to build FreeBSD (they are used in Perl man pages). We never needed embedded
"!" in targets that I can find.
We got this from OpenBSD and I cannot find any other make that supports
such things -- contrary to their commit message claim: "This behaviour
is also consistent with other versions of make.".
by forcing the creation of an object directory for the make regression
tests. Let make handle the tracking of the dependency and installation
of test_shell script.
Submitted by: ru
that you create one of the object directories make knows (see make(1)).
This uses the -C flag, so add a test that checks that make actually accepts
-C. Also fix the test that selects csh via the .SHELL target to work for
tcsh users too.
This commit renames shell_test to shell_test.sh. There is no history
to preserve so go without a repo-copy.
Reviewed by: ru
understood by Perl's Test::Harness module and prove(1) commands.
Update README to describe the new protocol. The work's broken down into
two main sets of changes.
First, update the existing test programs (shell scripts and C programs)
to produce output in the ok/not ok format, and to, where possible, also
produce a header describing the number of tests that are expected to be
run.
Second, provide the .t files that actually run the tests. In some cases
these are copies of, or very similar too, scripts that already existed.
I've kept the old scripts around so that it's possible to verify that
behaviour under this new system (in terms of whether or not a test fails)
is identical to the behaviour under the old system.
Add a TODO file.
warning: duplicate script for target "double" ignored
The regression-tests do try to hide that message, but the message does
still appear when using -j (eg: 'make -j5 buildworld'). This changes the
regression-test so the expected warning message will not be seen even
when -j is specified.
Reviewed by: jmallett ru
expansion of embedded variables in the left-hand-side of an assignment
expression, using the simplest case - hiding recursion using nil-expanded
variables.