Check IO errors in test using raw_os_error() instead of kind()

std::io::ErrorKind is a `#[non_exhaustive]` enum as more specific
error types are to be added in the future. It was unclear in the
docs until very recently, however, that this is to be done by
re-defining `ErrorKind::Other` errors to new enum variants. Thus,
our tests which check explicitly for `ErrorKind::Other` as a
result of trying to access a directory as a file were incorrect.
Sadly, these generated no meaningful feedback from rustc at all,
except that they're suddenly failing in rustc beta!

After some back-and-forth, it seems rustc is moving forward
breaking existing code in future versions, so we move to the
"correct" check here, which is to check the raw IO error.

See rust-lang/rust#86442 and rust-lang/rust#85746 for more info.
This commit is contained in:
Matt Corallo 2021-08-02 15:04:40 +00:00
parent 0fa18658cd
commit 84909447e9
2 changed files with 6 additions and 3 deletions

View file

@ -636,7 +636,10 @@ pub(crate) mod client_tests {
#[test]
fn connect_to_unresolvable_host() {
match HttpClient::connect(("example.invalid", 80)) {
Err(e) => assert_eq!(e.kind(), std::io::ErrorKind::Other),
Err(e) => {
assert!(e.to_string().contains("failed to lookup address information") ||
e.to_string().contains("No such host"), "{:?}", e);
},
Ok(_) => panic!("Expected error"),
}
}

View file

@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ mod tests {
// Create the channel data file and make it a directory.
fs::create_dir_all(get_full_filepath(path.clone(), filename.to_string())).unwrap();
match write_to_file(path.clone(), filename.to_string(), &test_writeable) {
Err(e) => assert_eq!(e.kind(), io::ErrorKind::Other),
Err(e) => assert_eq!(e.raw_os_error(), Some(libc::EISDIR)),
_ => panic!("Unexpected Ok(())")
}
fs::remove_dir_all(path).unwrap();
@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ mod tests {
match write_to_file(path, filename, &test_writeable) {
Err(e) => {
#[cfg(not(target_os = "windows"))]
assert_eq!(e.kind(), io::ErrorKind::Other);
assert_eq!(e.raw_os_error(), Some(libc::EISDIR));
#[cfg(target_os = "windows")]
assert_eq!(e.kind(), io::ErrorKind::PermissionDenied);
}