wget/tests/Test-ftp-list-Multinet.px
2014-10-02 15:01:19 +02:00

67 lines
1.6 KiB
Perl
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env perl
# 2013-10-17 Andrea Urbani (matfanjol)
# In this ftp test:
# - the response of SYST command is
# 215 UNIX MultiNet Unix Emulation V5.3(93)
# - the response of "LIST -a" command is an empty
# directory.
# wget should use directly the "LIST" command to get
# the right content, but it will be ok also "LIST -a"
# if followed by "LIST" (in the case of future changes).
use strict;
use warnings;
use FTPTest;
###############################################################################
my $afile = <<EOF;
Some text.
EOF
my $bfile = <<EOF;
Some more text.
EOF
$afile =~ s/\n/\r\n/g;
$bfile =~ s/\n/\r\n/g;
# code, msg, headers, content
my %urls = (
'/afile.txt' => {
content => $afile,
},
'/bfile.txt' => {
content => $bfile,
},
);
my $cmdline = $WgetTest::WGETPATH . " --no-directories --recursive --level=1 --accept \"?file.txt\" ftp://localhost:{{port}}/";
my $expected_error_code = 0;
my %expected_downloaded_files = (
'afile.txt' => {
content => $afile,
},
'bfile.txt' => {
content => $bfile,
},
);
###############################################################################
my $the_test = FTPTest->new (
input => \%urls,
cmdline => $cmdline,
errcode => $expected_error_code,
output => \%expected_downloaded_files,
server_behavior => {list_empty_if_list_a => 1,
syst_response => "215 UNIX MultiNet Unix Emulation V5.3(93)"});
exit $the_test->run();