use strict; use warnings FATAL => 'all'; use File::Spec::Functions qw(catfile catdir); use Apache::Test; use Apache::TestUtil; use Apache::TestRequest; ## ## mod_autoindex test part II ## ## this tests how mod_autoindex handles sub-dirs: ## normal, with protected access, with broken .htaccess, etc... #my $cfg = Apache::Test::config(); my $vars = Apache::Test::config()->{vars}; my $documentroot = $vars->{documentroot}; my $base_dir = catdir $documentroot, "modules", "autoindex2"; my $base_uri = "/modules/autoindex2"; my $have_apache_2 = have_apache 2; # which sub-dir listings should be seen in mod_autoindex's output # 1 == should appear # 0 == should not appear my %dirs = ( dir_normal => 1, # obvious dir_protected => $have_apache_2?0:1, # dir_broken => $have_apache_2?0:1, # ); plan tests => 3, ['autoindex']; setup(); my $res = GET_BODY "$base_uri/"; # simply test whether we get the sub-dir listed or not for my $dir (sort keys %dirs) { my $found = $res =~ /$dir/ ? 1 : 0; ok t_cmp($found, $dirs{$dir}, "$dir should @{[$dirs{$dir}?'':'not ']}be listed"); } sub setup { t_mkdir $base_dir; ### normal dir t_mkdir catdir $base_dir, "dir_normal"; ### passwd protected dir my $prot_dir = catdir $base_dir, "dir_protected"; # htpasswd file t_write_file catfile($prot_dir, "htpasswd"), "nobody:HIoD8SxAgkCdQ"; # .htaccess file my $content = <