The path to the dnsmasq binary can be configured while in the test data
the path is hard-coded to /usr/bin/. This break the test suite if a the
binary is located in a different location, like /usr/local/sbin/.
Replace the hard coded path in the test data by a token, which is
dynamically replaced in networkxml2argvtest with the configured path
after the test data has been loaded.
(Another option would have been to modify configure.ac to generate the
test data during configure, but I do not know of an easy way do trick
configure into mass-generate those test files without listing every
single one, which I consider less flexible.)
- unit-test the unit-test:
#include <assert.h>
#define TEST(in,token,rep,out) { char *buf = strdup(in); assert(!replaceTokens(&buf, token, rep) && !strcmp(buf, out)); free(buf); }
TEST("", "AA", "B", "");
TEST("A", "AA", "B", "A");
TEST("AA", "AA", "B", "B");
TEST("AAA", "AA", "B", "BA");
TEST("AA", "AA", "BB", "BB");
TEST("AA", "AA", "BBB", "BBB");
TEST("<AA", "AA", "B", "<B");
TEST("<AA", "AA", "BB", "<BB");
TEST("<AA", "AA", "BBB", "<BBB");
TEST("AA>", "AA", "B", "B>");
TEST("AA>", "AA", "BB", "BB>");
TEST("AA>", "AA", "BBB", "BBB>");
TEST("<AA>", "AA", "B", "<B>");
TEST("<AA>", "AA", "BB", "<BB>");
TEST("<AA>", "AA", "BBB", "<BBB>");
TEST("<AA|AA>", "AA", "B", "<B|B>");
TEST("<AA|AA>", "AA", "BB", "<BB|BB>");
TEST("<AA|AA>", "AA", "BBB", "<BBB|BBB>");
TEST("<AAAA>", "AA", "B", "<BB>");
TEST("<AAAA>", "AA", "BB", "<BBBB>");
TEST("<AAAA>", "AA", "BBB", "<BBBBBB>");
TEST("AAAA>", "AA", "B", "BB>");
TEST("AAAA>", "AA", "BB", "BBBB>");
TEST("AAAA>", "AA", "BBB", "BBBBBB>");
TEST("<AAAA", "AA", "B", "<BB");
TEST("<AAAA", "AA", "BB", "<BBBB");
TEST("<AAAA", "AA", "BBB", "<BBBBBB");
alarm(1); /* no infinite loop */
TEST("A", "A", "A", "A");
TEST("AA", "A", "A", "AA");
alarm(0);
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
If a domain name is defined for a network, add the --expand-hosts
option to the dnsmasq commandline. This results in the domain being
added to any hostname that is defined in a dns <host> element and
contains no '.' characters (i.e. it is an "unqualified"
hostname). Since PTR records are automatically created for any name
defined in <host>, the result of a PTR request will change from the
unqualified name to the qualified name.
This also has the same effect on any hostnames that dnsmasq reads
from the host's /etc/hosts file.
(In the case of guest hostnames that were learned by dnsmasq via DHCP
requests, they were already getting the domain name added on, even
without --expand-hosts).
The regression testing done by comparison of command-line
generated from the network XML file and the expected
command-line arguments (read from file).
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>