package VCP::TestUtils ; =head1 NAME VCP::TestUtils - support routines for VCP testing =cut use Exporter ; @EXPORT = qw( assert_eq compile_dtd_cmd copy_dir_tree get_vcp_output ok_or_diff perl_cmd parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db parse_files_and_revids_from_revml parse_files_and_revids_from_p4_files parse_files_and_revids_from_cvs_history rm_dir_tree slurp tmpdir vcp_cmd p4d_borken cvs_borken init_cvsroot vss_borken s_content rm_elts run run_p4 ) ; @ISA = qw( Exporter ) ; use strict ; use Carp ; use Cwd ; use File::Copy; use File::Find; use File::Path ; use File::Spec ; use IPC::Run3; use POSIX ':sys_wait_h' ; use Text::Diff ; use VCP::Utils qw( shell_quote empty escape_filename ); use VCP::Logger qw( lg_fh log_file_name ); =head1 General utility functions =over =cut { my @tmp_dirs ; END { rmtree \@tmp_dirs unless $ENV{VCPNODELETE} } sub mk_tmp_dir { confess "undef!!" if grep !defined, @_ ; rmtree \@_ ; mkpath \@_, 0, 0770 ; push @tmp_dirs, @_ ; } } =item copy_dir_tree copy_dir_tree $src, $dest; Copy source directory tree to a destination directory. Accepts absolute or relative directory names, but doesn't do tilde expansion. =cut sub copy_dir_tree { croak "usage $0 \n" unless @_ == 2; my ($src_dir, $dest_dir) = @_; $src_dir = File::Spec->rel2abs( $src_dir ); $dest_dir = File::Spec->rel2abs( $dest_dir ); croak "destination and source directories are the same\n" if $dest_dir eq $src_dir; croak "destination directory specified as a subdir of source directory, stopping.\n" if 0 == index $dest_dir, $src_dir; croak "source directory '$src_dir' doesn't exist\n" unless -e $src_dir; croak "source directory '$src_dir' isn't a directory\n" unless -d $src_dir; croak "destination '$dest_dir' already exists\n" if -e $dest_dir; my $src_dir_re = quotemeta $src_dir; find( { no_chdir => 1, wanted => sub { my $newname = $_; $newname =~ s/^$src_dir_re/$dest_dir/ ; my ( $perms, $uid, $gid ) = (stat)[2,4,5]; if ( -d ) { # source was a directory mkdir $newname or croak "couldn't create directory '$newname': $!\n"; } else { copy $_, $newname or croak "couldn't copy file from '$_' to '$newname'\n"; } chmod $perms, $newname or warn "$!: chmod()ing $newname\n"; chown $uid, $gid, $newname or warn "$!: chown()ing $newname\n"; }, }, $src_dir ); } =item rm_dir_tree rm_dir_tree $path; Remove a directory tree. Does not complain if it's not there to remove. =cut sub rm_dir_tree { croak "usage $0 \n" unless @_ == 1; my( $doomed_dir ) = @_; return unless -e $doomed_dir; rmtree [ $doomed_dir ], 0; } =item assert_eq DEPRECATED. Use ok_or_diff() instead. assert_eq $test_name, $expected, $got; =cut sub assert_eq { my ( $name, $in, $out ) = @_ ; croak diff \$in, \$out, { CONTEXT => 10 } if $in ne $out ; } =item ok_or_diff ok_or_diff $got, $expected, ...; Use instead of ok to compare two strings and output a diff if they are indeed different. Uses Test::Difference's eq_or_diff() if present, otherwise falls back to Text::Diff::diff(). Calls Test::ok(). If $got is empty and $expected is longer than 2 lines, diff() is not called and a special message is generated. This is to prevent SPAMming out huge diffs when no output is received but $expected is big. =cut #eval "use Test::Differences"; ## not suitable for *huge* diffs sub ok_or_diff { for ( @_[0,1] ) { if ( ref ) { require Data::Dumper; $_ = Data::Dumper::Dumper( $_ ); } } if ( $_[0] ne $_[1] ) { my ( $got, $expected, @rest ) = @_; my $expected_lines = $expected =~ tr/\n//; if ( $expected_lines > 2 && ! length $got ) { @_ = ( $got, "$expected_lines lines of output", @rest ); } else { require File::Basename; my $prog_name = File::Basename::basename( $0 ); my $tmp = File::Spec->tmpdir ; my $test_name = File::Spec->catfile( $tmp, "$prog_name.$Test::ntest" ); open GOT, ">$test_name.got"; binmode GOT; print GOT $_[0]; close GOT; open EXPECTED, ">$test_name.expected"; binmode EXPECTED; print EXPECTED $_[1]; close EXPECTED; print "# output written to $test_name.expected $test_name.got\n"; my $options = @_ > 2 ? $_[2] : {}; ## Handle both eq_or_diff() and diff() options syntax. my $context = $options->{CONTEXT} || $options->{context} || 10; $options->{context} = $options->{CONTEXT} = $context; $_[2] = $options; # goto &eq_or_diff if defined &eq_or_diff; my $lg_fh = lg_fh; my $diff = diff( \$expected, \$got, $options ); print $lg_fh $diff; $rest[0] .= " " if defined $rest[0] && length $rest[0]; $rest[0] .= "see $test_name.expected $test_name.got and " . log_file_name; my $lines = $diff =~ tr/\n//; @_ = ( "differences (diff -u is approx $lines lines)", "", @rest ); } } goto &Test::ok; } =item slurp $guts = slurp $filename ; @lines = slurp $filename; read entire contents of file and return as a scalar, or array in array context (splitting on newlines.) =cut sub slurp { my ( $fn ) = @_ ; open F, "<$fn" or croak "$!: $fn" ; binmode F ; local $/ ; my $s = ; close F; return $s; } =item perl_cmd @perl = perl_cmd Returns a list containing the Perl executable and some options to reproduce the current Perl options , like -I. =cut sub perl_cmd { my %seen ; return ( $^X, ( map { my $s = $_ ; $s = File::Spec->rel2abs( $_ ) ; "-I$s" ; } grep ! $seen{$_}++, @INC ) ) ; } =item find_command @vcp = find_command "vcp" Find a script within the main distro directory or one subdir under it. Looks for "bin/" and "../bin/". This should be adequate for almost all uses. =cut sub find_command { ## We always run vcp by doing a @perl, vcp, to make sure that vcp runs under ## the same version of perl that we are running under. my $cmd = shift; $cmd = "bin/$cmd" if -e "bin/$cmd" ; $cmd = "../bin/$cmd" if -e "../bin/$cmd" ; $cmd = File::Spec->rel2abs( $cmd ) ; return $cmd; } =item vcp_cmd @vcp = vcp_cmd Returns a list containing the Perl executable and some options to reproduce the current Perl options , like -I. vcp_cmd assumes it is called from within the main distro directory or one subdir under it, since it looks for "bin/vcp" and "../bin/vcp". This should be adequate for almost all uses. vcp_cmd caches it's results to allow it to be run from other directories after the first time it's called. (this is not a significant performance improvement; running the vcp process takes several orders of magnitude longer than the quick checks vcp_cmd does). =cut my @vcp_cmd ; sub vcp_cmd { unless ( @vcp_cmd ) { ## We always run vcp by doing a @perl, vcp, to make sure that ## vcp runs under the same version of perl that we are running under. @vcp_cmd = ( perl_cmd, find_command 'vcp' ) ; } return @vcp_cmd ; } =item compile_dtd_cmd @compile_dtd = compile_dtd_cmd Returns a list containing the Perl executable and some options to reproduce the current Perl options , like -I. compile_dtd_cmd assumes it is called from within the main distro directory or one subdir under it, since it looks for "bin/compile_dtd" and "../bin/compile_dtd". This should be adequate for almost all uses. compile_dtd_cmd caches it's results to allow it to be run from other directories after the first time it's called. =cut my @compile_dtd_cmd ; sub compile_dtd_cmd { unless ( @compile_dtd_cmd ) { ## We always run compile_dtd by doing a @perl, compile_dtd, to ## make sure that compile_dtd runs under the same version of ## perl that we are running under. @compile_dtd_cmd = ( perl_cmd, find_command 'compile_dtd' ) ; } return @compile_dtd_cmd ; } =item run Run a command using IPC::Run3::run3(), but with logging and a verbose exception on non-0 result code. Arguments are the same as and are passed to IPC::Run3::run3(). =cut sub run { confess "BUG: pass options in a trailing HASH instead of inline, please" if grep defined && /ok_result_codes|in_dir|stderr_filter/, @_; my $options = @_ && ref $_[-1] eq "HASH" ? pop : (); my ( $cmd, $stdin, $stdout, $stderr, $timeout ) = @_; $options ||= {}; my @log_cmd = @$cmd; if ( $log_cmd[0] eq $^X ) { # running a command via perl # replace all perl -I options with a "-I..." option to enhance # readability. @log_cmd = ( $log_cmd[0], "-I...", grep ! /^-I/, @log_cmd[1..$#log_cmd] ); # vcp is run using perl. get rid of perl and its lengthy # arguments in the log so the user doesn't need to see them. my $i; my @run_command = grep $i ||= /\bvcp\z/, @log_cmd[1..$#log_cmd]; @log_cmd = ( "vcp", @run_command[ 1..$#run_command ] ) if @run_command; } print "#\$ ", shell_quote( @log_cmd ), "\n"; my $run_cmd = $cmd; my $start_time = time; IPC::Run3::run3( $run_cmd, $stdin, $stdout, $stderr, $options ); my $r = $? >> 8; $options->{ok_result_codes} ||= [0]; $r = undef if grep $r == $_, @{$options->{ok_result_codes}}; croak "`", shell_quote( @log_cmd ), "`", " returned $r, not one of (", @{$options->{ok_result_codes}} == 1 ? $options->{ok_result_codes}->[0] : join( ", ", @{$options->{ok_result_codes}} ), ")" if defined $r; my $time = time - $start_time; my $mins = int( $time / 60 ); printf "# %02d:%02d\n", $mins, $time - $mins * 60; } =item run_p4 calls 'run' to run p4 binary after deciding which platform specific program to run. determines p4 executable name based on operating system. builds p4 options string from $p4_options hash examples: run_p4 \@args, \$stdin, \$stdout, \$stderr, $p4_options; run_p4 [ qw(files) ], \undef, \$stdout, $p4_options; arguments: =over =item 1. array of words to add to end of p4 command =item 2... remaining arguments passed on to 'run' sub (except final arg) =item final arg: p4_options hash (may contain: port, user, client, password ... ?) =back =cut sub run_p4 { die "usage: run_p4 [args-to-run-cmd]..." unless @_ >= 2; my $extra_p4_commands = shift; my $p4_options = pop; croak "no options passed" unless ref $p4_options eq "HASH" ; my @p4_args; local $ENV{P4PASSWD} = $p4_options->{password} if defined $p4_options->{password} ; push @p4_args, '-p', $p4_options->{port} if defined $p4_options->{port} ; push @p4_args, '-c', $p4_options->{client} if defined $p4_options->{client} ; push @p4_args, '-u', $p4_options->{user} if defined $p4_options->{user} ; push @p4_args, @$extra_p4_commands; my $p4_binary = $^O =~ /Win32/ ? "p4.exe" : "p4" ; run [ $p4_binary, @p4_args ], @_ ; } =item parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db options: state_dir repo_id remove_rev_root (string to be removed from front of filename) given a vcp state directory and repo_id, dump the head revs to a string, and parse out the and elements within each , then return a string (sorted by line) of the form: . . . examples: my $revs = parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db { state_dir => $state_dir, repo_id => $repo_id } my $revs = parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db $state_dir $repo_id { state_dir => $state_dir, repo_id => $repo_id, remove_rev_root => "/ignore/" } =cut sub parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db { croak "usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_head_revs_db " unless @_ == 1 && ref $_[0] eq "HASH"; my $options = shift; my $state_dir = $options->{state_dir}; croak "state_dir option required" if empty $state_dir; my $repo_id = $options->{repo_id}; croak "repo_id option required" if empty $repo_id; my $remove_rev_root = $options->{remove_rev_root}; my $store_loc = File::Spec->catfile( $state_dir, escape_filename $repo_id ); require VCP::HeadRevsDB; my $db = VCP::HeadRevsDB->new( StoreLoc => $store_loc ); $db->open_existing_db; my @dump = $db->dump; $db->close_db; my $revs = {}; my $line; for( @dump ) { $line++; # make the dump look like parse_files_and_revids_from_revml s/^[^\s]+\s+// ; # remove repo_id field s/\s+/ /g ; # collapse multiple spaces # Dump output seems to look like either of # a/file/name => '1.1' # or the more complicated cases: # a/file/name<> => ('1.1','edit') # a/file/name<1> => ('1.1','edit') # # This code makes the complicated case look like the simple case. s/<[\d.]*> => \(/ => / ; s/\)$// ; s/'[^\d.',]+'//g ; s/,*$// ; # remove quotes from version number s/=> '([\d.]+)'/=> $1/ ; unless( empty $remove_rev_root ) { die "'HeadRevsDB->dump' output lines weren't preceeded by $remove_rev_root as expected" if index( $_, $remove_rev_root ) < 0 ; $_ = substr $_, length $remove_rev_root ; } } return join "", map "$_\n", sort @dump; } =item parse_files_and_revids_from_revml given one or more revml filenames, slurp them up, parse out the and elements within each , then return a string (sorted by line) of the form: . . . The final (optional) argument may be a reference to a hash of parameters. Currently the only parameter is IGNORE_REVS_WITH_DELETE_FLAG, which if true, causes any revs containing the or tags to be ignored. examples: my $revs = parse_files_and_revids_from_revml $infile ; my $revs = parse_files_and_revids_from_revml $infile1, $infile2 ; =cut sub parse_files_and_revids_from_revml { my $options = @_ && ref $_[-1] ? pop : {} ; croak "usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_revml ... [options-hash-ref]" unless @_ >= 1; my $ignore_revs_with_delete_tag = $options->{IGNORE_REVS_WITH_DELETE_FLAG}; my $revs = {}; for( @_ ) { my $revml = slurp $_; # find tag while ( $revml =~ / < rev \b [^>] * > ( .*? ) < \/ rev > /gsx ) { my $rev = $1; # look for tags within tag my ($name, $rev_id, $source_filebranch_id); # tag $name = $1 if $rev =~ m{ ( [^<] * ) <\/name> }gx ; # tag $source_filebranch_id = $1 if $rev =~ m{ ( [^<] * ) <\/source_filebranch_id> }gx ; # tag $rev_id = $1 if $rev =~ m{ ( [^<] * ) <\/rev_id> }gx ; # tag next if $ignore_revs_with_delete_tag && $rev =~ m{} ; croak "rev found without tag at line $." unless defined $name; croak "rev found without tag at line $." unless defined $rev_id; croak "rev found without tag at line $." unless defined $source_filebranch_id; # keep name and source_filebranch_id for the greatest rev_id require VCP::Rev; if( ! exists $revs->{$source_filebranch_id} || VCP::Rev->cmp_id( $revs->{$source_filebranch_id}->{rev_id}, $rev_id ) < 0 ) { $revs->{$source_filebranch_id}->{rev_id} = $rev_id; $revs->{$source_filebranch_id}->{name} = $name; } } } return join "", map { "$revs->{$_}->{name} => $revs->{$_}->{rev_id}\n" } sort keys %$revs; } =item parse_files_and_revids_from_p4_files Run p4 files command line to get list of changed files. Parse the output so it can be diffed with the output of parse_files_and_revids_from_revml. returns a string containing names and revision numbers, 1 per line. See that sub above for a description of the output format. arguments are: =over =item 1. revision root, e.g. "//depot/something/". This string will be removed from the output so it may be diffed with parse_files_and_revids_from_revml output. =item 2. options hash for run_p4() =item 3... 1 or more file[revRange] spec for p4 files command (run 'p4 help files' and 'p4 help revisions' command line for formatting help) =back example usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_p4_files $p4_rev_root, $p4_options, "//..." =cut sub parse_files_and_revids_from_p4_files { croak "usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_p4_files , , ... " unless @_ >= 3; my ($p4_rev_root, $p4_options) = (shift, shift); my $output; run_p4 [ "files", @_ ], \undef, \$output, $p4_options; my $h = {}; while ( $output =~ m{(.*)#(\d+) - }g ) { die "'p4 files' output lines weren't preceeded by $p4_rev_root as expected" if index( $1, $p4_rev_root ) < 0 ; my $name = substr $1, length $p4_rev_root ; die "duplicate file names in p4 files output" if exists $h->{$name}; $h->{$name} = $2 ; } return join "", map { "$_ => $h->{$_}\n" } sort keys %$h; } =item parse_files_and_revids_from_cvs_history Run cvs history command line to get list of changed files. Parse the output so it can be diffed with the output of parse_files_and_revids_from_revml. returns a string containing names and revision numbers, 1 per line. See that sub above for a description of the output format. arguments are: =over =item 1. cvs root directory. =item 2. cvs module name. This string will be removed from the output so it may be diffed with parse_files_and_revids_from_revml output. =back example usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_cvs_history "/home/blah/blah/cvsroot_0/", "module-blah" =cut sub parse_files_and_revids_from_cvs_history { croak "usage: parse_files_and_revids_from_cvs_history , " unless @_ == 2; my ($cvs_root, $cvs_module) = (shift, shift); my $output; # run [ "cvs", "-d", $cvs_root, "history", "-xAM" ], run [ "cvs", "-d", $cvs_root, "history", "-c" ], \undef, \$output; my $h = {}; my @lines = split /\n/, $output; for ( @lines ) { my @fields = split; my $name = "$fields[7]/$fields[6]"; die "'cvs history' output line ($_), name ($name) didn't contain module name '$cvs_module' as expected" if index( $name, $cvs_module ) != 0 ; # remove cvs_module name plus directory separator $name = substr $name, length( $cvs_module ) + 1; # keep the greatest rev_id my $rev_id = $fields[5]; $h->{$name} = $rev_id if ! exists $h->{$name} || ! defined $h->{$name} || $h->{$name} lt $rev_id ; } return join "", map { "$_ => $h->{$_}\n" } sort keys %$h; } =item get_vcp_output @vcp = get_vcp_output "foo:", "-bar" ; Does a: run [ vcp_cmd, @_, "sort:", "--", "revml:", ... ], \undef, \$out or croak "`vcp blahdy blah` returned $?"; and returns $out. The "..." refers to whatever output options are needed to make the test output agree with C's test files (t/test-*.revml). You may pass in options as a hash reference as the final argument. The supported option is: revml_out_spec which, if present, is tacked on to the revml: output spec's list of options, =cut sub get_vcp_output { my $options = @_ && ref $_[-1] eq "HASH" ? pop : {} ; my @args = ( @_, "sort:", "--", "revml:" ); push @args, @{ $options->{revml_out_spec} } if exists $options->{revml_out_spec}; run [ vcp_cmd, @args ], \undef, \my $out; return $out ; } =back =head1 XML "cleanup" functions These are used to get rid of content or elements that are known to differ when comparing the revml fed in to a repository with the revml that comes out. =over =item s_content s_content $elt_type1, $elt_type2, ..., \$string1, \$string2, ..., $new_content ; Changes the contents of the elements, since some things, like suer id or mod_time can't be the same after going through a repository. If $new_val is not supplied, a constant string is used. =cut sub s_content { my $new_val = pop if @_ && ! ref $_[-1] ; $new_val = "" unless defined $new_val ; my $elt_type_re = do { my @a ; push @a, quotemeta shift while @_ && ! ref $_[0] ; join "|", @a ; } ; $$_ =~ s{(<($elt_type_re)[^>]*?>).*?()}{$1$new_val$3}sg for @_ ; } =item rm_elts rm_elts $elt_type1, $elt_type2, ..., \$string1, \$string2 rm_elts $elt_type1, $elt_type2, ..., qr/$content_re/, \$string1, \$string2 Removes the specified elements from the strings, including leading whitespace and trailing line separators. If the optional $content_re regular expression is provided, then only elements containing that pattern will be removed. =back =cut sub rm_elts { my $elt_type_re = do { my @a ; push @a, quotemeta shift while @_ && ! ref $_[0] ; join "|", @a ; } ; my $content_re = @_ && ref $_[0] eq "Regexp" ? shift : qr/.*?/s ; for ( @_ ) { $$_ =~ s{^\s*<($elt_type_re)\b[^>]*?>$content_re\r?\n}{}gsm; $$_ =~ s{^\s*<($elt_type_re)\s*/>\r?\n}{}g; } } =head1 p4 repository mgmt functions =over =item p4_borken Returns true if the p4 is missing or too old (< 99.2). =cut sub p4d_borken { my $p4dV = `p4d -V` || 0 ; return "p4d not found" unless $p4dV ; my ( $p4d_version ) = $p4dV =~ m{^Rev[^/]*/[^/]*/([^/]*)}m ; my $min_version = 99.2 ; return "p4d version too old, need at least $min_version" unless $p4d_version >= $min_version ; return "" ; } =item tmpdir my $d = tmpdir ## create a directory like /tmp/vcp_95cvs2p4_##### my $d = tmpdir( "foo" ); ## create a directory like /tmp/vcp_95cvs2p4_foo_##### Return a temporary directory that will be deleted in an END block. The prefix is advisory only and is meant to allow developers to intuit the purpose of a temporary directory from its name. See File::Spec::Unix's tmpdir() function for details, but you can set the TMPDIR environment variable to control where the VCP test suite places temp dirs (and, after testing, where vcp places test dirs, but vcp has separate temp directory management functions). =cut sub tmpdir { my ( $prefix ) = @_; $prefix = ( ! empty $prefix ) ? "${prefix}_" : ""; require File::Basename; ( my $progname = File::Basename::basename( $0 ) ) =~ s/\..*//; require File::Temp; my $dir = File::Temp::tempdir( "vcp_${progname}_${prefix}XXXX", DIR => File::Spec->tmpdir, ); ## We clean up the dir ourselves because tempdir( CLEANUP => 1 ) doesn't ## delete the dir if it's nonempty. mk_tmp_dir $dir; $dir; } =back =head1 CVS mgmt functions =over =item cvs_borken Returns true if cvs -v works and outputs "Concurrent Versions System". =cut sub cvs_borken { my $cvsV = `cvs -v` || 0 ; return "cvs command not found" unless $cvsV ; return "cvs command does not appear to be for CVS: '$cvsV'" unless $cvsV =~ /Concurrent Versions System/; return "" ; } =item init_cvsroot my $cvs_options = init_cvsroot $prefix, $module_name ; my $cvs_options = init_cvsroot $prefix, $module_name, $rootdir ; Creates a CVS repository containing an empty module. Also sets $ENV{LOGNAME} if it notices that we're running as root, so CVS won't give a "cannot commit files as 'root'" error. Tries "nobody", then "guest". Returns the options needed to access the cvs repository. =cut sub init_cvsroot { my ( $prefix , $module, $root ) = @_ ; my $is_tmp_root = ! defined $root; $prefix = "" unless defined $prefix; $prefix .= "_" if length $prefix; $root = tmpdir( "${prefix}cvsroot" ) unless defined $root; my $options = { repo => $root, work => tmpdir( "${prefix}cvswork" ), } ; my $cwd = cwd ; ## Give vcp ... cvs:... a repository to work with. Note that it does not ## use $cvswork, just this test script does. $ENV{CVSROOT} = $options->{repo} ; ## CVS does not like root to commit files. So, try to fool it. ## CVS calls geteuid() to determine rootness (so does perl's $>). ## If root, CVS calls getlogin() first, then checks the LOGNAME and USER ## environment vars. ## ## What this means is: if the user is actually logged in on a physical ## terminal as 'root', getlogin() will return "root" to cvs and we can't ## fool CVS. ## ## However, if they've used "su", a very common occurence, then getlogin() ## will return failure (NULL in C, undef in Perl) and we can spoof CVS ## using $ENV{LOGNAME}. if ( ! $> && $^O !~ /Win32/ ) { my $login = getlogin ; if ( ( ! defined $login || ! getpwnam $login ) && ( ! exists $ENV{LOGNAME} || ! getpwnam $ENV{LOGNAME} ) ) { for ( qw( nobody guest ) ) { my $uid = getpwnam $_ ; next unless defined $uid ; ( $ENV{LOGNAME}, $> ) = ( $_, $uid ) ; last ; } ## Must set uid, too, to keep perl (and thus vcp) from bombing ## out when running setuid and given a -I option. This happens ## a lot in the test suite, since the tests often call vcp ## using "perl", "-Iblib/lib", "bin/vcp", ... to recreate the ## appropriate operating environment for Perl. If this becomes ## a problem, perhaps we can hack in a "run as user" option to ## VCP::Utils::cvs so that only the cvs subcommands are run ## setuid, or perhaps we can avoid passing "-I" to the perls. $< = $> ; warn "# Setting real & eff. uids=", $>, "(", $ENV{LOGNAME}, qq{) to quell "cvs: cannot commit files as 'root'"\n} ; } } run [ qw( cvs init ) ]; chdir $options->{work} or die "$!: $options->{work}" ; mkdir $module, 0770 or die "$!: $module" ; chdir $module or die "$!: $module" ; run [ qw( cvs import -m ), "$module import", $module, "${module}_vendor", "${module}_release" ]; chdir $cwd or die "$!: $cwd" ; delete $ENV{CVSROOT} ; # chdir ".." or die "$! .." ; # # system qw( cvs checkout CVSROOT/modules ) and die "cvs checkout failed" ; # # open MODULES, ">>CVSROOT/modules" or die "$!: CVSROOT/modules" ; # print MODULES "\n$module $module/\n" or die "$!: CVSROOT/modules" ; # close MODULES or die "$!: CVSROOT/modules" ; # # system qw( cvs commit -m foo CVSROOT/modules ) # and die "cvs commit failed" ; return $options ; } =back =head1 VSS mgmt functions =over =item vss_borken Returns true if MKSS may be run. =cut sub vss_borken { my $out = `mkss` ; return "mkss command not found" if empty $out; return "" ; } =back =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2000, Perforce Software, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This module and the VCP package are licensed according to the terms given in the file LICENSE accompanying this distribution, a copy of which is included in L. =cut 1 ;