freebsd-skq/lib/libc_r/test
marcel 25569ea731 Make this compile without warnings on 64-bit architectures:
Don't cast thread_self() to int. Cast to uintptr_t. Pull in the
predefined printf format from <inttypes.h>
2003-06-04 20:38:54 +00:00
..
guard_b.c Make this compile without warnings on 64-bit architectures: 2003-06-04 20:36:08 +00:00
guard_b.exp
guard_s.pl
hello_b.c
hello_d.c
hello_d.exp
hello_s.c
join_leak_d.c If the library is not able to create a thread because resources 2003-06-04 08:16:32 +00:00
join_leak_d.exp
Makefile
mutex_d.c Make this compile without warnings on 64-bit architectures: 2003-06-04 20:38:54 +00:00
mutex_d.exp
propagate_s.pl
README
sem_d.c
sem_d.exp
sigsuspend_d.c
sigsuspend_d.exp
sigwait_d.c
sigwait_d.exp
verify

$FreeBSD$

This test suite is meant to test general functionality of pthreads, as well as
provide a simple framework for regression tests.  In general, this test suite
can be used with any pthreads library, but in reality there are a number of
libc_r-specific aspects to this test suite which would require some effort to
get around if testing another pthreads library.

This test suite assumes that libc_r is installed.

There are two forms of test that the 'verify' script understands.  The simpler
form is the diff format, where the output of the test program is diff'ed with
the correspondingly named .exp file.  If there is diff output, the test fails.
The sequence test format is somewhat more complex, and is documented in the
command line usage output for verify.  The advantage of this format is that it
allows multiple tests to pass/fail within one program.

There is no driving need for test naming consistency, but the existing tests
generally follow these conventions:

<name>_d.c <name>_d.exp     : Diff mode C test and expected output file.
<name>_s.c                  : Sequence mode C test.
<name>_b*.c                 : Back end C program used by perl tests.
<name>_d.pl <name>_d.pl.exp : Diff mode perl test and expected output file.
<name>_s.pl                 : Sequence mode perl test.

<name> is something descriptive, such as "pr14685" in the case of a PR-related
regression test, or "mutex" in the case of a test of mutexes.