import { exec } from "https://deno.land/x/exec/mod.ts";
await exec(`git clone https://github.com/vuejs/vue.git`)
when i use git clone https://github.com/vuejs/vue.git in .sh file, It has message in terminal,
but don't have in deno
First, I think it is important to echo what jsejcksn commented:
The exec module is not related to Deno. All modules at https://deno.land/x/... are third-party code. For working with your shell, see Creating a subprocess in the manual.
Deno's way of doing this without a 3rd party library is to use Deno.run.
With that said, if you take a look at exec's README you'll find documentation for what you're looking for under Capture the output of an external command:
Sometimes you need to capture the output of a command. For example, I do this to get git log checksums:
import { exec } from "https://deno.land/x/exec/mod.ts";
let response = await exec('git log -1 --format=%H', {output: OutputMode.Capture});
If you look at exec's code you'll find it uses Deno.run under the hoods. If you like exec you can use it but you might find you like using Deno.run directly instead.
I am using lintr library in R to find linting issues in the code. I put them into an xml format like this:
<lintsuites>
<lintissue filename="/home/.../blah.R" line_number="36" column_number="1" type="style" message="Trailing blank lines are superfluous."/>
<lintissue filename="/home/.../blahblah.R" line_number="1" column_number="8" type="style" message="Only use double-quotes."/>
</lintsuites>
Now, I would like to fail the Azure devops build when issues like this occur.
I was able to get my tests in a JUnit format like this:
<testsuite name="MB Unit Tests" timestamp="2020-01-22 22:34:07" hostname="0000" tests="29" skipped="0" failures="0" errors="0" time="0.05">
<testcase time="0.01" classname="1_Unit_Tests" name="1_calculates_correctly"/>
<testcase time="0.01" classname="1_Unit_Tests" name="2_absorbed_correctly"/>
...
</testsuite>
And when i do this step in the azure pipeline, my build fails if any tests in the test suite fail:
- task: PublishTestResults#2
displayName: 'Publish Test Results'
inputs:
testResultsFiles: '**/*.xml'
searchFolder: '$(System.DefaultWorkingDirectory)/fe'
mergeTestResults: true
failTaskOnFailedTests: true
I would like something similar for failing the build when there are linting issues. I would also like the users to see what those linting issues are in the build output.
Thanks
This is not possible to achieve a similar result for lintr xml with plishTestResults#2.
The workaround you can try is to use a powershell task to check for the content of your lintr xml file. If the content isnot empty, then fail the pipeline in the powershell task.
Below powershell task will check the content of lintr.xml(<car></car>) and will echo the content to the task logs and exit 1 to fail the task if the content is null.
- powershell: |
[xml]$XmlDocument = Get-Content -Path "$(system.defaultworkingdirectory)/lintr.xml"
if($XmlDocument.OuterXml){
echo $XmlDocument.OuterXml
}else{exit 1}
displayName: lintr result.
You can aslo use below statement in a powershell task to upload lintr xml file to the build summary page where you can download
echo "##vso[task.uploadsummary]$(system.defaultworkingdirectory)/lintr.xml"
You can check here for more logging commands.
Update:
A workaround to show the lintr results in a nice way is to create a custom extension to display html results in azure devops pipeline.
You can try creating a custom extension, and produce a html lint results. Please refer to the answer to this thread an example custom extension to display html
Other developers already submit requests to Microsoft for implementing this feature. Please vote it up here or create a new one.
I currently have a problem that I have to work around in legacy code to get our interaction with a PHP Extension to work properly (Singleton Testing Question).
As such, I do not want to execute this code when running our normal production code with the application. Therefore, I need to check in regular PHP code if the code being executed is being executed as part of a test or not.
Any suggestions on how to determine this? I thought about a defined variable tied to the presence of the test files themselves (we do not ship the tests to customers) but our developers need the Extension to work normally, while the CI server needs to run the tests.
Would a Global set in the PHPUnit.xml file be recommended? Other thoughts?
An alternative approach is to set a constant in the PHP section of your phpunit.xml.*:
<php>
<const name="PHPUNIT_YOURAPPLICATION_TESTSUITE" value="true"/>
</php>
In your PHP application, you might then use the following check:
if (defined('PHPUNIT_YOURAPPLICATION_TESTSUITE') && PHPUNIT_YOURAPPLICATION_TESTSUITE)
{
echo 'TestSuite running!';
}
Define a constant in your PHPUnit bootstrap.php file. This is executed before loading or running any tests. This shouldn't impact developers running the application normally--just the unit tests.
If you're using Laravel than use App::runningUnitTests()
You could check the $argv different ways.
if(PHP_SAPI == 'cli') {
if(strpos($_SERVER['argv'][0], 'phpunit') !== FALSE) { ... }
// or
if($_SERVER['argv'][0] == '/usr/bin/phpunit') { ... }
}
Use PHPUnit Constants
You can either define constant, but that requires your work, no typos and it's not generic. How to do it better?
PHPUnit defines 2 constants by itself:
if (! defined('PHPUNIT_COMPOSER_INSTALL') && ! defined('__PHPUNIT_PHAR__')) {
// is not PHPUnit run
return;
}
// is PHPUnit
I would like to pass command line arguments to my Meteor app on start up.
For example --dev, --test or --prod indicating whether or not it is running in dev, test or prod environments. It can then load different resources on start up, etc...
I tried something like this in a /server/server.js
var arguments = process.argv.splice(2);
console.log('cmd args: ' + JSON.stringify(arguments,0,4));
The I ran a test. And quite a few others with just random command line arguments.
meteor --dev
The output in the console is only this.
cmd args: [
"--keepalive"
]
What is the best way to get command line arguments into a Meteor app?
Or, is this even the correct way to solve the higher level problem? and if not, what is the correct way to solve this problem of distinguishing between running enviro?
Meteor doesn't forward command line args to your app, if it doesn't know them. You have multiple possibilities:
Rewrite parts of meteor.js to forward unrecognized args. This shouldn't be too hard, but it's not a pretty solution. And if updates occur you are in trouble. :D
You could write a small config file and change the behaviour of your app based on the configuration options in there. Take a look at this question.
The easiest thing to do is using environment variables. You can read env vars in node like this. After that you can start your app the "express.js" way: $ METEOR_ENV=production meteor
I hope I could help you! :)
The reason it doesn't work is because the meteor command starts a proxy (which gets the arguments you give) and then it starts the meteor app with --keepalive.
process.argv will have correct values if you build Meteor with meteor build --directory /my/build/path and run it.
Sorry for another 'phpunit doesn't work' question. It used to work for years now. Today I reinstalled PEAR and phpunit for reasons not connected to this problem. Now when I run phpunit as I usually did. Nothing happens. The cli just shows me a new line, no output whatsoever.
Has anyone encountered this problem or has an idea what could have caused it.
PHPUnit Version: 3.5.15
PEAR Version: 1.9.4
PHP Version: 5.3.8
Windows 7
I'm on OSX and MAMP. To get error messages I had to adjust the following entries in php.ini:
display_errors = On
display_startup_errors = On
Please not that this has to go into /Applications/MAMP/bin/php/php5.3.6/conf/php.ini .
For future reference, for those who are facing any problem with PHPUnit, and PHPUnit is failing silently, just add this three lines inside phpunit.xml:
<phpunit ....... >
...
...
<php>
<ini name="display_errors" value="true"/>
</php>
</phpunit>
After that run the tests again, and now you can see why PHPUnit is failing,
AND ... ENJOY UNIT TESTING :)
I know the orignal poster's question is already answered, but just for any people searching in the future: one thing that can cause PHPUnit to fail silently (i.e. it just stops running tests without telling you why) is that it has an error handler that it set up before each test run, which is intended to capture errors and display them at the end of the test run. The problem is that certain errors halt execution of the whole test run.
What I generally do when this happens, as a first step, is reset the error handler to something that will immediately output the error message. In my base test class I have a method called setVerboseErrorHandler, which I'll call at the top of the test (or in setUp) when this happens. The below requires php 5.3 or higher (due to the closure), so if you're on 5.2 or lower you can make it a regular function.
protected function setVerboseErrorHandler()
{
$handler = function($errorNumber, $errorString, $errorFile, $errorLine) {
echo "
ERROR INFO
Message: $errorString
File: $errorFile
Line: $errorLine
";
};
set_error_handler($handler);
}
Create the simplest test class you can without a bootstrap.php or phpunit.xml to first verify that your new installation works. PHPUnit will stop without any message if it cannot instantiate all of the test cases--one for each test method and data provider--before running any tests.
You have already figured out how to get it to work, but my solution was a little different.
First thing you can do is check the exit status. If it's not 0, then PHP exited and because of the INI configuration settings set, none of the PHP error messages were outputted. What I did was to enable the "display_errors" INI setting, and set "error_reporting" to E_ALL. I was then able to identify errors such as PHP not being able to parse a certain script. Once I fixed that, PHPUnit ran properly.
I managed to spectacularly paint myself in a corner with a custom "fatal error handler" that in certain rare conditions turned out to output nothing. Those conditions, in accordance with Murphy's Law, materialized once I had forgotten the handler was in place.
Since it wasn't really a "PHPunit problem", none of the other answers helped [although #David's problem was at the bottom the same thing], even though the symptoms were the same - phpunit terminating with no output, no errors, no log and no clue.
In the end I had to resort to a step-by-step tracing of the whole test suite by adding this in the bootstrap code:
register_shutdown_function(function() {
foreach ($GLOBALS['lastStack'] as $i => $frame) {
print "{$i}. {$frame['file']} +{$frame['line']} in function {$frame['function']}\n";
}
});
register_tick_function(function() {
$GLOBALS['lastStack'] = debug_backtrace(DEBUG_BACKTRACE_IGNORE_ARGS, 8);
});
declare(ticks=1);
If anyone ever manages to do worse than this, and somehow block stdout as well, this modification should work:
register_shutdown_function(function() {
$fp = fopen("/tmp/path-to-debugfile.txt", "w");
foreach ($GLOBALS['lastStack'] as $i => $frame) {
fwrite($fp, "{$i}. {$frame['file']} +{$frame['line']} in function {$frame['function']}\n");
}
fclose($fp);
});
an old thread this one, but one I stumbled across when having the same problem.
I had the same problem, nothing being returned to console including print, print_r, echo etc.
solved it by using --stderr as a test-runner option.
Check that you haven't written any logic into your code that just dies, with no output. For example,
<?php
if (!array_key_exists('SERVER_NAME', $_SERVER)) {
die();
}
This was exactly my case; I'd made some assumptions about the environment which were correct when running the code via Apache, but weren't fulfilled when running from CLI and the code did not echo any output.
PHPUnit tried to include the bootstrap file before giving the usual init output, but died during the bootstrapping proccess, hence exiting with status 0 and no output.
If when you run from command line a recent version of phpunit like this
> php phpunit
or
> ./phpunit
or
> php ./phpunit.phar
or
> ./phpunit.phar
And you immediatly return to the prompt with no messages, this is probably due to a "suhosin secutiry" setup.
phpunit is now a "phar" package including all libraries. To be able to run such file when php has the suhosin security module enabled, you must first set this
suhosin.executor.include.whitelist = phar
into you php.ini file (for example, with debian/ubuntu, you may have to edit file /etc/php5/conf.d/suhosin.ini
i tried everything here, but nothing worked until i tried phpunit --no-configuration simpletest.php. that finally gave me some output, which implies that my phpunit.xml.dist file is broken. (i'll come back and update this once i debug it.)
the contents of simpletest.php are below, but any test file should work.
<?php
use PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase;
final class FooTest extends TestCase
{
public function testFoo()
{
$this->assertEquals('x', 'y');
}
}
Check if the phpunit you're running and the one you installed are the same:
$ pear list phpunit/phpunit
...
script /path/to/phpunit
...
Try to execute exactly that phpunit with the full path.
Then check your PATH variable and see if the correct directory is in it. If not, fix that.
If that does not help, use write something into the phpunit executable, e.g. "echo 123;" and run phpunit. Check if you see that.
For me the conflict was with Xdebug's directive
xdebug.remote_enable=1
If you are using composer, check to make sure your included PHP files are not ending the code executions. The same goes for when you included certain PHP files explicitly.
In my case, I was working on a WordPress plugin and one of the PHP files I included directly in composer.json (which I don't want to load through PSR-4 because WordPress's coding standards don't support it yet) had this code on top;
if (!defined('ABSPATH')) {
exit(); // exit if accessed directly
}
And since ABSPATH will not be defined when I run the tests directly, the code was exiting.
This is because, since I told Composer to always load these files each time, this part of the code will execute, while the other files included though autoload PSR will load on demand.
So check to make sure any of the files you included are not stopping the code execution. If it happens, then even when you run phpunit --info the code will still exit and you won't see any output.
I was facing a seems problem. I could run phpunit from root directory but not from anywhere else. so I put the "--configuration" tag, and point it to my xml configuration.
$ ./<path_to_phpunit>phpunit --configuration <path_to_phpunitxml>/phpunit.xml
The path to phpunit is optinal, I used it because I installed locally by composer.
In /composer/vendor/phpunit/phpunit/src/TextUI/Command.php in main() function in catch (Throwable $t) {} block var_dump (echo / print_r) exception. If an exception exists, you, probably, will solve the current problem.