crashpad/util/stdlib/strlcpy_test.cc

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// Copyright 2014 The Crashpad Authors. All rights reserved.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
#include "util/stdlib/strlcpy.h"
#include <string.h>
#include <algorithm>
#include "base/format_macros.h"
#include "base/macros.h"
#include "base/strings/string16.h"
#include "base/strings/stringprintf.h"
#include "gtest/gtest.h"
namespace crashpad {
namespace test {
namespace {
TEST(strlcpy, c16lcpy) {
// Use a destination buffer thats larger than the length passed to c16lcpy.
// The unused portion is a guard area that must not be written to.
struct TestBuffer {
base::char16 lead_guard[64];
base::char16 data[128];
base::char16 trail_guard[64];
};
TestBuffer expected_untouched;
memset(&expected_untouched, 0xa5, sizeof(expected_untouched));
// Test with M, é, Ā, ő, and Ḙ. This is a mix of characters that have zero and
// nonzero low and high bytes.
static constexpr base::char16 test_characters[] =
{0x4d, 0xe9, 0x100, 0x151, 0x1e18};
for (size_t index = 0; index < arraysize(test_characters); ++index) {
base::char16 test_character = test_characters[index];
SCOPED_TRACE(base::StringPrintf(
"character index %" PRIuS ", character 0x%x", index, test_character));
for (size_t length = 0; length < 256; ++length) {
SCOPED_TRACE(
base::StringPrintf("index %" PRIuS, length));
base::string16 test_string(length, test_character);
TestBuffer destination;
memset(&destination, 0xa5, sizeof(destination));
test: Use (actual, [un]expected) in gtest {ASSERT,EXPECT}_{EQ,NE} gtest used to require (expected, actual) ordering for arguments to EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ, and in failed test assertions would identify each side as “expected” or “actual.” Tests in Crashpad adhered to this traditional ordering. After a gtest change in February 2016, it is now agnostic with respect to the order of these arguments. This change mechanically updates all uses of these macros to (actual, expected) by reversing them. This provides consistency with our use of the logging CHECK_EQ and DCHECK_EQ macros, and makes for better readability by ordinary native speakers. The rough (but working!) conversion tool is https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/466727/1/rewrite_expectassert_eq.py, and “git cl format” cleaned up its output. EXPECT_NE and ASSERT_NE never had a preferred ordering. gtest never made a judgment that one side or the other needed to provide an “unexpected” value. Consequently, some code used (unexpected, actual) while other code used (actual, unexpected). For consistency with the new EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ usage, as well as consistency with CHECK_NE and DCHECK_NE, this change also updates these use sites to (actual, unexpected) where one side can be called “unexpected” as, for example, std::string::npos can be. Unfortunately, this portion was a manual conversion. References: https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/docs/Primer.md#binary-comparison https://github.com/google/googletest/commit/77d6b173380332b1c1bc540532641f410ec82d65 https://github.com/google/googletest/pull/713 Change-Id: I978fef7c94183b8b1ef63f12f5ab4d6693626be3 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/466727 Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
2017-04-04 00:35:21 -04:00
EXPECT_EQ(c16lcpy(destination.data,
test_string.c_str(),
test: Use (actual, [un]expected) in gtest {ASSERT,EXPECT}_{EQ,NE} gtest used to require (expected, actual) ordering for arguments to EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ, and in failed test assertions would identify each side as “expected” or “actual.” Tests in Crashpad adhered to this traditional ordering. After a gtest change in February 2016, it is now agnostic with respect to the order of these arguments. This change mechanically updates all uses of these macros to (actual, expected) by reversing them. This provides consistency with our use of the logging CHECK_EQ and DCHECK_EQ macros, and makes for better readability by ordinary native speakers. The rough (but working!) conversion tool is https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/466727/1/rewrite_expectassert_eq.py, and “git cl format” cleaned up its output. EXPECT_NE and ASSERT_NE never had a preferred ordering. gtest never made a judgment that one side or the other needed to provide an “unexpected” value. Consequently, some code used (unexpected, actual) while other code used (actual, unexpected). For consistency with the new EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ usage, as well as consistency with CHECK_NE and DCHECK_NE, this change also updates these use sites to (actual, unexpected) where one side can be called “unexpected” as, for example, std::string::npos can be. Unfortunately, this portion was a manual conversion. References: https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/docs/Primer.md#binary-comparison https://github.com/google/googletest/commit/77d6b173380332b1c1bc540532641f410ec82d65 https://github.com/google/googletest/pull/713 Change-Id: I978fef7c94183b8b1ef63f12f5ab4d6693626be3 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/466727 Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
2017-04-04 00:35:21 -04:00
arraysize(destination.data)),
length);
// Make sure that the destination buffer is NUL-terminated, and that as
// much of the test string was copied as could fit.
size_t expected_destination_length =
std::min(length, arraysize(destination.data) - 1);
test: Use (actual, [un]expected) in gtest {ASSERT,EXPECT}_{EQ,NE} gtest used to require (expected, actual) ordering for arguments to EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ, and in failed test assertions would identify each side as “expected” or “actual.” Tests in Crashpad adhered to this traditional ordering. After a gtest change in February 2016, it is now agnostic with respect to the order of these arguments. This change mechanically updates all uses of these macros to (actual, expected) by reversing them. This provides consistency with our use of the logging CHECK_EQ and DCHECK_EQ macros, and makes for better readability by ordinary native speakers. The rough (but working!) conversion tool is https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/466727/1/rewrite_expectassert_eq.py, and “git cl format” cleaned up its output. EXPECT_NE and ASSERT_NE never had a preferred ordering. gtest never made a judgment that one side or the other needed to provide an “unexpected” value. Consequently, some code used (unexpected, actual) while other code used (actual, unexpected). For consistency with the new EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ usage, as well as consistency with CHECK_NE and DCHECK_NE, this change also updates these use sites to (actual, unexpected) where one side can be called “unexpected” as, for example, std::string::npos can be. Unfortunately, this portion was a manual conversion. References: https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/docs/Primer.md#binary-comparison https://github.com/google/googletest/commit/77d6b173380332b1c1bc540532641f410ec82d65 https://github.com/google/googletest/pull/713 Change-Id: I978fef7c94183b8b1ef63f12f5ab4d6693626be3 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/466727 Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
2017-04-04 00:35:21 -04:00
EXPECT_EQ(destination.data[expected_destination_length], '\0');
EXPECT_EQ(base::c16len(destination.data), expected_destination_length);
EXPECT_TRUE(base::c16memcmp(test_string.c_str(),
destination.data,
expected_destination_length) == 0);
// Make sure that the portion of the destination buffer that was not used
// was not touched. This includes the guard areas and the unused portion
// of the buffer passed to c16lcpy.
EXPECT_TRUE(base::c16memcmp(expected_untouched.lead_guard,
destination.lead_guard,
arraysize(destination.lead_guard)) == 0);
size_t expected_untouched_length =
arraysize(destination.data) - expected_destination_length - 1;
EXPECT_TRUE(
base::c16memcmp(expected_untouched.data,
&destination.data[expected_destination_length + 1],
expected_untouched_length) == 0);
EXPECT_TRUE(base::c16memcmp(expected_untouched.trail_guard,
destination.trail_guard,
arraysize(destination.trail_guard)) == 0);
}
}
}
} // namespace
} // namespace test
} // namespace crashpad