| # Test the `guile-snarf' tool. | |
| # Strip the first line, like GNU `tail -n +2' does, but in a portable | |
| # way (`tail' on Solaris 10 doesn't support `-n +2' for instance.) | |
| strip_first_line () | |
| { | |
| read line | |
| while read line | |
| do | |
| echo "$line" | |
| done | |
| } | |
| snarf () | |
| { | |
| # GNU cpp emits a comment on the first line, which shows what | |
| # arguments it was passed. Strip this line. | |
| echo "$1" | guile-snarf - | strip_first_line | tr -d ' \t\n' | |
| } | |
| snarf_test () | |
| { | |
| x=`snarf "$1"` | |
| if [ x"$x" != x"$2" ]; then | |
| echo "Incorrect output: expected \"$2\", but got \"$x\"" | |
| exit 1 | |
| fi | |
| } | |
| snarf_test "^^a^:^" "a;" | |
| snarf_test " ^ ^ b ^ : ^ " "b;" | |
| snarf_test "c\n^^d^:^\ne" "d;" | |
| snarf_test "f^^g^:^h" "g;" | |
| snarf_test "^^i^:^j^^k^:^" "i;k;" | |
| snarf_test "l^^m" "" | |
| snarf_test "n^:^o" "" | |