solidity/scripts/common.sh

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# vim:ts=4:et
# This file is part of solidity.
#
# solidity 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 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# solidity 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 solidity. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>
#
# (c) 2016-2019 solidity contributors.
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# The fail() function defined below requires set -e to be enabled.
set -e
# Save the initial working directory so that printStackTrace() can access it even if the sourcing
# changes directory. The paths returned by `caller` are relative to it.
_initial_work_dir=$(pwd)
if [ "$CIRCLECI" ]
then
export TERM="${TERM:-xterm}"
function printTask { echo "$(tput bold)$(tput setaf 2)$1$(tput setaf 7)"; }
function printError { >&2 echo "$(tput setaf 1)$1$(tput setaf 7)"; }
function printWarning { >&2 echo "$(tput setaf 11)$1$(tput setaf 7)"; }
function printLog { echo "$(tput setaf 3)$1$(tput setaf 7)"; }
else
function printTask { echo "$(tput bold)$(tput setaf 2)$1$(tput sgr0)"; }
function printError { >&2 echo "$(tput setaf 1)$1$(tput sgr0)"; }
function printWarning { >&2 echo "$(tput setaf 11)$1$(tput sgr0)"; }
function printLog { echo "$(tput setaf 3)$1$(tput sgr0)"; }
fi
function printStackTrace
{
printWarning ""
printWarning "Stack trace:"
local frame=1
while caller "$frame" > /dev/null
do
local lineNumber line file function
# `caller` returns something that could already be printed as a stacktrace but we can make
# it more readable by rearranging the components.
# NOTE: This assumes that paths do not contain spaces.
lineNumber=$(caller "$frame" | cut --delimiter " " --field 1)
function=$(caller "$frame" | cut --delimiter " " --field 2)
file=$(caller "$frame" | cut --delimiter " " --field 3)
# Paths in the output from `caller` can be relative or absolute (depends on how the path
# with which the script was invoked) and if they're relative, they're not necessarily
# relative to the current working dir. This is a heuristic that will work if they're absolute,
# relative to current dir, or relative to the dir that was current when the script started.
# If neither works, it gives up.
line=$(
{
tail "--lines=+${lineNumber}" "$file" ||
tail "--lines=+${lineNumber}" "${_initial_work_dir}/${file}"
} 2> /dev/null |
head --lines=1 |
sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//'
) || line="<failed to find source line>"
>&2 printf " %s:%d in function %s()\n" "$file" "$lineNumber" "$function"
>&2 printf " %s\n" "$line"
((frame++))
done
}
function fail
{
printError "$@"
# Using return rather than exit lets the invoking code handle the failure by suppressing the exit code.
return 1
}
function assertFail
{
printError ""
(( $# == 0 )) && printError "Assertion failed."
(( $# == 1 )) && printError "Assertion failed: $1"
printStackTrace
# Intentionally using exit here because assertion failures are not supposed to be handled.
exit 2
}
function msg_on_error
{
local error_message
local no_stdout=false
local no_stderr=false
while [[ $1 =~ ^-- ]]
do
case "$1" in
--msg)
error_message="$2"
shift
shift
;;
--no-stdout)
no_stdout=true
shift
;;
--no-stderr)
no_stderr=true
shift
;;
--silent)
no_stdout=true
no_stderr=true
shift
;;
*)
assertFail "Invalid option for msg_on_error: $1"
;;
esac
done
local command=("$@")
local stdout_file stderr_file
stdout_file="$(mktemp -t cmdline_test_command_stdout_XXXXXX.txt)"
stderr_file="$(mktemp -t cmdline_test_command_stderr_XXXXXX.txt)"
if "${command[@]}" > "$stdout_file" 2> "$stderr_file"
then
[[ $no_stdout == "true" ]] || cat "$stdout_file"
[[ $no_stderr == "true" ]] || >&2 cat "$stderr_file"
rm "$stdout_file" "$stderr_file"
return 0
else
printError ""
printError "Command failed: ${error_message}"
printError " command: $SOLC ${command[*]}"
if [[ -s "$stdout_file" ]]
then
printError "--- stdout ---"
printError "-----------"
>&2 cat "$stdout_file"
printError "--------------"
else
printError " stdout: <EMPTY>"
fi
if [[ -s "$stderr_file" ]]
then
printError "--- stderr ---"
>&2 cat "$stderr_file"
printError "--------------"
else
printError " stderr: <EMPTY>"
fi
rm "$stdout_file" "$stderr_file"
printStackTrace
return 1
fi
}
function diff_values
{
(( $# >= 2 )) || fail "diff_values requires at least 2 arguments."
local value1="$1"
local value2="$2"
shift
shift
diff --color=auto --unified=0 <(echo "$value1") <(echo "$value2") "$@"
}
function safe_kill
{
local PID=${1}
local NAME=${2:-${1}}
local n=1
# only proceed if $PID does exist
kill -0 "$PID" 2>/dev/null || return
echo "Sending SIGTERM to ${NAME} (${PID}) ..."
kill "$PID"
# wait until process terminated gracefully
while kill -0 "$PID" 2>/dev/null && [[ $n -le 4 ]]; do
echo "Waiting ($n) ..."
sleep 1
n=$((n + 1))
done
# process still alive? then hard-kill
if kill -0 "$PID" 2>/dev/null; then
echo "Sending SIGKILL to ${NAME} (${PID}) ..."
kill -9 "$PID"
fi
}