qemu/tests/check-qdict.c

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/*
* QDict unit-tests.
*
* Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat Inc.
*
* Authors:
* Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU LGPL, version 2.1 or later.
* See the COPYING.LIB file in the top-level directory.
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "qapi/qmp/qdict.h"
#include "qapi/qmp/qstring.h"
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
#include "qapi/error.h"
#include "qemu-common.h"
/*
* Public Interface test-cases
*
* (with some violations to access 'private' data)
*/
static void qdict_new_test(void)
{
QDict *qdict;
qdict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qdict != NULL);
g_assert(qdict_size(qdict) == 0);
g_assert(qdict->base.refcnt == 1);
g_assert(qobject_type(QOBJECT(qdict)) == QTYPE_QDICT);
QDECREF(qdict);
}
static void qdict_put_obj_test(void)
{
QNum *qn;
QDict *qdict;
QDictEntry *ent;
const int num = 42;
qdict = qdict_new();
// key "" will have tdb hash 12345
qdict_put_int(qdict, "", num);
g_assert(qdict_size(qdict) == 1);
ent = QLIST_FIRST(&qdict->table[12345 % QDICT_BUCKET_MAX]);
qn = qobject_to_qnum(ent->value);
g_assert_cmpint(qnum_get_int(qn), ==, num);
QDECREF(qdict);
}
static void qdict_destroy_simple_test(void)
{
QDict *qdict;
qdict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(qdict, "num", 0);
qdict_put_str(qdict, "str", "foo");
QDECREF(qdict);
}
static void qdict_get_test(void)
{
QNum *qn;
QObject *obj;
const int value = -42;
const char *key = "test";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, value);
obj = qdict_get(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(obj != NULL);
qn = qobject_to_qnum(obj);
g_assert_cmpint(qnum_get_int(qn), ==, value);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_get_int_test(void)
{
int ret;
const int value = 100;
const char *key = "int";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, value);
ret = qdict_get_int(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(ret == value);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_get_try_int_test(void)
{
int ret;
const int value = 100;
const char *key = "int";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, value);
qdict_put_str(tests_dict, "string", "test");
ret = qdict_get_try_int(tests_dict, key, 0);
g_assert(ret == value);
ret = qdict_get_try_int(tests_dict, "missing", -42);
g_assert_cmpuint(ret, ==, -42);
ret = qdict_get_try_int(tests_dict, "string", -42);
g_assert_cmpuint(ret, ==, -42);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_get_str_test(void)
{
const char *p;
const char *key = "key";
const char *str = "string";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_str(tests_dict, key, str);
p = qdict_get_str(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(p != NULL);
g_assert(strcmp(p, str) == 0);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_get_try_str_test(void)
{
const char *p;
const char *key = "key";
const char *str = "string";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_str(tests_dict, key, str);
p = qdict_get_try_str(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(p != NULL);
g_assert(strcmp(p, str) == 0);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_defaults_test(void)
{
QDict *dict, *copy;
dict = qdict_new();
copy = qdict_new();
qdict_set_default_str(dict, "foo", "abc");
qdict_set_default_str(dict, "foo", "def");
g_assert_cmpstr(qdict_get_str(dict, "foo"), ==, "abc");
qdict_set_default_str(dict, "bar", "ghi");
qdict_copy_default(copy, dict, "foo");
g_assert_cmpstr(qdict_get_str(copy, "foo"), ==, "abc");
qdict_set_default_str(copy, "bar", "xyz");
qdict_copy_default(copy, dict, "bar");
g_assert_cmpstr(qdict_get_str(copy, "bar"), ==, "xyz");
QDECREF(copy);
QDECREF(dict);
}
static void qdict_haskey_not_test(void)
{
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qdict_haskey(tests_dict, "test") == 0);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_haskey_test(void)
{
const char *key = "test";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, 0);
g_assert(qdict_haskey(tests_dict, key) == 1);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_del_test(void)
{
const char *key = "key test";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_str(tests_dict, key, "foo");
g_assert(qdict_size(tests_dict) == 1);
qdict_del(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(qdict_size(tests_dict) == 0);
g_assert(qdict_haskey(tests_dict, key) == 0);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qobject_to_qdict_test(void)
{
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qobject_to_qdict(QOBJECT(tests_dict)) == tests_dict);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_iterapi_test(void)
{
int count;
const QDictEntry *ent;
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qdict_first(tests_dict) == NULL);
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, "key1", 1);
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, "key2", 2);
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, "key3", 3);
count = 0;
for (ent = qdict_first(tests_dict); ent; ent = qdict_next(tests_dict, ent)){
g_assert(qdict_haskey(tests_dict, qdict_entry_key(ent)) == 1);
count++;
}
g_assert(count == qdict_size(tests_dict));
/* Do it again to test restarting */
count = 0;
for (ent = qdict_first(tests_dict); ent; ent = qdict_next(tests_dict, ent)){
g_assert(qdict_haskey(tests_dict, qdict_entry_key(ent)) == 1);
count++;
}
g_assert(count == qdict_size(tests_dict));
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_flatten_test(void)
{
QList *list1 = qlist_new();
QList *list2 = qlist_new();
QDict *dict1 = qdict_new();
QDict *dict2 = qdict_new();
QDict *dict3 = qdict_new();
/*
* Test the flattening of
*
* {
* "e": [
* 42,
* [
* 23,
* 66,
* {
* "a": 0,
* "b": 1
* }
* ]
* ],
* "f": {
* "c": 2,
* "d": 3,
* },
* "g": 4
* }
*
* to
*
* {
* "e.0": 42,
* "e.1.0": 23,
* "e.1.1": 66,
* "e.1.2.a": 0,
* "e.1.2.b": 1,
* "f.c": 2,
* "f.d": 3,
* "g": 4
* }
*/
qdict_put_int(dict1, "a", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict1, "b", 1);
qlist_append_int(list1, 23);
qlist_append_int(list1, 66);
qlist_append(list1, dict1);
qlist_append_int(list2, 42);
qlist_append(list2, list1);
qdict_put_int(dict2, "c", 2);
qdict_put_int(dict2, "d", 3);
qdict_put(dict3, "e", list2);
qdict_put(dict3, "f", dict2);
qdict_put_int(dict3, "g", 4);
qdict_flatten(dict3);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "e.0") == 42);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "e.1.0") == 23);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "e.1.1") == 66);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "e.1.2.a") == 0);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "e.1.2.b") == 1);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "f.c") == 2);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "f.d") == 3);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict3, "g") == 4);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict3) == 8);
QDECREF(dict3);
}
static void qdict_array_split_test(void)
{
QDict *test_dict = qdict_new();
QDict *dict1, *dict2;
QNum *int1;
QList *test_list;
/*
* Test the split of
*
* {
* "1.x": 0,
* "4.y": 1,
* "0.a": 42,
* "o.o": 7,
* "0.b": 23,
* "2": 66
* }
*
* to
*
* [
* {
* "a": 42,
* "b": 23
* },
* {
* "x": 0
* },
* 66
* ]
*
* and
*
* {
* "4.y": 1,
* "o.o": 7
* }
*
* (remaining in the old QDict)
*
* This example is given in the comment of qdict_array_split().
*/
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "1.x", 0);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "4.y", 1);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "0.a", 42);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "o.o", 7);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "0.b", 23);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "2", 66);
qdict_array_split(test_dict, &test_list);
dict1 = qobject_to_qdict(qlist_pop(test_list));
dict2 = qobject_to_qdict(qlist_pop(test_list));
int1 = qobject_to_qnum(qlist_pop(test_list));
g_assert(dict1);
g_assert(dict2);
g_assert(int1);
g_assert(qlist_empty(test_list));
QDECREF(test_list);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "a") == 42);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "b") == 23);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict1) == 2);
QDECREF(dict1);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict2, "x") == 0);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict2) == 1);
QDECREF(dict2);
g_assert_cmpint(qnum_get_int(int1), ==, 66);
QDECREF(int1);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(test_dict, "4.y") == 1);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(test_dict, "o.o") == 7);
g_assert(qdict_size(test_dict) == 2);
QDECREF(test_dict);
/*
* Test the split of
*
* {
* "0": 42,
* "1": 23,
* "1.x": 84
* }
*
* to
*
* [
* 42
* ]
*
* and
*
* {
* "1": 23,
* "1.x": 84
* }
*
* That is, test whether splitting stops if there is both an entry with key
* of "%u" and other entries with keys prefixed "%u." for the same index.
*/
test_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "0", 42);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "1", 23);
qdict_put_int(test_dict, "1.x", 84);
qdict_array_split(test_dict, &test_list);
int1 = qobject_to_qnum(qlist_pop(test_list));
g_assert(int1);
g_assert(qlist_empty(test_list));
QDECREF(test_list);
g_assert_cmpint(qnum_get_int(int1), ==, 42);
QDECREF(int1);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(test_dict, "1") == 23);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(test_dict, "1.x") == 84);
g_assert(qdict_size(test_dict) == 2);
QDECREF(test_dict);
}
static void qdict_array_entries_test(void)
{
QDict *dict = qdict_new();
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "bar", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "baz.0", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.1", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, -EINVAL);
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.0", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, 2);
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.bar", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, -EINVAL);
qdict_del(dict, "foo.bar");
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.2.a", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.2.b", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "foo.2.c", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, "foo."), ==, 3);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, ""), ==, -EINVAL);
QDECREF(dict);
dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(dict, "1", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, ""), ==, -EINVAL);
qdict_put_int(dict, "0", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, ""), ==, 2);
qdict_put_int(dict, "bar", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, ""), ==, -EINVAL);
qdict_del(dict, "bar");
qdict_put_int(dict, "2.a", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "2.b", 0);
qdict_put_int(dict, "2.c", 0);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_array_entries(dict, ""), ==, 3);
QDECREF(dict);
}
static void qdict_join_test(void)
{
QDict *dict1, *dict2;
bool overwrite = false;
int i;
dict1 = qdict_new();
dict2 = qdict_new();
/* Test everything once without overwrite and once with */
do
{
/* Test empty dicts */
qdict_join(dict1, dict2, overwrite);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict1) == 0);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict2) == 0);
/* First iteration: Test movement */
/* Second iteration: Test empty source and non-empty destination */
qdict_put_int(dict2, "foo", 42);
for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
qdict_join(dict1, dict2, overwrite);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict1) == 1);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict2) == 0);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "foo") == 42);
}
/* Test non-empty source and destination without conflict */
qdict_put_int(dict2, "bar", 23);
qdict_join(dict1, dict2, overwrite);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict1) == 2);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict2) == 0);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "foo") == 42);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "bar") == 23);
/* Test conflict */
qdict_put_int(dict2, "foo", 84);
qdict_join(dict1, dict2, overwrite);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict1) == 2);
g_assert(qdict_size(dict2) == !overwrite);
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "foo") == (overwrite ? 84 : 42));
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict1, "bar") == 23);
if (!overwrite) {
g_assert(qdict_get_int(dict2, "foo") == 84);
}
/* Check the references */
g_assert(qdict_get(dict1, "foo")->refcnt == 1);
g_assert(qdict_get(dict1, "bar")->refcnt == 1);
if (!overwrite) {
g_assert(qdict_get(dict2, "foo")->refcnt == 1);
}
/* Clean up */
qdict_del(dict1, "foo");
qdict_del(dict1, "bar");
if (!overwrite) {
qdict_del(dict2, "foo");
}
}
while (overwrite ^= true);
QDECREF(dict1);
QDECREF(dict2);
}
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
static void qdict_crumple_test_recursive(void)
{
QDict *src, *dst, *rule, *vnc, *acl, *listen;
QList *rules;
src = qdict_new();
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.listen.addr", "127.0.0.1");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.listen.port", "5901");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.rules.0.match", "fred");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.rules.0.policy", "allow");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.rules.1.match", "bob");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.rules.1.policy", "deny");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.default", "deny");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl..name", "acl0");
qdict_put_str(src, "vnc.acl.rule..name", "acl0");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
dst = qobject_to_qdict(qdict_crumple(src, &error_abort));
g_assert(dst);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(dst), ==, 1);
vnc = qdict_get_qdict(dst, "vnc");
g_assert(vnc);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(vnc), ==, 3);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
listen = qdict_get_qdict(vnc, "listen");
g_assert(listen);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(listen), ==, 2);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert_cmpstr("127.0.0.1", ==, qdict_get_str(listen, "addr"));
g_assert_cmpstr("5901", ==, qdict_get_str(listen, "port"));
acl = qdict_get_qdict(vnc, "acl");
g_assert(acl);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(acl), ==, 3);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
rules = qdict_get_qlist(acl, "rules");
g_assert(rules);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert_cmpint(qlist_size(rules), ==, 2);
rule = qobject_to_qdict(qlist_pop(rules));
g_assert(rule);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(rule), ==, 2);
g_assert_cmpstr("fred", ==, qdict_get_str(rule, "match"));
g_assert_cmpstr("allow", ==, qdict_get_str(rule, "policy"));
QDECREF(rule);
rule = qobject_to_qdict(qlist_pop(rules));
g_assert(rule);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(rule), ==, 2);
g_assert_cmpstr("bob", ==, qdict_get_str(rule, "match"));
g_assert_cmpstr("deny", ==, qdict_get_str(rule, "policy"));
QDECREF(rule);
/* With recursive crumpling, we should see all names unescaped */
g_assert_cmpstr("acl0", ==, qdict_get_str(vnc, "acl.name"));
g_assert_cmpstr("acl0", ==, qdict_get_str(acl, "rule.name"));
QDECREF(src);
QDECREF(dst);
}
static void qdict_crumple_test_empty(void)
{
QDict *src, *dst;
src = qdict_new();
dst = (QDict *)qdict_crumple(src, &error_abort);
g_assert_cmpint(qdict_size(dst), ==, 0);
QDECREF(src);
QDECREF(dst);
}
static void qdict_crumple_test_bad_inputs(void)
{
QDict *src;
Error *error = NULL;
src = qdict_new();
/* rule.0 can't be both a string and a dict */
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.0", "fred");
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.0.policy", "allow");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert(qdict_crumple(src, &error) == NULL);
g_assert(error != NULL);
error_free(error);
error = NULL;
QDECREF(src);
src = qdict_new();
/* rule can't be both a list and a dict */
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.0", "fred");
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.a", "allow");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert(qdict_crumple(src, &error) == NULL);
g_assert(error != NULL);
error_free(error);
error = NULL;
QDECREF(src);
src = qdict_new();
/* The input should be flat, ie no dicts or lists */
qdict_put(src, "rule.a", qdict_new());
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.b", "allow");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert(qdict_crumple(src, &error) == NULL);
g_assert(error != NULL);
error_free(error);
error = NULL;
QDECREF(src);
src = qdict_new();
/* List indexes must not have gaps */
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.0", "deny");
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.3", "allow");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert(qdict_crumple(src, &error) == NULL);
g_assert(error != NULL);
error_free(error);
error = NULL;
QDECREF(src);
src = qdict_new();
/* List indexes must be in %zu format */
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.0", "deny");
qdict_put_str(src, "rule.+1", "allow");
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_assert(qdict_crumple(src, &error) == NULL);
g_assert(error != NULL);
error_free(error);
error = NULL;
QDECREF(src);
}
/*
* Errors test-cases
*/
static void qdict_put_exists_test(void)
{
int value;
const char *key = "exists";
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, 1);
qdict_put_int(tests_dict, key, 2);
value = qdict_get_int(tests_dict, key);
g_assert(value == 2);
g_assert(qdict_size(tests_dict) == 1);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
static void qdict_get_not_exists_test(void)
{
QDict *tests_dict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qdict_get(tests_dict, "foo") == NULL);
QDECREF(tests_dict);
}
/*
* Stress test-case
*
* This is a lot big for a unit-test, but there is no other place
* to have it.
*/
static void remove_dots(char *string)
{
char *p = strchr(string, ':');
if (p)
*p = '\0';
}
static QString *read_line(FILE *file, char *key)
{
char value[128];
if (fscanf(file, "%127s%127s", key, value) == EOF) {
return NULL;
}
remove_dots(key);
return qstring_from_str(value);
}
#define reset_file(file) fseek(file, 0L, SEEK_SET)
static void qdict_stress_test(void)
{
size_t lines;
char key[128];
FILE *test_file;
QDict *qdict;
QString *value;
const char *test_file_path = "qdict-test-data.txt";
test_file = fopen(test_file_path, "r");
g_assert(test_file != NULL);
// Create the dict
qdict = qdict_new();
g_assert(qdict != NULL);
// Add everything from the test file
for (lines = 0;; lines++) {
value = read_line(test_file, key);
if (!value)
break;
qdict_put(qdict, key, value);
}
g_assert(qdict_size(qdict) == lines);
// Check if everything is really in there
reset_file(test_file);
for (;;) {
const char *str1, *str2;
value = read_line(test_file, key);
if (!value)
break;
str1 = qstring_get_str(value);
str2 = qdict_get_str(qdict, key);
g_assert(str2 != NULL);
g_assert(strcmp(str1, str2) == 0);
QDECREF(value);
}
// Delete everything
reset_file(test_file);
for (;;) {
value = read_line(test_file, key);
if (!value)
break;
qdict_del(qdict, key);
QDECREF(value);
g_assert(qdict_haskey(qdict, key) == 0);
}
fclose(test_file);
g_assert(qdict_size(qdict) == 0);
QDECREF(qdict);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
g_test_init(&argc, &argv, NULL);
g_test_add_func("/public/new", qdict_new_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/put_obj", qdict_put_obj_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/destroy_simple", qdict_destroy_simple_test);
/* Continue, but now with fixtures */
g_test_add_func("/public/get", qdict_get_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/get_int", qdict_get_int_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/get_try_int", qdict_get_try_int_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/get_str", qdict_get_str_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/get_try_str", qdict_get_try_str_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/defaults", qdict_defaults_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/haskey_not", qdict_haskey_not_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/haskey", qdict_haskey_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/del", qdict_del_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/to_qdict", qobject_to_qdict_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/iterapi", qdict_iterapi_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/flatten", qdict_flatten_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/array_split", qdict_array_split_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/array_entries", qdict_array_entries_test);
g_test_add_func("/public/join", qdict_join_test);
g_test_add_func("/errors/put_exists", qdict_put_exists_test);
g_test_add_func("/errors/get_not_exists", qdict_get_not_exists_test);
qdict: implement a qdict_crumple method for un-flattening a dict The qdict_flatten() method will take a dict whose elements are further nested dicts/lists and flatten them by concatenating keys. The qdict_crumple() method aims to do the reverse, taking a flat qdict, and turning it into a set of nested dicts/lists. It will apply nesting based on the key name, with a '.' indicating a new level in the hierarchy. If the keys in the nested structure are all numeric, it will create a list, otherwise it will create a dict. If the keys are a mixture of numeric and non-numeric, or the numeric keys are not in strictly ascending order, an error will be reported. As an example, a flat dict containing { 'foo.0.bar': 'one', 'foo.0.wizz': '1', 'foo.1.bar': 'two', 'foo.1.wizz': '2' } will get turned into a dict with one element 'foo' whose value is a list. The list elements will each in turn be dicts. { 'foo': [ { 'bar': 'one', 'wizz': '1' }, { 'bar': 'two', 'wizz': '2' } ], } If the key is intended to contain a literal '.', then it must be escaped as '..'. ie a flat dict { 'foo..bar': 'wizz', 'bar.foo..bar': 'eek', 'bar.hello': 'world' } Will end up as { 'foo.bar': 'wizz', 'bar': { 'foo.bar': 'eek', 'hello': 'world' } } The intent of this function is that it allows a set of QemuOpts to be turned into a nested data structure that mirrors the nesting used when the same object is defined over QMP. Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Message-Id: <1475246744-29302-3-git-send-email-berrange@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> [Parameter recursive dropped along with its tests; whitespace style touched up] Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2016-09-30 17:45:25 +03:00
g_test_add_func("/public/crumple/recursive",
qdict_crumple_test_recursive);
g_test_add_func("/public/crumple/empty",
qdict_crumple_test_empty);
g_test_add_func("/public/crumple/bad_inputs",
qdict_crumple_test_bad_inputs);
/* The Big one */
if (g_test_slow()) {
g_test_add_func("/stress/test", qdict_stress_test);
}
return g_test_run();
}