/* * This file is part of the libsigrok project. * * Copyright (C) 2013 Uwe Hermann * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, see . */ #include #include #include #include #include "lib.h" /* * Check various basic init related things. * * - Check whether an sr_init() call with a proper sr_ctx works. * If it returns != SR_OK (or segfaults) this test will fail. * The sr_init() call (among other things) also runs sanity checks on * all libsigrok hardware drivers and errors out upon issues. * * - Check whether a subsequent sr_exit() with that sr_ctx works. * If it returns != SR_OK (or segfaults) this test will fail. */ START_TEST(test_init_exit) { int ret; struct sr_context *sr_ctx; ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() failed: %d.", ret); } END_TEST /* * Check whether two nested sr_init() and sr_exit() calls work. * The two functions have two different contexts. * If any function returns != SR_OK (or segfaults) this test will fail. */ START_TEST(test_init_exit_2) { int ret; struct sr_context *sr_ctx1, *sr_ctx2; ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 1 failed: %d.", ret); } END_TEST /* * Same as above, but sr_exit() in the "wrong" order. * This should work fine, it's not a bug to do this. */ START_TEST(test_init_exit_2_reverse) { int ret; struct sr_context *sr_ctx1, *sr_ctx2; ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 2 failed: %d.", ret); } END_TEST /* * Check whether three nested sr_init() and sr_exit() calls work. * The three functions have three different contexts. * If any function returns != SR_OK (or segfaults) this test will fail. */ START_TEST(test_init_exit_3) { int ret; struct sr_context *sr_ctx1, *sr_ctx2, *sr_ctx3; ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx3); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 3 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx3); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 3 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 1 failed: %d.", ret); } END_TEST /* * Same as above, but sr_exit() in the "wrong" order. * This should work fine, it's not a bug to do this. */ START_TEST(test_init_exit_3_reverse) { int ret; struct sr_context *sr_ctx1, *sr_ctx2, *sr_ctx3; ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(&sr_ctx3); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_init() 3 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx1); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 1 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx2); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 2 failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(sr_ctx3); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_exit() 3 failed: %d.", ret); } END_TEST /* Check whether sr_init(NULL) fails as it should. */ START_TEST(test_init_null) { int ret; ret = sr_log_loglevel_set(SR_LOG_NONE); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_log_loglevel_set() failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_init(NULL); fail_unless(ret != SR_OK, "sr_init(NULL) should have failed."); } END_TEST /* Check whether sr_exit(NULL) fails as it should. */ START_TEST(test_exit_null) { int ret; ret = sr_log_loglevel_set(SR_LOG_NONE); fail_unless(ret == SR_OK, "sr_log_loglevel_set() failed: %d.", ret); ret = sr_exit(NULL); fail_unless(ret != SR_OK, "sr_exit(NULL) should have failed."); } END_TEST Suite *suite_core(void) { Suite *s; TCase *tc; s = suite_create("core"); tc = tcase_create("init_exit"); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_exit); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_exit_2); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_exit_2_reverse); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_exit_3); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_exit_3_reverse); tcase_add_test(tc, test_init_null); tcase_add_test(tc, test_exit_null); suite_add_tcase(s, tc); return s; }