On 2023-06-27 Tu 11:54, Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker wrote:
Andrew Dunstan<and...@dunslane.net> writes:
On 2023-06-26 Mo 19:55, Jacob Champion wrote:
Hello,
I was running the test_pg_dump extension suite, and I got annoyed that
I couldn't keep it from deleting its dump artifacts after a successful
run. Here's a patch to make use of PG_TEST_NOCLEAN (which currently
covers the test cluster's base directory) with the Test::Utils
tempdirs too.
(Looks like this idea was also discussed last year [1]; let me know if
I missed any more recent suggestions.)
- CLEANUP => 1);
+ CLEANUP => not defined $ENV{'PG_TEST_NOCLEAN'});
This doesn't look quite right. If PG_TEST_CLEAN had a value of 0 we
would still do the cleanup. I would probably use something like:
CLEANUP => $ENV{'PG_TEST_NOCLEAN'} // 1
i.e. if it's not defined at all or has a value of undef, do the cleanup,
otherwise use the value.
If the environment varible were used as a boolean, it should be
CLEANUP => not $ENV{PG_TEST_NOCLEAN}
since `not undef` returns true with no warning, and the senses of the
two flags are inverted.
However, the docs
(https://www.postgresql.org/docs/16/regress-tap.html#REGRESS-TAP-VARS)
say "If the environment variable PG_TEST_NOCLEAN is set", not "is set to
a true value", and the existing test in PostgreSQL::Test::Cluster's END
block is:
# skip clean if we are requested to retain the basedir
next if defined $ENV{'PG_TEST_NOCLEAN'};
So the original `not defined` test is consistent with that.
ok, but ...
I think it's unwise to encourage setting environment variables without
values. Some years ago I had to work around some ugly warnings in
buildfarm logs by removing one such. I guess in the end it's a minor
issue, but if someone actually sets it to 0 it would seem to me like a
POLA violation still to skip the cleanup.
cheers
andew
--
Andrew Dunstan
EDB:https://www.enterprisedb.com