#!./perl -w # # testsuite for Data::Dumper # BEGIN { if ($ENV{PERL_CORE}){ chdir 't' if -d 't'; @INC = '../lib'; require Config; import Config; if ($Config{'extensions'} !~ /\bData\/Dumper\b/) { print "1..0 # Skip: Data::Dumper was not built\n"; exit 0; } } } # Since Perl 5.8.1 because otherwise hash ordering is really random. local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1; use Data::Dumper; use Config; my $Is_ebcdic = defined($Config{'ebcdic'}) && $Config{'ebcdic'} eq 'define'; $Data::Dumper::Pad = "#"; my $TMAX; my $XS; my $TNUM = 0; my $WANT = ''; sub TEST { my $string = shift; my $name = shift; my $t = eval $string; ++$TNUM; $t =~ s/([A-Z]+)\(0x[0-9a-f]+\)/$1(0xdeadbeef)/g if ($WANT =~ /deadbeef/); if ($Is_ebcdic) { # these data need massaging with non ascii character sets # because of hashing order differences $WANT = join("\n",sort(split(/\n/,$WANT))); $WANT =~ s/\,$//mg; $t = join("\n",sort(split(/\n/,$t))); $t =~ s/\,$//mg; } $name = $name ? " - $name" : ''; print( ($t eq $WANT and not $@) ? "ok $TNUM$name\n" : "not ok $TNUM$name\n--Expected--\n$WANT\n--Got--\n$@$t\n"); ++$TNUM; eval "$t"; print $@ ? "not ok $TNUM\n# \$@ says: $@\n" : "ok $TNUM\n"; $t = eval $string; ++$TNUM; $t =~ s/([A-Z]+)\(0x[0-9a-f]+\)/$1(0xdeadbeef)/g if ($WANT =~ /deadbeef/); if ($Is_ebcdic) { # here too there are hashing order differences $WANT = join("\n",sort(split(/\n/,$WANT))); $WANT =~ s/\,$//mg; $t = join("\n",sort(split(/\n/,$t))); $t =~ s/\,$//mg; } print( ($t eq $WANT and not $@) ? "ok $TNUM\n" : "not ok $TNUM\n--Expected--\n$WANT\n--Got--\n$@$t\n"); } sub SKIP_TEST { my $reason = shift; ++$TNUM; print "ok $TNUM # skip $reason\n"; ++$TNUM; print "ok $TNUM # skip $reason\n"; ++$TNUM; print "ok $TNUM # skip $reason\n"; } # Force Data::Dumper::Dump to use perl. We test Dumpxs explicitly by calling # it direct. Out here it lets us knobble the next if to test that the perl # only tests do work (and count correctly) $Data::Dumper::Useperl = 1; if (defined &Data::Dumper::Dumpxs) { print "### XS extension loaded, will run XS tests\n"; $TMAX = 363; $XS = 1; } else { print "### XS extensions not loaded, will NOT run XS tests\n"; $TMAX = 183; $XS = 0; } print "1..$TMAX\n"; #XXXif (0) { ############# ############# @c = ('c'); $c = \@c; $b = {}; $a = [1, $b, $c]; $b->{a} = $a; $b->{b} = $a->[1]; $b->{c} = $a->[2]; ############# 1 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = [ # 1, # { # 'a' => $a, # 'b' => $a->[1], # 'c' => [ # 'c' # ] # }, # $a->[1]{'c'} # ]; #$b = $a->[1]; #$c = $a->[1]{'c'}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a,$b,$c], [qw(a b c)])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a,$b,$c], [qw(a b c)])) if $XS; ############# 7 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #@a = ( # 1, # { # 'a' => [], # 'b' => {}, # 'c' => [ # 'c' # ] # }, # [] # ); #$a[1]{'a'} = \@a; #$a[1]{'b'} = $a[1]; #$a[2] = $a[1]{'c'}; #$b = $a[1]; EOT $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1; # fill in the holes for eval TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a, $b], [qw(*a b)])); # print as @a TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a, $b], [qw(*a b)])) if $XS; ############# 13 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #%b = ( # 'a' => [ # 1, # {}, # [ # 'c' # ] # ], # 'b' => {}, # 'c' => [] # ); #$b{'a'}[1] = \%b; #$b{'b'} = \%b; #$b{'c'} = $b{'a'}[2]; #$a = $b{'a'}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$b, $a], [qw(*b a)])); # print as %b TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$b, $a], [qw(*b a)])) if $XS; ############# 19 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = [ # 1, # { # 'a' => [], # 'b' => {}, # 'c' => [] # }, # [] #]; #$a->[1]{'a'} = $a; #$a->[1]{'b'} = $a->[1]; #$a->[1]{'c'} = \@c; #$a->[2] = \@c; #$b = $a->[1]; EOT $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1; TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b], [qw(a b)]); $d->Seen({'*c' => $c}); $d->Dump; ); if ($XS) { TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b], [qw(a b)]); $d->Seen({'*c' => $c}); $d->Dumpxs; ); } ############# 25 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = [ # #0 # 1, # #1 # { # a => $a, # b => $a->[1], # c => [ # #0 # 'c' # ] # }, # #2 # $a->[1]{c} # ]; #$b = $a->[1]; EOT $d->Indent(3); $d->Purity(0)->Quotekeys(0); TEST q( $d->Reset; $d->Dump ); TEST q( $d->Reset; $d->Dumpxs ) if $XS; ############# 31 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = [ # 1, # { # 'a' => [], # 'b' => {}, # 'c' => [ # 'c' # ] # }, # [] #]; #$VAR1->[1]{'a'} = $VAR1; #$VAR1->[1]{'b'} = $VAR1->[1]; #$VAR1->[2] = $VAR1->[1]{'c'}; EOT TEST q(Dumper($a)); TEST q(Data::Dumper::DumperX($a)) if $XS; ############# 37 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #[ # 1, # { # a => $VAR1, # b => $VAR1->[1], # c => [ # 'c' # ] # }, # $VAR1->[1]{c} #] EOT { local $Data::Dumper::Purity = 0; local $Data::Dumper::Quotekeys = 0; local $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1; TEST q(Dumper($a)); TEST q(Data::Dumper::DumperX($a)) if $XS; } ############# 43 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = { # "abc\0'\efg" => "mno\0", # "reftest" => \\1 #}; EOT $foo = { "abc\000\'\efg" => "mno\000", "reftest" => \\1, }; { local $Data::Dumper::Useqq = 1; TEST q(Dumper($foo)); } $WANT = <<"EOT"; #\$VAR1 = { # 'abc\0\\'\efg' => 'mno\0', # 'reftest' => \\\\1 #}; EOT { local $Data::Dumper::Useqq = 1; TEST q(Data::Dumper::DumperX($foo)) if $XS; # cheat } ############# ############# { package main; use Data::Dumper; $foo = 5; @foo = (-10,\*foo); %foo = (a=>1,b=>\$foo,c=>\@foo); $foo{d} = \%foo; $foo[2] = \%foo; ############# 49 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$foo = \*::foo; #*::foo = \5; #*::foo = [ # #0 # -10, # #1 # do{my $o}, # #2 # { # 'a' => 1, # 'b' => do{my $o}, # 'c' => [], # 'd' => {} # } # ]; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[1] = $foo; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'b'} = *::foo{SCALAR}; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'c'} = *::foo{ARRAY}; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'d'} = *::foo{ARRAY}->[2]; #*::foo = *::foo{ARRAY}->[2]; #@bar = @{*::foo{ARRAY}}; #%baz = %{*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]}; EOT $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1; $Data::Dumper::Indent = 3; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['*foo', '*bar', '*baz'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['*foo', '*bar', '*baz'])) if $XS; ############# 55 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$foo = \*::foo; #*::foo = \5; #*::foo = [ # -10, # do{my $o}, # { # 'a' => 1, # 'b' => do{my $o}, # 'c' => [], # 'd' => {} # } #]; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[1] = $foo; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'b'} = *::foo{SCALAR}; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'c'} = *::foo{ARRAY}; #*::foo{ARRAY}->[2]{'d'} = *::foo{ARRAY}->[2]; #*::foo = *::foo{ARRAY}->[2]; #$bar = *::foo{ARRAY}; #$baz = *::foo{ARRAY}->[2]; EOT $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'])) if $XS; ############# 61 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #@bar = ( # -10, # \*::foo, # {} #); #*::foo = \5; #*::foo = \@bar; #*::foo = { # 'a' => 1, # 'b' => do{my $o}, # 'c' => [], # 'd' => {} #}; #*::foo{HASH}->{'b'} = *::foo{SCALAR}; #*::foo{HASH}->{'c'} = \@bar; #*::foo{HASH}->{'d'} = *::foo{HASH}; #$bar[2] = *::foo{HASH}; #%baz = %{*::foo{HASH}}; #$foo = $bar[1]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\@foo, \\%foo, \\*foo], ['*bar', '*baz', '*foo'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\@foo, \\%foo, \\*foo], ['*bar', '*baz', '*foo'])) if $XS; ############# 67 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$bar = [ # -10, # \*::foo, # {} #]; #*::foo = \5; #*::foo = $bar; #*::foo = { # 'a' => 1, # 'b' => do{my $o}, # 'c' => [], # 'd' => {} #}; #*::foo{HASH}->{'b'} = *::foo{SCALAR}; #*::foo{HASH}->{'c'} = $bar; #*::foo{HASH}->{'d'} = *::foo{HASH}; #$bar->[2] = *::foo{HASH}; #$baz = *::foo{HASH}; #$foo = $bar->[1]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\@foo, \\%foo, \\*foo], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\@foo, \\%foo, \\*foo], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo'])) if $XS; ############# 73 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$foo = \*::foo; #@bar = ( # -10, # $foo, # { # a => 1, # b => \5, # c => \@bar, # d => $bar[2] # } #); #%baz = %{$bar[2]}; EOT $Data::Dumper::Purity = 0; $Data::Dumper::Quotekeys = 0; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['*foo', '*bar', '*baz'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['*foo', '*bar', '*baz'])) if $XS; ############# 79 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$foo = \*::foo; #$bar = [ # -10, # $foo, # { # a => 1, # b => \5, # c => $bar, # d => $bar->[2] # } #]; #$baz = $bar->[2]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\*foo, \\@foo, \\%foo], ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'])) if $XS; } ############# ############# { package main; @dogs = ( 'Fido', 'Wags' ); %kennel = ( First => \$dogs[0], Second => \$dogs[1], ); $dogs[2] = \%kennel; $mutts = \%kennel; $mutts = $mutts; # avoid warning ############# 85 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #%kennels = ( # First => \'Fido', # Second => \'Wags' #); #@dogs = ( # ${$kennels{First}}, # ${$kennels{Second}}, # \%kennels #); #%mutts = %kennels; EOT TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([\\%kennel, \\@dogs, $mutts], [qw(*kennels *dogs *mutts)] ); $d->Dump; ); if ($XS) { TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([\\%kennel, \\@dogs, $mutts], [qw(*kennels *dogs *mutts)] ); $d->Dumpxs; ); } ############# 91 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #%kennels = %kennels; #@dogs = @dogs; #%mutts = %kennels; EOT TEST q($d->Dump); TEST q($d->Dumpxs) if $XS; ############# 97 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #%kennels = ( # First => \'Fido', # Second => \'Wags' #); #@dogs = ( # ${$kennels{First}}, # ${$kennels{Second}}, # \%kennels #); #%mutts = %kennels; EOT TEST q($d->Reset; $d->Dump); if ($XS) { TEST q($d->Reset; $d->Dumpxs); } ############# 103 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #@dogs = ( # 'Fido', # 'Wags', # { # First => \$dogs[0], # Second => \$dogs[1] # } #); #%kennels = %{$dogs[2]}; #%mutts = %{$dogs[2]}; EOT TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([\\@dogs, \\%kennel, $mutts], [qw(*dogs *kennels *mutts)] ); $d->Dump; ); if ($XS) { TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new([\\@dogs, \\%kennel, $mutts], [qw(*dogs *kennels *mutts)] ); $d->Dumpxs; ); } ############# 109 ## TEST q($d->Reset->Dump); if ($XS) { TEST q($d->Reset->Dumpxs); } ############# 115 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #@dogs = ( # 'Fido', # 'Wags', # { # First => \'Fido', # Second => \'Wags' # } #); #%kennels = ( # First => \'Fido', # Second => \'Wags' #); EOT TEST q( $d = Data::Dumper->new( [\@dogs, \%kennel], [qw(*dogs *kennels)] ); $d->Deepcopy(1)->Dump; ); if ($XS) { TEST q($d->Reset->Dumpxs); } } { sub z { print "foo\n" } $c = [ \&z ]; ############# 121 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = $b; #$c = [ # $b #]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['a','c'])->Seen({'b' => \&z})->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['a','c'])->Seen({'b' => \&z})->Dumpxs;) if $XS; ############# 127 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = \&b; #$c = [ # \&b #]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['a','c'])->Seen({'*b' => \&z})->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['a','c'])->Seen({'*b' => \&z})->Dumpxs;) if $XS; ############# 133 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #*a = \&b; #@c = ( # \&b #); EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['*a','*c'])->Seen({'*b' => \&z})->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([\&z,$c],['*a','*c'])->Seen({'*b' => \&z})->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = []; $a->[1] = \$a->[0]; ############# 139 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #@a = ( # undef, # do{my $o} #); #$a[1] = \$a[0]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a],['*a'])->Purity(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a],['*a'])->Purity(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = \\\\\'foo'; $b = $$$a; ############# 145 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = \\\\\'foo'; #$b = ${${$a}}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b],['a','b'])->Purity(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b],['a','b'])->Purity(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = [{ a => \$b }, { b => undef }]; $b = [{ c => \$b }, { d => \$a }]; ############# 151 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = [ # { # a => \[ # { # c => do{my $o} # }, # { # d => \[] # } # ] # }, # { # b => undef # } #]; #${$a->[0]{a}}->[0]->{c} = $a->[0]{a}; #${${$a->[0]{a}}->[1]->{d}} = $a; #$b = ${$a->[0]{a}}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b],['a','b'])->Purity(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b],['a','b'])->Purity(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = [[[[\\\\\'foo']]]]; $b = $a->[0][0]; $c = $${$b->[0][0]}; ############# 157 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = [ # [ # [ # [ # \\\\\'foo' # ] # ] # ] #]; #$b = $a->[0][0]; #$c = ${${$a->[0][0][0][0]}}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Purity(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Purity(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $f = "pearl"; $e = [ $f ]; $d = { 'e' => $e }; $c = [ $d ]; $b = { 'c' => $c }; $a = { 'b' => $b }; ############# 163 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = { # b => { # c => [ # { # e => 'ARRAY(0xdeadbeef)' # } # ] # } #}; #$b = $a->{b}; #$c = $a->{b}{c}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Maxdepth(4)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Maxdepth(4)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; ############# 169 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = { # b => 'HASH(0xdeadbeef)' #}; #$b = $a->{b}; #$c = [ # 'HASH(0xdeadbeef)' #]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Maxdepth(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b,$c],['a','b','c'])->Maxdepth(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = \$a; $b = [$a]; ############# 175 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$b = [ # \$b->[0] #]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$b],['b'])->Purity(0)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$b],['b'])->Purity(0)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; ############# 181 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$b = [ # \do{my $o} #]; #${$b->[0]} = $b->[0]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$b],['b'])->Purity(1)->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$b],['b'])->Purity(1)->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $a = "\x{09c10}"; ############# 187 ## XS code was adding an extra \0 $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$a = "\x{9c10}"; EOT if($] >= 5.007) { TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a], ['a'])), "\\x{9c10}"; } else { SKIP_TEST "Incomplete support for UTF-8 in old perls"; } TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a], ['a'])), "XS \\x{9c10}" if $XS; } { $i = 0; $a = { map { ("$_$_$_", ++$i) } 'I'..'Q' }; ############# 193 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = { # III => 1, # JJJ => 2, # KKK => 3, # LLL => 4, # MMM => 5, # NNN => 6, # OOO => 7, # PPP => 8, # QQQ => 9 #}; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a])->Dump;); TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$a])->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $i = 5; $c = { map { (++$i, "$_$_$_") } 'I'..'Q' }; local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = \&sort199; sub sort199 { my $hash = shift; return [ sort { $b <=> $a } keys %$hash ]; } ############# 199 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = { # 14 => 'QQQ', # 13 => 'PPP', # 12 => 'OOO', # 11 => 'NNN', # 10 => 'MMM', # 9 => 'LLL', # 8 => 'KKK', # 7 => 'JJJ', # 6 => 'III' #}; EOT # perl code does keys and values as numbers if possible TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$c])->Dump;); # XS code always does them as strings $WANT =~ s/ (\d+)/ '$1'/gs; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([$c])->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { $i = 5; $c = { map { (++$i, "$_$_$_") } 'I'..'Q' }; $d = { reverse %$c }; local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = \&sort205; sub sort205 { my $hash = shift; return [ $hash eq $c ? (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %$hash) : (reverse sort keys %$hash) ]; } ############# 205 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = [ # { # 6 => 'III', # 7 => 'JJJ', # 8 => 'KKK', # 9 => 'LLL', # 10 => 'MMM', # 11 => 'NNN', # 12 => 'OOO', # 13 => 'PPP', # 14 => 'QQQ' # }, # { # QQQ => 14, # PPP => 13, # OOO => 12, # NNN => 11, # MMM => 10, # LLL => 9, # KKK => 8, # JJJ => 7, # III => 6 # } #]; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([[$c, $d]])->Dump;); $WANT =~ s/ (\d+)/ '$1'/gs; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([[$c, $d]])->Dumpxs;) if $XS; } { local $Data::Dumper::Deparse = 1; local $Data::Dumper::Indent = 2; ############# 211 ## $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = { # foo => sub { # print 'foo'; # } # }; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->new([{ foo => sub { print "foo"; } }])->Dump); } ############# 214 ## # This is messy. # The controls (bare numbers) are stored either as integers or floating point. # [depending on whether the tokeniser sees things like ".". # The peephole optimiser only runs for constant folding, not single constants, # so I already have some NVs, some IVs # The string versions are not. They are all PV # This is arguably all far too chummy with the implementation, but I really # want to ensure that we don't go wrong when flags on scalars get as side # effects of reading them. # These tests are actually testing the precise output of the current # implementation, so will most likely fail if the implementation changes, # even if the new implementation produces different but correct results. # It would be nice to test for wrong answers, but I can't see how to do that, # so instead I'm checking for unexpected answers. (ie -2 becoming "-2" is not # wrong, but I can't see an easy, reliable way to code that knowledge) # Numbers (seen by the tokeniser as numbers, stored as numbers. @numbers = ( 0, +1, -2, 3.0, +4.0, -5.0, 6.5, +7.5, -8.5, 9, +10, -11, 12.0, +13.0, -14.0, 15.5, +16.25, -17.75, ); # Strings @strings = ( "0", "+1", "-2", "3.0", "+4.0", "-5.0", "6.5", "+7.5", "-8.5", " 9", " +10", " -11", " 12.0", " +13.0", " -14.0", " 15.5", " +16.25", " -17.75", ); # The perl code always does things the same way for numbers. $WANT_PL_N = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 0; #$VAR2 = 1; #$VAR3 = -2; #$VAR4 = 3; #$VAR5 = 4; #$VAR6 = -5; #$VAR7 = '6.5'; #$VAR8 = '7.5'; #$VAR9 = '-8.5'; #$VAR10 = 9; #$VAR11 = 10; #$VAR12 = -11; #$VAR13 = 12; #$VAR14 = 13; #$VAR15 = -14; #$VAR16 = '15.5'; #$VAR17 = '16.25'; #$VAR18 = '-17.75'; EOT # The perl code knows that 0 and -2 stringify exactly back to the strings, # so it dumps them as numbers, not strings. $WANT_PL_S = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 0; #$VAR2 = '+1'; #$VAR3 = -2; #$VAR4 = '3.0'; #$VAR5 = '+4.0'; #$VAR6 = '-5.0'; #$VAR7 = '6.5'; #$VAR8 = '+7.5'; #$VAR9 = '-8.5'; #$VAR10 = ' 9'; #$VAR11 = ' +10'; #$VAR12 = ' -11'; #$VAR13 = ' 12.0'; #$VAR14 = ' +13.0'; #$VAR15 = ' -14.0'; #$VAR16 = ' 15.5'; #$VAR17 = ' +16.25'; #$VAR18 = ' -17.75'; EOT # The XS code differs. # These are the numbers as seen by the tokeniser. Constants aren't folded # (which makes IVs where possible) so values the tokeniser thought were # floating point are stored as NVs. The XS code outputs these as strings, # but as it has converted them from NVs, leading + signs will not be there. $WANT_XS_N = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 0; #$VAR2 = 1; #$VAR3 = -2; #$VAR4 = '3'; #$VAR5 = '4'; #$VAR6 = '-5'; #$VAR7 = '6.5'; #$VAR8 = '7.5'; #$VAR9 = '-8.5'; #$VAR10 = 9; #$VAR11 = 10; #$VAR12 = -11; #$VAR13 = '12'; #$VAR14 = '13'; #$VAR15 = '-14'; #$VAR16 = '15.5'; #$VAR17 = '16.25'; #$VAR18 = '-17.75'; EOT # These are the strings as seen by the tokeniser. The XS code will output # these for all cases except where the scalar has been used in integer context $WANT_XS_S = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = '0'; #$VAR2 = '+1'; #$VAR3 = '-2'; #$VAR4 = '3.0'; #$VAR5 = '+4.0'; #$VAR6 = '-5.0'; #$VAR7 = '6.5'; #$VAR8 = '+7.5'; #$VAR9 = '-8.5'; #$VAR10 = ' 9'; #$VAR11 = ' +10'; #$VAR12 = ' -11'; #$VAR13 = ' 12.0'; #$VAR14 = ' +13.0'; #$VAR15 = ' -14.0'; #$VAR16 = ' 15.5'; #$VAR17 = ' +16.25'; #$VAR18 = ' -17.75'; EOT # These are the numbers as IV-ized by & # These will differ from WANT_XS_N because now IV flags will be set on all # values that were actually integer, and the XS code will then output these # as numbers not strings. $WANT_XS_I = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 0; #$VAR2 = 1; #$VAR3 = -2; #$VAR4 = 3; #$VAR5 = 4; #$VAR6 = -5; #$VAR7 = '6.5'; #$VAR8 = '7.5'; #$VAR9 = '-8.5'; #$VAR10 = 9; #$VAR11 = 10; #$VAR12 = -11; #$VAR13 = 12; #$VAR14 = 13; #$VAR15 = -14; #$VAR16 = '15.5'; #$VAR17 = '16.25'; #$VAR18 = '-17.75'; EOT # Some of these tests will be redundant. @numbers_s = @numbers_i = @numbers_is = @numbers_n = @numbers_ns = @numbers_ni = @numbers_nis = @numbers; @strings_s = @strings_i = @strings_is = @strings_n = @strings_ns = @strings_ni = @strings_nis = @strings; # Use them in an integer context foreach (@numbers_i, @numbers_ni, @numbers_nis, @numbers_is, @strings_i, @strings_ni, @strings_nis, @strings_is) { my $b = sprintf "%d", $_; } # Use them in a floating point context foreach (@numbers_n, @numbers_ni, @numbers_nis, @numbers_ns, @strings_n, @strings_ni, @strings_nis, @strings_ns) { my $b = sprintf "%e", $_; } # Use them in a string context foreach (@numbers_s, @numbers_is, @numbers_nis, @numbers_ns, @strings_s, @strings_is, @strings_nis, @strings_ns) { my $b = sprintf "%s", $_; } # use Devel::Peek; Dump ($_) foreach @vanilla_c; $WANT=$WANT_PL_N; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers)->Dump), 'Numbers'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_s)->Dump), 'Numbers PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_i)->Dump), 'Numbers IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_is)->Dump), 'Numbers IV,PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_n)->Dump), 'Numbers NV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_ns)->Dump), 'Numbers NV,PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_ni)->Dump), 'Numbers NV,IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_nis)->Dump), 'Numbers NV,IV,PV'; $WANT=$WANT_PL_S; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings)->Dump), 'Strings'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_s)->Dump), 'Strings PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_i)->Dump), 'Strings IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_is)->Dump), 'Strings IV,PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_n)->Dump), 'Strings NV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_ns)->Dump), 'Strings NV,PV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_ni)->Dump), 'Strings NV,IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_nis)->Dump), 'Strings NV,IV,PV'; if ($XS) { $WANT=$WANT_XS_N; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_s)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers PV'; $WANT=$WANT_XS_I; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_i)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_is)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers IV,PV'; $WANT=$WANT_XS_N; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_n)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers NV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_ns)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers NV,PV'; $WANT=$WANT_XS_I; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_ni)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers NV,IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@numbers_nis)->Dumpxs), 'XS Numbers NV,IV,PV'; $WANT=$WANT_XS_S; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_s)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings PV'; # This one used to really mess up. New code actually emulates the .pm code $WANT=$WANT_PL_S; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_i)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_is)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings IV,PV'; $WANT=$WANT_XS_S; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_n)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings NV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_ns)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings NV,PV'; # This one used to really mess up. New code actually emulates the .pm code $WANT=$WANT_PL_S; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_ni)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings NV,IV'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->new(\@strings_nis)->Dumpxs), 'XS Strings NV,IV,PV'; } { $a = "1\n"; ############# 310 ## Perl code was using /...$/ and hence missing the \n. $WANT = <<'EOT'; my $VAR1 = '42 '; EOT # Can't pad with # as the output has an embedded newline. local $Data::Dumper::Pad = "my "; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump(["42\n"])), "number with trailing newline"; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs(["42\n"])), "XS number with trailing newline" if $XS; } { @a = ( 999999999, 1000000000, 9999999999, 10000000000, -999999999, -1000000000, -9999999999, -10000000000, 4294967295, 4294967296, -2147483648, -2147483649, ); ############# 316 ## Perl code flips over at 10 digits. $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 999999999; #$VAR2 = '1000000000'; #$VAR3 = '9999999999'; #$VAR4 = '10000000000'; #$VAR5 = -999999999; #$VAR6 = '-1000000000'; #$VAR7 = '-9999999999'; #$VAR8 = '-10000000000'; #$VAR9 = '4294967295'; #$VAR10 = '4294967296'; #$VAR11 = '-2147483648'; #$VAR12 = '-2147483649'; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump(\@a)), "long integers"; if ($XS) { ## XS code flips over at 11 characters ("-" is a char) or larger than int. if (~0 == 0xFFFFFFFF) { # 32 bit system $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 999999999; #$VAR2 = 1000000000; #$VAR3 = '9999999999'; #$VAR4 = '10000000000'; #$VAR5 = -999999999; #$VAR6 = '-1000000000'; #$VAR7 = '-9999999999'; #$VAR8 = '-10000000000'; #$VAR9 = 4294967295; #$VAR10 = '4294967296'; #$VAR11 = '-2147483648'; #$VAR12 = '-2147483649'; EOT } else { $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 999999999; #$VAR2 = 1000000000; #$VAR3 = 9999999999; #$VAR4 = '10000000000'; #$VAR5 = -999999999; #$VAR6 = '-1000000000'; #$VAR7 = '-9999999999'; #$VAR8 = '-10000000000'; #$VAR9 = 4294967295; #$VAR10 = 4294967296; #$VAR11 = '-2147483648'; #$VAR12 = '-2147483649'; EOT } TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs(\@a)), "XS long integers"; } } #XXX} { $b = "Bad. XS didn't escape dollar sign"; ############# 322 $WANT = <<"EOT"; # Careful. This is '' string written inside '' here doc #\$VAR1 = '\$b\"\@\\\\\xA3'; EOT $a = "\$b\"\@\\\xA3\x{100}"; chop $a; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a])), "utf8 flag with \" and \$"; if ($XS) { $WANT = <<'EOT'; # While this is "" string written inside "" here doc #$VAR1 = "\$b\"\@\\\x{a3}"; EOT TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a])), "XS utf8 flag with \" and \$"; } # XS used to produce "$b\"' which is 4 chars, not 3. [ie wrongly qq(\$b\\\")] ############# 328 $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = '$b"'; EOT $a = "\$b\"\x{100}"; chop $a; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a])), "utf8 flag with \" and \$"; if ($XS) { TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a])), "XS utf8 flag with \" and \$"; } # XS used to produce 'D'oh!' which is well, D'oh! # Andreas found this one, which in turn discovered the previous two. ############# 334 $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = 'D\'oh!'; EOT $a = "D'oh!\x{100}"; chop $a; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([$a])), "utf8 flag with '"; if ($XS) { TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([$a])), "XS utf8 flag with '"; } } # Jarkko found that -Mutf8 caused some tests to fail. Turns out that there # was an otherwise untested code path in the XS for utf8 hash keys with purity # 1 { $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$ping = \*::ping; #*::ping = \5; #*::ping = { # "\x{decaf}\x{decaf}\x{decaf}\x{decaf}" => do{my $o} #}; #*::ping{HASH}->{"\x{decaf}\x{decaf}\x{decaf}\x{decaf}"} = *::ping{SCALAR}; #%pong = %{*::ping{HASH}}; EOT local $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1; local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys; $ping = 5; %ping = (chr (0xDECAF) x 4 =>\$ping); for $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys (0, 1) { if($] >= 5.007) { TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\*ping, \\%ping], ['*ping', '*pong'])); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\*ping, \\%ping], ['*ping', '*pong'])) if $XS; } else { SKIP_TEST "Incomplete support for UTF-8 in old perls"; SKIP_TEST "Incomplete support for UTF-8 in old perls"; } } } # XS for quotekeys==0 was not being defensive enough against utf8 flagged # scalars { $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = { # perl => 'rocks' #}; EOT local $Data::Dumper::Quotekeys = 0; my $k = 'perl' . chr 256; chop $k; %foo = ($k => 'rocks'); TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\\%foo])), "quotekeys == 0 for utf8 flagged ASCII"; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\\%foo])), "XS quotekeys == 0 for utf8 flagged ASCII" if $XS; } ############# 358 { $WANT = <<'EOT'; #$VAR1 = [ # undef, # undef, # 1 #]; EOT @foo = (); $foo[2] = 1; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dump([\@foo])), 'Richard Clamp, Message-Id: <20030104005247.GA27685@mirth.demon.co.uk>'; TEST q(Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([\@foo])) if $XS; }