| // There used to be assert! checks in the compiler to error on encountering |
| // files starting or ending with < or > respectively, as a preventive measure |
| // against "fake" files like <anon>. However, this was not truly required, |
| // as rustc has other checks to verify the veracity of a file. This test includes |
| // some files with < and > in their names and prints out their output to stdout, |
| // expecting no errors. |
| // See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73419 |
| |
| //@ ignore-cross-compile |
| // Reason: the compiled binary is executed |
| //@ ignore-windows |
| // Reason: Windows refuses files with < and > in their names |
| |
| use run_make_support::{diff, rfs, run, rustc}; |
| |
| fn main() { |
| rfs::create_file("<leading-lt"); |
| rfs::write("<leading-lt", r#""comes from a file with a name that begins with <""#); |
| rfs::create_file("trailing-gt>"); |
| rfs::write("trailing-gt>", r#""comes from a file with a name that ends with >""#); |
| rustc().input("silly-file-names.rs").output("silly-file-names").run(); |
| let out = run("silly-file-names").stdout_utf8(); |
| diff().expected_file("silly-file-names.run.stdout").actual_text("actual-stdout", out).run(); |
| } |