1<!-- 2Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al. 3 4SPDX-License-Identifier: curl 5--> 6 7# curl test suite file format 8 9The curl test suite's file format is simple and extendable, closely resembling 10XML. All data for a single test case resides in a single ASCII file. Labels 11mark the beginning and the end of all sections, and each label must be written 12in its own line. Comments are either XML-style (enclosed with `<!--` and 13`-->`) or shell script style (beginning with `#`) and must appear on their own 14lines and not alongside actual test data. Most test data files are 15syntactically valid XML, although a few files are not (lack of support for 16character entities and the preservation of CR/LF characters at the end of 17lines are the biggest differences). 18 19Each test case source exists as a file matching the format 20`tests/data/testNUM`, where `NUM` is the unique test number, and must begin 21with a `testcase` tag, which encompasses the remainder of the file. 22 23# Preprocessing 24 25When a test is to be executed, the source file is first preprocessed and 26variables are substituted by their respective contents and the output 27version of the test file is stored as `%LOGDIR/testNUM`. That version is what 28will be read and used by the test servers. 29 30## Base64 Encoding 31 32In the preprocess stage, a special instruction can be used to have runtests.pl 33base64 encode a certain section and insert in the generated output file. This 34is in particular good for test cases where the test tool is expected to pass 35in base64 encoded content that might use dynamic information that is unique 36for this particular test invocation, like the server port number. 37 38To insert a base64 encoded string into the output, use this syntax: 39 40 %b64[ data to encode ]b64% 41 42The data to encode can then use any of the existing variables mentioned below, 43or even percent-encoded individual bytes. As an example, insert the HTTP 44server's port number (in ASCII) followed by a space and the hexadecimal byte 459a: 46 47 %b64[%HTTPPORT %9a]b64% 48 49## Hexadecimal decoding 50 51In the preprocess stage, a special instruction can be used to have runtests.pl 52generate a sequence of binary bytes. 53 54To insert a sequence of bytes from a hex encoded string, use this syntax: 55 56 %hex[ %XX-encoded data to decode ]hex% 57 58For example, to insert the binary octets 0, 1 and 255 into the test file: 59 60 %hex[ %00%01%FF ]hex% 61 62## Repeat content 63 64In the preprocess stage, a special instruction can be used to have runtests.pl 65generate a repetitive sequence of bytes. 66 67To insert a sequence of repeat bytes, use this syntax to make the `<string>` 68get repeated `<number>` of times. The number has to be 1 or larger and the 69string may contain `%HH` hexadecimal codes: 70 71 %repeat[<number> x <string>]% 72 73For example, to insert the word hello 100 times: 74 75 %repeat[100 x hello]% 76 77## Include file 78 79This instruction allows a test case to include another file. It is helpful to 80remember that the ordinary variables are expanded before the include happens 81so `%LOGDIR` and the others can be used in the include line. 82 83The file name cannot contain `%` as that letter is used to end the name for 84the include instruction: 85 86 %include filename% 87 88## Conditional lines 89 90Lines in the test file can be made to appear conditionally on a specific 91feature (see the "features" section below) being set or not set. If the 92specific feature is present, the following lines will be output, otherwise it 93outputs nothing, until a following else or `endif` clause. Like this: 94 95 %if brotli 96 Accept-Encoding 97 %endif 98 99It can also check for the inverse condition, so if the feature is *not* set by 100the use of an exclamation mark: 101 102 %if !brotli 103 Accept-Encoding: not-brotli 104 %endif 105 106You can also make an "else" clause to get output for the opposite condition, 107like: 108 109 %if brotli 110 Accept-Encoding: brotli 111 %else 112 Accept-Encoding: nothing 113 %endif 114 115Nested conditions are supported. 116 117# Variables 118 119When the test is preprocessed, a range of "variables" in the test file will be 120replaced by their content at that time. 121 122Available substitute variables include: 123 124- `%CLIENT6IP` - IPv6 address of the client running curl 125- `%CLIENTIP` - IPv4 address of the client running curl 126- `%CURL` - Path to the curl executable 127- `%FILE_PWD` - Current directory, on Windows prefixed with a slash 128- `%FTP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the FTP server 129- `%FTPPORT` - Port number of the FTP server 130- `%FTPSPORT` - Port number of the FTPS server 131- `%FTPTIME2` - Timeout in seconds that should be just sufficient to receive a 132 response from the test FTP server 133- `%FTPTIME3` - Even longer than `%FTPTIME2` 134- `%GOPHER6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the Gopher server 135- `%GOPHERPORT` - Port number of the Gopher server 136- `%GOPHERSPORT` - Port number of the Gophers server 137- `%HOST6IP` - IPv6 address of the host running this test 138- `%HOSTIP` - IPv4 address of the host running this test 139- `%HTTP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the HTTP server 140- `%HTTPPORT` - Port number of the HTTP server 141- `%HTTP2PORT` - Port number of the HTTP/2 server 142- `%HTTPSPORT` - Port number of the HTTPS server 143- `%HTTPSPROXYPORT` - Port number of the HTTPS-proxy 144- `%HTTPTLS6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the HTTP TLS server 145- `%HTTPTLSPORT` - Port number of the HTTP TLS server 146- `%HTTPUNIXPATH` - Path to the Unix socket of the HTTP server 147- `%SOCKSUNIXPATH` - Path to the Unix socket of the SOCKS server 148- `%IMAP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the IMAP server 149- `%IMAPPORT` - Port number of the IMAP server 150- `%LOGDIR` - Log directory relative to %PWD 151- `%MQTTPORT` - Port number of the MQTT server 152- `%TELNETPORT` - Port number of the telnet server 153- `%NOLISTENPORT` - Port number where no service is listening 154- `%POP36PORT` - IPv6 port number of the POP3 server 155- `%POP3PORT` - Port number of the POP3 server 156- `%POSIX_PWD` - Current directory somewhat mingw friendly 157- `%PROXYPORT` - Port number of the HTTP proxy 158- `%PWD` - Current directory 159- `%RTSP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the RTSP server 160- `%RTSPPORT` - Port number of the RTSP server 161- `%SMBPORT` - Port number of the SMB server 162- `%SMBSPORT` - Port number of the SMBS server 163- `%SMTP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the SMTP server 164- `%SMTPPORT` - Port number of the SMTP server 165- `%SOCKSPORT` - Port number of the SOCKS4/5 server 166- `%SRCDIR` - Full path to the source dir 167- `%SSHPORT` - Port number of the SCP/SFTP server 168- `%SSHSRVMD5` - MD5 of SSH server's public key 169- `%SSHSRVSHA256` - SHA256 of SSH server's public key 170- `%SSH_PWD` - Current directory friendly for the SSH server 171- `%TESTNUMBER` - Number of the test case 172- `%TFTP6PORT` - IPv6 port number of the TFTP server 173- `%TFTPPORT` - Port number of the TFTP server 174- `%USER` - Login ID of the user running the test 175- `%VERSION` - the full version number of the tested curl 176 177# `<testcase>` 178 179Each test is always specified entirely within the `testcase` tag. Each test 180case is split up in four main sections: `info`, `reply`, `client` and 181`verify`. 182 183- **info** provides information about the test case 184 185- **reply** is used for the server to know what to send as a reply for the 186requests curl sends 187 188- **client** defines how the client should behave 189 190- **verify** defines how to verify that the data stored after a command has 191been run ended up correct 192 193Each main section has a number of available subsections that can be specified, 194that will be checked/used if specified. 195 196## `<info>` 197 198### `<keywords>` 199A newline-separated list of keywords describing what this test case uses and 200tests. Try to use already used keywords. These keywords will be used for 201statistical/informational purposes and for choosing or skipping classes of 202tests. Keywords must begin with an alphabetic character, `-`, `[` or `{` and 203may actually consist of multiple words separated by spaces which are treated 204together as a single identifier. Most keywords are only there to provide a way 205for users to skip certain classes of tests, if desired, but a few are treated 206specially by the test harness or build system. 207 208When using curl built with Hyper, the keywords must include `HTTP` or `HTTPS` 209for 'hyper mode' to kick in and make line ending checks work for tests. 210 211When running a unit test and the keywords include `unittest`, the `<tool>` 212section can be left empty to use the standard unit test tool name `unitN` where 213`N` is the test number. 214 215The `text-ci` make target automatically skips test with the `flaky` keyword. 216 217Tests that have strict timing dependencies have the `timing-dependent` keyword. 218These are intended to eventually be treated specially on CI builds which are 219often run on overloaded machines with unpredictable timing. 220 221## `<reply>` 222 223### `<data [nocheck="yes"] [sendzero="yes"] [base64="yes"] [hex="yes"] [nonewline="yes"] [crlf="yes"]>` 224 225data to be sent to the client on its request and later verified that it 226arrived safely. Set `nocheck="yes"` to prevent the test script from verifying 227the arrival of this data. 228 229If the data contains `swsclose` anywhere within the start and end tag, and 230this is an HTTP test, then the connection will be closed by the server after 231this response is sent. If not, the connection will be kept persistent. 232 233If the data contains `swsbounce` anywhere within the start and end tag, the 234HTTP server will detect if this is a second request using the same test and 235part number and will then increase the part number with one. This is useful 236for auth tests and similar. 237 238`sendzero=yes` means that the (FTP) server will "send" the data even if the 239size is zero bytes. Used to verify curl's behavior on zero bytes transfers. 240 241`base64=yes` means that the data provided in the test-file is a chunk of data 242encoded with base64. It is the only way a test case can contain binary 243data. (This attribute can in fact be used on any section, but it doesn't make 244much sense for other sections than "data"). 245 246`hex=yes` means that the data is a sequence of hex pairs. It will get decoded 247and used as "raw" data. 248 249`nonewline=yes` means that the last byte (the trailing newline character) 250should be cut off from the data before sending or comparing it. 251 252`crlf=yes` forces *header* newlines to become CRLF even if not written so in 253the source file. Note that this makes runtests.pl parse and "guess" what is a 254header and what is not in order to apply the CRLF line endings appropriately. 255 256For FTP file listings, the `<data>` section will be used *only* if you make 257sure that there has been a CWD done first to a directory named `test-[NUM]` 258where `NUM` is the test case number. Otherwise the ftp server can't know from 259which test file to load the list content. 260 261### `<dataNUM [crlf="yes"]>` 262 263Send back this contents instead of the `<data>` one. The `NUM` is set by: 264 265 - The test number in the request line is >10000 and this is the remainder 266 of [test case number]%10000. 267 - The request was HTTP and included digest details, which adds 1000 to `NUM` 268 - If an HTTP request is NTLM type-1, it adds 1001 to `NUM` 269 - If an HTTP request is NTLM type-3, it adds 1002 to `NUM` 270 - If an HTTP request is Basic and `NUM` is already >=1000, it adds 1 to `NUM` 271 - If an HTTP request is Negotiate, `NUM` gets incremented by one for each 272 request with Negotiate authorization header on the same test case. 273 274Dynamically changing `NUM` in this way allows the test harness to be used to 275test authentication negotiation where several different requests must be sent 276to complete a transfer. The response to each request is found in its own data 277section. Validating the entire negotiation sequence can be done by specifying 278a `datacheck` section. 279 280### `<connect>` 281The connect section is used instead of the 'data' for all CONNECT 282requests. The remainder of the rules for the data section then apply but with 283a connect prefix. 284 285### `<socks>` 286Address type and address details as logged by the SOCKS proxy. 287 288### `<datacheck [mode="text"] [nonewline="yes"] [crlf="yes"]>` 289if the data is sent but this is what should be checked afterwards. If 290`nonewline=yes` is set, runtests will cut off the trailing newline from the 291data before comparing with the one actually received by the client. 292 293Use the `mode="text"` attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms 294that have a text/binary difference. 295 296### `<datacheckNUM [nonewline="yes"] [mode="text"] [crlf="yes"]>` 297The contents of numbered `datacheck` sections are appended to the non-numbered 298one. 299 300### `<size>` 301number to return on a ftp SIZE command (set to -1 to make this command fail) 302 303### `<mdtm>` 304what to send back if the client sends a (FTP) `MDTM` command, set to -1 to 305have it return that the file doesn't exist 306 307### `<postcmd>` 308special purpose server-command to control its behavior *after* the 309reply is sent 310For HTTP/HTTPS, these are supported: 311 312`wait [secs]` - Pause for the given time 313 314### `<servercmd>` 315Special-commands for the server. 316 317The first line of this file will always be set to `Testnum [number]` by the 318test script, to allow servers to read that to know what test the client is 319about to issue. 320 321#### For FTP/SMTP/POP/IMAP 322 323- `REPLY [command] [return value] [response string]` - Changes how the server 324 responds to the [command]. [response string] is evaluated as a perl string, 325 so it can contain embedded \r\n, for example. There's a special [command] 326 named "welcome" (without quotes) which is the string sent immediately on 327 connect as a welcome. 328- `REPLYLF` (like above but sends the response terminated with LF-only and not 329 CRLF) 330- `COUNT [command] [num]` - Do the `REPLY` change for `[command]` only `[num]` 331 times and then go back to the built-in approach 332- `DELAY [command] [secs]` - Delay responding to this command for the given 333 time 334- `RETRWEIRDO` - Enable the "weirdo" RETR case when multiple response lines 335 appear at once when a file is transferred 336- `RETRNOSIZE` - Make sure the RETR response doesn't contain the size of the 337 file 338- `RETRSIZE [size]` - Force RETR response to contain the specified size 339- `NOSAVE` - Don't actually save what is received 340- `SLOWDOWN` - Send FTP responses with 0.01 sec delay between each byte 341- `PASVBADIP` - makes PASV send back an illegal IP in its 227 response 342- `CAPA [capabilities]` - Enables support for and specifies a list of space 343 separated capabilities to return to the client for the IMAP `CAPABILITY`, 344 POP3 `CAPA` and SMTP `EHLO` commands 345- `AUTH [mechanisms]` - Enables support for SASL authentication and specifies 346 a list of space separated mechanisms for IMAP, POP3 and SMTP 347- `STOR [msg]` respond with this instead of default after `STOR` 348 349#### For HTTP/HTTPS 350 351- `auth_required` if this is set and a POST/PUT is made without auth, the 352 server will NOT wait for the full request body to get sent 353- `delay: [msecs]` - delay this amount after connection 354- `idle` - do nothing after receiving the request, just "sit idle" 355- `stream` - continuously send data to the client, never-ending 356- `writedelay: [msecs]` delay this amount between reply packets 357- `skip: [num]` - instructs the server to ignore reading this many bytes from 358 a PUT or POST request 359- `rtp: part [num] channel [num] size [num]` - stream a fake RTP packet for 360 the given part on a chosen channel with the given payload size 361- `connection-monitor` - When used, this will log `[DISCONNECT]` to the 362 `server.input` log when the connection is disconnected. 363- `upgrade` - when an HTTP upgrade header is found, the server will upgrade to 364 http2 365- `swsclose` - instruct server to close connection after response 366- `no-expect` - don't read the request body if Expect: is present 367 368#### For TFTP 369`writedelay: [secs]` delay this amount between reply packets (each packet 370 being 512 bytes payload) 371 372## `<client>` 373 374### `<server>` 375What server(s) this test case requires/uses. Available servers: 376 377- `dict` 378- `file` 379- `ftp` 380- `ftp-ipv6` 381- `ftps` 382- `gopher` 383- `gopher-ipv6` 384- `gophers` 385- `http` 386- `http/2` 387- `http-ipv6` 388- `http-proxy` 389- `https` 390- `https-proxy` 391- `httptls+srp` 392- `httptls+srp-ipv6` 393- `http-unix` 394- `imap` 395- `mqtt` 396- `none` 397- `pop3` 398- `rtsp` 399- `rtsp-ipv6` 400- `scp` 401- `sftp` 402- `smb` 403- `smtp` 404- `socks4` 405- `socks5` 406- `socks5unix` 407- `telnet` 408- `tftp` 409 410Give only one per line. This subsection is mandatory (use `none` if no servers 411are required). Servers that require a special server certificate can have the 412PEM certificate file name (found in the `certs` directory) appended to the 413server name separated by a space. 414 415### `<features>` 416A list of features that MUST be present in the client/library for this test to 417be able to run. If a required feature is not present then the test will be 418SKIPPED. 419 420Alternatively a feature can be prefixed with an exclamation mark to indicate a 421feature is NOT required. If the feature is present then the test will be 422SKIPPED. 423 424Features testable here are: 425 426- `alt-svc` 427- `bearssl` 428- `brotli` 429- `c-ares` 430- `CharConv` 431- `cookies` 432- `crypto` 433- `debug` 434- `DoH` 435- `getrlimit` 436- `GnuTLS` 437- `GSS-API` 438- `h2c` 439- `headers-api` 440- `HSTS` 441- `HTTP-auth` 442- `http/2` 443- `http/3` 444- `https-proxy` 445- `hyper` 446- `idn` 447- `ipv6` 448- `Kerberos` 449- `large_file` 450- `large-time` (time_t is larger than 32 bit) 451- `ld_preload` 452- `libssh2` 453- `libssh` 454- `oldlibssh` (versions before 0.9.4) 455- `libz` 456- `manual` 457- `mbedtls` 458- `Mime` 459- `netrc` 460- `nghttpx` 461- `nghttpx-h3` 462- `NTLM` 463- `NTLM_WB` 464- `OpenSSL` 465- `parsedate` 466- `proxy` 467- `PSL` 468- `rustls` 469- `Schannel` 470- `sectransp` 471- `shuffle-dns` 472- `socks` 473- `SPNEGO` 474- `SSL` 475- `SSLpinning` 476- `SSPI` 477- `threaded-resolver` 478- `TLS-SRP` 479- `TrackMemory` 480- `typecheck` 481- `threadsafe` 482- `Unicode` 483- `unittest` 484- `unix-sockets` 485- `verbose-strings` 486- `wakeup` 487- `win32` 488- `wolfssh` 489- `wolfssl` 490- `xattr` 491- `zstd` 492 493as well as each protocol that curl supports. A protocol only needs to be 494specified if it is different from the server (useful when the server is 495`none`). 496 497### `<killserver>` 498Using the same syntax as in `<server>` but when mentioned here these servers 499are explicitly KILLED when this test case is completed. Only use this if there 500is no other alternatives. Using this of course requires subsequent tests to 501restart servers. 502 503### `<precheck>` 504A command line that if set gets run by the test script before the test. If an 505output is displayed by the command or if the return code is non-zero, the test 506will be skipped and the (single-line) output will be displayed as reason for 507not running the test. 508 509### `<postcheck>` 510A command line that if set gets run by the test script after the test. If 511the command exists with a non-zero status code, the test will be considered 512to have failed. 513 514### `<tool>` 515Name of tool to invoke instead of "curl". This tool must be built and exist 516either in the `libtest/` directory (if the tool name starts with `lib`) or in 517the `unit/` directory (if the tool name starts with `unit`). 518 519### `<name>` 520Brief test case description, shown when the test runs. 521 522### `<setenv>` 523 variable1=contents1 524 variable2=contents2 525 526Set the given environment variables to the specified value before the actual 527command is run. They are cleared again after the command has been run. 528 529### `<command [option="no-output/no-include/force-output/binary-trace"] [timeout="secs"][delay="secs"][type="perl/shell"]>` 530Command line to run. 531 532Note that the URL that gets passed to the server actually controls what data 533that is returned. The last slash in the URL must be followed by a number. That 534number (N) will be used by the test-server to load test case N and return the 535data that is defined within the `<reply><data></data></reply>` section. 536 537If there's no test number found above, the HTTP test server will use the 538number following the last dot in the given hostname (made so that a CONNECT 539can still pass on test number) so that "foo.bar.123" gets treated as test case 540123. Alternatively, if an IPv6 address is provided to CONNECT, the last 541hexadecimal group in the address will be used as the test number! For example 542the address "[1234::ff]" would be treated as test case 255. 543 544Set `type="perl"` to write the test case as a perl script. It implies that 545there's no memory debugging and valgrind gets shut off for this test. 546 547Set `type="shell"` to write the test case as a shell script. It implies that 548there's no memory debugging and valgrind gets shut off for this test. 549 550Set `option="no-output"` to prevent the test script to slap on the `--output` 551argument that directs the output to a file. The `--output` is also not added 552if the verify/stdout section is used. 553 554Set `option="force-output"` to make use of `--output` even when the test is 555otherwise written to verify stdout. 556 557Set `option="no-include"` to prevent the test script to slap on the 558`--include` argument. 559 560Set `option="binary-trace"` to use `--trace` instead of `--trace-ascii` for 561tracing. Suitable for binary-oriented protocols such as MQTT. 562 563Set `timeout="secs"` to override default server logs advisor read lock 564timeout. This timeout is used by the test harness, once that the command has 565completed execution, to wait for the test server to write out server side log 566files and remove the lock that advised not to read them. The "secs" parameter 567is the not negative integer number of seconds for the timeout. This `timeout` 568attribute is documented for completeness sake, but is deep test harness stuff 569and only needed for singular and specific test cases. Avoid using it. 570 571Set `delay="secs"` to introduce a time delay once that the command has 572completed execution and before the `<postcheck>` section runs. The "secs" 573parameter is the not negative integer number of seconds for the delay. This 574'delay' attribute is intended for specific test cases, and normally not 575needed. 576 577### `<file name="%LOGDIR/filename" [nonewline="yes"]>` 578This creates the named file with this content before the test case is run, 579which is useful if the test case needs a file to act on. 580 581If `nonewline="yes"` is used, the created file will have the final newline 582stripped off. 583 584### `<stdin [nonewline="yes"]>` 585Pass this given data on stdin to the tool. 586 587If `nonewline` is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data 588before comparing with the one actually received by the client 589 590## `<verify>` 591### `<errorcode>` 592numerical error code curl is supposed to return. Specify a list of accepted 593error codes by separating multiple numbers with comma. See test 237 for an 594example. 595 596### `<strip>` 597One regex per line that is removed from the protocol dumps before the 598comparison is made. This is useful to remove dependencies on dynamically 599changing protocol data such as port numbers or user-agent strings. 600 601### `<strippart>` 602One perl op per line that operates on the protocol dump. This is pretty 603advanced. Example: `s/^EPRT .*/EPRT stripped/`. 604 605### `<protocol [nonewline="yes"][crlf="yes"]>` 606 607the protocol dump curl should transmit, if `nonewline` is set, we will cut off 608the trailing newline of this given data before comparing with the one actually 609sent by the client The `<strip>` and `<strippart>` rules are applied before 610comparisons are made. 611 612`crlf=yes` forces the newlines to become CRLF even if not written so in the 613test. 614 615### `<proxy [nonewline="yes"][crlf="yes"]>` 616 617The protocol dump curl should transmit to an HTTP proxy (when the http-proxy 618server is used), if `nonewline` is set, we will cut off the trailing newline 619of this given data before comparing with the one actually sent by the client 620The `<strip>` and `<strippart>` rules are applied before comparisons are made. 621 622### `<stderr [mode="text"] [nonewline="yes"]>` 623This verifies that this data was passed to stderr. 624 625Use the mode="text" attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms that 626have a text/binary difference. 627 628If `nonewline` is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data 629before comparing with the one actually received by the client 630 631### `<stdout [mode="text"] [nonewline="yes"] [crlf="yes"] [loadfile="filename"]>` 632This verifies that this data was passed to stdout. 633 634Use the mode="text" attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms that 635have a text/binary difference. 636 637If `nonewline` is set, we will cut off the trailing newline of this given data 638before comparing with the one actually received by the client 639 640`crlf=yes` forces the newlines to become CRLF even if not written so in the 641test. 642 643`loadfile="filename"` makes loading the data from an external file. 644 645### `<file name="%LOGDIR/filename" [mode="text"]>` 646The file's contents must be identical to this after the test is complete. Use 647the mode="text" attribute if the output is in text mode on platforms that have 648a text/binary difference. 649 650### `<file1>` 6511 to 4 can be appended to 'file' to compare more files. 652 653### `<file2>` 654 655### `<file3>` 656 657### `<file4>` 658 659### `<stripfile>` 660One perl op per line that operates on the output file or stdout before being 661compared with what is stored in the test file. This is pretty 662advanced. Example: "s/^EPRT .*/EPRT stripped/" 663 664### `<stripfile1>` 6651 to 4 can be appended to `stripfile` to strip the corresponding `<fileN>` 666content 667 668### `<stripfile2>` 669 670### `<stripfile3>` 671 672### `<stripfile4>` 673 674### `<upload>` 675the contents of the upload data curl should have sent 676 677### `<valgrind>` 678disable - disables the valgrind log check for this test 679