package psx import ( "runtime" "syscall" "testing" ) func TestSyscall3(t *testing.T) { want := syscall.Getpid() if got, _, err := Syscall3(syscall.SYS_GETPID, 0, 0, 0); err != 0 { t.Errorf("failed to get PID via libpsx: %v", err) } else if int(got) != want { t.Errorf("pid mismatch: got=%d want=%d", got, want) } if got, _, err := Syscall3(syscall.SYS_CAPGET, 0, 0, 0); err != 14 { t.Errorf("malformed capget returned %d: %v (want 14: %v)", err, err, syscall.Errno(14)) } else if ^got != 0 { t.Errorf("malformed capget did not return -1, got=%d", got) } } func TestSyscall6(t *testing.T) { want := syscall.Getpid() if got, _, err := Syscall6(syscall.SYS_GETPID, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0); err != 0 { t.Errorf("failed to get PID via libpsx: %v", err) } else if int(got) != want { t.Errorf("pid mismatch: got=%d want=%d", got, want) } if got, _, err := Syscall6(syscall.SYS_CAPGET, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0); err != 14 { t.Errorf("malformed capget errno %d: %v (want 14: %v)", err, err, syscall.Errno(14)) } else if ^got != 0 { t.Errorf("malformed capget did not return -1, got=%d", got) } } // The man page for errno indicates that it is never set to zero, so // validate that it retains its value over a successful Syscall[36]() // and is overwritten on a failing syscall. func TestErrno(t *testing.T) { // This testing is much easier if we don't have to guess which // thread is running this Go code. runtime.LockOSThread() defer runtime.UnlockOSThread() // Start from a known bad state and clean up afterwards. setErrno(int(syscall.EPERM)) defer setErrno(0) v3, _, errno := Syscall3(syscall.SYS_GETUID, 0, 0, 0) if errno != 0 { t.Fatalf("psx getuid failed: %v", errno) } v6, _, errno := Syscall6(syscall.SYS_GETUID, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0) if errno != 0 { t.Fatalf("psx getuid failed: %v", errno) } if v3 != v6 { t.Errorf("psx getuid failed to match v3=%d, v6=%d", v3, v6) } if v := setErrno(-1); v != int(syscall.EPERM) { t.Errorf("psx changes prevailing errno got=%v(%d) want=%v", syscall.Errno(v), v, syscall.EPERM) } }