# The syslogd listens on 127.0.0.1 TLS socket. # The client connects and aborts the connection to syslogd. # The syslogd writes the error into a file and through a pipe. # Find the error message in file, syslogd log. # Check that syslogd writes a log message about the client error. use strict; use warnings; use Socket; use Errno ':POSIX'; my @errors = (ECONNRESET); my $errors = "(". join("|", map { $! = $_ } @errors). ")"; our %args = ( client => { connect => { domain => AF_INET, proto => "tls", addr => "127.0.0.1", port => 6514 }, func => sub { my $self = shift; setsockopt(STDOUT, SOL_SOCKET, SO_LINGER, pack('ii', 1, 0)) or die "set socket linger failed: $!"; }, loggrep => { qr/connect sock: 127.0.0.1 \d+/ => 1, }, }, syslogd => { options => ["-S", "127.0.0.1:6514"], loggrep => { qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tls logger .* accept/ => 1, qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tls logger .* connection error/ => 1, }, }, server => { func => sub { my $self = shift; ${$self->{syslogd}}->loggrep("tls logger .* connection error", 5) or die "no connection error in syslogd.log"; }, loggrep => {}, }, file => { loggrep => { qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tls logger .* connection error: /. qr/read failed: $errors/ => 1, }, }, pipe => { nocheck => 1, }, tty => { nocheck => 1, }, ); 1;