run-tests: alternative way of handling \r on Windows
After f71d60da58fb all \r was stripped from output on Windows, and the places
where a \r explicitly was expected it was accepted that it was missing. Ugly
hack.
Instead we now accept that an extra \r might appear at the end of lines on
Windows. That is more to the point and less ugly.
[ original upstream message ]
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""This does HTTP GET requests given a host:port and path and returns
a subset of the headers plus the body of the result."""
import httplib, sys
try:
import msvcrt, os
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
pass
twice = False
if '--twice' in sys.argv:
sys.argv.remove('--twice')
twice = True
reasons = {'Not modified': 'Not Modified'} # python 2.4
tag = None
def request(host, path, show):
assert not path.startswith('/'), path
global tag
headers = {}
if tag:
headers['If-None-Match'] = tag
conn = httplib.HTTPConnection(host)
conn.request("GET", '/' + path, None, headers)
response = conn.getresponse()
print response.status, reasons.get(response.reason, response.reason)
for h in [h.lower() for h in show]:
if response.getheader(h, None) is not None:
print "%s: %s" % (h, response.getheader(h))
print
data = response.read()
sys.stdout.write(data)
if twice and response.getheader('ETag', None):
tag = response.getheader('ETag')
return response.status
status = request(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3:])
if twice:
status = request(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3:])
if 200 <= status <= 305:
sys.exit(0)
sys.exit(1)