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# The syslogd listens on 127.0.0.1 TCP socket.
# The client connects and aborts the connection to syslogd.
# The syslogd writes the error into a file and through a pipe.
# Find the 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 => "tcp", addr => "127.0.0.1",
port => 514 },
func => sub {
my $self = shift;
setsockopt(STDOUT, SOL_SOCKET, SO_LINGER, pack('ii', 1, 0))
or die ref($self), " set socket linger failed: $!";
${$self->{syslogd}}->loggrep("tcp logger .* accept", 5)
or die ref($self), " no accept in syslogd.log";
},
loggrep => {
qr/connect sock: 127.0.0.1 \d+/ => 1,
},
},
syslogd => {
options => ["-T", "127.0.0.1:514"],
loggrep => {
qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tcp logger .* accept/ => 1,
qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tcp logger .* connection error/ => 1,
},
},
server => {
func => sub {
my $self = shift;
${$self->{syslogd}}->loggrep("tcp logger .* connection error", 5)
or die ref($self), " no connection error in syslogd.log";
},
loggrep => {},
},
file => {
loggrep => {
qr/syslogd\[\d+\]: tcp logger .* connection error: $errors/ => 1,
},
},
pipe => { nocheck => 1 },
tty => { nocheck => 1 },
);
1;
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