ClamAV is an open source (GPLv2) anti-virus toolkit.
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clamav/unit_tests/check_htmlnorm.c

204 lines
6.4 KiB

/*
* Unit tests for HTML normalizer;
*
* Copyright (C) 2013-2022 Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (C) 2008-2013 Sourcefire, Inc.
*
* Authors: Török Edvin
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
* published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program 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 this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston,
* MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
#if HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "clamav-config.h"
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <check.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <string.h>
Add CMake build tooling This patch adds experimental-quality CMake build tooling. The libmspack build required a modification to use "" instead of <> for header #includes. This will hopefully be included in the libmspack upstream project when adding CMake build tooling to libmspack. Removed use of libltdl when using CMake. Flex & Bison are now required to build. If -DMAINTAINER_MODE, then GPERF is also required, though it currently doesn't actually do anything. TODO! I found that the autotools build system was generating the lexer output but not actually compiling it, instead using previously generated (and manually renamed) lexer c source. As a consequence, changes to the .l and .y files weren't making it into the build. To resolve this, I removed generated flex/bison files and fixed the tooling to use the freshly generated files. Flex and bison are now required build tools. On Windows, this adds a dependency on the winflexbison package, which can be obtained using Chocolatey or may be manually installed. CMake tooling only has partial support for building with external LLVM library, and no support for the internal LLVM (to be removed in the future). I.e. The CMake build currently only supports the bytecode interpreter. Many files used include paths relative to the top source directory or relative to the current project, rather than relative to each build target. Modern CMake support requires including internal dependency headers the same way you would external dependency headers (albeit with "" instead of <>). This meant correcting all header includes to be relative to the build targets and not relative to the workspace. For example, ... ```c include "../libclamav/clamav.h" include "clamd/clamd_others.h" ``` ... becomes: ```c // libclamav include "clamav.h" // clamd include "clamd_others.h" ``` Fixes header name conflicts by renaming a few of the files. Converted the "shared" code into a static library, which depends on libclamav. The ironically named "shared" static library provides features common to the ClamAV apps which are not required in libclamav itself and are not intended for use by downstream projects. This change was required for correct modern CMake practices but was also required to use the automake "subdir-objects" option. This eliminates warnings when running autoreconf which, in the next version of autoconf & automake are likely to break the build. libclamav used to build in multiple stages where an earlier stage is a static library containing utils required by the "shared" code. Linking clamdscan and clamdtop with this libclamav utils static lib allowed these two apps to function without libclamav. While this is nice in theory, the practical gains are minimal and it complicates the build system. As such, the autotools and CMake tooling was simplified for improved maintainability and this feature was thrown out. clamdtop and clamdscan now require libclamav to function. Removed the nopthreads version of the autotools libclamav_internal_utils static library and added pthread linking to a couple apps that may have issues building on some platforms without it, with the intention of removing needless complexity from the source. Kept the regular version of libclamav_internal_utils.la though it is no longer used anywhere but in libclamav. Added an experimental doxygen build option which attempts to build clamav.h and libfreshclam doxygen html docs. The CMake build tooling also may build the example program(s), which isn't a feature in the Autotools build system. Changed C standard to C90+ due to inline linking issues with socket.h when linking libfreshclam.so on Linux. Generate common.rc for win32. Fix tabs/spaces in shared Makefile.am, and remove vestigial ifndef from misc.c. Add CMake files to the automake dist, so users can try the new CMake tooling w/out having to build from a git clone. clamonacc changes: - Renamed FANOTIFY macro to HAVE_SYS_FANOTIFY_H to better match other similar macros. - Added a new clamav-clamonacc.service systemd unit file, based on the work of ChadDevOps & Aaron Brighton. - Added missing clamonacc man page. Updates to clamdscan man page, add missing options. Remove vestigial CL_NOLIBCLAMAV definitions (all apps now use libclamav). Rename Windows mspack.dll to libmspack.dll so all ClamAV-built libraries have the lib-prefix with Visual Studio as with CMake.
5 years ago
// libclamav
#include "clamav.h"
#include "fmap.h"
#include "dconf.h"
#include "htmlnorm.h"
#include "others.h"
#include "fmap.h"
#include "checks.h"
static char *dir;
static void htmlnorm_setup(void)
{
cl_init(CL_INIT_DEFAULT);
dconf_setup();
dir = cli_gentemp(NULL);
ck_assert_msg(!!dir, "cli_gentemp failed");
}
static void htmlnorm_teardown(void)
{
dconf_teardown();
/* can't call fail() functions in teardown, it can cause SEGV */
cli_rmdirs(dir);
free(dir);
dir = NULL;
}
static struct test {
const char *input;
const char *nocommentref;
const char *notagsref;
const char *jsref;
} tests[] = {
/* NULL means don't test it */
{"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_scanfiles" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_buf.html",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "buf.nocomment.ref",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "buf.notags.ref",
NULL},
{"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_scanfiles" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_encode.html",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "encode.nocomment.ref",
NULL,
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "encode.js.ref"},
{"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_scanfiles" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_js_test.html",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "js.nocomment.ref",
NULL,
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "js.js.ref"},
{"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_scanfiles" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_test.html",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "test.nocomment.ref",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "test.notags.ref",
NULL},
{"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_scanfiles" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_urls.html",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "urls.nocomment.ref",
"input" PATHSEP "htmlnorm_reffiles" PATHSEP "urls.notags.ref",
NULL}};
static void check_dir(const char *dire, const struct test *test)
{
char filename[4096];
int fd, reffd;
if (test->nocommentref) {
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
snprintf(filename, sizeof(filename), "%s" PATHSEP "nocomment.html", dire);
fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
ck_assert_msg(fd > 0, "unable to open: %s", filename);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
reffd = open_testfile(test->nocommentref, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
diff_files(fd, reffd);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
/* diff_files will close both fd's */
}
if (test->notagsref) {
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
snprintf(filename, sizeof(filename), "%s" PATHSEP "notags.html", dire);
fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
ck_assert_msg(fd > 0, "unable to open: %s", filename);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
reffd = open_testfile(test->notagsref, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
diff_files(fd, reffd);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
/* diff_files will close both fd's */
}
if (test->jsref) {
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
snprintf(filename, sizeof(filename), "%s" PATHSEP "javascript", dire);
fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
ck_assert_msg(fd > 0, "unable to open: %s", filename);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
reffd = open_testfile(test->jsref, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
diff_files(fd, reffd);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
/* diff_files will close both fd's */
}
}
START_TEST(test_htmlnorm_api)
{
int fd;
tag_arguments_t hrefs;
fmap_t *map;
memset(&hrefs, 0, sizeof(hrefs));
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
fd = open_testfile(tests[_i].input, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
ck_assert_msg(fd > 0, "open_testfile failed");
Record names of extracted files A way is needed to record scanned file names for two purposes: 1. File names (and extensions) must be stored in the json metadata properties recorded when using the --gen-json clamscan option. Future work may use this to compare file extensions with detected file types. 2. File names are useful when interpretting tmp directory output when using the --leave-temps option. This commit enables file name retention for later use by storing file names in the fmap header structure, if a file name exists. To store the names in fmaps, an optional name argument has been added to any internal scan API's that create fmaps and every call to these APIs has been modified to pass a file name or NULL if a file name is not required. The zip and gpt parsers required some modification to record file names. The NSIS and XAR parsers fail to collect file names at all and will require future work to support file name extraction. Also: - Added recursive extraction to the tmp directory when the --leave-temps option is enabled. When not enabled, the tmp directory structure remains flat so as to prevent the likelihood of exceeding MAX_PATH. The current tmp directory is stored in the scan context. - Made the cli_scanfile() internal API non-static and added it to scanners.h so it would be accessible outside of scanners.c in order to remove code duplication within libmspack.c. - Added function comments to scanners.h and matcher.h - Converted a TDB-type macros and LSIG-type macros to enums for improved type safey. - Converted more return status variables from `int` to `cl_error_t` for improved type safety, and corrected ooxml file typing functions so they use `cli_file_t` exclusively rather than mixing types with `cl_error_t`. - Restructured the magic_scandesc() function to use goto's for error handling and removed the early_ret_from_magicscan() macro and magic_scandesc_cleanup() function. This makes the code easier to read and made it easier to add the recursive tmp directory cleanup to magic_scandesc(). - Corrected zip, egg, rar filename extraction issues. - Removed use of extra sub-directory layer for zip, egg, and rar file extraction. For Zip, this also involved changing the extracted filenames to be randomly generated rather than using the "zip.###" file name scheme.
5 years ago
map = fmap(fd, 0, 0, tests[_i].input);
ck_assert_msg(!!map, "fmap failed");
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(mkdir(dir, 0700) == 0, "mkdir failed: %s", dir);
ck_assert_msg(html_normalise_map(map, dir, NULL, dconf) == 1, "html_normalise_map failed");
check_dir(dir, &tests[_i]);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(cli_rmdirs(dir) == 0, "rmdirs failed: %s", dir);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(mkdir(dir, 0700) == 0, "mkdir failed: %s", dir);
ck_assert_msg(html_normalise_map(map, dir, NULL, NULL) == 1, "html_normalise_map failed");
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(cli_rmdirs(dir) == 0, "rmdirs failed: %s", dir);
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(mkdir(dir, 0700) == 0, "mkdir failed: %s", dir);
ck_assert_msg(html_normalise_map(map, dir, &hrefs, dconf) == 1, "html_normalise_map failed");
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(cli_rmdirs(dir) == 0, "rmdirs failed: %s", dir);
html_tag_arg_free(&hrefs);
memset(&hrefs, 0, sizeof(hrefs));
hrefs.scanContents = 1;
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(mkdir(dir, 0700) == 0, "mkdir failed: %s", dir);
ck_assert_msg(html_normalise_map(map, dir, &hrefs, dconf) == 1, "html_normalise_map failed");
CMake: Add CTest support to match Autotools checks An ENABLE_TESTS CMake option is provided so that users can disable testing if they don't want it. Instructions for how to use this included in the INSTALL.cmake.md file. If you run `ctest`, each testcase will write out a log file to the <build>/unit_tests directory. As with Autotools' make check, the test files are from test/.split and unit_tests/.split files, but for CMake these are generated at build time instead of at test time. On Posix systems, sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ClamAV-compiled libraries can be loaded when running tests. On Windows systems, CTest will identify and collect all library dependencies and assemble a temporarily install under the build/unit_tests directory so that the libraries can be loaded when running tests. The same feature is used on Windows when using CMake to install to collect all DLL dependencies so that users don't have to install them manually afterwards. Each of the CTest tests are run using a custom wrapper around Python's unittest framework, which is also responsible for finding and inserting valgrind into the valgrind tests on Posix systems. Unlike with Autotools, the CMake CTest Valgrind-tests are enabled by default, if Valgrind can be found. There's no need to set VG=1. CTest's memcheck module is NOT supported, because we use Python to orchestrate our tests. Added a bunch of Windows compatibility changes to the unit tests. These were primarily changing / to PATHSEP and making adjustments to use Win32 C headers and ifdef out the POSIX ones which aren't available on Windows. Also disabled a bunch of tests on Win32 that don't work on Windows, notably the mmap ones and FD-passing (i.e. FILEDES) ones. Add JSON_C_HAVE_INTTYPES_H definition to clamav-config.h to eliminate warnings on Windows where json.h is included after inttypes.h because json-c's inttypes replacement relies on it. This is a it of a hack and may be removed if json-c fixes their inttypes header stuff in the future. Add preprocessor definitions on Windows to disable MSVC warnings about CRT secure and nonstandard functions. While there may be a better solution, this is needed to be able to see other more serious warnings. Add missing file comment block and copyright statement for clamsubmit.c. Also change json-c/json.h include filename to json.h in clamsubmit.c. The directory name is not required. Changed the hash table data integer type from long, which is poorly defined, to size_t -- which is capable of storing a pointer. Fixed a bunch of casts regarding this variable to eliminate warnings. Fixed two bugs causing utf8 encoding unit tests to fail on Windows: - The in_size variable should be the number of bytes, not the character count. This was was causing the SHIFT_JIS (japanese codepage) to UTF8 transcoding test to only transcode half the bytes. - It turns out that the MultiByteToWideChar() API can't transcode UTF16-BE to UTF16-LE. The solution is to just iterate over the buffer and flip the bytes on each uint16_t. This but was causing the UTF16-BE to UTF8 tests to fail. I also split up the utf8 transcoding tests into separate tests so I could see all of the failures instead of just the first one. Added a flags parameter to the unit test function to open testfiles because it turns out that on Windows if a file contains the \r\n it will replace it with just \n if you opened the file as a text file instead of as binary. However, if we open the CBC files as binary, then a bunch of bytecode tests fail. So I've changed the tests to open the CBC files in the bytecode tests as text files and open all other files as binary. Ported the feature tests from shell scripts to Python using a modified version of our QA test-framework, which is largely compatible and will allow us to migrate some QA tests into this repo. I'd like to add GitHub Actions pipelines in the future so that all public PR's get some testing before anyone has to manually review them. The clamd --log option was missing from the help string, though it definitely works. I've added it in this commit. It appears that clamd.c was never clang-format'd, so this commit also reformats clamd.c. Some of the check_clamd tests expected the path returned by clamd to match character for character with original path sent to clamd. However, as we now evaluate real paths before a scan, the path returned by clamd isn't going to match the relative (and possibly symlink-ridden) path passed to clamdscan. I fixed this test by changing the test to search for the basename: <signature> FOUND within the response instead of matching the exact path. Autotools: Link check_clamd with libclamav so we can use our utility functions in check_clamd.c.
5 years ago
ck_assert_msg(cli_rmdirs(dir) == 0, "rmdirs failed: %s", dir);
html_tag_arg_free(&hrefs);
funmap(map);
close(fd);
}
END_TEST
START_TEST(test_screnc_nullterminate)
{
int fd = open_testfile("input" PATHSEP "other_scanfiles" PATHSEP "screnc_test", O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
fmap_t *map;
ck_assert_msg(mkdir(dir, 0700) == 0, "mkdir failed");
Record names of extracted files A way is needed to record scanned file names for two purposes: 1. File names (and extensions) must be stored in the json metadata properties recorded when using the --gen-json clamscan option. Future work may use this to compare file extensions with detected file types. 2. File names are useful when interpretting tmp directory output when using the --leave-temps option. This commit enables file name retention for later use by storing file names in the fmap header structure, if a file name exists. To store the names in fmaps, an optional name argument has been added to any internal scan API's that create fmaps and every call to these APIs has been modified to pass a file name or NULL if a file name is not required. The zip and gpt parsers required some modification to record file names. The NSIS and XAR parsers fail to collect file names at all and will require future work to support file name extraction. Also: - Added recursive extraction to the tmp directory when the --leave-temps option is enabled. When not enabled, the tmp directory structure remains flat so as to prevent the likelihood of exceeding MAX_PATH. The current tmp directory is stored in the scan context. - Made the cli_scanfile() internal API non-static and added it to scanners.h so it would be accessible outside of scanners.c in order to remove code duplication within libmspack.c. - Added function comments to scanners.h and matcher.h - Converted a TDB-type macros and LSIG-type macros to enums for improved type safey. - Converted more return status variables from `int` to `cl_error_t` for improved type safety, and corrected ooxml file typing functions so they use `cli_file_t` exclusively rather than mixing types with `cl_error_t`. - Restructured the magic_scandesc() function to use goto's for error handling and removed the early_ret_from_magicscan() macro and magic_scandesc_cleanup() function. This makes the code easier to read and made it easier to add the recursive tmp directory cleanup to magic_scandesc(). - Corrected zip, egg, rar filename extraction issues. - Removed use of extra sub-directory layer for zip, egg, and rar file extraction. For Zip, this also involved changing the extracted filenames to be randomly generated rather than using the "zip.###" file name scheme.
5 years ago
map = fmap(fd, 0, 0, "screnc_test");
ck_assert_msg(!!map, "fmap failed");
ck_assert_msg(html_screnc_decode(map, dir) == 1, "html_screnc_decode failed");
funmap(map);
ck_assert_msg(cli_rmdirs(dir) == 0, "rmdirs failed");
close(fd);
}
END_TEST
Suite *test_htmlnorm_suite(void)
{
Suite *s = suite_create("htmlnorm");
TCase *tc_htmlnorm_api;
tc_htmlnorm_api = tcase_create("htmlnorm api");
suite_add_tcase(s, tc_htmlnorm_api);
tcase_add_loop_test(tc_htmlnorm_api, test_htmlnorm_api, 0, sizeof(tests) / sizeof(tests[0]));
tcase_add_unchecked_fixture(tc_htmlnorm_api,
htmlnorm_setup, htmlnorm_teardown);
tcase_add_test(tc_htmlnorm_api, test_screnc_nullterminate);
return s;
}