process
2362 }
1ca9f507 2363 }
3ff2360f 2364 run_system("sudo /bin/rm -f spool/exim-daemon.*");
1ca9f507 2365 return (1, $return_extra);
151b83f8
PH
2366 }
2367
2368
2369# The "millisleep" command is like "sleep" except that its argument is in
2370# milliseconds, thus allowing for a subsecond sleep, which is, in fact, all it
2371# is used for.
2372
2373elsif (/^millisleep\s+(.*)$/)
2374 {
2375 select(undef, undef, undef, $1/1000);
2376 return 0;
2377 }
2378
2379
c9a55f6a 2380# The "munge" command selects one of a hardwired set of test-result modifications
aded2255 2381# to be made before result compares are run against the golden set. This lets
c9a55f6a
JH
2382# us account for test-system dependent things which only affect a few, but known,
2383# test-cases.
2384# Currently only the last munge takes effect.
2385
2386if (/^munge\s+(.*)$/)
2387 {
2388 return (0, { munge => $1 });
2389 }
2390
2391
151b83f8
PH
2392# The "sleep" command does just that. For sleeps longer than 1 second we
2393# tell the user what's going on.
2394
2395if (/^sleep\s+(.*)$/)
2396 {
2397 if ($1 == 1)
2398 {
2399 sleep(1);
2400 }
2401 else
2402 {
2403 printf(" Test %d sleep $1 ", $$subtestref);
2404 for (1..$1)
2405 {
2406 print ".";
2407 sleep(1);
2408 }
2409 printf("\r Test %d $cr", $$subtestref);
2410 }
2411 return 0;
2412 }
2413
2414
2415# Various Unix management commands are recognized
2416
21c28500 2417if (/^(ln|ls|du|mkdir|mkfifo|touch|cp|cat)\s/ ||
4e192008 2418 /^sudo\s(rmdir|rm|mv|chown|chmod)\s/)
151b83f8
PH
2419 {
2420 run_system("$_ >>test-stdout 2>>test-stderr");
2421 return 1;
2422 }
2423
2424
2425
2426###################
2427###################
2428
2429# The next group of commands are also freestanding, but they are all followed
2430# by data lines.
2431
2432
2433# The "server" command starts up a script-driven server that runs in parallel
2434# with the following exim command. Therefore, we want to run a subprocess and
2435# not yet wait for it to complete. The waiting happens after the next exim
2436# command, triggered by $server_pid being non-zero. The server sends its output
2437# to a different file. The variable $server_opts, if not empty, contains
2438# options to disable IPv4 or IPv6 if necessary.
b9d9c5a2 2439# This works because "server" swallows its stdin before waiting for a connection.
151b83f8
PH
2440
2441if (/^server\s+(.*)$/)
2442 {
f41e0506
JH
2443 $pidfile = "$parm_cwd/aux-var/server-daemon.pid";
2444 $cmd = "./bin/server $server_opts -oP $pidfile $1 >>test-stdout-server";
151b83f8
PH
2445 print ">> $cmd\n" if ($debug);
2446 $server_pid = open SERVERCMD, "|$cmd" || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to run $cmd");
2447 SERVERCMD->autoflush(1);
2448 print ">> Server pid is $server_pid\n" if $debug;
2449 while (<SCRIPT>)
2450 {
2451 $lineno++;
2452 last if /^\*{4}\s*$/;
2453 print SERVERCMD;
2454 }
2455 print SERVERCMD "++++\n"; # Send end to server; can't send EOF yet
2456 # because close() waits for the process.
2457
f41e0506 2458 # Interlock the server startup; otherwise the next
151b83f8 2459 # process may not find it there when it expects it.
f41e0506 2460 while (! stat("$pidfile") ) { select(undef, undef, undef, 0.3); }
151b83f8
PH
2461 return 3;
2462 }
2463
2464
2465# The "write" command is a way of creating files of specific sizes for
2466# buffering tests, or containing specific data lines from within the script
2467# (rather than hold lots of little files). The "catwrite" command does the
2468# same, but it also copies the lines to test-stdout.
2469
2470if (/^(cat)?write\s+(\S+)(?:\s+(.*))?\s*$/)
2471 {
2472 my($cat) = defined $1;
2473 @sizes = ();
2474 @sizes = split /\s+/, $3 if defined $3;
2475 open FILE, ">$2" || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open \"$2\": $!");
2476
2477 if ($cat)
2478 {
2479 open CAT, ">>test-stdout" ||
2480 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open test-stdout: $!");
2481 print CAT "==========\n";
2482 }
2483
2484 if (scalar @sizes > 0)
2485 {
2486 # Pre-data
2487
2488 while (<SCRIPT>)
2489 {
2490 $lineno++;
2491 last if /^\+{4}\s*$/;
2492 print FILE;
2493 print CAT if $cat;
2494 }
2495
2496 # Sized data
2497
2498 while (scalar @sizes > 0)
2499 {
2500 ($count,$len,$leadin) = (shift @sizes) =~ /(\d+)x(\d+)(?:=(.*))?/;
9a8a6839 2501 $leadin = '' if !defined $leadin;
151b83f8
PH
2502 $leadin =~ s/_/ /g;
2503 $len -= length($leadin) + 1;
2504 while ($count-- > 0)
2505 {
2506 print FILE $leadin, "a" x $len, "\n";
2507 print CAT $leadin, "a" x $len, "\n" if $cat;
2508 }
2509 }
2510 }
2511
2512 # Post data, or only data if no sized data
2513
2514 while (<SCRIPT>)
2515 {
2516 $lineno++;
2517 last if /^\*{4}\s*$/;
2518 print FILE;
2519 print CAT if $cat;
2520 }
2521 close FILE;
2522
2523 if ($cat)
2524 {
2525 print CAT "==========\n";
2526 close CAT;
2527 }
2528
2529 return 0;
2530 }
2531
2532
2533###################
2534###################
2535
2536# From this point on, script commands are implemented by setting up a shell
2537# command in the variable $cmd. Shared code to run this command and handle its
2538# input and output follows.
2539
cfc54830
PH
2540# The "client", "client-gnutls", and "client-ssl" commands run a script-driven
2541# program that plays the part of an email client. We also have the availability
2542# of running Perl for doing one-off special things. Note that all these
2543# commands expect stdin data to be supplied.
151b83f8 2544
cfc54830 2545if (/^client/ || /^(sudo\s+)?perl\b/)
151b83f8
PH
2546 {
2547 s"client"./bin/client";
2548 $cmd = "$_ >>test-stdout 2>>test-stderr";
2549 }
2550
2551# For the "exim" command, replace the text "exim" with the path for the test
2552# binary, plus -D options to pass over various parameters, and a -C option for
2553# the testing configuration file. When running in the test harness, Exim does
2554# not drop privilege when -C and -D options are present. To run the exim
2555# command as root, we use sudo.
2556
bc3c7bb7 2557elsif (/^((?i:[A-Z\d_]+=\S+\s+)+)?(\d+)?\s*(sudo(?:\s+-u\s+(\w+))?\s+)?exim(_\S+)?\s+(.*)$/)
151b83f8 2558 {
4c7220eb 2559 $args = $6;
9a8a6839
HSHR
2560 my($envset) = (defined $1)? $1 : '';
2561 my($sudo) = (defined $3)? "sudo " . (defined $4 ? "-u $4 ":'') : '';
2562 my($special)= (defined $5)? $5 : '';
151b83f8
PH
2563 $wait_time = (defined $2)? $2 : 0;
2564
2565 # Return 2 rather than 1 afterwards
2566
2567 $yield = 2;
2568
2569 # Update the test number
2570
2571 $$subtestref = $$subtestref + 1;
2572 printf(" Test %d $cr", $$subtestref);
2573
2574 # Copy the configuration file, making the usual substitutions.
2575
2576 open (IN, "$parm_cwd/confs/$testno") ||
2577 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open $parm_cwd/confs/$testno: $!\n");
2578 open (OUT, ">test-config") ||
2579 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open test-config: $!\n");
2580 while (<IN>)
2581 {
2582 do_substitute($testno);
2583 print OUT;
2584 }
2585 close(IN);
2586 close(OUT);
2587
2588 # The string $msg1 in args substitutes the message id of the first
2589 # message on the queue, and so on. */
2590
2591 if ($args =~ /\$msg/)
2592 {
fc7bae7f
JH
2593 my($queuespec);
2594 if ($args =~ /-qG\w+/) { $queuespec = $&; }
2595
2596 my @listcmd;
2597
2598 if (defined $queuespec)
2599 {
2600 @listcmd = ("$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim", '-bp',
2601 $queuespec,
562a0e6f
HSHR
2602 "-DEXIM_PATH=$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim",
2603 -C => "$parm_cwd/test-config");
fc7bae7f
JH
2604 }
2605 else
2606 {
2607 @listcmd = ("$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim", '-bp',
2608 "-DEXIM_PATH=$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim",
2609 -C => "$parm_cwd/test-config");
2610 }
562a0e6f 2611 print ">> Getting queue list from:\n>> @listcmd\n" if $debug;
b402f294
HSHR
2612 # We need the message ids sorted in ascending order.
2613 # Message id is: <timestamp>-<pid>-<fractional-time>. On some systems (*BSD) the
2614 # PIDs are randomized, so sorting just the whole PID doesn't work.
2615 # We do the Schartz' transformation here (sort on
2616 # <timestamp><fractional-time>). Thanks to Kirill Miazine
562a0e6f
HSHR
2617 my @msglist =
2618 map { $_->[1] } # extract the values
2619 sort { $a->[0] cmp $b->[0] } # sort by key
2620 map { [join('.' => (split /-/, $_)[0,2]) => $_] } # key (timestamp.fractional-time) => value(message_id)
2621 map { /^\s*\d+[smhdw]\s+\S+\s+(\S+)/ } `@listcmd` or tests_exit(-1, "No output from `exim -bp` (@listcmd)\n");
151b83f8
PH
2622
2623 # Done backwards just in case there are more than 9
2624
25adc2a8 2625 for (my $i = @msglist; $i > 0; $i--) { $args =~ s/\$msg$i/$msglist[$i-1]/g; }
3ff2360f
JH
2626 if ( $args =~ /\$msg\d/ )
2627 {
8334b9b8
TL
2628 tests_exit(-1, "Not enough messages in spool, for test $testno line $lineno\n")
2629 unless $force_continue;
3ff2360f 2630 }
151b83f8
PH
2631 }
2632
2633 # If -d is specified in $optargs, remove it from $args; i.e. let
2634 # the command line for runtest override. Then run Exim.
2635
2636 $args =~ s/(?:^|\s)-d\S*// if $optargs =~ /(?:^|\s)-d/;
2637
9a8a6839 2638 my $opt_valgrind = $valgrind ? "valgrind --leak-check=yes --suppressions=$parm_cwd/aux-fixed/valgrind.supp " : '';
2c9f7ff8
JH
2639
2640 $cmd = "$envset$sudo$opt_valgrind" .
2641 "$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim$special$optargs " .
151b83f8
PH
2642 "-DEXIM_PATH=$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim$special " .
2643 "-C $parm_cwd/test-config $args " .
2644 ">>test-stdout 2>>test-stderr";
151b83f8
PH
2645 # If the command is starting an Exim daemon, we run it in the same
2646 # way as the "server" command above, that is, we don't want to wait
2647 # for the process to finish. That happens when "killdaemon" is obeyed later
2648 # in the script. We also send the stderr output to test-stderr-server. The
2649 # daemon has its log files put in a different place too (by configuring with
2650 # log_file_path). This requires the directory to be set up in advance.
2651 #
2652 # There are also times when we want to run a non-daemon version of Exim
2653 # (e.g. a queue runner) with the server configuration. In this case,
2654 # we also define -DNOTDAEMON.
2655
2656 if ($cmd =~ /\s-DSERVER=server\s/ && $cmd !~ /\s-DNOTDAEMON\s/)
2657 {
2658 if ($debug) { printf ">> daemon: $cmd\n"; }
050514b5 2659 run_system("sudo mkdir spool/log 2>/dev/null");
151b83f8
PH
2660 run_system("sudo chown $parm_eximuser:$parm_eximgroup spool/log");
2661
2662 # Before running the command, convert the -bd option into -bdf so that an
2663 # Exim daemon doesn't double fork. This means that when we wait close
1b781f48
PH
2664 # DAEMONCMD, it waits for the correct process. Also, ensure that the pid
2665 # file is written to the spool directory, in case the Exim binary was
2666 # built with PID_FILE_PATH pointing somewhere else.
151b83f8 2667
f41e0506
JH
2668 if ($cmd =~ /\s-oP\s/)
2669 {
2670 ($pidfile = $cmd) =~ s/^.*-oP ([^ ]+).*$/$1/;
2671 $cmd =~ s!\s-bd\s! -bdf !;
2672 }
2673 else
2674 {
2675 $pidfile = "$parm_cwd/spool/exim-daemon.pid";
2676 $cmd =~ s!\s-bd\s! -bdf -oP $pidfile !;
2677 }
151b83f8
PH
2678 print ">> |${cmd}-server\n" if ($debug);
2679 open DAEMONCMD, "|${cmd}-server" || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to run $cmd");
2680 DAEMONCMD->autoflush(1);
2681 while (<SCRIPT>) { $lineno++; last if /^\*{4}\s*$/; } # Ignore any input
f41e0506
JH
2682
2683 # Interlock with daemon startup
109b7eb1
JH
2684 for (my $count = 0; ! stat("$pidfile") && $count < 30; $count++ )
2685 { select(undef, undef, undef, 0.3); }
151b83f8
PH
2686 return 3; # Don't wait
2687 }
1ca9f507
PP
2688 elsif ($cmd =~ /\s-DSERVER=wait:(\d+)\s/)
2689 {
df613eb4
HSHR
2690
2691 # The port and the $dynamic_socket was already allocated while parsing the
2692 # script file, where -DSERVER=wait:PORT_DYNAMIC was encountered.
2693
1ca9f507
PP
2694 my $listen_port = $1;
2695 if ($debug) { printf ">> wait-mode daemon: $cmd\n"; }
050514b5 2696 run_system("sudo mkdir spool/log 2>/dev/null");
1ca9f507
PP
2697 run_system("sudo chown $parm_eximuser:$parm_eximgroup spool/log");
2698
1ca9f507
PP
2699 my $pid = fork();
2700 if (not defined $pid) { die "** fork failed: $!\n" }
2701 if (not $pid) {
2702 close(STDIN);
df613eb4
HSHR
2703 open(STDIN, '<&', $dynamic_socket) or die "** dup sock to stdin failed: $!\n";
2704 close($dynamic_socket);
1ca9f507
PP
2705 print "[$$]>> ${cmd}-server\n" if ($debug);
2706 exec "exec ${cmd}-server";
df613eb4 2707 die "Can't exec ${cmd}-server: $!\n";
1ca9f507
PP
2708 }
2709 while (<SCRIPT>) { $lineno++; last if /^\*{4}\s*$/; } # Ignore any input
2710 select(undef, undef, undef, 0.3); # Let the daemon get going
2711 return (3, { exim_pid => $pid }); # Don't wait
2712 }
151b83f8
PH
2713 }
2714
bdf36f7c
JH
2715# The "background" command is run but not waited-for, like exim -DSERVER=server.
2716# One script line is read and fork-exec'd. The PID is stored for a later
2717# killdaemon.
2718
2719elsif (/^background$/)
2720 {
2721 my $line;
2722# $pidfile = "$parm_cwd/aux-var/server-daemon.pid";
2723
2724 $_ = <SCRIPT>; $lineno++;
2725 chomp;
de1294ea 2726 do_substitute($testno);
bdf36f7c
JH
2727 $line = $_;
2728 if ($debug) { printf ">> daemon: $line >>test-stdout 2>>test-stderr\n"; }
2729
2730 my $pid = fork();
2731 if (not defined $pid) { die "** fork failed: $!\n" }
2732 if (not $pid) {
2733 print "[$$]>> ${line}\n" if ($debug);
2734 close(STDIN);
2735 open(STDIN, "<", "test-stdout");
2736 close(STDOUT);
2737 open(STDOUT, ">>", "test-stdout");
2738 close(STDERR);
2739 open(STDERR, ">>", "test-stderr-server");
2740 exec "exec ${line}";
2741 exit(1);
2742 }
2743
2744# open(my $fh, ">", $pidfile) ||
2745# tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $pidfile: $!");
2746# printf($fh, "%d\n", $pid);
2747# close($fh);
2748
2749 while (<SCRIPT>) { $lineno++; last if /^\*{4}\s*$/; } # Ignore any input
2750 select(undef, undef, undef, 0.3); # Let the daemon get going
2751 return (3, { exim_pid => $pid }); # Don't wait
2752 }
2753
2754
151b83f8
PH
2755
2756# Unknown command
2757
2758else { tests_exit(-1, "Command unrecognized in line $lineno: $_"); }
2759
2760
2761# Run the command, with stdin connected to a pipe, and write the stdin data
2762# to it, with appropriate substitutions. If a line ends with \NONL\, chop off
2763# the terminating newline (and the \NONL\). If the command contains
2764# -DSERVER=server add "-server" to the command, where it will adjoin the name
2765# for the stderr file. See comment above about the use of -DSERVER.
2766
9a8a6839 2767$stderrsuffix = ($cmd =~ /\s-DSERVER=server\s/)? "-server" : '';
151b83f8
PH
2768print ">> |${cmd}${stderrsuffix}\n" if ($debug);
2769open CMD, "|${cmd}${stderrsuffix}" || tests_exit(1, "Failed to run $cmd");
2770
2771CMD->autoflush(1);
2772while (<SCRIPT>)
2773 {
2774 $lineno++;
2775 last if /^\*{4}\s*$/;
2776 do_substitute($testno);
2777 if (/^(.*)\\NONL\\\s*$/) { print CMD $1; } else { print CMD; }
2778 }
2779
2780# For timeout tests, wait before closing the pipe; we expect a
2781# SIGPIPE error in this case.
2782
2783if ($wait_time > 0)
2784 {
2785 printf(" Test %d sleep $wait_time ", $$subtestref);
2786 while ($wait_time-- > 0)
2787 {
2788 print ".";
2789 sleep(1);
2790 }
2791 printf("\r Test %d $cr", $$subtestref);
2792 }
2793
2794$sigpipehappened = 0;
2795close CMD; # Waits for command to finish
2796return $yield; # Ran command and waited
2797}
2798
2799
2800
2801
2802###############################################################################
2803###############################################################################
2804
d63a9563 2805# Here begins the Main Program ...
151b83f8
PH
2806
2807###############################################################################
2808###############################################################################
2809
2810
2811autoflush STDOUT 1;
2812print "Exim tester $testversion\n";
2813
26ab1da3
HSHR
2814# extend the PATH with .../sbin
2815# we map all (.../bin) to (.../sbin:.../bin)
2816$ENV{PATH} = do {
2817 my %seen = map { $_, 1 } split /:/, $ENV{PATH};
25adc2a8
HSHR
2818 join ':' => map { m{(.*)/bin$}
2819 ? ( $seen{"$1/sbin"} ? () : ("$1/sbin"), $_)
2820 : ($_) }
26ab1da3
HSHR
2821 split /:/, $ENV{PATH};
2822};
151b83f8 2823
650ececb
PP
2824##################################################
2825# Some tests check created file modes #
2826##################################################
2827
2828umask 022;
2829
2830
151b83f8
PH
2831##################################################
2832# Check for the "less" command #
2833##################################################
2834
a31c0dcd 2835@more = 'more' if system('which less >/dev/null 2>&1') != 0;
151b83f8
PH
2836
2837
2838
151b83f8
PH
2839##################################################
2840# See if an Exim binary has been given #
2841##################################################
2842
2843# If the first character of the first argument is '/', the argument is taken
1c143d9d
HSHR
2844# as the path to the binary. If the first argument does not start with a
2845# '/' but exists in the file system, it's assumed to be the Exim binary.
151b83f8 2846
151b83f8
PH
2847
2848##################################################
2849# Sort out options and which tests are to be run #
2850##################################################
2851
2852# There are a few possible options for the test script itself; after these, any
2853# options are passed on to Exim calls within the tests. Typically, this is used
2854# to turn on Exim debugging while setting up a test.
2855
4d8393c0 2856Getopt::Long::Configure qw(no_getopt_compat);
ffe0a357
HSHR
2857GetOptions(
2858 'debug' => sub { $debug = 1; $cr = "\n" },
2859 'diff' => sub { $cf = 'diff -u' },
a31c0dcd 2860 'continue' => sub { $force_continue = 1; @more = 'cat' },
ffe0a357
HSHR
2861 'update' => \$force_update,
2862 'ipv4!' => \$have_ipv4,
2863 'ipv6!' => \$have_ipv6,
2864 'keep' => \$save_output,
2865 'slow' => \$slow,
2866 'valgrind' => \$valgrind,
c9102412 2867 'range=s{2}' => \my @range_wanted,
4d8393c0 2868 'test=i@' => \my @tests_wanted,
e99725fd 2869 'flavor|flavour=s' => \$flavour,
ffe0a357
HSHR
2870 'help' => sub { pod2usage(-exit => 0) },
2871 'man' => sub {
2872 pod2usage(
2873 -exit => 0,
2874 -verbose => 2,
2875 -noperldoc => system('perldoc -V 2>/dev/null 1>&2')
2876 );
2877 },
2878) or pod2usage;
2879
2880($parm_exim, @ARGV) = Exim::Runtest::exim_binary(@ARGV);
2881print "Exim binary is `$parm_exim'\n" if defined $parm_exim;
151b83f8 2882
151b83f8 2883
4d8393c0
HSHR
2884my @wanted = sort numerically uniq
2885 @tests_wanted ? @tests_wanted : (),
2886 @range_wanted ? $range_wanted[0] .. $range_wanted[1] : (),
2887 @ARGV ? @ARGV == 1 ? $ARGV[0] :
2888 $ARGV[1] eq '+' ? $ARGV[0]..($ARGV[0] >= 9000 ? TEST_SPECIAL_TOP : TEST_TOP) :
2889 0+$ARGV[0]..0+$ARGV[1] # add 0 to cope with test numbers starting with zero
2890 : ();
2891@wanted = 1..TEST_TOP if not @wanted;
ffe0a357
HSHR
2892
2893##################################################
2894# Check for sudo access to root #
2895##################################################
2896
2897print "You need to have sudo access to root to run these tests. Checking ...\n";
2898if (system('sudo true >/dev/null') != 0)
2899 {
2900 die "** Test for sudo failed: testing abandoned.\n";
2901 }
2902else
2903 {
2904 print "Test for sudo OK\n";
2905 }
2906
2907
151b83f8
PH
2908
2909
2910##################################################
2911# Make the command's directory current #
2912##################################################
2913
2914# After doing so, we find its absolute path name.
2915
2916$cwd = $0;
2917$cwd = '.' if ($cwd !~ s|/[^/]+$||);
2918chdir($cwd) || die "** Failed to chdir to \"$cwd\": $!\n";
2919$parm_cwd = Cwd::getcwd();
2920
2921
2922##################################################
2923# Search for an Exim binary to test #
2924##################################################
2925
2926# If an Exim binary hasn't been provided, try to find one. We can handle the
2927# case where exim-testsuite is installed alongside Exim source directories. For
2928# PH's private convenience, if there's a directory just called "exim4", that
2929# takes precedence; otherwise exim-snapshot takes precedence over any numbered
2930# releases.
2931
151b83f8
PH
2932# If $parm_exim is still empty, ask the caller
2933
4d8393c0 2934if (not $parm_exim)
151b83f8
PH
2935 {
2936 print "** Did not find an Exim binary to test\n";
2937 for ($i = 0; $i < 5; $i++)
2938 {
2939 my($trybin);
2940 print "** Enter pathname for Exim binary: ";
2941 chomp($trybin = <STDIN>);
2942 if (-e $trybin)
2943 {
2944 $parm_exim = $trybin;
2945 last;
2946 }
2947 else
2948 {
2949 print "** $trybin does not exist\n";
2950 }
2951 }
9a8a6839 2952 die "** Too many tries\n" if $parm_exim eq '';
151b83f8
PH
2953 }
2954
2955
2956
2957##################################################
2958# Find what is in the binary #
2959##################################################
2960
5f122889
PP
2961# deal with TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST restrictions
2962unlink("$parm_cwd/test-config") if -e "$parm_cwd/test-config";
72acdf0f
JH
2963open (IN, "$parm_cwd/confs/0000") ||
2964 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open $parm_cwd/confs/0000: $!\n");
2965open (OUT, ">test-config") ||
2966 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open test-config: $!\n");
2967while (<IN>) { print OUT; }
2968close(IN);
2969close(OUT);
5f122889
PP
2970
2971print("Probing with config file: $parm_cwd/test-config\n");
0e1cd284 2972
109ad60f
HSHR
2973my $eximinfo = "$parm_exim -d -C $parm_cwd/test-config -DDIR=$parm_cwd -bP exim_user exim_group";
2974chomp(my @eximinfo = `$eximinfo 2>&1`);
0e1cd284
HSHR
2975die "$0: Can't run $eximinfo\n" if $? == -1;
2976
2977warn 'Got ' . $?>>8 . " from $eximinfo\n" if $?;
109ad60f 2978foreach (@eximinfo)
151b83f8 2979 {
c039ce61
HSHR
2980 if (my ($version) = /^Exim version (\S+)/) {
2981 my $git = `git describe --dirty=-XX --match 'exim-4*'`;
2982 if (defined $git and $? == 0) {
2983 chomp $git;
c039ce61
HSHR
2984 $git =~ s/^exim-//i;
2985 $git =~ s/.*-\Kg([[:xdigit:]]+(?:-XX)?)/$1/;
fefe59d9
HSHR
2986 print <<___
2987
2988*** Version mismatch
2989*** Exim binary: $version
2990*** Git : $git
2991
2992___
c039ce61
HSHR
2993 if not $version eq $git;
2994 }
2995 }
151b83f8
PH
2996 $parm_eximuser = $1 if /^exim_user = (.*)$/;
2997 $parm_eximgroup = $1 if /^exim_group = (.*)$/;
32ca7e2d 2998 $parm_trusted_config_list = $1 if /^TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST:.*?"(.*?)"$/;
c9fb6994
HSHR
2999 ($parm_configure_owner, $parm_configure_group) = ($1, $2)
3000 if /^Configure owner:\s*(\d+):(\d+)/;
0df394b5 3001 print if /wrong owner/;
151b83f8 3002 }
151b83f8 3003
109ad60f
HSHR
3004if (not defined $parm_eximuser) {
3005 die <<XXX, map { "|$_\n" } @eximinfo;
3006Unable to extract exim_user from binary.
3007Check if Exim refused to run; if so, consider:
3008 TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX WHITELIST_D_MACROS
3009If debug permission denied, are you in the exim group?
3010Failing to get information from binary.
3011Output from $eximinfo:
3012XXX
3013
3014}
3015
3016if ($parm_eximuser =~ /^\d+$/) { $parm_exim_uid = $parm_eximuser; }
3017else { $parm_exim_uid = getpwnam($parm_eximuser); }
151b83f8
PH
3018
3019if (defined $parm_eximgroup)
3020 {
3021 if ($parm_eximgroup =~ /^\d+$/) { $parm_exim_gid = $parm_eximgroup; }
3022 else { $parm_exim_gid = getgrnam($parm_eximgroup); }
3023 }
3024
32ca7e2d
HSHR
3025# check the permissions on the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST
3026if (defined $parm_trusted_config_list)
3027 {
3028 die "TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST: $parm_trusted_config_list: $!\n"
3029 if not -f $parm_trusted_config_list;
3030
3031 die "TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST $parm_trusted_config_list must not be world writable!\n"
3032 if 02 & (stat _)[2];
3033
3034 die sprintf "TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST: $parm_trusted_config_list %d is group writable, but not owned by group '%s' or '%s'.\n",
3035 (stat _)[1],
3036 scalar(getgrgid 0), scalar(getgrgid $>)
3037 if (020 & (stat _)[2]) and not ((stat _)[5] == $> or (stat _)[5] == 0);
3038
3039 die sprintf "TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST: $parm_trusted_config_list is not owned by user '%s' or '%s'.\n",
3040 scalar(getpwuid 0), scalar(getpwuid $>)
3041 if (not (-o _ or (stat _)[4] == 0));
3042
3043 open(TCL, $parm_trusted_config_list) or die "Can't open $parm_trusted_config_list: $!\n";
3044 my $test_config = getcwd() . '/test-config';
3045 die "Can't find '$test_config' in TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST $parm_trusted_config_list."
93d55ee3 3046 if not grep { /^\Q$test_config\E$/ } <TCL>;
32ca7e2d
HSHR
3047 }
3048else
3049 {
3050 die "Unable to check the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST, seems to be empty?\n";
3051 }
3052
c9fb6994
HSHR
3053die "CONFIGURE_OWNER ($parm_configure_owner) does not match the user invoking $0 ($>)\n"
3054 if $parm_configure_owner != $>;
3055
3056die "CONFIGURE_GROUP ($parm_configure_group) does not match the group invoking $0 ($))\n"
3057 if 0020 & (stat "$parm_cwd/test-config")[2]
3058 and $parm_configure_group != $);
3059
2ea74e31 3060die "aux-fixed file is group-writeable; best to strip them all, recursively\n"
01c59460
JH
3061 if 0020 & (stat "aux-fixed/0037.f-1")[2];
3062
c9fb6994 3063
b6a0dbb2 3064open(EXIMINFO, "$parm_exim -d-all+transport -bV -C $parm_cwd/test-config -DDIR=$parm_cwd |") ||
151b83f8
PH
3065 die "** Cannot run $parm_exim: $!\n";
3066
3067print "-" x 78, "\n";
3068
3069while (<EXIMINFO>)
3070 {
3071 my(@temp);
3072
b6a0dbb2 3073 if (/^(Exim|Library) version/) { print; }
96508de1 3074 if (/Runtime: /) {print; }
151b83f8 3075
21c28500
PH
3076 elsif (/^Size of off_t: (\d+)/)
3077 {
e1b3d58d 3078 print;
21c28500 3079 $have_largefiles = 1 if $1 > 4;
e1b3d58d
JJ
3080 die "** Size of off_t > 32 which seems improbable, not running tests\n"
3081 if ($1 > 32);
21c28500
PH
3082 }
3083
3084 elsif (/^Support for: (.*)/)
151b83f8
PH
3085 {
3086 print;
3087 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3088 push(@temp, ' ');
3089 %parm_support = @temp;
3090 }
3091
33191679 3092 elsif (/^Lookups \(built-in\): (.*)/)
151b83f8
PH
3093 {
3094 print;
3095 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3096 push(@temp, ' ');
3097 %parm_lookups = @temp;
3098 }
3099
21c28500 3100 elsif (/^Authenticators: (.*)/)
151b83f8
PH
3101 {
3102 print;
3103 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3104 push(@temp, ' ');
3105 %parm_authenticators = @temp;
3106 }
3107
21c28500 3108 elsif (/^Routers: (.*)/)
151b83f8
PH
3109 {
3110 print;
3111 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3112 push(@temp, ' ');
3113 %parm_routers = @temp;
3114 }
3115
3116 # Some transports have options, e.g. appendfile/maildir. For those, ensure
3117 # that the basic transport name is set, and then the name with each of the
3118 # options.
3119
21c28500 3120 elsif (/^Transports: (.*)/)
151b83f8
PH
3121 {
3122 print;
3123 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3124 my($i,$k);
3125 push(@temp, ' ');
3126 %parm_transports = @temp;
3127 foreach $k (keys %parm_transports)
3128 {
3129 if ($k =~ "/")
3130 {
3131 @temp = split /\//, $k;
9a8a6839 3132 $parm_transports{$temp[0]} = " ";
151b83f8
PH
3133 for ($i = 1; $i < @temp; $i++)
3134 { $parm_transports{"$temp[0]/$temp[$i]"} = " "; }
3135 }
3136 }
3137 }
c11d665d
JH
3138
3139 elsif (/^Malware: (.*)/)
3140 {
3141 print;
3142 @temp = split /(\s+)/, $1;
3143 push(@temp, ' ');
3144 %parm_malware = @temp;
3145 }
3146
151b83f8
PH
3147 }
3148close(EXIMINFO);
3149print "-" x 78, "\n";
3150
5f122889 3151unlink("$parm_cwd/test-config");
151b83f8
PH
3152
3153##################################################
3154# Check for SpamAssassin and ClamAV #
3155##################################################
3156
3157# These are crude tests. If they aren't good enough, we'll have to improve
3158# them, for example by actually passing a message through spamc or clamscan.
3159
9a8a6839 3160if (defined $parm_support{Content_Scanning})
151b83f8 3161 {
3ff2360f
JH
3162 my $sock = new FileHandle;
3163
151b83f8
PH
3164 if (system("spamc -h 2>/dev/null >/dev/null") == 0)
3165 {
151b83f8
PH
3166 print "The spamc command works:\n";
3167
3168 # This test for an active SpamAssassin is courtesy of John Jetmore.
3169 # The tests are hard coded to localhost:783, so no point in making
3170 # this test flexible like the clamav test until the test scripts are
4c04137d 3171 # changed. spamd doesn't have the nice PING/PONG protocol that
151b83f8
PH
3172 # clamd does, but it does respond to errors in an informative manner,
3173 # so use that.
3174
3175 my($sint,$sport) = ('127.0.0.1',783);
3176 eval
3177 {
3178 my $sin = sockaddr_in($sport, inet_aton($sint))
3179 or die "** Failed packing $sint:$sport\n";
3ff2360f 3180 socket($sock, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, getprotobyname('tcp'))
151b83f8
PH
3181 or die "** Unable to open socket $sint:$sport\n";
3182
3183 local $SIG{ALRM} =
3184 sub { die "** Timeout while connecting to socket $sint:$sport\n"; };
3185 alarm(5);
3ff2360f 3186 connect($sock, $sin)
151b83f8
PH
3187 or die "** Unable to connect to socket $sint:$sport\n";
3188 alarm(0);
3189
3ff2360f
JH
3190 select((select($sock), $| = 1)[0]);
3191 print $sock "bad command\r\n";
151b83f8
PH
3192
3193 $SIG{ALRM} =
3194 sub { die "** Timeout while reading from socket $sint:$sport\n"; };
3195 alarm(10);
3ff2360f 3196 my $res = <$sock>;
151b83f8
PH
3197 alarm(0);
3198
3199 $res =~ m|^SPAMD/|
3200 or die "** Did not get SPAMD from socket $sint:$sport. "
3201 ."It said: $res\n";
3202 };
3203 alarm(0);
3204 if($@)
3205 {
3206 print " $@";
3207 print " Assume SpamAssassin (spamd) is not running\n";
3208 }
3209 else
3210 {
9a8a6839 3211 $parm_running{SpamAssassin} = ' ';
151b83f8
PH
3212 print " SpamAssassin (spamd) seems to be running\n";
3213 }
3214 }
3215 else
3216 {
3217 print "The spamc command failed: assume SpamAssassin (spamd) is not running\n";
3218 }
3219
3220 # For ClamAV, we need to find the clamd socket for use in the Exim
3221 # configuration. Search for the clamd configuration file.
3222
3223 if (system("clamscan -h 2>/dev/null >/dev/null") == 0)
3224 {
3225 my($f, $clamconf, $test_prefix);
3226
3227 print "The clamscan command works";
3228
3229 $test_prefix = $ENV{EXIM_TEST_PREFIX};
9a8a6839 3230 $test_prefix = '' if !defined $test_prefix;
151b83f8
PH
3231
3232 foreach $f ("$test_prefix/etc/clamd.conf",
3233 "$test_prefix/usr/local/etc/clamd.conf",
9a8a6839 3234 "$test_prefix/etc/clamav/clamd.conf", '')
151b83f8
PH
3235 {
3236 if (-e $f)
3237 {
3238 $clamconf = $f;
3239 last;
3240 }
3241 }
3242
11b3bc4d
PH
3243 # Read the ClamAV configuration file and find the socket interface.
3244
9a8a6839 3245 if ($clamconf ne '')
151b83f8 3246 {
11b3bc4d 3247 my $socket_domain;
151b83f8
PH
3248 open(IN, "$clamconf") || die "\n** Unable to open $clamconf: $!\n";
3249 while (<IN>)
3250 {
3251 if (/^LocalSocket\s+(.*)/)
3252 {
3253 $parm_clamsocket = $1;
11b3bc4d 3254 $socket_domain = AF_UNIX;
151b83f8
PH
3255 last;
3256 }
11b3bc4d
PH
3257 if (/^TCPSocket\s+(\d+)/)
3258 {
3259 if (defined $parm_clamsocket)
3260 {
3261 $parm_clamsocket .= " $1";
3262 $socket_domain = AF_INET;
3263 last;
3264 }
3265 else
3266 {
3267 $parm_clamsocket = " $1";
3268 }
3269 }
3270 elsif (/^TCPAddr\s+(\S+)/)
3271 {
3272 if (defined $parm_clamsocket)
3273 {
3274 $parm_clamsocket = $1 . $parm_clamsocket;
3275 $socket_domain = AF_INET;
3276 last;
3277 }
3278 else
3279 {
3280 $parm_clamsocket = $1;
3281 }
3282 }
151b83f8
PH
3283 }
3284 close(IN);
11b3bc4d
PH
3285
3286 if (defined $socket_domain)
151b83f8
PH
3287 {
3288 print ":\n The clamd socket is $parm_clamsocket\n";
3289 # This test for an active ClamAV is courtesy of Daniel Tiefnig.
3290 eval
3291 {
11b3bc4d
PH
3292 my $socket;
3293 if ($socket_domain == AF_UNIX)
3294 {
3295 $socket = sockaddr_un($parm_clamsocket) or die "** Failed packing '$parm_clamsocket'\n";
3296 }
3297 elsif ($socket_domain == AF_INET)
3298 {
3299 my ($ca_host, $ca_port) = split(/\s+/,$parm_clamsocket);
3300 my $ca_hostent = gethostbyname($ca_host) or die "** Failed to get raw address for host '$ca_host'\n";
3301 $socket = sockaddr_in($ca_port, $ca_hostent) or die "** Failed packing '$parm_clamsocket'\n";
3302 }
3303 else
3304 {
3305 die "** Unknown socket domain '$socket_domain' (should not happen)\n";
3306 }
3ff2360f 3307 socket($sock, $socket_domain, SOCK_STREAM, 0) or die "** Unable to open socket '$parm_clamsocket'\n";
151b83f8
PH
3308 local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "** Timeout while connecting to socket '$parm_clamsocket'\n"; };
3309 alarm(5);
3ff2360f 3310 connect($sock, $socket) or die "** Unable to connect to socket '$parm_clamsocket'\n";
151b83f8
PH
3311 alarm(0);
3312
3ff2360f
JH
3313 my $ofh = select $sock; $| = 1; select $ofh;
3314 print $sock "PING\n";
151b83f8
PH
3315
3316 $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "** Timeout while reading from socket '$parm_clamsocket'\n"; };
3317 alarm(10);
3ff2360f 3318 my $res = <$sock>;
151b83f8
PH
3319 alarm(0);
3320
3321 $res =~ /PONG/ or die "** Did not get PONG from socket '$parm_clamsocket'. It said: $res\n";
3322 };
3323 alarm(0);
3324
3325 if($@)
3326 {
520de300 3327 print " $@";
151b83f8
PH
3328 print " Assume ClamAV is not running\n";
3329 }
3330 else
3331 {
9a8a6839 3332 $parm_running{ClamAV} = ' ';
151b83f8
PH
3333 print " ClamAV seems to be running\n";
3334 }
3335 }
3336 else
3337 {
11b3bc4d 3338 print ", but the socket for clamd could not be determined\n";
151b83f8
PH
3339 print "Assume ClamAV is not running\n";
3340 }
3341 }
3342
3343 else
3344 {
3345 print ", but I can't find a configuration for clamd\n";
3346 print "Assume ClamAV is not running\n";
3347 }
3348 }
3349 }
3350
3351
3352##################################################
bdf36f7c
JH
3353# Check for redis #
3354##################################################
9a8a6839 3355if (defined $parm_lookups{redis})
bdf36f7c
JH
3356 {
3357 if (system("redis-server -v 2>/dev/null >/dev/null") == 0)
3358 {
3359 print "The redis-server command works\n";
9a8a6839 3360 $parm_running{redis} = ' ';
bdf36f7c
JH
3361 }
3362 else
3363 {
3364 print "The redis-server command failed: assume Redis not installed\n";
3365 }
3366 }
3367
3368##################################################
151b83f8
PH
3369# Test for the basic requirements #
3370##################################################
3371
3372# This test suite assumes that Exim has been built with at least the "usual"
3373# set of routers, transports, and lookups. Ensure that this is so.
3374
9a8a6839 3375$missing = '';
151b83f8 3376
9a8a6839 3377$missing .= " Lookup: lsearch\n" if (!defined $parm_lookups{lsearch});
151b83f8 3378
9a8a6839
HSHR
3379$missing .= " Router: accept\n" if (!defined $parm_routers{accept});
3380$missing .= " Router: dnslookup\n" if (!defined $parm_routers{dnslookup});
3381$missing .= " Router: manualroute\n" if (!defined $parm_routers{manualroute});
3382$missing .= " Router: redirect\n" if (!defined $parm_routers{redirect});
151b83f8 3383
9a8a6839
HSHR
3384$missing .= " Transport: appendfile\n" if (!defined $parm_transports{appendfile});
3385$missing .= " Transport: autoreply\n" if (!defined $parm_transports{autoreply});
3386$missing .= " Transport: pipe\n" if (!defined $parm_transports{pipe});
3387$missing .= " Transport: smtp\n" if (!defined $parm_transports{smtp});
151b83f8 3388
9a8a6839 3389if ($missing ne '')
151b83f8
PH
3390 {
3391 print "\n";
3392 print "** Many features can be included or excluded from Exim binaries.\n";
3393 print "** This test suite requires that Exim is built to contain a certain\n";
3394 print "** set of basic facilities. It seems that some of these are missing\n";
3395 print "** from the binary that is under test, so the test cannot proceed.\n";
3396 print "** The missing facilities are:\n";
3397 print "$missing";
3398 die "** Test script abandoned\n";
3399 }
3400
3401
3402##################################################
3403# Check for the auxiliary programs #
3404##################################################
3405
3406# These are always required:
3407
3408for $prog ("cf", "checkaccess", "client", "client-ssl", "client-gnutls",
3409 "fakens", "iefbr14", "server")
3410 {
9a8a6839
HSHR
3411 next if ($prog eq "client-ssl" && !defined $parm_support{OpenSSL});
3412 next if ($prog eq "client-gnutls" && !defined $parm_support{GnuTLS});
151b83f8
PH
3413 if (!-e "bin/$prog")
3414 {
3415 print "\n";
3416 print "** bin/$prog does not exist. Have you run ./configure and make?\n";
3417 die "** Test script abandoned\n";
3418 }
3419 }
3420
3421# If the "loaded" binary is missing, we cut out tests for ${dlfunc. It isn't
3422# compiled on systems where we don't know how to. However, if Exim does not
3423# have that functionality compiled, we needn't bother.
3424
3425$dlfunc_deleted = 0;
9a8a6839 3426if (defined $parm_support{Expand_dlfunc} && !-e 'bin/loaded')
151b83f8 3427 {
9a8a6839 3428 delete $parm_support{Expand_dlfunc};
151b83f8
PH
3429 $dlfunc_deleted = 1;
3430 }
3431
3432
3433##################################################
3434# Find environmental details #
3435##################################################
3436
3437# Find the caller of this program.
3438
3439($parm_caller,$pwpw,$parm_caller_uid,$parm_caller_gid,$pwquota,$pwcomm,
eeeda78a 3440 $parm_caller_gecos, $parm_caller_home) = getpwuid($>);
151b83f8
PH
3441
3442$pwpw = $pwpw; # Kill Perl warnings
3443$pwquota = $pwquota;
3444$pwcomm = $pwcomm;
151b83f8
PH
3445
3446$parm_caller_group = getgrgid($parm_caller_gid);
3447
42ec9880 3448print "Program caller is $parm_caller ($parm_caller_uid), whose group is $parm_caller_group ($parm_caller_gid)\n";
151b83f8
PH
3449print "Home directory is $parm_caller_home\n";
3450
5f122889
PP
3451unless (defined $parm_eximgroup)
3452 {
3453 print "Unable to derive \$parm_eximgroup.\n";
3454 die "** ABANDONING.\n";
01c59460
JH
3455 }
3456
3457if ($parm_caller_home eq $parm_cwd)
3458 {
3459 print "will confuse working dir with homedir; change homedir\n";
3460 die "** ABANDONING.\n";
5f122889
PP
3461 }
3462
151b83f8
PH
3463print "You need to be in the Exim group to run these tests. Checking ...";
3464
3465if (`groups` =~ /\b\Q$parm_eximgroup\E\b/)
3466 {
3467 print " OK\n";
3468 }
3469else
3470 {
3471 print "\nOh dear, you are not in the Exim group.\n";
3472 die "** Testing abandoned.\n";
3473 }
3474
3475# Find this host's IP addresses - there may be many, of course, but we keep
3476# one of each type (IPv4 and IPv6).
5c03403d 3477#XXX it would be good to avoid non-UP interfaces
151b83f8 3478
bb660b56
HSHR
3479open(IFCONFIG, '-|', (grep { -x "$_/ip" } split /:/, $ENV{PATH}) ? 'ip address' : 'ifconfig -a')
3480 or die "** Cannot run 'ip address' or 'ifconfig -a'\n";
d63a9563 3481while (not ($parm_ipv4 and $parm_ipv6) and defined($_ = <IFCONFIG>))
151b83f8 3482 {
39e69de6 3483 if (/^(?:[0-9]+: )?([a-z0-9]+): /) { $ifname = $1; }
40e3c5bf 3484
157609cd 3485 if (not $parm_ipv4 and /^\s*inet(?:\saddr(?:ess))?:?\s*(\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+)(?:\/\d+)?\s/i)
151b83f8 3486 {
dc8380bb 3487 # It would be nice to be able to vary the /16 used for manyhome; we could take
3cbde9b9
JH
3488 # an option to runtest used here - but we'd also have to pass it on to fakens.
3489 # Possibly an environment variable?
8af2888b 3490 next if $1 eq '0.0.0.0' or $1 =~ /^(?:127|10\.250)\./;
d63a9563 3491 $parm_ipv4 = $1;
151b83f8
PH
3492 }
3493
22c3450e 3494 if ( (not $parm_ipv6 or $parm_ipv6 =~ /%/)
1d717e1c 3495 and /^\s*inet6(?:\saddr(?:ess))?:?\s*([abcdef\d:]+)(?:%[^ \/]+)?(?:\/\d+)?/i)
151b83f8 3496 {
39e69de6 3497 next if $1 eq '::' or $1 eq '::1' or $1 =~ /^ff00/i or $1 =~ /^fe80::1/i;
d63a9563 3498 $parm_ipv6 = $1;
40e3c5bf 3499 if ($1 =~ /^fe80/i) { $parm_ipv6 .= '%' . $ifname; }
151b83f8
PH
3500 }
3501 }
3502close(IFCONFIG);
3503
3504# Use private IP addresses if there are no public ones.
3505
151b83f8
PH
3506# If either type of IP address is missing, we need to set the value to
3507# something other than empty, because that wrecks the substitutions. The value
3508# is reflected, so use a meaningful string. Set appropriate options for the
3509# "server" command. In practice, however, many tests assume 127.0.0.1 is
3510# available, so things will go wrong if there is no IPv4 address. The lack
3511# of IPV4 or IPv6 can be simulated by command options, which force $have_ipv4
3512# and $have_ipv6 false.
3513
d63a9563 3514if (not $parm_ipv4)
151b83f8
PH
3515 {
3516 $have_ipv4 = 0;
3517 $parm_ipv4 = "<no IPv4 address found>";
3518 $server_opts .= " -noipv4";
3519 }
3520elsif ($have_ipv4 == 0)
3521 {
3522 $parm_ipv4 = "<IPv4 testing disabled>";
3523 $server_opts .= " -noipv4";
3524 }
3525else
3526 {
9a8a6839 3527 $parm_running{IPv4} = " ";
151b83f8
PH
3528 }
3529
d63a9563 3530if (not $parm_ipv6)
151b83f8
PH
3531 {
3532 $have_ipv6 = 0;
3533 $parm_ipv6 = "<no IPv6 address found>";
3534 $server_opts .= " -noipv6";
9a8a6839 3535 delete($parm_support{IPv6});
151b83f8
PH
3536 }
3537elsif ($have_ipv6 == 0)
3538 {
3539 $parm_ipv6 = "<IPv6 testing disabled>";
3540 $server_opts .= " -noipv6";
9a8a6839 3541 delete($parm_support{IPv6});
151b83f8 3542 }
9a8a6839 3543elsif (!defined $parm_support{IPv6})
151b83f8
PH
3544 {
3545 $have_ipv6 = 0;
3546 $parm_ipv6 = "<no IPv6 support in Exim binary>";
3547 $server_opts .= " -noipv6";
3548 }
3549else
3550 {
9a8a6839 3551 $parm_running{IPv6} = " ";
151b83f8
PH
3552 }
3553
3554print "IPv4 address is $parm_ipv4\n";
3555print "IPv6 address is $parm_ipv6\n";
cef8a6ef 3556$parm_ipv6 =~ /^[^%\/]*/;
40e3c5bf
JH
3557# drop any %scope from the ipv6, for some uses
3558($parm_ipv6_stripped = $parm_ipv6) =~ s/%.*//g;
151b83f8 3559
75758eeb
PH
3560# For munging test output, we need the reversed IP addresses.
3561
9a8a6839 3562$parm_ipv4r = ($parm_ipv4 !~ /^\d/)? '' :
75758eeb
PH
3563 join(".", reverse(split /\./, $parm_ipv4));
3564
1b781f48 3565$parm_ipv6r = $parm_ipv6; # Appropriate if not in use
75758eeb
PH
3566if ($parm_ipv6 =~ /^[\da-f]/)
3567 {
40e3c5bf 3568 my(@comps) = split /:/, $parm_ipv6_stripped;
75758eeb
PH
3569 my(@nibbles);
3570 foreach $comp (@comps)
3571 {
3572 push @nibbles, sprintf("%lx", hex($comp) >> 8);
3573 push @nibbles, sprintf("%lx", hex($comp) & 0xff);
3574 }
3575 $parm_ipv6r = join(".", reverse(@nibbles));
3576 }
3577
151b83f8
PH
3578# Find the host name, fully qualified.
3579
3580chomp($temp = `hostname`);
d36e39d7 3581die "'hostname' didn't return anything\n" unless defined $temp and length $temp;
32c5107f
JH
3582if ($temp =~ /\./)
3583 {
3584 $parm_hostname = $temp;
3585 }
3586else
3587 {
3588 $parm_hostname = (gethostbyname($temp))[0];
3589 $parm_hostname = "no.host.name.found" unless defined $parm_hostname and length $parm_hostname;
3590 }
151b83f8
PH
3591print "Hostname is $parm_hostname\n";
3592
3593if ($parm_hostname !~ /\./)
3594 {
3595 print "\n*** Host name is not fully qualified: this may cause problems ***\n\n";
3596 }
3597
05e0ef26
TL
3598if ($parm_hostname =~ /[[:upper:]]/)
3599 {
3600 print "\n*** Host name has upper case characters: this may cause problems ***\n\n";
3601 }
3602
4a7ad62b
JH
3603if ($parm_hostname =~ /\.example\.com$/)
3604 {
3605 die "\n*** Host name ends in .example.com; this conflicts with the testsuite use of that domain.\n"
3606 . " Please change the host's name (or comment out this check, and fail several testcases)\n";
3607 }
3608
151b83f8
PH
3609
3610
3611##################################################
3612# Create a testing version of Exim #
3613##################################################
3614
3615# We want to be able to run Exim with a variety of configurations. Normally,
3616# the use of -C to change configuration causes Exim to give up its root
3617# privilege (unless the caller is exim or root). For these tests, we do not
3618# want this to happen. Also, we want Exim to know that it is running in its
3619# test harness.
3620
3621# We achieve this by copying the binary and patching it as we go. The new
3622# binary knows it is a testing copy, and it allows -C and -D without loss of
3623# privilege. Clearly, this file is dangerous to have lying around on systems
3624# where there are general users with login accounts. To protect against this,
3625# we put the new binary in a special directory that is accessible only to the
3626# caller of this script, who is known to have sudo root privilege from the test
3627# that was done above. Furthermore, we ensure that the binary is deleted at the
3628# end of the test. First ensure the directory exists.
3629
050514b5
JH
3630if (-d "eximdir")
3631 { unlink "eximdir/exim"; } # Just in case
3632else
3633 {
3634 mkdir("eximdir", 0710) || die "** Unable to mkdir $parm_cwd/eximdir: $!\n";
3635 system("sudo chgrp $parm_eximgroup eximdir");
3636 }
151b83f8
PH
3637
3638# The construction of the patched binary must be done as root, so we use
3639# a separate script. As well as indicating that this is a test-harness binary,
3640# the version number is patched to "x.yz" so that its length is always the
3641# same. Otherwise, when it appears in Received: headers, it affects the length
3642# of the message, which breaks certain comparisons.
3643
3644die "** Unable to make patched exim: $!\n"
3645 if (system("sudo ./patchexim $parm_exim") != 0);
3646
3647# From this point on, exits from the program must go via the subroutine
3648# tests_exit(), so that suitable cleaning up can be done when required.
3649# Arrange to catch interrupting signals, to assist with this.
3650
9a8a6839
HSHR
3651$SIG{INT} = \&inthandler;
3652$SIG{PIPE} = \&pipehandler;
151b83f8
PH
3653
3654# For some tests, we need another copy of the binary that is setuid exim rather
3655# than root.
3656
050514b5 3657system("sudo cp eximdir/exim eximdir/exim_exim;" .
151b83f8
PH
3658 "sudo chown $parm_eximuser eximdir/exim_exim;" .
3659 "sudo chgrp $parm_eximgroup eximdir/exim_exim;" .
050514b5 3660 "sudo chmod 06755 eximdir/exim_exim");
151b83f8 3661
151b83f8
PH
3662##################################################
3663# Make copies of utilities we might need #
3664##################################################
3665
3666# Certain of the tests make use of some of Exim's utilities. We do not need
3667# to be root to copy these.
3668
1ca9f507 3669($parm_exim_dir) = $parm_exim =~ m?^(.*)/exim?;
151b83f8
PH
3670
3671$dbm_build_deleted = 0;
9a8a6839 3672if (defined $parm_lookups{dbm} &&
151b83f8
PH
3673 system("cp $parm_exim_dir/exim_dbmbuild eximdir") != 0)
3674 {
9a8a6839 3675 delete $parm_lookups{dbm};
151b83f8
PH
3676 $dbm_build_deleted = 1;
3677 }
3678
3679if (system("cp $parm_exim_dir/exim_dumpdb eximdir") != 0)
3680 {
3681 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to make a copy of exim_dumpdb: $!");
3682 }
3683
3684if (system("cp $parm_exim_dir/exim_lock eximdir") != 0)
3685 {
3686 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to make a copy of exim_lock: $!");
3687 }
3688
3689if (system("cp $parm_exim_dir/exinext eximdir") != 0)
3690 {
3691 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to make a copy of exinext: $!");
3692 }
3693
f3f065bb
PH
3694if (system("cp $parm_exim_dir/exigrep eximdir") != 0)
3695 {
3696 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to make a copy of exigrep: $!");
3697 }
3698
3699if (system("cp $parm_exim_dir/eximstats eximdir") != 0)
3700 {
3701 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to make a copy of eximstats: $!");
3702 }
3703
fd1e42c5
HSHR
3704# Collect some version information
3705print '-' x 78, "\n";
02721dcd 3706print "Perl version for runtest: $]\n";
fd1e42c5
HSHR
3707foreach (map { "./eximdir/$_" } qw(exigrep exinext eximstats)) {
3708 # fold (or unfold?) multiline output into a one-liner
3709 print join(', ', map { chomp; $_ } `$_ --version`), "\n";
3710}
3711print '-' x 78, "\n";
3712
151b83f8
PH
3713
3714##################################################
3715# Check that the Exim user can access stuff #
3716##################################################
3717
3718# We delay this test till here so that we can check access to the actual test
3719# binary. This will be needed when Exim re-exec's itself to do deliveries.
3720
3721print "Exim user is $parm_eximuser ($parm_exim_uid)\n";
3722print "Exim group is $parm_eximgroup ($parm_exim_gid)\n";
a56f166d
JJ
3723
3724if ($parm_caller_uid eq $parm_exim_uid) {
3725 tests_exit(-1, "Exim user ($parm_eximuser,$parm_exim_uid) cannot be "
3726 ."the same as caller ($parm_caller,$parm_caller_uid)");
3727}
b43517ed
JH
3728if ($parm_caller_gid eq $parm_exim_gid) {
3729 tests_exit(-1, "Exim group ($parm_eximgroup,$parm_exim_gid) cannot be "
3730 ."the same as caller's ($parm_caller) group as it confuses "
3731 ."results analysis");
3732}
a56f166d 3733
151b83f8
PH
3734print "The Exim user needs access to the test suite directory. Checking ...";
3735
3736if (($rc = system("sudo bin/checkaccess $parm_cwd/eximdir/exim $parm_eximuser $parm_eximgroup")) != 0)
3737 {
3738 my($why) = "unknown failure $rc";
3739 $rc >>= 8;
3740 $why = "Couldn't find user \"$parm_eximuser\"" if $rc == 1;
3741 $why = "Couldn't find group \"$parm_eximgroup\"" if $rc == 2;
3742 $why = "Couldn't read auxiliary group list" if $rc == 3;
3743 $why = "Couldn't get rid of auxiliary groups" if $rc == 4;
3744 $why = "Couldn't set gid" if $rc == 5;
3745 $why = "Couldn't set uid" if $rc == 6;
3746 $why = "Couldn't open \"$parm_cwd/eximdir/exim\"" if $rc == 7;
3747 print "\n** $why\n";
3748 tests_exit(-1, "$parm_eximuser cannot access the test suite directory");
3749 }
3750else
3751 {
3752 print " OK\n";
3753 }
3754
9b25e4a9
HSHR
3755tests_exit(-1, "Failed to unlink $log_summary_filename: $!")
3756 if not unlink($log_summary_filename) and -e $log_summary_filename;
151b83f8
PH
3757
3758##################################################
3759# Create a list of available tests #
3760##################################################
3761
3762# The scripts directory contains a number of subdirectories whose names are
3763# of the form 0000-xxxx, 1100-xxxx, 2000-xxxx, etc. Each set of tests apart
3764# from the first requires certain optional features to be included in the Exim
3765# binary. These requirements are contained in a file called "REQUIRES" within
3766# the directory. We scan all these tests, discarding those that cannot be run
3767# because the current binary does not support the right facilities, and also
3768# those that are outside the numerical range selected.
3769
4d8393c0
HSHR
3770printf "\nWill run %d tests between %d and %d for flavour %s\n",
3771 scalar(@wanted), $wanted[0], $wanted[-1], $flavour;
3772
151b83f8
PH
3773print "Omitting \${dlfunc expansion tests (loadable module not present)\n"
3774 if $dlfunc_deleted;
3775print "Omitting dbm tests (unable to copy exim_dbmbuild)\n"
3776 if $dbm_build_deleted;
3777
9e146c9f 3778
9b25e4a9
HSHR
3779my @test_dirs = grep { not /^CVS$/ } map { basename $_ } glob 'scripts/*'
3780 or die tests_exit(-1, "Failed to find test scripts in 'scripts/*`: $!");
9e146c9f
PH
3781
3782# Scan for relevant tests
4d8393c0
HSHR
3783# HS12: Needs to be reworked.
3784DIR: for (my $i = 0; $i < @test_dirs; $i++)
151b83f8
PH
3785 {
3786 my($testdir) = $test_dirs[$i];
3787 my($wantthis) = 1;
3788
151b83f8
PH
3789 print ">>Checking $testdir\n" if $debug;
3790
3791 # Skip this directory if the first test is equal or greater than the first
3792 # test in the next directory.
3793
9b25e4a9 3794 next DIR if ($i < @test_dirs - 1) &&
4d8393c0 3795 ($wanted[0] >= substr($test_dirs[$i+1], 0, 4));
151b83f8
PH
3796
3797 # No need to carry on if the end test is less than the first test in this
3798 # subdirectory.
3799
4d8393c0 3800 last DIR if $wanted[-1] < substr($testdir, 0, 4);
151b83f8
PH
3801
3802 # Check requirements, if any.
3803
9b25e4a9 3804 if (open(my $requires, "scripts/$testdir/REQUIRES"))
151b83f8 3805 {
9b25e4a9 3806 while (<$requires>)
151b83f8
PH
3807 {
3808 next if /^\s*$/;
3809 s/\s+$//;
3810 if (/^support (.*)$/)
3811 {
3812 if (!defined $parm_support{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3813 }
3814 elsif (/^running (.*)$/)
3815 {
3816 if (!defined $parm_running{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3817 }
3818 elsif (/^lookup (.*)$/)
3819 {
3820 if (!defined $parm_lookups{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3821 }
3822 elsif (/^authenticators? (.*)$/)
3823 {
3824 if (!defined $parm_authenticators{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3825 }
3826 elsif (/^router (.*)$/)
3827 {
3828 if (!defined $parm_routers{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3829 }
3830 elsif (/^transport (.*)$/)
3831 {
3832 if (!defined $parm_transports{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3833 }
c11d665d
JH
3834 elsif (/^malware (.*)$/)
3835 {
3836 if (!defined $parm_malware{$1}) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3837 }
4e6ad671
JH
3838 elsif (/^feature (.*)$/)
3839 {
3840 # move to a subroutine?
3841 my $eximinfo = "$parm_exim -C $parm_cwd/test-config -DDIR=$parm_cwd -bP macro $1";
3842
3843 open (IN, "$parm_cwd/confs/0000") ||
3844 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open $parm_cwd/confs/0000: $!\n");
3845 open (OUT, ">test-config") ||
3846 tests_exit(-1, "Couldn't open test-config: $!\n");
3847 while (<IN>)
3848 {
3849 do_substitute($testno);
3850 print OUT;
3851 }
3852 close(IN);
3853 close(OUT);
3854
3855 system($eximinfo . " >/dev/null 2>&1");
3856 if ($? != 0) {
3857 unlink("$parm_cwd/test-config");
3858 $wantthis = 0;
3859 $_ = "feature $1";
3860 last;
3861 }
3862 unlink("$parm_cwd/test-config");
3863 }
22c3450e
JH
3864 elsif (/^ipv6-non-linklocal/)
3865 {
3866 if ($parm_ipv6 =~ /%/) { $wantthis = 0; last; }
3867 }
151b83f8
PH
3868 else
3869 {
3870 tests_exit(-1, "Unknown line in \"scripts/$testdir/REQUIRES\": \"$_\"");
3871 }
3872 }
151b83f8
PH
3873 }
3874 else
3875 {
3876 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open \"scripts/$testdir/REQUIRES\": $!")
3877 unless $!{ENOENT};
3878 }
3879
3880 # Loop if we do not want the tests in this subdirectory.
3881
3882 if (!$wantthis)
3883 {
3884 chomp;
3885 print "Omitting tests in $testdir (missing $_)\n";
151b83f8
PH
3886 }
3887
3888 # We want the tests from this subdirectory, provided they are in the
3889 # range that was selected.
3890
4d8393c0 3891 @testlist = grep { $_ ~~ @wanted } grep { /^\d+(?:\.\d+)?$/ } map { basename $_ } glob "scripts/$testdir/*";
9b25e4a9
HSHR
3892 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to read test scripts from `scripts/$testdir/*': $!")
3893 if not @testlist;
151b83f8
PH
3894
3895 foreach $test (@testlist)
3896 {
4d8393c0 3897 if (!$wantthis)
a4ecb6a7
JH
3898 {
3899 log_test($log_summary_filename, $test, '.');
3900 }
3901 else
3902 {
3903 push @test_list, "$testdir/$test";
3904 }
151b83f8
PH
3905 }
3906 }
3907
4d8393c0 3908print ">>Test List:\n", join "\n", @test_list, '' if $debug;
151b83f8
PH
3909
3910
3911##################################################
3912# Munge variable auxiliary data #
3913##################################################
3914
3915# Some of the auxiliary data files have to refer to the current testing
3916# directory and other parameter data. The generic versions of these files are
3917# stored in the aux-var-src directory. At this point, we copy each of them
3918# to the aux-var directory, making appropriate substitutions. There aren't very
3919# many of them, so it's easiest just to do this every time. Ensure the mode
3920# is standardized, as this path is used as a test for the ${stat: expansion.
3921
3922# A similar job has to be done for the files in the dnszones-src directory, to
3923# make the fake DNS zones for testing. Most of the zone files are copied to
3924# files of the same name, but db.ipv4.V4NET and db.ipv6.V6NET use the testing
3925# networks that are defined by parameter.
3926
3927foreach $basedir ("aux-var", "dnszones")
3928 {
3929 system("sudo rm -rf $parm_cwd/$basedir");
3930 mkdir("$parm_cwd/$basedir", 0777);
3931 chmod(0755, "$parm_cwd/$basedir");
3932
3933 opendir(AUX, "$parm_cwd/$basedir-src") ||
3934 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to opendir $parm_cwd/$basedir-src: $!");
3935 my(@filelist) = readdir(AUX);
3936 close(AUX);
3937
3938 foreach $file (@filelist)
3939 {
3940 my($outfile) = $file;
3941 next if $file =~ /^\./;
3942
3943 if ($file eq "db.ip4.V4NET")
3944 {
3945 $outfile = "db.ip4.$parm_ipv4_test_net";
3946 }
3947 elsif ($file eq "db.ip6.V6NET")
3948 {
3949 my(@nibbles) = reverse(split /\s*/, $parm_ipv6_test_net);
3950 $" = '.';
3951 $outfile = "db.ip6.@nibbles";
3952 $" = ' ';
3953 }
3954
3955 print ">>Copying $basedir-src/$file to $basedir/$outfile\n" if $debug;
3956 open(IN, "$parm_cwd/$basedir-src/$file") ||
3957 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $parm_cwd/$basedir-src/$file: $!");
3958 open(OUT, ">$parm_cwd/$basedir/$outfile") ||
3959 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $parm_cwd/$basedir/$outfile: $!");
3960 while (<IN>)
3961 {
3962 do_substitute(0);
3963 print OUT;
3964 }
3965 close(IN);
3966 close(OUT);
3967 }
3968 }
3969
d40f27c3
JH
3970# Set a user's shell, distinguishable from /bin/sh
3971
9a8a6839
HSHR
3972symlink('/bin/sh' => 'aux-var/sh');
3973$ENV{SHELL} = $parm_shell = "$parm_cwd/aux-var/sh";
151b83f8
PH
3974
3975##################################################
3976# Create fake DNS zones for this host #
3977##################################################
3978
3979# There are fixed zone files for 127.0.0.1 and ::1, but we also want to be
3980# sure that there are forward and reverse registrations for this host, using
3981# its real IP addresses. Dynamically created zone files achieve this.
3982
3983if ($have_ipv4 || $have_ipv6)
3984 {
3985 my($shortname,$domain) = $parm_hostname =~ /^([^.]+)(.*)/;
3986 open(OUT, ">$parm_cwd/dnszones/db$domain") ||
3987 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $parm_cwd/dnszones/db$domain: $!");
3988 print OUT "; This is a dynamically constructed fake zone file.\n" .
3989 "; The following line causes fakens to return PASS_ON\n" .
3990 "; for queries that it cannot answer\n\n" .
3991 "PASS ON NOT FOUND\n\n";
3992 print OUT "$shortname A $parm_ipv4\n" if $have_ipv4;
40e3c5bf 3993 print OUT "$shortname AAAA $parm_ipv6_stripped\n" if $have_ipv6;
151b83f8
PH
3994 print OUT "\n; End\n";
3995 close(OUT);
3996 }
3997
3998if ($have_ipv4 && $parm_ipv4 ne "127.0.0.1")
3999 {
4000 my(@components) = $parm_ipv4 =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)/;
218a6f15
JH
4001
4002 if ($components[0]=='10')
4003 {
4004 open(OUT, ">>$parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip4.$components[0]") ||
4005 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open $parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip4.$components[0]: $!");
4006 print OUT "$components[3].$components[2].$components[1] PTR $parm_hostname.\n\n";
4007 close(OUT);
2dc4c388 4008 }
218a6f15
JH
4009 else
4010 {
4011 open(OUT, ">$parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip4.$components[0]") ||
4012 tests_exit(-1,
4013 "Failed to open $parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip4.$components[0]: $!");
4014 print OUT "; This is a dynamically constructed fake zone file.\n" .
4015 "; The zone is $components[0].in-addr.arpa.\n\n" .
4016 "$components[3].$components[2].$components[1] PTR $parm_hostname.\n\n" .
4017 "; End\n";
4018 close(OUT);
4019 }
151b83f8
PH
4020 }
4021
40e3c5bf 4022if ($have_ipv6 && $parm_ipv6_stripped ne "::1")
151b83f8 4023 {
40e3c5bf 4024 my($exp_v6) = $parm_ipv6_stripped;
6f99d4d9 4025 $exp_v6 =~ s/[^:]//g;
40e3c5bf 4026 if ( $parm_ipv6_stripped =~ /^([^:].+)::$/ ) {
6f99d4d9 4027 $exp_v6 = $1 . ':0' x (9-length($exp_v6));
40e3c5bf 4028 } elsif ( $parm_ipv6_stripped =~ /^(.+)::(.+)$/ ) {
6f99d4d9 4029 $exp_v6 = $1 . ':0' x (8-length($exp_v6)) . ':' . $2;
40e3c5bf 4030 } elsif ( $parm_ipv6_stripped =~ /^::(.+[^:])$/ ) {
6f99d4d9 4031 $exp_v6 = '0:' x (9-length($exp_v6)) . $1;
d37842eb 4032 } else {
40e3c5bf 4033 $exp_v6 = $parm_ipv6_stripped;
6f99d4d9
JH
4034 }
4035 my(@components) = split /:/, $exp_v6;
151b83f8 4036 my(@nibbles) = reverse (split /\s*/, shift @components);
9a8a6839 4037 my($sep) = '';
151b83f8
PH
4038
4039 $" = ".";
4040 open(OUT, ">$parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip6.@nibbles") ||
4041 tests_exit(-1,
4042 "Failed to open $parm_cwd/dnszones/db.ip6.@nibbles: $!");
4043 print OUT "; This is a dynamically constructed fake zone file.\n" .
4044 "; The zone is @nibbles.ip6.arpa.\n\n";
4045
4046 @components = reverse @components;
4047 foreach $c (@components)
4048 {
4049 $c = "0$c" until $c =~ /^..../;
4050 @nibbles = reverse(split /\s*/, $c);
4051 print OUT "$sep@nibbles";
4052 $sep = ".";
4053 }
4054
4055 print OUT " PTR $parm_hostname.\n\n; End\n";
4056 close(OUT);
4057 $" = " ";
4058 }
4059
4060
4061
4062##################################################
4063# Create lists of mailboxes and message logs #
4064##################################################
4065
4066# We use these lists to check that a test has created the expected files. It
4067# should be faster than looking for the file each time. For mailboxes, we have
4068# to scan a complete subtree, in order to handle maildirs. For msglogs, there
4069# is just a flat list of files.
4070
4071@oldmails = list_files_below("mail");
4072opendir(DIR, "msglog") || tests_exit(-1, "Failed to opendir msglog: $!");
4073@oldmsglogs = readdir(DIR);
4074closedir(DIR);
4075
4076
4077
4078##################################################
4079# Run the required tests #
4080##################################################
4081
4082# Each test script contains a number of tests, separated by a line that
4083# contains ****. We open input from the terminal so that we can read responses
4084# to prompts.
4085
0b9ead6d
HSHR
4086if (not $force_continue) {
4087 # runtest needs to interact if we're not in continue
4088 # mode. It does so by communicate to /dev/tty
9b25e4a9
HSHR
4089 open(T, '<', '/dev/tty') or tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open /dev/tty: $!");
4090 print "\nPress RETURN to run the tests: ";
4091 <T>;
0b9ead6d
HSHR
4092}
4093
151b83f8 4094
151b83f8
PH
4095foreach $test (@test_list)
4096 {
9b25e4a9
HSHR
4097 state $lasttestdir = '';
4098
4099 local $lineno = 0;
4100 local $commandno = 0;
4101 local $subtestno = 0;
4102 local $sortlog = 0;
4103
28e8a0f7 4104 (local $testno = $test) =~ s|.*/||;
151b83f8 4105
9b25e4a9
HSHR
4106 # Leaving traces in the process table and in the environment
4107 # gives us a chance to identify hanging processes (exim daemons)
4108 local $0 = "[runtest $testno]";
4109 local $ENV{EXIM_TEST_NUMBER} = $testno;
4110
4111 my $gnutls = 0;
4112 my $docheck = 1;
4113 my $thistestdir = substr($test, 0, -5);
151b83f8 4114
df613eb4
HSHR
4115 $dynamic_socket->close() if $dynamic_socket;
4116
151b83f8
PH
4117 if ($lasttestdir ne $thistestdir)
4118 {
4119 $gnutls = 0;
4120 if (-s "scripts/$thistestdir/REQUIRES")
4121 {
9b25e4a9 4122 my $indent = '';
151b83f8 4123 print "\n>>> The following tests require: ";
9b25e4a9
HSHR
4124 open(my $requires, '<', "scripts/$thistestdir/REQUIRES") ||
4125 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open scripts/$thistestdir/REQUIRES: $!");
4126 while (<$requires>)
151b83f8
PH
4127 {
4128 $gnutls = 1 if /^support GnuTLS/;
4129 print $indent, $_;
4130 $indent = ">>> ";
4131 }
151b83f8 4132 }
9b25e4a9 4133 $lasttestdir = $thistestdir;
151b83f8 4134 }
151b83f8
PH
4135
4136 # Remove any debris in the spool directory and the test-mail directory
4137 # and also the files for collecting stdout and stderr. Then put back
4138 # the test-mail directory for appendfile deliveries.
4139
4140 system "sudo /bin/rm -rf spool test-*";
4141 system "mkdir test-mail 2>/dev/null";
4142
4143 # A privileged Exim will normally make its own spool directory, but some of
4144 # the tests run in unprivileged modes that don't always work if the spool
4145 # directory isn't already there. What is more, we want anybody to be able
4146 # to read it in order to find the daemon's pid.
4147
4148 system "mkdir spool; " .
4149 "sudo chown $parm_eximuser:$parm_eximgroup spool; " .
4150 "sudo chmod 0755 spool";
4151
4152 # Empty the cache that keeps track of things like message id mappings, and
4153 # set up the initial sequence strings.
4154
4155 undef %cache;
4156 $next_msgid = "aX";
f3f065bb 4157 $next_pid = 1234;
151b83f8
PH
4158 $next_port = 1111;
4159 $message_skip = 0;
4160 $msglog_skip = 0;
4161 $stderr_skip = 0;
4162 $stdout_skip = 0;
4163 $rmfiltertest = 0;
4164 $is_ipv6test = 0;
9a8a6839 4165 $TEST_STATE->{munge} = '';
151b83f8
PH
4166
4167 # Remove the associative arrays used to hold checked mail files and msglogs
4168
4169 undef %expected_mails;
4170 undef %expected_msglogs;
4171
4172 # Open the test's script
151b83f8
PH
4173 open(SCRIPT, "scripts/$test") ||
4174 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open \"scripts/$test\": $!");
770feb2f
TL
4175 # Run through the script once to set variables which should be global
4176 while (<SCRIPT>)
4177 {
4178 if (/^no_message_check/) { $message_skip = 1; next; }
4179 if (/^no_msglog_check/) { $msglog_skip = 1; next; }
4180 if (/^no_stderr_check/) { $stderr_skip = 1; next; }
4181 if (/^no_stdout_check/) { $stdout_skip = 1; next; }
4182 if (/^rmfiltertest/) { $rmfiltertest = 1; next; }
4183 if (/^sortlog/) { $sortlog = 1; next; }
b369d470 4184 if (/\bPORT_DYNAMIC\b/) { $dynamic_socket = Exim::Runtest::dynamic_socket(); next; }
770feb2f
TL
4185 }
4186 # Reset to beginning of file for per test interpreting/processing
4187 seek(SCRIPT, 0, 0);
151b83f8
PH
4188
4189 # The first line in the script must be a comment that is used to identify
4190 # the set of tests as a whole.
4191
4192 $_ = <SCRIPT>;
4193 $lineno++;
4194 tests_exit(-1, "Missing identifying comment at start of $test") if (!/^#/);
4195 printf("%s %s", (substr $test, 5), (substr $_, 2));
4196
4197 # Loop for each of the subtests within the script. The variable $server_pid
4198 # is used to remember the pid of a "server" process, for which we do not
4199 # wait until we have waited for a subsequent command.
4200
4201 local($server_pid) = 0;
4202 for ($commandno = 1; !eof SCRIPT; $commandno++)
4203 {
4204 # Skip further leading comments and blank lines, handle the flag setting
4205 # commands, and deal with tests for IP support.
4206
4207 while (<SCRIPT>)
4208 {
4209 $lineno++;
770feb2f
TL
4210 # Could remove these variable settings because they are already
4211 # set above, but doesn't hurt to leave them here.
151b83f8
PH
4212 if (/^no_message_check/) { $message_skip = 1; next; }
4213 if (/^no_msglog_check/) { $msglog_skip = 1; next; }
4214 if (/^no_stderr_check/) { $stderr_skip = 1; next; }
4215 if (/^no_stdout_check/) { $stdout_skip = 1; next; }
4216 if (/^rmfiltertest/) { $rmfiltertest = 1; next; }
4217 if (/^sortlog/) { $sortlog = 1; next; }
4218
21c28500
PH
4219 if (/^need_largefiles/)
4220 {
4221 next if $have_largefiles;
4222 print ">>> Large file support is needed for test $testno, but is not available: skipping\n";
4223 $docheck = 0; # don't check output
4224 undef $_; # pretend EOF
4225 last;
4226 }
4227
151b83f8
PH
4228 if (/^need_ipv4/)
4229 {
4230 next if $have_ipv4;
4231 print ">>> IPv4 is needed for test $testno, but is not available: skipping\n";
4232 $docheck = 0; # don't check output
4233 undef $_; # pretend EOF
4234 last;
4235 }
4236
4237 if (/^need_ipv6/)
4238 {
4239 if ($have_ipv6)
4240 {
4241 $is_ipv6test = 1;
4242 next;
4243 }
4244 print ">>> IPv6 is needed for test $testno, but is not available: skipping\n";
4245 $docheck = 0; # don't check output
4246 undef $_; # pretend EOF
4247 last;
4248 }
4249
4250 if (/^need_move_frozen_messages/)
4251 {
9edef117 4252 next if defined $parm_support{move_frozen_messages};
151b83f8
PH
4253 print ">>> move frozen message support is needed for test $testno, " .
4254 "but is not\n>>> available: skipping\n";
4255 $docheck = 0; # don't check output
4256 undef $_; # pretend EOF
4257 last;
4258 }
4259
4cc77633 4260 last unless /^(?:#(?!##\s)|\s*$)/;
151b83f8
PH
4261 }
4262 last if !defined $_; # Hit EOF
4263
4264 my($subtest_startline) = $lineno;
4265
59eaad2b
JH
4266 # Now run the command. The function returns 0 for an inline command,
4267 # 1 if a non-exim command was run and waited for, 2 if an exim
4268 # command was run and waited for, and 3 if a command
151b83f8
PH
4269 # was run and not waited for (usually a daemon or server startup).
4270
9a8a6839 4271 my($commandname) = '';
151b83f8 4272 my($expectrc) = 0;
1ca9f507 4273 my($rc, $run_extra) = run_command($testno, \$subtestno, \$expectrc, \$commandname, $TEST_STATE);
151b83f8
PH
4274 my($cmdrc) = $?;
4275
1ca9f507
PP
4276 if ($debug) {
4277 print ">> rc=$rc cmdrc=$cmdrc\n";
4278 if (defined $run_extra) {
4279 foreach my $k (keys %$run_extra) {
4280 my $v = defined $run_extra->{$k} ? qq!"$run_extra->{$k}"! : '<undef>';
4281 print ">> $k -> $v\n";
4282 }
4283 }
4284 }
4285 $run_extra = {} unless defined $run_extra;
4286 foreach my $k (keys %$run_extra) {
4287 if (exists $TEST_STATE->{$k}) {
4288 my $nv = defined $run_extra->{$k} ? qq!"$run_extra->{$k}"! : 'removed';
4289 print ">> override of $k; was $TEST_STATE->{$k}, now $nv\n" if $debug;
4290 }
4291 if (defined $run_extra->{$k}) {
4292 $TEST_STATE->{$k} = $run_extra->{$k};
4293 } elsif (exists $TEST_STATE->{$k}) {
4294 delete $TEST_STATE->{$k};
4295 }
4296 }
151b83f8
PH
4297
4298 # Hit EOF after an initial return code number
4299
4300 tests_exit(-1, "Unexpected EOF in script") if ($rc == 4);
4301
4302 # Carry on with the next command if we did not wait for this one. $rc == 0
4303 # if no subprocess was run; $rc == 3 if we started a process but did not
4304 # wait for it.
4305
4306 next if ($rc == 0 || $rc == 3);
4307
4308 # We ran and waited for a command. Check for the expected result unless
4309 # it died.
4310
4311 if ($cmdrc != $expectrc && !$sigpipehappened)
4312 {
4313 printf("** Command $commandno (\"$commandname\", starting at line $subtest_startline)\n");
4314 if (($cmdrc & 0xff) == 0)
4315 {
4316 printf("** Return code %d (expected %d)", $cmdrc/256, $expectrc/256);
4317 }
4318 elsif (($cmdrc & 0xff00) == 0)
4319 { printf("** Killed by signal %d", $cmdrc & 255); }
4320 else
4321 { printf("** Status %x", $cmdrc); }
4322
4323 for (;;)
4324 {
4be52428 4325 print "\nshow stdErr, show stdOut, Retry, Continue (without file comparison), or Quit? [Q] ";
825fae12 4326 $_ = $force_continue ? "c" : <T>;
151b83f8 4327 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/i;
a4ecb6a7
JH
4328 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
4329 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, "exit code unexpected");
4330 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
4331 }
d1cebc7f
JH
4332 if ($force_continue)
4333 {
eb04cefd
JH
4334 print "\nstdout tail:\n";
4335 print "==================>\n";
4336 system("tail -20 test-stdout");
d1cebc7f 4337 print "===================\n";
7b3d2d41 4338
eb04cefd
JH
4339 print "stderr tail:\n";
4340 print "==================>\n";
7b3d2d41
JH
4341 system("tail -30 test-stderr");
4342 print "===================\n";
4343
4344 print "stdout-server tail:\n";
4345 print "==================>\n";
4346 system("tail -20 test-stdout-server");
d1cebc7f 4347 print "===================\n";
7b3d2d41 4348
eecbe95e
JH
4349 print "stderr-server tail:\n";
4350 print "==================>\n";
7b3d2d41 4351 system("tail -30 test-stderr-server");
eecbe95e 4352 print "===================\n";
7b3d2d41 4353
d1cebc7f
JH
4354 print "... continue forced\n";
4355 }
4356
4be52428 4357 last if /^[rc]$/i;
151b83f8
PH
4358 if (/^e$/i)
4359 {
a31c0dcd 4360 system @more => 'test-stderr';
151b83f8
PH
4361 }
4362 elsif (/^o$/i)
4363 {
a31c0dcd 4364 system @more => 'test-stdout';
151b83f8
PH
4365 }
4366 }
4367
4be52428 4368 $retry = 1 if /^r$/i;
151b83f8
PH
4369 $docheck = 0;
4370 }
4371
4372 # If the command was exim, and a listening server is running, we can now
4373 # close its input, which causes us to wait for it to finish, which is why
4374 # we didn't close it earlier.
4375
4376 if ($rc == 2 && $server_pid != 0)
4377 {
4378 close SERVERCMD;
4379 $server_pid = 0;
4380 if ($? != 0)
4381 {
4382 if (($? & 0xff) == 0)
02b41d71
JH
4383 { printf("Server return code %d for test %d starting line %d", $?/256,
4384 $testno, $subtest_startline); }
151b83f8
PH
4385 elsif (($? & 0xff00) == 0)
4386 { printf("Server killed by signal %d", $? & 255); }
4387 else
4388 { printf("Server status %x", $?); }
4389
4390 for (;;)
4391 {
4be52428 4392 print "\nShow server stdout, Retry, Continue, or Quit? [Q] ";
825fae12 4393 $_ = $force_continue ? "c" : <T>;
151b83f8 4394 tests_exit(1) if /^q?$/i;
a4ecb6a7
JH
4395 if (/^c$/ && $force_continue) {
4396 log_failure($log_failed_filename, $testno, "exit code unexpected");
4397 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'F')
4398 }
825fae12 4399 print "... continue forced\n" if $force_continue;
4be52428 4400 last if /^[rc]$/i;
151b83f8
PH
4401
4402 if (/^s$/i)
4403 {
4404 open(S, "test-stdout-server") ||
4405 tests_exit(-1, "Failed to open test-stdout-server: $!");
4406 print while <S>;
4407 close(S);
4408 }
4409 }
4be52428 4410 $retry = 1 if /^r$/i;
151b83f8
PH
4411 }
4412 }
4413 }
4414
4415 close SCRIPT;
4416
4417 # The script has finished. Check the all the output that was generated. The
a4ecb6a7
JH
4418 # function returns 0 for a perfect pass, 1 if imperfect but ok, 2 if we should
4419 # rerun the test (the files # have been updated).
4420 # It does not return if the user responds Q to a prompt.
151b83f8 4421
4be52428
JH
4422 if ($retry)
4423 {
4424 $retry = '0';
4425 print (("#" x 79) . "\n");
4426 redo;
4427 }
4428
151b83f8
PH
4429 if ($docheck)
4430 {
1a13c13c 4431 sleep 1 if $slow;
a4ecb6a7
JH
4432 my $rc = check_output($TEST_STATE->{munge});
4433 log_test($log_summary_filename, $testno, 'P') if ($rc == 0);
4434 if ($rc < 2)
151b83f8 4435 {
a4ecb6a7 4436 print (" Script completed\n");
151b83f8
PH
4437 }
4438 else
4439 {
a4ecb6a7
JH
4440 print (("#" x 79) . "\n");
4441 redo;
151b83f8
PH
4442 }
4443 }
4444 }
4445
4446
4447##################################################
4448# Exit from the test script #
4449##################################################
4450
9b25e4a9 4451tests_exit(-1, "No runnable tests selected") if not @test_list;
151b83f8
PH
4452tests_exit(0);
4453
ffe0a357
HSHR
4454__END__
4455
4456=head1 NAME
4457
4458 runtest - run the exim testsuite
4459
4460=head1 SYNOPSIS
4461
4d8393c0 4462 runtest [exim-path] [options] [test0 [test1]]
ffe0a357
HSHR
4463
4464=head1 DESCRIPTION
4465
4466B<runtest> runs the Exim testsuite.
4467
4468=head1 OPTIONS
4469
4470For legacy reasons the options are not case sensitive.
4471
4472=over
4473
4d8393c0
HSHR
4474=item B<--continue>
4475
4476Do not stop for user interaction or on errors. (default: off)
4477
ffe0a357
HSHR
4478=item B<--debug>
4479
4480This option enables the output of debug information when running the
4481various test commands. (default: off)
4482
4483=item B<--diff>
4484
4485Use C<diff -u> for comparing the expected output with the produced
4d8393c0 4486output. (default: use a built-in routine)
ffe0a357 4487
4d8393c0 4488=item B<--flavor>|B<--flavour> I<flavour>
ffe0a357 4489
4d8393c0
HSHR
4490Override the expected results for results for a specific (OS) flavour.
4491(default: unused)
ffe0a357
HSHR
4492
4493=item B<--[no]ipv4>
4494
4495Skip IPv4 related setup and tests (default: use ipv4)
4496
4497=item B<--[no]ipv6>
4498
4499Skip IPv6 related setup and tests (default: use ipv6)
4500
4501=item B<--keep>
4502
4503Keep the various output files produced during a test run. (default: don't keep)
4504
4d8393c0
HSHR
4505=item B<--range> I<n0> I<n1>
4506
c9102412
HSHR
4507Run tests between (including) I<n0> and I<n1>. A "+" may be used to specify the "last
4508test available".
4d8393c0 4509
ffe0a357
HSHR
4510=item B<--slow>
4511
4d8393c0 4512Insert some delays to compensate for a slow host system. (default: off)
ffe0a357 4513
4d8393c0 4514=item B<--test> I<n>
ffe0a357 4515
4d8393c0 4516Run the specified test. This option may used multiple times.
ffe0a357 4517
4d8393c0 4518=item B<--update>
ffe0a357 4519
4d8393c0
HSHR
4520Automatically update the recorded (expected) data on mismatch. (default: off)
4521
4522=item B<--valgrind>
4523
4524Start Exim wrapped by I<valgrind>. (default: don't use valgrind)
ffe0a357
HSHR
4525
4526=back
4527
4528=cut
4529
4530
151b83f8 4531# End of runtest script