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guile/test-suite
Neil Jerram 88f2f7a127 Avoid "no duplicate" popen tests leaving zombie processes
On the one hand we want the child process in these tests to exit.  On
the other, we don't want it to exit before the parent Guile code has
tested the relevant condition (EOF in the first test, broken pipe in
the second) - because these conditions would obviously be true if the
child had already exited, and that's not what we're trying to test
here.  We're trying to test getting EOF and broken pipe while the
child process is still alive.

* test-suite/tests/popen.test (open-input-pipe:no duplicate): Add
  another pipe from parent to child, so that the child can finish by
  reading from this.  Then the parent controls the child lifetime by
  writing to this pipe.

* test-suite/tests/popen.test (open-output-pipe:no duplicate): Add
  another pipe from child to parent, and have the child finish by
  endlessly writing into this.  Then the parent controls the child
  lifetime by closing its end of the pipe, causing a broken pipe in
  the child.
2009-05-20 19:07:25 +01:00
..
standalone add test case for load-extension bug, fix gdb-uninstalled-guile 2009-03-30 20:28:30 -07:00
tests Avoid "no duplicate" popen tests leaving zombie processes 2009-05-20 19:07:25 +01:00
ChangeLog-2008 Rename ChangeLog' files to ChangeLog-2008'. 2008-09-12 21:49:58 +02:00
guile-test merge from 1.8 branch 2006-04-16 23:37:40 +00:00
lib.scm * tests/continuations.test ("continuations"): Use 2007-10-21 20:45:45 +00:00
Makefile.am Merge commit 'e20d7001c3' into vm-check 2009-03-17 16:40:52 +01:00
README Revert "Note need for subscription to bug-guile@gnu.org." 2008-12-10 19:07:14 +00:00

This directory contains some tests for Guile, and some generic test
support code.

To run these tests, you will need a version of Guile more recent than
15 Feb 1999 --- the tests use the (ice-9 and-let*) and (ice-9
getopt-long) modules, which were added to Guile around then.

For information about how to run the test suite, read the usage
instructions in the comments at the top of the guile-test script.

You can reference the file `lib.scm' from your own code as the module
(test-suite lib); it also has comments at the top and before each
function explaining what's going on.

Please write more Guile tests, and send them to bug-guile@gnu.org.
We'll merge them into the distribution.  All test suites must be
licensed for our use under the GPL, but I don't think I'm going to
collect assignment papers for them.



Some test suite philosophy:

GDB has an extensive test suite --- around 6300 tests.  Every time the
test suite catches a bug, it's great.

GDB is so complicated that folks are often unable to get a solid
understanding of the code before making a change --- we just don't
have time.  You'll see people say things like, "Here's a fix for X; it
doesn't cause any regressions."  The subtext is, I made a change that
looks reasonable, and the test suite didn't complain, so it must be
okay.

I think this is terrible, because it suggests that the writer is using
the test suite as a substitute for having a rock-solid explanation of
why their changes are correct.  The problem is that any test suite is
woefully incomplete.  Diligent reasoning about code can catch corner
conditions or limitations that no test suite will ever find.



Jim's rule for test suites:

Every test suite failure should be a complete, mysterious surprise,
never a possibility you were prepared for.  Any other attitude
indicates that you're using the test suite as a crutch, which you need
only because your understanding is weak.