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author | green <green@FreeBSD.org> | 2002-06-27 15:58:59 +0000 |
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committer | green <green@FreeBSD.org> | 2002-06-27 15:58:59 +0000 |
commit | 14942ad80d2cbd1c6e5e7dea23c60a009d2be704 (patch) | |
tree | 005315e64a9b3acd40c274857b865d916c82f74a /tools | |
parent | c13cdc98b2a2f3070e4908f7ac893c1c043706a9 (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-14942ad80d2cbd1c6e5e7dea23c60a009d2be704.zip FreeBSD-src-14942ad80d2cbd1c6e5e7dea23c60a009d2be704.tar.gz |
Correct the psl regression test for sed(1)'s now-fixed newline
behavior. Add the bcb regression test which checks for failures due
to a backslash ('\') coinciding with the very last character of the
command buffer. The regression test is cf. this PR (which I did not
know about) and has a different fix for the bug.
PR: bin/22351
Submitted by: Stefan Duerholt <stefan.duerholt@t-online.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'tools')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.bcb.out | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.psl.out | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.sh | 1 |
3 files changed, 8 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.bcb.out b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.bcb.out new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a26e6a --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.bcb.out @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +input +data +for validation +of sed(1) diff --git a/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.psl.out b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.psl.out index 965a13c..8b38f4d 100644 --- a/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.psl.out +++ b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.psl.out @@ -1 +1,4 @@ + + + of sed(1) diff --git a/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.sh b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.sh index 1176466..15ab0e6 100644 --- a/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.sh +++ b/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/regress.sh @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ REGRESSION_START($1) REGRESSION_TEST(`G', `sed G < regress.in') REGRESSION_TEST(`P', `sed P < regress.in') REGRESSION_TEST(`psl', `sed \$!g\;P\;D < regress.in') +REGRESSION_TEST(`bcb', `sed s/X/$(jot -n -bx -s "" 2043)\\\\zz/ < regress.in') REGRESSION_TEST(`y', `echo -n foo | sed y/o/O/') REGRESSION_END() |