@@ -25,6 +25,7 @@ test_expect_success 'ordered enumeration' '
test_expect_success 'ordered enumeration with duplicate suppression' '
echoid "" 44 55 88 aa >expect &&
{
+ echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echo for_each_unique
@@ -52,17 +53,19 @@ test_expect_success 'lookup non-existing entry' '
test_expect_success 'lookup with duplicates' '
{
+ echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid lookup 55
} | test-tool oid-array >actual &&
n=$(cat actual) &&
- test "$n" -ge 2 &&
- test "$n" -le 3
+ test "$n" -ge 3 &&
+ test "$n" -le 5
'
test_expect_success 'lookup non-existing entry with duplicates' '
{
+ echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid append 88 44 aa 55 &&
echoid lookup 66
Our tests for handling duplicates in oid-array provide only a single duplicate for each number, so our sorted array looks like: 44 44 55 55 88 88 aa aa A slightly more interesting test is to have multiple duplicates, which makes sure that we not only skip the duplicate, but keep skipping until we are out of the set of matching duplicates. Unsurprisingly this works just fine, but it's worth beefing up this test since we're about to change the duplicate-detection code. Note that we do need to adjust the results on the lookup test, since it is returning the index of the found item (and now we have more items before our range, and the range itself is slightly larger, since we'll accept a match of any element). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> --- t/t0064-oid-array.sh | 7 +++++-- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)