GResolver doesn't do full validation of its inputs, so in some of
these tests, the fact that we were getting back
G_RESOLVER_ERROR_NOT_FOUND is because the junk string was getting
passed to an upstream DNS resolver, which returned NXDOMAIN. But if
there's no network on the machine then we'd get
G_RESOLVER_ERROR_INTERNAL instead in that case.
else
{
g_assert_false (test->valid_resolve);
else
{
g_assert_false (test->valid_resolve);
- g_assert_error (error, G_RESOLVER_ERROR, G_RESOLVER_ERROR_NOT_FOUND);
+
+ if (!test->valid_parse)
+ {
+ /* GResolver should have rejected the address internally, in
+ * which case we're guaranteed to get G_RESOLVER_ERROR_NOT_FOUND.
+ */
+ g_assert_error (error, G_RESOLVER_ERROR, G_RESOLVER_ERROR_NOT_FOUND);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* If GResolver didn't reject the string itself, then we
+ * might have attempted to send it over the network. If that
+ * attempt succeeded, we'd get back NOT_FOUND, but if
+ * there's no network available we might have gotten some
+ * other error instead.
+ */
+ }
+
g_error_free (error);
return;
}
g_error_free (error);
return;
}