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137 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
137 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
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To run the tests:
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$ make check
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Note that if your /bin/sh doesn't support shell functions, you'll
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have to try something like this, where "/bin/sh5" is replaced by the
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pathname of a shell which handles normal shell functions:
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$ make SHELL=/bin/sh5 check
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WARNING: This test can take quite a while to run, esp. if your
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disks are slow or over-loaded.
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The tests work in /tmp/cvs-sanity (which the tests create) by default.
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If for some reason you want them to work in a different directory, you
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can set the TESTDIR environment variable to the desired location
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before running them. In particular, using SGI's Irix 6, the tests
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will fail if TESTDIR is an XFS filesystem (which /tmp often is);
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you'll want to set TESTDIR to a non-XFS filesystem.
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You will probably need GNU expr, which is part of the GNU sh-utils
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package (this is just for running the tests; CVS itself doesn't use
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expr).
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If there is some unexpected output, that is a failure which can be
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somewhat hard to track down. Finding out which test is producing the
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output is not always easy. The newer tests (that is, ones using
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dotest*) will not have this problem, but there are many old tests
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which have not been converted.
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If running the tests produces the output "FAIL:" followed by the name
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of the test that failed, then the details on the failure are in the
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file check.log. If it says "exit status is " followed by a number,
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then the exit status of the command under test was not what the test
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expected. If it says "** expected:" followed by a regular expression
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followed by "** got:" followed by some text, then the regular
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expression is the output which the test expected, and the text is the
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output which the command under test actually produced. In some cases
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you'll have to look closely to see how they differ.
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If output from "make remotecheck" is out of order compared to what is
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expected (for example,
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a
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b
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cvs foo: this is a demo
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is expected and
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a
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cvs foo: this is a demo
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b
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is output), this is probably a well-known bug in the CVS server
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(search for "out-of-order" in src/server.c for a comment explaining
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the cause). It is a real pain in running the testsuite, but if you
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are lucky and/or your machine is fast and/or lightly loaded, you won't
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run into it. Running the tests again might succeed if the first run
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failed in this manner.
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For more information on what goes in check.log, and how the tests are
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run in general, you'll have to read sanity.sh. Depending on just what
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you are looking for, and how familiar you are with the Bourne shell
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and regular expressions, it will range from relatively straightforward
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to obscure.
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If you choose to submit a bug report based on tests failing, be
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aware that, as with all bug reports, you may or may not get a
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response, and your odds might be better if you include enough
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information to reproduce the bug, an analysis of what is going
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wrong (if you have the time to provide one), etc. The check.log
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file is the first place to look.
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ABOUT STDOUT AND STDERR
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***********************
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The sanity.sh test framework combines stdout and stderr and for tests
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to pass requires that output appear in the given order. Some people
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suggest that ordering between stdout and stderr should not be
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required, or to put it another way, that the out-of-order bug referred
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to above, and similar behaviors, should be considered features, or at
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least tolerable. The reasoning behind the current behavior is that
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having the output appear in a certain order is the correct behavior
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for users using CVS interactively--that users get confused if the
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order is unpredictable.
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ABOUT TEST FRAMEWORKS
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*********************
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People periodically suggest using dejagnu or some other test
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framework. A quick look at sanity.sh should make it clear that there
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are indeed reasons to be dissatisfied with the status quo. Ideally a
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replacement framework would achieve the following:
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1. Widely portable, including to a wide variety of unices, NT, Win95,
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OS/2, VMS, probably DOS and Win3, etc.
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2. Nicely match extended regular expressions of unlimited length.
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3. Be freely redistributable, and if possible already the kind of
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thing people might have already installed. The harder it is to get
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and install the framework, the less people will run the tests.
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The various contenders are:
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* Bourne shell and GNU expr (the status quo). Falls short on #1
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(we've only tried unix and NT, although MKS might help with other DOS
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mutants). #3 is pretty good (the main dependency is GNU expr which is
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fairly widely available).
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* Bourne shell with a new regexp matcher we would distribute with
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CVS. This means maintaining a regexp matcher and the makefiles which
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go with it. Not clearly a win over Bourne shell and GNU expr.
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* Bourne shell, and use sed to remove variable portions of output, and
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thus produce a form that can be compared with cmp or diff (this
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sidesteps the need for a full regular expression matcher as mentioned
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in #2 above). The C News tests are said to work this way. This would
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appear to rely on variable portions of output having a certain syntax
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and might spuriously recognize them out of context (this issue needs
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more investigation; it isn't clear how big a problem it is in
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practice). Same portability issues as the other choices based on the
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Bourne shell.
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* Dejagnu. This is overkill; most of dejagnu is either unnecessary
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(e.g. libraries for communicating with target boards) or undesirable
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(e.g. the code which stats every file in sight to find the tests). On
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the plus side, dejagnu is probably closer than any of the other
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choices to having everything which is needed already there.
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* Write our own small framework directly in tcl and distribute with
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CVS. The tests would look much like dejagnu tests, but we'd avoid the
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unnecessary baggage. The only dependency would be on tcl (that is,
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wish).
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* perl or python or <any other serious contenders here?>
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