nixpkgs/lib/tests/systems.nix

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# We assert that the new algorithmic way of generating these lists matches the
# way they were hard-coded before.
#
# One might think "if we exhaustively test, what's the point of procedurally
# calculating the lists anyway?". The answer is one can mindlessly update these
# tests as new platforms become supported, and then just give the diff a quick
# sanity check before committing :).
let
lib = import ../default.nix;
mseteq = x: y: {
expr = lib.sort lib.lessThan x;
expected = lib.sort lib.lessThan y;
};
in with lib.systems.doubles; lib.runTests {
testall = mseteq all (linux ++ darwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd ++ netbsd ++ illumos ++ wasi ++ windows ++ embedded);
testarm = mseteq arm [ "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux" "armv7l-linux" "arm-none" ];
testi686 = mseteq i686 [ "i686-linux" "i686-freebsd" "i686-netbsd" "i686-openbsd" "i686-cygwin" "i686-windows" "i686-none" ];
testmips = mseteq mips [ "mipsel-linux" ];
testx86_64 = mseteq x86_64 [ "x86_64-linux" "x86_64-darwin" "x86_64-freebsd" "x86_64-openbsd" "x86_64-netbsd" "x86_64-cygwin" "x86_64-solaris" "x86_64-windows" "x86_64-none" ];
testcygwin = mseteq cygwin [ "i686-cygwin" "x86_64-cygwin" ];
testdarwin = mseteq darwin [ "x86_64-darwin" ];
testfreebsd = mseteq freebsd [ "i686-freebsd" "x86_64-freebsd" ];
testgnu = mseteq gnu (linux /* ++ kfreebsd ++ ... */);
testillumos = mseteq illumos [ "x86_64-solaris" ];
testlinux = mseteq linux [ "aarch64-linux" "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux" "armv7l-linux" "i686-linux" "mipsel-linux" "riscv32-linux" "riscv64-linux" "x86_64-linux" "powerpc64le-linux" ];
testnetbsd = mseteq netbsd [ "i686-netbsd" "x86_64-netbsd" ];
testopenbsd = mseteq openbsd [ "i686-openbsd" "x86_64-openbsd" ];
testwindows = mseteq windows [ "i686-cygwin" "x86_64-cygwin" "i686-windows" "x86_64-windows" ];
testunix = mseteq unix (linux ++ darwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd ++ netbsd ++ illumos ++ cygwin);
}