package main import ( "fmt" "io" ) func mainUsage(f io.Writer) { fmt.Fprint(f, mainHelp) } var mainHelp = ` The testscript command runs github.com/rogpeppe/go-internal/testscript scripts in a fresh temporary work directory tree. Usage: testscript [-v] [-e VAR[=value]]... [-u] [-continue] [-work] files... The testscript command is designed to make it easy to create self-contained reproductions of command sequences. Each file is opened as a script and run as described in the documentation for github.com/rogpeppe/go-internal/testscript. The special filename "-" is interpreted as the standard input. As a special case, supporting files/directories in the .gomodproxy subdirectory will be served via a github.com/rogpeppe/go-internal/goproxytest server which is available to each script via the GOPROXY environment variable. The contents of the .gomodproxy subdirectory are not available to the script except via the proxy server. See the documentation for github.com/rogpeppe/go-internal/goproxytest for details on the format of these files/directories. Environment variables can be passed through to each script with the -e flag, where VAR is the name of the variable. Variables override testscript-defined values, with the exception of WORK which cannot be overridden. The -e flag can appear multiple times to specify multiple variables. The -u flag specifies that if a cmp command within a testscript fails and its second argument refers to a file inside the testscript file, the command will succeed and the testscript file will be updated to reflect the actual content. As such, this is the cmd/testcript equivalent of testscript.Params.UpdateScripts. The -continue flag specifies that if an error occurs, the script will continue running. All errors will be printed and the exit status will be false. The -work flag prints the temporary work directory path before running each script, and does not remove that directory when testscript exits. Examples ======== The following example, fruit.txtar, shows a simple reproduction that includes .gomodproxy supporting files: go get -m fruit.com go list fruit.com/... stdout 'fruit.com/fruit' -- go.mod -- module mod -- .gomodproxy/fruit.com_v1.0.0/.mod -- module fruit.com -- .gomodproxy/fruit.com_v1.0.0/.info -- {"Version":"v1.0.0","Time":"2018-10-22T18:45:39Z"} -- .gomodproxy/fruit.com_v1.0.0/fruit/fruit.go -- package fruit const Name = "Apple" Running testscript -v fruit.txtar we get: ... > go get -m fruit.com [stderr] go: finding fruit.com v1.0.0 > go list fruit.com/... [stdout] fruit.com/fruit [stderr] go: downloading fruit.com v1.0.0 > stdout 'fruit.com/fruit' PASS The following example, goimports.txtar, shows a simple reproduction involving goimports: go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports # check goimports help information exec goimports -d main.go stdout 'import "math"' -- go.mod -- module mod require golang.org/x/tools v0.0.0-20181221235234-d00ac6d27372 -- main.go -- package mod const Pi = math.Pi Running testscript -v goimports.txtar we get: ... > go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports [stderr] go: finding golang.org/x/tools v0.0.0-20181221235234-d00ac6d27372 go: downloading golang.org/x/tools v0.0.0-20181221235234-d00ac6d27372 # check goimports help information (0.015s) > exec goimports -d main.go [stdout] diff -u main.go.orig main.go --- main.go.orig 2019-01-08 16:03:35.861907738 +0000 +++ main.go 2019-01-08 16:03:35.861907738 +0000 @@ -1,3 +1,5 @@ package mod +import "math" + const Pi = math.Pi > stdout 'import "math"' PASS `[1:]