#!/usr/bin/env python3 # Copyright 2016 The Chromium Authors # Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be # found in the LICENSE file. """Helper script to update the test error expectations based on actual results. This is useful for regenerating test expectations after making changes to the error format. To use this run the affected tests, and then pass the input to this script (either via stdin, or as the first argument). For instance: $ ./out/Release/net_unittests --gtest_filter="*ParseCertificate*" | \ net/data/parse_certificate_unittest/rebase-errors.py The script works by scanning the stdout looking for gtest failures having a particular format. The C++ test side should have been instrumented to dump out the test file's path on mismatch. This script will then update the corresponding .pem file """ import sys import os script_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) sys.path += [os.path.join(script_dir, '..')] import gencerts import os import sys import re # Regular expression to find the failed errors in test stdout. # * Group 1 of the match is file path (relative to //src) where the # expected errors were read from. # * Group 2 of the match is the actual error text failed_test_regex = re.compile(r""" Cert errors don't match expectations \((.+?)\) EXPECTED: (?:.|\n)*? ACTUAL: ((?:.|\n)*?) ===> Use net/data/parse_certificate_unittest/rebase-errors.py to rebaseline. """, re.MULTILINE) # Regular expression to find the ERRORS block (and any text above it) in a PEM # file. The assumption is that ERRORS is not the very first block in the file # (since it looks for an -----END to precede it). # * Group 1 of the match is the ERRORS block content and any comments # immediately above it. errors_block_regex = re.compile(r""".* -----END .*?----- (.*? -----BEGIN ERRORS----- .*? -----END ERRORS-----)""", re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL) def read_file_to_string(path): """Reads a file entirely to a string""" with open(path, 'r') as f: return f.read() def write_string_to_file(data, path): """Writes a string to a file""" print("Writing file %s ..." % (path)) with open(path, "w") as f: f.write(data) def replace_string(original, start, end, replacement): """Replaces the specified range of |original| with |replacement|""" return original[0:start] + replacement + original[end:] def fixup_pem_file(path, actual_errors): """Updates the ERRORS block in the test .pem file""" contents = read_file_to_string(path) errors_block_text = '\n' + gencerts.text_data_to_pem('ERRORS', actual_errors) # Strip the trailing newline. errors_block_text = errors_block_text[:-1] m = errors_block_regex.search(contents) if not m: contents += errors_block_text else: contents = replace_string(contents, m.start(1), m.end(1), errors_block_text) # Update the file. write_string_to_file(contents, path) def get_src_root(): """Returns the path to the enclosing //src directory. This assumes the current script is inside the source tree.""" cur_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) while True: parent_dir, dirname = os.path.split(cur_dir) # Check if it looks like the src/ root. if dirname == "src" and os.path.isdir(os.path.join(cur_dir, "net")): return cur_dir if not parent_dir or parent_dir == cur_dir: break cur_dir = parent_dir print("Couldn't find src dir") sys.exit(1) def get_abs_path(rel_path): """Converts |rel_path| (relative to src) to a full path""" return os.path.join(get_src_root(), rel_path) def main(): if len(sys.argv) > 2: print('Usage: %s [path-to-unittest-stdout]' % (sys.argv[0])) sys.exit(1) # Read the input either from a file, or from stdin. test_stdout = None if len(sys.argv) == 2: test_stdout = read_file_to_string(sys.argv[1]) else: print('Reading input from stdin...') test_stdout = sys.stdin.read() for m in failed_test_regex.finditer(test_stdout): src_relative_errors_path = m.group(1) errors_path = get_abs_path(src_relative_errors_path) actual_errors = m.group(2) fixup_pem_file(errors_path, actual_errors) if __name__ == "__main__": main()