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.
zero argument were supplied.
Add a regression test to catch this case as well.
PR: bin/174521
Submitted by: Daniel Shahaf <danielsh@elego.de> (pr)
Submitted by: Mark Johnston <markjdb@gmail.com> (initial patch)
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: cperciva (implicit)
MFC after: 3 weeks
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.".
bison, keeping full compatibility with our previous yacc implementation.
Also bring the ability to create reentrant parser
This fix bin/140309 [1]
PR: bin/140309 [1]
Submitted by: Philippe Pepiot <ksh@philpep.org> [1]
Approved by: des (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
expressions properly. Some of the tests depend on the compiler
implementing C99's FENV_ACCESS pragma, and only commercial compilers
do; those tests are currently skipped. If any of the enabled tests
fail, then odds are the libm regression tests will fail also.
This should make it easier to diagnose reported problems on platforms
I don't have.
Currently, gcc passes all the tests that don't depend on FENV_ACCESS
on amd64 and sparc64. Clang fails a few on amd64 (see clang bug
11406). Both gcc and clang fare poorly on i386, which has well-known
issues.
- plus: execute "+command" when run with -jX -n
- ellipsis: ellipsis ("...") from variable
- empty: empty command (from variable)
Currently make(1) fails all three tests:
- plus: segmentation fault due to incorrect command list handling
- ellipsis: works in compat mode but fails in job (-jX) mode
- empty:
- compat mode: prints error message
- job mode: works but prints empty string
Examples:
LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 printf '%d\n' $(printf \'\\303\\244)
LC_ALL=en_US.ISO8859-1 printf '%d\n' $(printf \'\\344)
Both of these should print 228.
Like some other shells, incomplete or invalid multibyte characters yield the
value of the first byte without a warning.
Note that there is no general way to go back from the character code to the
character.
A closing bracket immediately after '[=' should not be treated as special.
Different from the submitted patch, a string ending with '[=' does not cause
access beyond the terminating '\0'.
PR: bin/150384
Submitted by: Richard Lowe
MFC after: 2 weeks
- A couple of tests to check if the layout of the generated calenders
is correct.
- A couple of tests to see if impossible combinations for -3, -A,
-m, -y etc properly abort.
- A couple of test to confirm that the order of -A, -B, -3 etc give
the right number of months.
snprintf(3) doesn't set errno in the tested cases.
- If the same argument reference (for example %1) was specified more than
once, the command didn't necessarily fit to the final command buffer. Fix
this using a dynamic sbuf buffer. Add a few regression tests for the case.
PR: bin/95079
No objections: freebsd-hackers
Do by specifying ".../" with '-m' or MAKESYSPATH (new) environment variable.
Reviewed by: <sjg@NetBSD.org>
Obtained from: NetBSD (+ embellishment by me, sent back to NetBSD)
to wcscoll(3). Newline characters could cause incorrect results when
comparing lines.
Also, if an input line didn't contain a newline character, it was
omitted from the output. According to my interpretation, SUSv3 requires
that the newline is always printed.
Add regression tests for the cases. [1]
PR: bin/140976
Submitted by: D'Arcy Cain (original version) [1]
Approved by: trasz (mentor)
"The escape sequence '\n' shall match a <newline> embedded in
the pattern space."
It is unclear whether this also applies to a \n embedded in a
character class. Disable the existing handling of \n in a character
class following Mac OS X, GNU sed version 4.1.5 with --posix, and
SunOS 5.10 /usr/bin/sed.
Pointed by: Marius Strobl
Obtained from: Mac OS X