freebsd-dev/lib/libarchive/test/README
Tim Kientzle 2a5e8d812c Extensive improvements to the libarchive_test test program that
exercises and verifies the libarchive APIs:

* Improved error reporting; hexdumps are now provided for
  many file/memory content differences.
* Overall status more clearly counts "tests" and "assertions"
* Reference files can now be stored on disk instead of having
  to be compiled into the test program itself.  A couple of
  tests have been converted to this more natural structure.
* Several memory leaks corrected so that leaks within libarchive
  itself can be more easily detected and diagnosed.
* New test: GNU tar compatibility
* New test: Zip compatibility
* New test: Zero-byte writes to a compressed archive entry
* New test: archive_entry_strmode() format verification
* New test: mtree reader
* New test: write/read of large (2G - 1TB) entries to tar archives
  (thanks to recent performance work, this test only requires a few seconds)
* New test: detailed format verification of cpio odc and newc writers
* Many minor additions/improvements to existing tests as well.
2008-01-01 22:28:04 +00:00

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$FreeBSD$
This is the test harness for libarchive.
It compiles into a single program "libarchive_test" that is intended
to exercise as much of the library as possible. It is, of course,
very much a work in progress.
Each test is a function named test_foo in a file named test_foo.c.
Note that the file name is the same as the function name.
Each file must start with this line:
#include "test.h"
The test function must be declared with a line of this form
DEFINE_TEST(test_foo)
Nothing else should appear on that line.
When you add a test, please update the Makefile to add your
file to the list of tests. The Makefile and main.c use various
macro trickery to automatically collect a list of test functions
to be invoked.
Each test function can rely on the following:
* The current directory will be a freshly-created empty directory
suitable for that test. (The top-level main() creates a
directory for each separate test and chdir()s to that directory
before running the test.)
* The test function should use assert(), assertA() and similar macros
defined in test.h. If you need to add new macros of this form, feel
free to do so. The current macro set includes assertEqualInt() and
assertEqualString() that print out additional detail about their
arguments if the assertion does fail. 'A' versions also accept
a struct archive * and display any error message from there on
failure.
* You are encouraged to document each assertion with a failure() call
just before the assert. The failure() function is a printf-like
function whose text is displayed only if the assertion fails. It
can be used to display additional information relevant to the failure:
failure("The data read from file %s did not match the data written to that file.", filename);
assert(strcmp(buff1, buff2) == 0);
* Tests are encouraged to be economical with their memory and disk usage,
though this is not essential. The test is occasionally run under
a memory debugger to try to locate memory leaks in the library;
as a result, tests should be careful to release any memory they
allocate.
* Disable tests on specific platforms as necessary. Please don't
use config.h to adjust feature requirements, as I want the tests
to also serve as a check on the configure process. The following
form is appropriate:
#if !defined(__PLATFORM) && !defined(__Platform2__)
assert(xxxx)
#endif