looking for ^===> can give quite annoying false positives, especially
when building kernels, so drop it; the context can be inferred from
make's "Stop in /foo/bar/baz" messages anyway.
Also add a case that I'd missed the first time around (which happens
to be the common case, not the exception...)
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
backout_commit.rb. Tool can be used to automate the
process of backing out either small or large commits based off of
one or more commit messages. The result of the script is a shell
script which can be edited or run as needed. New and dead files
are taken into consideration. See the program's usage statement for
more configuration details. Here's an example usage:
<programlisting>
$ mutt
[find commit message, save to disk as cvsmsg.txt]
$ backout_commit.rb ~/cvsmsg.txt
Backout directory: /usr
Backout script: backout-2003-01-31-14-04.sh
Scanning through cvsmsg.txt...done.
Change to /usr and run this script. Please look through this script and
make changes as necessary. There are commented out commands available
in the script.
Example script usage:
mv backout-2003-01-31-14-04.sh /usr
cd /usr
less backout-2003-01-31-14-04.sh
/bin/sh backout-2003-01-31-14-04.sh
rm -f backout-2003-01-31-14-04.sh
</programlisting>
o cryptotest can now run multiple threads with -t option
o cryptotest can now "profile" time spent doing symmetric ops with -p
o cryptostats dumps the crypto statistics block
o cryptokeystat is an openbsd app that tests public key ops
the value of the supplied wide character is ignored and L'\0' is used
instead. Remove incorrect comments about "internal buffer" since wcrtomb()
does not have one (wctomb() does).
subdirectories, and ended up making us loop forever.
Add the username to the md5 of the commit to make it slightly more
unique.
Make the 'cvs' run quietly.
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
If somebody wanted to, this could for the beginning of a "libkernel"
which could be used to run kernel code in userland.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
(I skipped those in contrib/, gnu/ and crypto/)
While I was at it, fixed a lot more found by ispell that I
could identify with certainty to be errors. All of these
were in comments or text, not in actual code.
Suggested by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
behavior. Add the bcb regression test which checks for failures due
to a backslash ('\') coinciding with the very last character of the
command buffer. The regression test is cf. this PR (which I did not
know about) and has a different fix for the bug.
PR: bin/22351
Submitted by: Stefan Duerholt <stefan.duerholt@t-online.de>
handle printing of the PASS/FAIL messages. Suffix PASS/FAIL/FATAL with the
string (in $directory) where $directory is ${.CURDIR} from make(1), to
make it easier to use grep(1) and a bit of sed/awk to do statistics of
failure for some utilities over time, etc.
make(1): Does not work like the other tests. Its Makefile is
self-testing.
m4(1): It uses complex voodo to test GNU m4(1) features.
To the new framework. I had worried about passing the binary data that
uudecode(1)'s test passes to diff(1) might give a user something nasty,
but this is unlikely to happen as even with an unmodified old nasty
diff(1) which doesn't recognise many binary files, these binary files
are recognised. Using $DIFF instead of `diff' in the library and making
it possible to override this with `cmp -s' might be nice some day, but
as of this second, there's no immediate need.
to handle the ones which output to stdout and have output in regress.$test.out,
etc. More freeform macros should and will be written, but these are the most
prominent and most straightforward sort of tests we have around, so it makes
sense to try to accomodate them.
expansion of embedded variables in the left-hand-side of an assignment
expression, using the simplest case - hiding recursion using nil-expanded
variables.