X-Git-Url: http://git.indexdata.com/?p=irspy-moved-to-github.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2FZOOM%2FIRSpy%2FTest%2FPing.pm;h=7f14db2f92d49e7263cbf563aa216d76b5acbf4c;hp=080854f68a833570bfd04a401300a6ffc6826817;hb=e7a12a42d55041acafc1e6012ecb7ad1728f3dee;hpb=7653f86cc084bb83b97271cd655066530303d8fa diff --git a/lib/ZOOM/IRSpy/Test/Ping.pm b/lib/ZOOM/IRSpy/Test/Ping.pm index 080854f..7f14db2 100644 --- a/lib/ZOOM/IRSpy/Test/Ping.pm +++ b/lib/ZOOM/IRSpy/Test/Ping.pm @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# $Id: Ping.pm,v 1.7 2006-07-21 11:27:33 mike Exp $ +# $Id: Ping.pm,v 1.22 2007-03-02 12:17:33 mike Exp $ # See the "Main" test package for documentation @@ -9,20 +9,21 @@ use strict; use warnings; use ZOOM::IRSpy::Test; -our @ISA; -@ISA = qw(ZOOM::IRSpy::Test); +our @ISA = qw(ZOOM::IRSpy::Test); +use ZOOM::IRSpy::Utils qw(isodate); -sub run { - my $this = shift(); - my $irspy = $this->irspy(); - my $pod = $irspy->pod(); +use Text::Iconv; +my $conv = new Text::Iconv("LATIN1", "UTF8"); - $pod->callback(ZOOM::Event::CONNECT, \&connected); - $pod->callback("exception", \¬_connected); - my $err = $pod->wait($irspy); - return 0; +sub start { + my $class = shift(); + my($conn) = @_; + + $conn->irspy_connect(undef, {}, + ZOOM::Event::ZEND, \&connected, + exception => \¬_connected); } @@ -30,14 +31,58 @@ sub connected { maybe_connected(@_, 1) } sub not_connected { maybe_connected(@_, 0) } sub maybe_connected { - my($conn, $irspy, $rs, $event, $ok) = @_; - - my $rec = $irspy->record($conn); - $irspy->log("irspy_test", $conn->option("host"), - ($ok ? "" : " not"), " connected"); - $conn->option(pod_omit => 1) if !$ok; - ### At this point we should note the successful connection in $rec - return 0; + my($conn, $task, $__UNUSED_udata, $event, $ok) = @_; + + $conn->log("irspy_test", ($ok ? "" : "not "), "connected"); + my $rec = $conn->record(); + $rec->append_entry("irspy:status", "" . + isodate(time()) . ""); + + if ($ok) { + foreach my $opt (qw(search present delSet resourceReport + triggerResourceCtrl resourceCtrl + accessCtrl scan sort extendedServices + level_1Segmentation level_2Segmentation + concurrentOperations namedResultSets + encapsulation resultCount negotiationModel + duplicationDetection queryType104 + pQESCorrection stringSchema)) { + #print STDERR "\$conn->option('init_opt_$opt') = '", $conn->option("init_opt_$opt"), "'\n"; + $conn->record()->store_result('init_opt', option => $opt) + if $conn->option("init_opt_$opt"); + } + + foreach my $opt (qw(serverImplementationId + serverImplementationName + serverImplementationVersion)) { + # There doesn't seem to be a reliable way to tell what + # character set the server uses for these. At least one + # server (z3950.bcl.jcyl.es:210/AbsysCCFL) returns an ISO + # 8859-1 string containing an o-acute, which breaks the + # XML parser if we just insert it naively. It seems + # reasonable, though, to guess that the great majority of + # servers will use ASCII, Latin-1 or Unicode. The first + # of these is a subset of the second, so that brings it to + # down to two. The strategy is simply this: assume it's + # ASCII-Latin-1, and try to convert to UTF-8. If that + # conversion works, fine; if not, assume it's because the + # string was already UTF-8, so use it as is. + my $val = $conn->option($opt); + Text::Iconv->raise_error(1); + my $maybe; + eval { + $maybe = $conv->convert($val); + }; if (!$@ && $maybe ne $val) { + $conn->log("irspy", "converted '$val' from Latin-1 to UTF-8"); + $val = $maybe; + } + $conn->record()->store_result($opt, value => $val); + } + } + + + return $ok ? ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_GOOD : + ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_BAD; }