AppleTalk was a network transport protocol for Apple Macintosh devices
in 80s and then 90s. Starting with Mac OS X in 2000 the AppleTalk was
a legacy protocol and primary networking protocol is TCP/IP. The last
Mac OS X release to support AppleTalk happened in 2009. The same year
routing equipment vendors (namely Cisco) end their support.
Thus, AppleTalk won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
IPX was a network transport protocol in Novell's NetWare network operating
system from late 80s and then 90s. The NetWare itself switched to TCP/IP
as default transport in 1998. Later, in this century the Novell Open
Enterprise Server became successor of Novell NetWare. The last release
that claimed to still support IPX was OES 2 in 2007. Routing equipment
vendors (e.g. Cisco) discontinued support for IPX in 2011.
Thus, IPX won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
This function is not public and brooks (initial committer adding the code)
suggests the deletion of the tests (which I don't know if they work)
instead of changing the visibility of the function.
Just replace the simple calls to the library with ad-hoc code. We should
later rewrite these with the ATF libraries anyway, which are part of the
base system.
Tests that cannot be run because a precondition is not met should be
marked as skipped, not failed. Do this for the tests in mdconfig that
first check if the caller user is root.
Small divergences in the output padding made some sa tests fail. Just
trim all whitespace from the outputs and the golden files so comparisons
are less fragile and the tests pass again.
Because bmake is the default make being built, many of the tests here
fail due to differences between the two. Just skip the tests for now
when using fmake.
This fixes a pgrep test that assumed that PID 2 was named g_event. This
does not seem to be the case any longer (and I don't know if it ever was
in all possible setups).
Change this test to use the idle loop instead and determine its expected
PID using ps without assuming any specific ID.
First, change the driver to run the installed yacc instead of the one from
/usr/obj (which might not be there), just as we (intend to) do with all
other tests.
Second, regenerate the expected output files from scratch. Based on visual
inspection, the differences seem OK. But this highlights that the tests in
here are too fragile and, possibly, useless: we should be testing the
behavior of the generated program, not the literal output. Something to be
addressed later.
were a little broken and not automatable, with unix_seqpacket_test.
It's coverage is a superset of the old tests and it uses ATF. It
includes test cases for bugs kern/185813 and kern/185812.
PR: kern/185812
PR: kern/185813
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Compile the tests with .t suffix, so prove can use them directly.
- The CHECKX() macro should increment ntest just like the CHECK() macro.
- For consistency remove # from the pwd.t output.
Submitted by: Mariusz Zaborski <oshogbo@FreeBSD.org>
This change is a proof of concept on how to easily integrate existing
tests from the tools/regression/ hierarchy into the /usr/tests/ test
suite and on how to adapt them to the new layout for src.
To achieve these goals, this change:
- Moves tests from tools/regression/bin/<tool>/ to bin/<tool>/tests/.
- Renames the previous regress.sh files to legacy_test.sh.
- Adds Makefiles to build and install the tests and all their supporting
data files into /usr/tests/bin/.
- Plugs the legacy_test test programs into the test suite using the new
TAP backend for Kyua (appearing in 0.8) so that the code of the test
programs does not have to change.
- Registers the new directories in the BSD.test.dist mtree file.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
Although <&0 does nothing, it is a redirection affecting standard input and
should therefore disable the </dev/null redirection implicit in a background
command.
This call should be a sufficiently close approximation of what happens
when a filesystem is unmounted and remounted. To be more specific, it
should test that the data that was in the page cache is the same data
that ends up on a stable storage or in a filesystem's internal cache,
if any.
This will catch the cases where a page with modified data is marked as
a clean page for whatever reason.
While there, make logging of the special events (open+close before
plus invalidation now) more generic and slightly better than the previous
hack.
MFC after: 10 days
This option should be useful for testing if a filesystem uses the
unified buffer / page cache.
Or, if filesystem's emulation of the unified cache works as expected.
This should be the case for e.g. ZFS.
MFC after: 1 week
- Fix ALWAYS_INSTALL to take precedence over the FreeBSD ID checks.
In particular, always install a file where the only change was
the FreeBSD ID even if -F is specified.
- Fix the -F option in the case that the only upstream change is a
change in the FreeBSD ID and the local file is removed.
- Add tests for these two cases.
passed to mergemaster. In this mode, only changes to /etc/master.passwd
and /etc/group are merged to /etc. In addition, it uses a temporary
tree to stage these changes rather than overwriting the existing
'current' and 'previous' trees so that a full update can be run after
a normal installworld has completed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
If job control is not enabled, background jobs started with ... & ignore
SIGINT and SIGQUIT so that they are not affected by such signals that are
intended for the foreground job. However, this should not prevent
reassigning a different action for these signals (as if the shell invocation
inherited these signal actions from its parent).
Austin group issue #751
Example:
{ trap - INT; exec sleep 10; } & wait
A Ctrl+C should terminate the sleep command.
Since so many programs don't check return value, always NUL terminate
the buf...
fix rounding when using base 1024 (the bug that started it all)...
add a set of test cases so we can make sure that things don't break
in the future...
Thanks to Clifton Royston for testing and the test program...
Approved by: re (hrs, glebius)
MFC after: 1 week
Austin Group issue #411 requires 'e' to be accepted before and after 'x',
and encourages accepting the characters in any order, except the initial
'r', 'w' or 'a'.
Given that glibc accepts the characters after r/w/a in any order and that
diagnosing this problem may be hard, change our libc to behave that way as
well.
Formerly, return always returned from a function if it was called from a
function, even if there was a closer dot script. This was for compatibility
with the Bourne shell which only allowed returning from functions.
Other modern shells and POSIX return from the function or the dot script,
whichever is closest.
Git 1.8.4's rebase --continue depends on the POSIX behaviour.
Reported by: Christoph Mallon, avg
The FFLAGS and OFLAGS now work correctly also for files opened with O_EXEC.
Except possibly fuse, the other users pass values without O_EXEC set. fuse
appears to assume O_EXEC is handled correctly.
Although F_SETFL may not be commonly used for execute-only file descriptors,
F_GETFL may be useful to find the access mode.
As per POSIX, a simple command must have at least one redirection,
assignment word or command word.
These occured in rare cases such as eval "f()" .
The extension of allowing no commands inside { }, if, while, for, etc.
remains.