Currently, colourize_console is a constant, set at process
initialization.
To allow the actual stdout to be easily compared with the expected when
running tests, we want to allow colourization to be on for the test
driver, but not for the in-process configure done by run_configure,
which has stdout redirected from a tty to a pipe.
v2:
Cache _colorize_console per file object
v3:
Reset cache on setup_console()
Adds the `tools` section to `tests.json` to specify requirements
for the tools in the environment. All tests that fail at least
one tool requirements check are skipped.
I have an NVME drive, I really don't want to be thrashing it with
temporary files. It's also annoying to watch vscode thrash about with
files that are quickly created and deleted. I'd rather put them in /tmp,
so I've added a non-default option to do so.
This is needed when mixing D and C code, as it's possible to end up
witha combination of linkers and compilres such that C produces pdb
files but D does not.
This allows the harness to apply the version correctly, putting it in the right
place, dropping the right amount of numbers, etc.
pdb taking a version allows it to be more easily copied from the
shared_lib type.
Add coverage of a simple 'configure then build' sequence, to catch bugs
which occur with that.
Also, to simplify returning results from functions called by
_run_test(), allow it also throw TestResult objects, which run_test()
catches and returns.
Looking at 45c8557d, the idea behind this seems to be that a test could
conditionally indicate that the list of installed files should not be
validated by creating that file.
It's no longer used anywhere.
Also remove a lingering no-install-files file which isn't used since commit
c693bd9b.
Just add or alter attributes of the TestResult object, rather than many,
many invocations of the constructor with very similar arguments.
Define helper methods for TestResult to add the results of a step and
set the failure reason.
This move the sorting logic into the TestDef class itself, which
simplifies sorting them.
Additionally it remove overcomplicated sort logic, because python
strings are compared character by character, we don't need to do the
split and cast to int, we know that realistically a maximum of 4
characters (the first 4 numbers) are going to be compared in most cases.
* xenial doesn't ship many dependencies, so make them all optional
since we don't guarantee that everything will work
* cmake/{5,6}: needs stdlib.h for EXIT_SUCCESS on GCC 5
* common/222: needs C++11, and GCC 5 doesn't understand `auto`
correctly unless we explicitly enable it.
* frameworks/1 boost: xenial doesn't ship boost_python3, so make it
properly optional
* frameworks/6 gettext: gettext can be installed without xgettext,
which doesn't cause the project to fail, but the installed files
list is different which causes the test to fail.
* frameworks/7 gnome: gobject-introspection can't be enabled because
the sanitizer unit test detects leaks in glib and fails
Scalapack uses a library stack that can be challenging to manage.
Not least of all since many Scalapacks ship with broken / incomplete
pkg-config files and CMake FindScalapack.cmake
This resolves those issues for typical Scalapack setups including:
* Linux: Intel MKL or OpenMPI + Netlib
* MacOS: Intel MKL or OpenMPI + Netlib
* Windows: Intel MKL (OpenMPI not available on Windows)
Fortran: check for undeclared variables by forcing implicit none everywhere
C/C++: check for unused parameters and return types
removed unused variables from test cases
ci: do missing return and unused arg check with Github Actions
Now that the linkers are split out of the compilers this enum is
only used to know what platform we're compiling for. Which is
what the MachineInfo class is for
In most cases instead pass `for_machine`, the name of the relevant
machines (what compilers target, what targets run on, etc). This allows
us to use the cross code path in the native case, deduplicating the
code.
As one can see, environment got bigger as more information is kept
structured there, while ninjabackend got a smaller. Overall a few amount
of lines were added, but the hope is what's added is a lot simpler than
what's removed.
Meson is not warning if you join paths with / but you are requesting a
version older than 0.49.0; fix this before adding more features to the
division operator.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
These don't work and no one has fixed them. When I've tried to
download dmd for windows I can't get a valid installer from their
website. Let's at least turn the CI green.
This doesn't touch everything as it's just based on the python3 module
tests, ported to the python module. It's still better than the one very
basic test in the unit test module.
Deal with clang-cl doing the sane (but different to MSVC) thing, of
generating an empty import library, rather than silently ignoring
/IMPLIB when there are no exports.
Extend platform_fix_name() to handle this case
We avoid using library(version:), so we don't have to teach
platform_fix_name() all the platform details of versioned shared library
naming. Hopefully that's exercised by platform-specific tests...
Use the compiler detector in detect_system_compiler(), rather than trying to
guess based on what it is the PATH (which could utterly fail e.g when CC env
var is set)
Note that this detection is only used by platform_fix_name() to interpret
installed_files.txt
This has the adventage that "meson --help" shows a list of all commands,
making them discoverable. This also reduce the manual parsing of
arguments to the strict minimum needed for backward compatibility.
As per commit 2340fd3, unexpected installed files are not reported anymore when
using compilers other than 'cl', this regression was introduced in the attempt
of not reporting extra .pdb files, but actually caused any non extra .pdb file
in other compilers to be ignored.
Fix boolean test, by reporting any extra file a part '.pdb' ones under non 'cl'
compiler, while anyone under 'cl'.