Hash :
7b142a7b
Author :
Date :
2012-05-15T16:12:09
tests: use 'parallel-tests' Automake option by default This will help our transition from 'serial-tests' to 'parallel-tests' as the default test suite driver enabled by a TESTS assignment in the input Makefile.am. Note that that change of default will only take place in master, though. * defs: Pass the 'parallel-tests' option to the AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE invocation in the created 'configure.ac' stub, unless the variable 'am_serial_tests' is set to "yes". Don't pay attention anymore to the 'am_parallel_tests' variable, that's obsolete now. * defs-static.in: Warn if the 'am_serial_tests' variable is set in the environment; conversely, don't warn anymore about 'am_parallel_tests' being set in the environment. * Makefile.am (AM_TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Nullify the 'am_serial_tests' variable instead of the now-obsolete 'am_parallel_tests' one. * syntax-checks.mk (sc_tests_obsolete_variables): Also warn against uses of 'am_parallel_tests', which is now deprecated in favor of 'am_serial_tests'. Similarly, if a use of 'parallel_tests' is seen, suggest using 'am_serial_tests' instead, not 'am_parallel_tests'. * gen-testsuite-part: Now that we use the 'parallel-tests' by default in our tests, we need to completely change the logic and semantics of generation of sibling tests for those tests that check the Automake generated testsuite harness itself. Do that, and give a complete explanation of the new logic and semantics in the relevant comments. * t/README: Update. * Lots of test cases: Adjust. Signed-off-by: Stefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>
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#! /bin/sh
# Copyright (C) 2011-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# Check parallel-tests features:
# - If $(TEST_SUITE_LOG) is in $(TEST_LOGS), we get a diagnosed
# error, not a make hang or a system freeze.
. ./defs || Exit 1
# We don't want localized error messages from make, since we'll have
# to grep them. See automake bug#11452.
LANG=C LANGUAGE=C LC_ALL=C
export LANG LANGUAGE LC_ALL
# The tricky part of this test is to avoid that make hangs or even
# freezes the system in case infinite recursion (which is the bug we
# are testing against) is encountered. The following hacky makefile
# should minimize the probability of that happening.
cat > Makefile.am << 'END'
TEST_LOG_COMPILER = true
TESTS =
errmsg = ::OOPS:: Recursion too deep
if IS_GNU_MAKE
is_too_deep := $(shell test $(MAKELEVEL) -lt 10 && echo no)
## Indenteation here required to avoid confusing Automake.
ifeq ($(is_too_deep),no)
else
$(error $(errmsg), $(MAKELEVEL) levels)
endif
else !IS_GNU_MAKE
# We use mkdir to detect the level of recursion, since it is easy
# to use and assured to be portably atomical. Also use an higher
# number than with GNU make above, since the level used here can
# be incremented by tow or more per recursion.
recursion-not-too-deep:
@ok=no; \
for i in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 \
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29; \
do \
echo " mkdir rec-$$i.d"; \
if mkdir rec-$$i.d; then \
ok=yes; break; \
else :; fi; \
done; \
test $$ok = yes || { echo '$(errmsg)' >&2; exit 1; }
.PHONY: recursion-not-too-deep
clean-local:
rmdir rec-[0-9].d
targets = all check recheck $(TESTS) $(TEST_LOGS) $(TEST_SUITE_LOG)
$(targets): recursion-not-too-deep
# For BSD make.
.BEGIN: recursion-not-too-deep
endif !IS_GNU_MAKE
END
if using_gmake; then
cond=:
else
cond=false
fi
cat >> configure.ac << END
AM_CONDITIONAL([IS_GNU_MAKE], [$cond])
AC_OUTPUT
END
# Another helpful idiom to avoid hanging on capable systems. The subshell
# is needed since 'ulimit' might be a special shell builtin.
if (ulimit -t 8); then ulimit -t 8; fi
$ACLOCAL
$AUTOCONF
$AUTOMAKE -a -Wno-portability
./configure
do_check ()
{
st=0
log=$1; shift
env "$@" $MAKE -e check >output 2>&1 || st=$?
cat output
$FGREP '::OOPS::' output && Exit 1 # Possible infinite recursion.
# Check that at least we don't create a botched global log file.
test ! -f "$log"
if using_gmake; then
grep "[Cc]ircular.*dependency" output | $FGREP "$log"
test $st -gt 0
else
# Look for possible error messages about circular dependencies from
# either make or our own recipes. At least one such a message must
# be present. OTOH, some make implementations (e.g., NetBSD's), while
# smartly detecting the circular dependency early and diagnosing it,
# still exit with a successful exit status (yikes!). So don't check
# the exit status of non-GNU make, to avoid spurious failures.
# this case.
err_seen=no
for err_rx in \
'circular.* depend' \
'depend.* circular' \
'graph cycle' \
'infinite (loop|recursion)' \
'depend.* on itself' \
; do
$EGREP -i "$err_rx" output | $FGREP "$log" || continue
err_seen=yes
break
done
test $err_seen = yes || Exit 1
fi
}
: > test-suite.test
do_check test-suite.log TESTS=test-suite.test
rm -f *.log *.test
: > 0.test
: > 1.test
: > 2.test
: > 3.test
: > foobar.test
do_check foobar.log TEST_LOGS='0.log 1.log foobar.log 2.log 3.log' \
TEST_SUITE_LOG=foobar.log
rm -f *.log *.test
: