setfacl -d -m user:${USERS[1]}:rwx "${TESTDIR}"
$BIN "${TARGET}"
-
EXPECTED=$(cat <<EOF
user::rwx
user:${USERS[0]}:rwx
setfacl -d -m user:${USERS[0]}:rwx "${TESTDIR}"
$BIN "${TARGET}"
-
EXPECTED=$(cat <<EOF
user::rw-
user:${USERS[0]}:rwx #effective:rw-
# we get the expected error.
TESTNUM=25
ACTUAL=$( "${BIN}" test/nonexistent 2>&1 )
-ACTUAL="${ACTUAL#*: }"
EXPECTED="test/nonexistent: No such file or directory"
compare
# Same as the previous test, but with --recursive.
TESTNUM=26
ACTUAL=$( "${BIN}" --recursive test/nonexistent 2>&1 )
-ACTUAL="${ACTUAL#*: }"
EXPECTED="test/nonexistent: No such file or directory"
compare
DUMMY2="${TESTDIR}/dummy2"
touch "${DUMMY1}" "${DUMMY2}"
ACTUAL=$( "${BIN}" "${DUMMY1}" test/nonexistent "${DUMMY2}" 2>&1 )
-ACTUAL="${ACTUAL#*: }"
EXPECTED="test/nonexistent: No such file or directory"
compare
EXPECTED="0"
compare
+
# Test that our exit code fails on a symlink.
TESTNUM=34
TARGET="${TESTDIR}/bar"
ACTUAL="$?"
EXPECTED="1"
compare
+
+
+# The previous test should "succeed" if we use --recursive. This is
+# buggy, but it's documented.
+TESTNUM=35
+TARGET="${TESTDIR}/bar"
+touch "${TESTDIR}/foo"
+ln -s foo "${TARGET}"
+setfacl --default --modify user:${USERS[0]}:rw "${TESTDIR}"
+"${BIN}" --recursive "${TARGET}"
+ACTUAL="$?"
+EXPECTED="0"
+compare
+
+
+# Test the return value for nonexistent paths.
+TESTNUM=36
+TARGET="${TESTDIR}/foo"
+"${BIN}" "${TARGET}" &>/dev/null
+ACTUAL="$?"
+EXPECTED="1"
+compare
+
+
+# Test that one "failure" exit code overrides two "successes"
+# We need a default ACL on ${TESTDIR} because otherwise we do
+# nothing, successfully, on the symlink path.
+TESTNUM=37
+mkdir "${TESTDIR}/foo"
+ln -s foo "${TESTDIR}/bar"
+mkdir "${TESTDIR}/baz"
+setfacl --default --modify user:${USERS[0]}:rw "${TESTDIR}"
+"${BIN}" "${TESTDIR}/foo" "${TESTDIR}/bar" "${TESTDIR}/baz"
+ACTUAL="$?"
+EXPECTED="1"
+compare
+
+
+# And test the buggy behavior again; the previous test should return
+# success (ignoring the failure) when --recursive is used.
+TESTNUM=38
+mkdir "${TESTDIR}/foo"
+ln -s foo "${TESTDIR}/bar"
+mkdir "${TESTDIR}/baz"
+"${BIN}" --recursive "${TESTDIR}"
+ACTUAL="$?"
+EXPECTED="0"
+compare
+
+
+# We should get "Not a directory" if we stick a trailing slash on the
+# end of the path to a file.
+TESTNUM=39
+TARGET="${TESTDIR}/foo"
+touch "${TARGET}"
+ACTUAL=$( "${BIN}" "${TARGET}/" 2>&1 )
+EXPECTED="${TARGET}/: Not a directory"
+compare
+
+
+# We should be a no-op on files contained in directories that have no
+# default ACL.
+TESTNUM=40
+TARGET="${TESTDIR}/foo"
+touch "${TARGET}"
+setfacl --modify user:${USERS[0]}:rw "${TARGET}"
+EXPECTED=$( getfacl --omit-header "${TARGET}" )
+"${BIN}" "${TARGET}"
+ACTUAL=$( getfacl --omit-header "${TARGET}" )
+compare
+
+
+# We should be a no-op on directories contained in directories that
+# have no default ACL (same as the previous test, but with a directory).
+TESTNUM=41
+TARGET="${TESTDIR}/foo"
+mkdir "${TARGET}"
+setfacl --modify user:${USERS[0]}:rw "${TARGET}"
+setfacl --default --modify user:${USERS[0]}:rw "${TARGET}"
+EXPECTED=$( getfacl --omit-header "${TARGET}" )
+"${BIN}" --recursive "${TARGET}"
+ACTUAL=$( getfacl --omit-header "${TARGET}" )
+compare