o Add mount and umount actions so that partitions can be in use.
o Extend the testing of the add verb to include overlapping
partitions.
o Add tests for the remove verb. this includes tests to remove
a partition when in use (i.e. is mounted).
o Add a MD5 checksum to the output of the conf action so that
it can be tested. Make sure the MD5 doesn't vary based on
certain dynamic behaviour that is irrelevant to the output.
o Add MD5 checksums to the expected result of conf actions.
Add support for read-write parameters. Allow an optional initializer
for read-write parameters. Print the value of those parameters on
success following the PASS.
o Change the result of gctl(001) now that a bogus verb still requires
a valid geom,
o Insert gctl(024) to test for an appropriate error when a bogus verb
is given that does have a proper geom parameter.
whole name. This does not unnecessarily close the door that in some
future we want to test on something other than md(4) devices.
Also add a "conf" action so that we can check whether a gctl actually
did the right thing or not. It's one thing to check that the result
strings are as expected, but it doesn't tell us if the end result is
correct. This needs a bit more fleshing out, but for now a visual
(i.e. manual) check suffices.
mdconfig(8), because we need a disk to work on.
o Extend the number of tests now that we have a disk.
o Simplify the driver. All parameters are ASCII strings now.
The testsuite is based on a simple driver program that builds a
request from the arguments passed to it and issues the request to
Geom. The driver emits FAIL with the error string or PASS depending
on whether the request completed with an error or not. A -v option
has been added to the driver and causes the request to be dumped.
The -v option to prove(1) controls the -v option to the driver.
The testsuite itself contains a hash of which the key constitutes
the arguments and the value is the expected result.