From: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
To: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Cc: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>, git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: 1.7.2 cycle will open soon
Date: Thu, 6 May 2010 02:54:19 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20100506065419.GA21009@coredump.intra.peff.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20100506064428.GA29360@progeny.tock>
On Thu, May 06, 2010 at 01:44:28AM -0500, Jonathan Nieder wrote:
> > Am I missing something?
>
> If cleanup fails, I want to catch it. Would something like this do?
Ah, I see.
> test_run_ () {
> test_cleanup=:
> eval >&3 2>&4 "$1"
> eval_ret=$?
> eval >&3 2>&4 "$test_cleanup" && (exit "$eval_ret")
> eval_ret=$?
> return 0
> }
>
> test_when_finished () {
> test_cleanup="$* && $test_cleanup"
> }
Doesn't that violate your rule that the cleanup will _always_ be run?
Here, if the first cleanup fails, we don't run subsequent ones.
Perhaps the simplest would be to just keep a cleanup_ret in the second
eval (where you have eval_ret in the original patch), and then act
appropriately after the eval finishes. That would be easier on the eyes,
too, I think.
> To permit a line break at the end of a cleanup command, one can do
>
> test_when_finished () {
> test_cleanup="{ $*
> } && $test_cleanup"
> }
>
> but that might not be worth the ugliness.
I doubt anyone will put a linebreak in, but it is probably better to be
defensive, and the ugliness is at least contained only in that function.
-Peff
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-05-06 6:54 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-05-05 5:39 1.7.2 cycle will open soon Junio C Hamano
2010-05-06 5:52 ` Jeff King
2010-05-06 6:44 ` Jonathan Nieder
2010-05-06 6:54 ` Jeff King [this message]
2010-05-06 8:41 ` [PATCH] test-lib: some shells do not let $? propagate into an eval Jonathan Nieder
2010-05-06 8:57 ` Jeff King
2010-05-06 20:20 ` Junio C Hamano
2010-05-06 7:06 ` 1.7.2 cycle will open soon Johannes Sixt
2010-05-06 7:49 ` Jeff King
2010-05-06 8:01 ` Jonathan Nieder
2010-05-06 6:57 ` Johannes Sixt
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