i3/testcases/t/64-kill-win-vs-client.t
Michael Stapelberg de5286da59 tests: lib/i3test: Remove open_standard_window, introduce open_window
open_window has a better API than open_standard_window. It uses named
parameters and supplies default values for everything you don’t specify. This
way, you can use every feature which X11::XCB::Window supports.
2011-09-24 15:11:37 +01:00

67 lines
1.5 KiB
Perl

#!perl
# vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab
#
# Tests if WM_STATE is WM_STATE_NORMAL when mapped and WM_STATE_WITHDRAWN when
# unmapped.
#
use i3test;
my $x = X11::XCB::Connection->new;
sub two_windows {
my $tmp = fresh_workspace;
ok(@{get_ws_content($tmp)} == 0, 'no containers yet');
my $first = open_window($x);
my $second = open_window($x);
sync_with_i3 $x;
is($x->input_focus, $second->id, 'second window focused');
ok(@{get_ws_content($tmp)} == 2, 'two containers opened');
return $tmp;
}
##############################################################
# 1: open two windows (in the same client), kill one and see if
# the other one is still there
##############################################################
my $tmp = two_windows;
cmd 'kill';
sleep 0.25;
ok(@{get_ws_content($tmp)} == 1, 'one container left after killing');
##############################################################
# 2: same test case as test 1, but with the explicit variant
# 'kill window'
##############################################################
my $tmp = two_windows;
cmd 'kill window';
sleep 0.25;
ok(@{get_ws_content($tmp)} == 1, 'one container left after killing');
##############################################################
# 3: open two windows (in the same client), use 'kill client'
# and check if both are gone
##############################################################
my $tmp = two_windows;
cmd 'kill client';
sleep 0.25;
ok(@{get_ws_content($tmp)} == 0, 'no containers left after killing');
done_testing;