freebsd-dev/tools/regression/usr.bin/regress.m4
2002-06-24 14:19:57 +00:00

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# $FreeBSD$
dnl A library of routines for doing regression tests for userland utilities.
dnl Start up. We initialise the exit status to 0 (no failure) and change
dnl into the directory specified by our first argument, which is the
dnl directory to run the tests inside.
define(`REGRESSION_START',
TESTDIR=$1
if [ -z "$TESTDIR" ]; then
TESTDIR=.
fi
cd $TESTDIR
STATUS=0)
dnl An actual test. The first parameter is the test name. The second is the
dnl command/commands to execute for the actual test. Their exit status is
dnl checked. It is assumed that the test will output to stdout, and that the
dnl output to be used to check for regression will be in regress.TESTNAME.out.
define(`REGRESSION_TEST',
echo "Running test $1"
$2 | diff -u regress.$1.out -
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "PASS: Test $1 detected no regression."
else
STATUS=$?
echo "FAIL: Test $1 failed: regression detected. See above."
fi)
dnl A freeform regression test. Only exit status is checked.
define(`REGRESSION_TEST_FREEFORM',
$2
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "PASS: Test $1 detected no regression."
else
STATUS=$?
echo "FAIL: Test $1 failed: regression detected. See above."
fi)
dnl A regression test like REGRESSION_TEST, except only regress.out is used
dnl for checking output differences. The first argument is the command, the
dnl second argument (which may be empty) is the test name.
define(`REGRESSION_TEST_ONE',
echo "Running test $2"
$1 | diff -u regress.out -
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "PASS: Test $2 detected no regression."
else
STATUS=$?
echo "FAIL: Test $2 failed: regression detected. See above."
fi)
dnl A fatal error. This will exit with the given status (first argument) and
dnl print the message (second argument) prefixed with the string "FATAL :" to
dnl the error stream.
define(`REGRESSION_FATAL',
echo "FATAL: $2" > /dev/stderr
exit $1)
dnl Cleanup. Exit with the status code of the last failure. Should probably
dnl be the number of failed tests, but hey presto, this is what it does. This
dnl could also clean up potential droppings, if some forms of regression tests
dnl end up using mktemp(1) or such.
define(`REGRESSION_END',
exit $STATUS)