| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2009 The Android Open Source Project |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| /* |
| * Note that similar (or almost same) tests exist in Java side (See |
| * DatabaseGeneralTest.java in AndroidTests). The differences are: |
| * - this test is quite easy to do (You can do it in your Unix PC) |
| * - this test is not automatically executed by build servers |
| * |
| * You should also execute the test before submitting this. |
| */ |
| |
| #include "PhoneNumberUtils.h" |
| |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| |
| using namespace android; |
| |
| #define EXPECT(function, input1, input2, expected, total, error) \ |
| ({ \ |
| const char *i1_cache = input1; \ |
| const char *i2_cache = input2; \ |
| (total)++; \ |
| if ((expected) != (function)((i1_cache), (i2_cache))) { \ |
| if (expected) { \ |
| printf("%s != %s while we expect %s == %s\n", \ |
| (i1_cache), (i2_cache), (i1_cache), (i2_cache)); \ |
| } else { \ |
| printf("%s == %s while we expect %s != %s\n", \ |
| (i1_cache), (i2_cache), (i1_cache), (i2_cache)); \ |
| } \ |
| (error)++; \ |
| } \ |
| }) |
| |
| #define EXPECT_EQ(input1, input2) \ |
| EXPECT(phone_number_compare_strict, (input1), (input2), true, \ |
| (total), (error)) |
| |
| |
| #define EXPECT_NE(input1, input2) \ |
| EXPECT(phone_number_compare_strict, (input1), (input2), false, \ |
| (total), (error)) |
| |
| int main() { |
| int total = 0; |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| EXPECT_EQ(NULL, NULL); |
| EXPECT_EQ("", NULL); |
| EXPECT_EQ(NULL, ""); |
| EXPECT_EQ("", ""); |
| |
| EXPECT_EQ("999", "999"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("119", "119"); |
| |
| EXPECT_NE("123456789", "923456789"); |
| EXPECT_NE("123456789", "123456781"); |
| EXPECT_NE("123456789", "1234567890"); |
| EXPECT_NE("123456789", "0123456789"); |
| |
| // Google, Inc. |
| EXPECT_EQ("650-253-0000", "6502530000"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("650-253-0000", "650 253 0000"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("650 253 0000", "6502530000"); |
| |
| // trunk (NDD) prefix must be properly handled in US |
| EXPECT_EQ("650-253-0000", "1-650-253-0000"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("650-253-0000", " 1-650-253-0000"); |
| EXPECT_NE("650-253-0000", "11-650-253-0000"); |
| EXPECT_NE("650-253-0000", "0-650-253-0000"); |
| EXPECT_NE("555-4141", "+1-700-555-4141"); |
| |
| EXPECT_EQ("+1 650-253-0000", "6502530000"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("001 650-253-0000", "6502530000"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("0111 650-253-0000", "6502530000"); |
| |
| // Country code is different. |
| EXPECT_NE("+19012345678", "+819012345678"); |
| |
| // Russian trunk digit |
| EXPECT_EQ("+79161234567", "89161234567"); |
| |
| // French trunk digit |
| EXPECT_EQ("+33123456789", "0123456789"); |
| |
| // Trunk digit for city codes in the Netherlands |
| EXPECT_EQ("+31771234567", "0771234567"); |
| |
| // Japanese dial |
| EXPECT_EQ("090-1234-5678", "+819012345678"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("090(1234)5678", "+819012345678"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("090-1234-5678", "+81-90-1234-5678"); |
| |
| // Trunk prefix must not be ignored in Japan |
| EXPECT_NE("090-1234-5678", "90-1234-5678"); |
| |
| EXPECT_NE("090-1234-5678", "080-1234-5678"); |
| EXPECT_NE("090-1234-5678", "190-1234-5678"); |
| EXPECT_NE("090-1234-5678", "890-1234-5678"); |
| EXPECT_NE("+81-90-1234-5678", "+81-090-1234-5678"); |
| |
| EXPECT_EQ("+593(800)123-1234", "8001231234"); |
| |
| // Two continuous 0 at the beginieng of the phone string should not be |
| // treated as trunk prefix. |
| EXPECT_NE("008001231234", "8001231234"); |
| |
| // Test broken caller ID seen on call from Thailand to the US |
| EXPECT_EQ("+66811234567", "166811234567"); |
| |
| // Confirm that the bug found before does not re-appear. |
| EXPECT_NE("080-1234-5678", "+819012345678"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("650-000-3456", "16500003456"); |
| EXPECT_EQ("011 1 7005554141", "+17005554141"); |
| EXPECT_NE("011 11 7005554141", "+17005554141"); |
| EXPECT_NE("+44 207 792 3490", "00 207 792 3490"); |
| // This is not related to Thailand case. NAMP "1" + region code "661". |
| EXPECT_EQ("16610001234", "6610001234"); |
| |
| // We also need to compare two alpha addresses to make sure two different strings |
| // aren't treated as the same addresses. This is relevant to SMS as SMS sender may |
| // contain all alpha chars. |
| EXPECT_NE("abcd", "bcde"); |
| |
| // in the U.S. people often use alpha in the phone number to easily remember it |
| // (e.g. 800-flowers would be dialed as 800-356-9377). Since we accept this form of |
| // phone number in Contacts and others, we should make sure the comparison method |
| // handle them. |
| EXPECT_EQ("1-800-flowers", "800-flowers"); |
| |
| // TODO: we currently do not support this comparison. It maybe nice to support this |
| // TODO: in the future. |
| // EXPECT_EQ("1-800-flowers", "1-800-356-9377") |
| |
| EXPECT_NE("1-800-flowers", "1-800-abcdefg"); |
| |
| // Currently we cannot get this test through (Japanese trunk prefix is 0, |
| // but there is no sensible way to know it now (as of 2009-6-12)... |
| // EXPECT_NE("290-1234-5678", "+819012345678"); |
| |
| printf("total: %d, error: %d\n\n", total, error); |
| if (error == 0) { |
| printf("Success!\n"); |
| } else { |
| printf("Failure... :(\n"); |
| } |
| } |