Commit 3a1a8c6d3cb46bfe65b715ddd8a3e0d7e27e1bf7

Stefano Lattarini 2012-06-22T11:40:39

tests: automatic re-execution works for non-POSIX shells too Some inferior shells are too greedy in parsing their input. If a non-POSIX Bourne shell (like Solaris 10 /bin/sh) was used to launch one of our test scripts, it would fail unconditionally, because it unexpectedly saw some (by it) unsupported constructs, notwithstanding such constructs being placed *after* the code implementing automatic test re-execution with a better shell. In conclusion, the shell bailed out like this: $ /bin/sh t/ar.sh $ t/ar.sh: syntax error at line 257: `is_newest_files=$' unexpected By moving all the potentially problematic code in a separate file, to be sourced only after the code for automatic re-execution with a better shell, we ensure that inferior shell cannot see such code by mistake. * defs: All code after automatic shell re-execution moved out ... * t/ax/test-init.sh: ... to this new file. * syntax-checks.mk (xdefs): Add it. * Makefile.am (dist_check_DATA): Add it. Also move in 'defs' from a less explicit 'check_DATA' declaration. (nodist_check_DATA): Move in 'defs-static' from a less explicit 'check_DATA' declaration. (check_DATA): Remove. * t/self-check-sanity.sh: Remove, it was actually too hacky and brittle, sanity-checking situations we don0t actually care about. * t/list-of-tests.mk: Adjust. * t/self-check-explicit-skips.sh: Adjust, and fix a botched heading comments while we are at it. * t/self-check-reexec.tap: Adjust. * t/self-check-cleanup.tap: Likewise. Signed-off-by: Stefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>