To run the tests: $ make check Note that if your /bin/sh doesn't support shell functions, you'll have to try something like this, where "/bin/sh5" is replaced by the pathname of a shell which handles normal shell functions: $ make SHELL=/bin/sh5 check WARNING: This test can take quite a while to run, esp. if your disks are slow or over-loaded. The tests work in /tmp/cvs-sanity (which the tests create) by default. If for some reason you want them to work in a different directory, you can set the TESTDIR environment variable to the desired location before running them. You will probably need GNU expr, which is part of the GNU sh-utils package. You may also need sort from the GNU textutils; Solaris in particular has been reported to have a sort program which does not behave the way that the testsuite expects (with Solaris, lines starting with tabs sort before blank lines). These programs are just for running the tests; CVS itself doesn't require expr or sort. If there is some unexpected output, that is a failure which can be somewhat hard to track down. Finding out which test is producing the output is not always easy. The newer tests (that is, ones using dotest*) will not have this problem, but there are many old tests which have not been converted. If running the tests produces the output "FAIL:" followed by the name of the test that failed, then the details on the failure are in the file check.log. If it says "exit status is " followed by a number, then the exit status of the command under test was not what the test expected. If it says "** expected:" followed by a regular expression followed by "** got:" followed by some text, then the regular expression is the output which the test expected, and the text is the output which the command under test actually produced. In some cases you'll have to look closely to see how they differ. If output from "make remotecheck" is out of order compared to what is expected (for example, a b cvs foo: this is a demo is expected and a cvs foo: this is a demo b is output), this is probably a well-known bug in the CVS server (search for "out-of-order" in src/server.c for a comment explaining the cause). It is a real pain in running the testsuite, but if you are lucky and/or your machine is fast and/or lightly loaded, you won't run into it. Running the tests again might succeed if the first run failed in this manner. For more information on what goes in check.log, and how the tests are run in general, you'll have to read sanity.sh. Depending on just what you are looking for, and how familiar you are with the Bourne shell and regular expressions, it will range from relatively straightforward to obscure. If you choose to submit a bug report based on tests failing, be aware that, as with all bug reports, you may or may not get a response, and your odds might be better if you include enough information to reproduce the bug, an analysis of what is going wrong (if you have the time to provide one), etc. The check.log file is the first place to look. ABOUT STDOUT AND STDERR *********************** The sanity.sh test framework combines stdout and stderr and for tests to pass requires that output appear in the given order. Some people suggest that ordering between stdout and stderr should not be required, or to put it another way, that the out-of-order bug referred to above, and similar behaviors, should be considered features, or at least tolerable. The reasoning behind the current behavior is that having the output appear in a certain order is the correct behavior for users using CVS interactively--that users get confused if the order is unpredictable. ABOUT TEST FRAMEWORKS ********************* People periodically suggest using dejagnu or some other test framework. A quick look at sanity.sh should make it clear that there are indeed reasons to be dissatisfied with the status quo. Ideally a replacement framework would achieve the following: 1. Widely portable, including to a wide variety of unices, NT, Win95, OS/2, VMS, probably DOS and Win3, etc. 2. Nicely match extended regular expressions of unlimited length. 3. Be freely redistributable, and if possible already the kind of thing people might have already installed. The harder it is to get and install the framework, the less people will run the tests. The various contenders are: * Bourne shell and GNU expr (the status quo). Falls short on #1 (we've only tried unix and NT, although MKS might help with other DOS mutants). #3 is pretty good (the main dependency is GNU expr which is fairly widely available). * Bourne shell with a new regexp matcher we would distribute with CVS. This means maintaining a regexp matcher and the makefiles which go with it. Not clearly a win over Bourne shell and GNU expr. * Bourne shell, and use sed to remove variable portions of output, and thus produce a form that can be compared with cmp or diff (this sidesteps the need for a full regular expression matcher as mentioned in #2 above). The C News tests are said to work this way. This would appear to rely on variable portions of output having a certain syntax and might spuriously recognize them out of context (this issue needs more investigation; it isn't clear how big a problem it is in practice). Same portability issues as the other choices based on the Bourne shell. * Dejagnu. This is overkill; most of dejagnu is either unnecessary (e.g. libraries for communicating with target boards) or undesirable (e.g. the code which stats every file in sight to find the tests). On the plus side, dejagnu is probably closer than any of the other choices to having everything which is needed already there. * Write our own small framework directly in tcl and distribute with CVS. The tests would look much like dejagnu tests, but we'd avoid the unnecessary baggage. The only dependency would be on tcl (that is, wish). * perl or python or It is worth thinking about how to: a. include spaces in arguments which we pass to the program under test (sanity.sh dotest cannot do this; see test rcs-9 for a workaround). b. pass stdin to the program under test (sanity.sh, again, handles this by bypassing dotest).