+++ /dev/null
-/* $Id: setenv-t.c 7492 2006-03-19 23:07:34Z eagle $ */
-/* setenv test suite. */
-
-#include "config.h"
-
-#include <errno.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-
-#include "inn/messages.h"
-#include "libinn.h"
-#include "libtest.h"
-
-int test_setenv(const char *name, const char *value, int overwrite);
-
-static const char test_var[] = "SETENV_TEST";
-static const char test_value1[] = "Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.";
-static const char test_value2[] = "Do not use Happy Fun Ball on concrete.";
-
-int
-main(void)
-{
- char *value;
- int status;
-
- if (getenv(test_var))
- die("%s already in the environment!", test_var);
-
- puts("12");
-
- ok(1, test_setenv(test_var, test_value1, 0) == 0);
- ok_string(2, test_value1, getenv(test_var));
- ok(3, test_setenv(test_var, test_value2, 0) == 0);
- ok_string(4, test_value1, getenv(test_var));
- ok(5, test_setenv(test_var, test_value2, 1) == 0);
- ok_string(6, test_value2, getenv(test_var));
- ok(7, test_setenv(test_var, "", 1) == 0);
- ok_string(8, "", getenv(test_var));
-
- /* We're run by a shell script wrapper that sets resource limits such
- that we can allocate one string of this size but not two. Note that
- Linux doesn't support data limits, so skip if we get an unexpected
- success here. */
- value = xmalloc(100 * 1024);
- memset(value, 'A', 100 * 1024 - 1);
- value[100 * 1024 - 1] = 0;
- ok(9, test_setenv(test_var, value, 0) == 0);
- ok_string(10, "", getenv(test_var));
- status = test_setenv(test_var, value, 1);
- if (status == 0) {
- puts("ok 11 # skip - no data limit support");
- puts("ok 12 # skip - no data limit support");
- } else {
- ok(11, (status == -1) && (errno == ENOMEM));
- ok_string(12, "", getenv(test_var));
- }
-
- return 0;
-}