# Don't run for C++ script compilation, as the C++ compiler itself complains # about the constants. # @TEST-REQUIRES: test "${ZEEK_USE_CPP}" != "1" # @TEST-EXEC: zeek -b %INPUT >out # @TEST-EXEC: btest-diff out # @TEST-EXEC: btest-diff .stderr function test_case(msg: string, expect: bool) { print fmt("%s (%s)", msg, expect ? "PASS" : "FAIL"); } global i1: int = 9223372036854775807; # max. allowed value global i2: int = -9223372036854775808; # min. allowed value global i3: int = 0x7fffffffffffffff; # max. allowed value global i4: int = -0x8000000000000000; # min. allowed value event zeek_init() { # Max/min value tests. We do these separately from language/int.zeek # because they generate compile-time errors for scripts compiled to # C++. local str1 = fmt("max int value = %d", i1); test_case( str1, str1 == "max int value = 9223372036854775807" ); local str2 = fmt("min int value = %d", i2); test_case( str2, str2 == "min int value = -9223372036854775808" ); local str3 = fmt("max int value = %d", i3); test_case( str3, str3 == "max int value = 9223372036854775807" ); local str4 = fmt("min int value = %d", i4); test_case( str4, str4 == "min int value = -9223372036854775808" ); }