git-lfs/t/t-batch-error-handling.sh
brian m. carlson b2ddccd90d t: avoid using shell variables in printf's first argument
The printf(1) command, like it's C cousin, takes a format string as its
first argument.  If a shell variable is passed as the first argument, it
will be interpreted as a format string; this can lead to surprising
behavior and can cause the test suite to fail if we accidentally insert
a format string character into the variable.

Modify all the places in the individual tests that we use a plain quoted
variable as the format string by running the following Ruby one-liner:

  ruby -i -pe '$_.gsub!(/printf "\$/, %q(printf "%s" "$))' t/t-*.sh

Avoid modifying the test helpers, as there are places (such as calc_oid)
where we want to pass text containing escapes (such as "\n") and have
those be properly interpreted by printf(1).
2018-09-10 14:57:10 +00:00

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# This is a sample Git LFS test. See test/README.md and testhelpers.sh for
# more documentation.
. "$(dirname "$0")/testlib.sh"
begin_test "batch error handling"
(
set -e
# This initializes a new bare git repository in test/remote.
# These remote repositories are global to every test, so keep the names
# unique.
reponame="badbatch" # Server looks for the "badbatch" repo, returns a 203 status
setup_remote_repo "$reponame"
# Clone the repository from the test Git server. This is empty, and will be
# used to test a "git pull" below. The repo is cloned to $TRASHDIR/clone
clone_repo "$reponame" clone
# Clone the repository again to $TRASHDIR/repo. This will be used to commit
# and push objects.
clone_repo "$reponame" repo
# This executes Git LFS from the local repo that was just cloned.
git lfs track "*.dat" 2>&1 | tee track.log
grep "Tracking \"\*.dat\"" track.log
contents="a"
contents_oid=$(calc_oid "$contents")
printf "%s" "$contents" > a.dat
git add a.dat
git add .gitattributes
git commit -m "add a.dat" 2>&1 | tee commit.log
grep "master (root-commit)" commit.log
grep "2 files changed" commit.log
grep "create mode 100644 a.dat" commit.log
grep "create mode 100644 .gitattributes" commit.log
[ "a" = "$(cat a.dat)" ]
# This is a small shell function that runs several git commands together.
assert_pointer "master" "a.dat" "$contents_oid" 1
refute_server_object "$reponame" "$contents_oid"
# This pushes to the remote repository set up at the top of the test.
git push origin master 2>&1 | tee push.log
grep "Unable to parse HTTP response" push.log
)
end_test