In phpunit 3.6.10, assertEquals considered two NaNs to be equivalent.
Somewhere between that and phpunit 3.7.14, this behavior changed so NaNs
are no longer considered equivalent.
Change-Id: I2c664498eb34cf5119a2eaaa96a6be57b821ab94
People sometimes want to load large tables of constant data from a
module. Using require(), this has to be reparsed every time, which can
be slow.
mw.loadData() will load the just data once, and return a table with a
metatable cleverly designed to give read-only access to the loaded data.
Change-Id: Icec192bdbe6cfca7902fd5cb5d0e217bd8399637
Allowing a module to call mw.makeProtectedEnvFuncs() lets it bypass the
allowEnvFuncs setting. It can also be used to manipulate the global
tables that other modules' sandboxes will be copied from.
And for paranoia's sake, let's tighten up what setfenv is allowed to
set. This requires changing a unit test, because it is no longer
sane to do something like
env.setfenv, env.getfenv = mw.makeProtectedEnvFuncs( { [env] = true }, {} )
Nothing real does this, it was only in the unit test.
Change-Id: I8e0d83bb0980ee869af3ac4413afd211717ca92f
The Lua manual says this:
For this function, a '^' at the start of a pattern does not work as an
anchor, as this would prevent the iteration.
I had interpreted that to mean that a pattern starting with '^' would
never match in gmatch. But further testing reveals that the '^' is just
treated as a literal character: string.gmatch( "foo ^bar baz", "^%a+" )
will match "^bar".
Change-Id: Id91d6ee2db753ce1d6a4f6ae27764691d9e9fdc4
It's easy to forget a 'local' somewhere and accidentally leak a global
variable. Add a unit test to catch that.
Change-Id: I3a8dda22f108d88039f9562a1da7a739850bb14b
This is a reimplementation of Lua's string library with support for
UTF-8.
The entire ustring library is implemented in pure Lua. PHP callbacks are
also available for overrides: in LuaSandbox these are used for almost
all functions, while in LuaStandalone they are used only for the pattern
matching. Also, ustring.upper and ustring.lower are overridden using
mw.language's .uc and .lc if available.
It also includes a bunch of unit tests.
Note that if you download the normalization tests, they may fail under
LuaSandbox if you have PHP's intl extension installed and libicu on your
system is too old.
Change-Id: Ie76fdf8d3a85d0a3d2a41b0d3b7afe433f247af0
Rework the LuaEngine tests to be entirely modular, so that every library
need not add itself to one monolithic file. This also allows other
extensions that add Lua modules to make unit tests without having to
somehow inject them into a test class owned by Scribunto.
The approach taken is similar to that used for Selenium for running
tests against multiple browsers.
Change-Id: I294b2a8195759c0e4fa211f879305a8eb66d9c9a
To allow Lua libraries to mark functions as expensive, add an
incrementExpensiveFunctionCount() method to Scribunto_LuaEngine that
will call the corresponding Parser method and throw an error if the
limit is exceeded.
Also allow libraries to do the same thing from Lua by calling
mw.incrementExpensiveFunctionCount().
Change-Id: I56fded32b1077eff3980371e9abc9b3b7581f7b5
The listing of the standard modules in package.loaded seems to have been
removed to avoid leaking information to loaded modules. However, since
the *entire* environment is cloned, *including* package.loaded itself,
this does not seem to actually be a problem. But for good measure, also
add a unit test to verify that the version of the standard module tables
referenced from package.loaded is the same as that in _G.
This change also cleans up some unused local variables and an unused
local function from the package module.
Change-Id: I7ec8227b3273059e8f65ad735c215bfd0c623e64
In Lua, a table entry with a nil value is the same as a table entry that
doesn't exist. So when serializing for transfer to PHP, these keys will
be skipped. For a table as an associative array this isn't much of a
problem, but for a table as a list it means we have missing indexes.
Some of Lua's functions for handling "lists" (i.e. tables with numeric
keys) also have a problem when the list contains nils.
To work around these issues when passing argument lists and return value
lists, pass the number of elements along with the sparse list. On the
PHP end we can use this to fill in the missing nulls, and on the Lua
end we can pass this count to unpack() to avoid the problems on the Lua
side.
Change-Id: I858e3905a06e377693301da2b8bc534808f00e3e
Trivial fix, the parameter order to assertEquals() was backwards so if
the test failed it would indicate the "Actual" results as "Expected" and
vice versa.
Change-Id: Ibfe12591a58b10e0321aafea576c36cfa674f51d
Lua 5.2 introduces a nice feature where a metatable can override the
standard behavior of the pairs() and ipairs() functions. That would be
very useful in allowing a more standard syntax for our frame.args, and
it's very easy to do both in C and in Lua.
Change-Id: I37efc59a0c8876ee16184807e15fafbc07e2d288
Built-in modules (e.g. the upcoming ustring) should be able to extend
the string metatable, but user modules (and the debug console) should
not be able to.
But currently built-in modules cannot extend the string metatable in
LuaStandalone, while in LuaSandbox the string metatable can be extended
in the console. Fix this and add unit tests.
Change-Id: I15f5598fed318f2fe26b08ec47e16053dddc13c4
The existing unit tests work, but the setup is really not amenable to
the addition of additional tests in a modular fashion. This splits
things out so there is a framework for tests in Lua, and all a module
has to do on the Lua side is supply a list of functions to call and
results to expect. And then on the php side, only one array entry and
two short functions need to be added to LuaSandboxEngineTest to run the
tests.
Change-Id: Ib241b246aa0c7223c33887b38a5858582d7d31b0
Currently, the only way for PHP to pass a function to Lua is to pass
back a function that it received from Lua. This means, for example, that
PHP cannot implement a Lua iterator function except by registering a
library holding the function or by using loadString.
This changeset adds Scribunto_LuaInterpreter::wrapPhpFunction (and
implements it for both LuaSandbox and LuaStandalone), which takes a PHP
callable and returns a Lua function wrapping it.
Note that fallback code is included so this does not depend on
I2e552799.
Change-Id: Ic0a98eec7cc17ef4b1acee032c0f42d617b998d2
We should include a unit test to try to ensure that we don't add
features to one environment and forget about the other.
Change-Id: I72b1acf8eea4a05e05fed1efeb0663a3eff9278a
There's no reason LuaStandalone cannot handle NaN and Inf.
Also, add some unit tests to check this.
Change-Id: I8570242a792e212489ad24dfc04fb1f2940190a5
* string.format() truncates the string at a null character, causing a
deadlock when Lua attempts to send null characters to PHP. Use
concatenation instead.
* Added test.
* Fixed an error reporting issue in the console, which I happened to
notice at the same time as the above bug.
Change-Id: I2e6061a04512557492bffbd04bc09ca3bc1d80d6
The Darwin does not support POSIX timer which is being used to limit CPU
usage. Running the tests on Mac OS X would never end so we are just
skipping it.
Change-Id: I56c3e8cd1cba15d33256192aa7e721e6448c7a2e
* Implemented the new parser interface based on a frame object, as
described in the design document and wikitech-l.
* Added parser tests for the new interface.
* Removed {{script:}} parser function
* Allow named parameters to {{#invoke:}}
* Don't trim the return value
* If a function invoked by #invoke returns multiple values, concatenate
them into a single string.
* If there is an error during parse, show the error message as an HTML
comment as well as via JavaScript. This makes parser test construction
easier, and probably makes debugging easier also.
* Rename mw_internal to mw_php to clarify its role. It is now strictly a
private Lua -> PHP interface function table.
* Protect mw.setup() against multiple invocation.
* Fixed a bug in Scribunto_LuaStandaloneInterpreter::receiveMessage():
large packets caused fread() to return with less than the requested
amount of data, which previously caused an exception. It's necessary
to check for EOF and to repeat the read to get all data. The receive
function on the Lua side does not suffer from this problem.
* In the standalone engine, fixed a bug in the interpretation of null
return values from PHP callbacks. This should return no values to Lua.
* Updated the Lua unit tests to account for the fact that functions are
now forced to return strings.
* Updated the getfenv and setfenv tests to account for the extra stack
level introduced by mw.executeFunction().
Change-Id: If8fdecdfc91ebe7bd4b1dae8489ccbdeb6bbf5ce
Fixed the issue noticed during testing of da06273e, and which resulted
in satest.setfenv1() being disabled. It's not possible to protect
environments by iterating through every stack level, calling getfenv()
at each one, because if any of the stack levels is a tail call, an error
is raised.
Such a tail call was introduced in da06273e, which is why the test broke.
Instead, just protect the actual specified environments, not their
callers. The callers will have to protect themselves.
Change-Id: If39104010ff2663c1bae5105cc8d37e276532100
* Added tests for the engine classes.
* Added some tests that run under Lua.
* In the chunk names, fixed truncation of module names at 60 bytes
by using an "=" prefix instead of @.
* Fixed a bug in mw.clone() which was causing the metatable to be set on
the source table instead of the destination.
* Put restricted setfenv/getfenv in the cloned environment rather than
the base environment, they work better that way.
* In setfenv(), check for getfenv() == nil, since that's what our own
restricted getfenv returns.
* Fixed getfenv() handling of numeric arguments: add one where
appropriate.
Change-Id: I2b356fd65a3fcb348c4e99a3a4267408fb995739