@@ -125,19 +125,52 @@ check_verify_failure '"type" line type-name length check' \
'^error: char.*: type too long$'
############################################################
-# 9. verify object (SHA1/type) check
+# 9. verify object (SHA/type) check
cat >tag.sig <<EOF
object $(test_oid deadbeef)
+type tag
+tag mytag
+tagger . <> 0 +0000
+
+EOF
+
+check_verify_failure 'verify object (SHA/type) check -- correct type, nonexisting object' \
+ '^error: char7: could not verify object.*$'
+
+cat >tag.sig <<EOF
+object $head
type tagggg
tag mytag
tagger . <> 0 +0000
EOF
-check_verify_failure 'verify object (SHA1/type) check' \
+check_verify_failure 'verify object (SHA/type) check -- made-up type, nonexisting object' \
+ '^fatal: invalid object type'
+
+cat >tag.sig <<EOF
+object $(test_oid deadbeef)
+type tagggg
+tag mytag
+tagger . <> 0 +0000
+
+EOF
+
+check_verify_failure 'verify object (SHA/type) check -- incorrect type, valid object' \
'^error: char7: could not verify object.*$'
+cat >tag.sig <<EOF
+object $head
+type tree
+tag mytag
+tagger . <> 0 +0000
+
+EOF
+
+check_verify_failure 'verify object (SHA/type) check -- incorrect type, valid object' \
+ '^error: char7: could not verify object'
+
############################################################
# 10. verify tag-name check
The verify_object() function in "mktag.c" is tasked with ensuring that our tag refers to a valid object. The existing test for this might fail because it was also testing that "type taggg" didn't refer to a valid object type (it should be "type tag"), or because we referred to a valid object but got the type wrong. Let's split these tests up, so we're testing all combinations of a non-existing object and in invalid/wrong "type" lines. Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> --- t/t3800-mktag.sh | 37 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)