Changes in version 0.6 ====================== Experimental version released on February 22nd, 2013. * Issue 36: Changed 'kyua help' to not fail when the configuration file is bogus. Help should always work. * Issue 37: Simplified the syntax() calls in configuration and Kyuafile files to only specify the requested version instead of also the format name. The format name is implied by the file being loaded, so there is no use in the caller having to specify it. The version number of these file formats has been bumped to 2. * Issue 39: Added per-test-case metadata values to the HTML reports. * Issue 40: Rewrote the documentation as manual pages and removed the previous GNU Info document. * Issue 47: Started using the independent testers in the kyua-testers package to run the test cases. Kyua does not implement the logic to invoke test cases any more, which provides for better modularity, extensibility and robustness. * Issue 57: Added support to specify arbitrary metadata properties for test programs right from the Kyuafile. This is to make plain test programs more versatile, by allowing them to specify any of the requirements (allowed architectures, required files, etc.) supported by Kyua. * Reduced automatic screen line wrapping of messages to the 'help' command and the output of tables by 'db-exec'. Wrapping any other messages (specially anything going to stderr) was very annoying because it prevented natural copy/pasting of text. * Increased the granularity of the error codes returned by kyua(1) to denote different error conditions. This avoids the overload of '1' to indicate both "expected" errors from specific subcommands and unexpected errors caused by the internals of the code. The manual now correctly explain how the exit codes behave on a command basis. * Optimized the database schema to make report generation almost instantaneous. * Bumped the database schema to 2. The database now records the metadata of both test programs and test cases generically, without knowledge of their interface. * Added the 'db-migrate' command to provide a mechanism to upgrade a database with an old schema to the current schema. * Removed the GDB build-time configuration variable. This is now part of the kyua-testers package. * Rewrote the Kyuafile parsing code in C++, which results in a much simpler implementation. As a side-effect, this gets rid of the external Lua files required by 'kyua', which in turn make the tool self-contained. * Added caching of various configure test results (particularly in those tests that need to execute a test program) so that cross-compilers can predefine the results of the tests without having to run the executables. Changes in version 0.5 ====================== Experimental version released on July 10th, 2012. * Issue 15: Added automatic stacktrace gathering of crashing test cases. This relies on GDB and is a best-effort operation. * Issue 32: Added the '--build-root' option to the debug, list and test commands. This allows executing test programs from a different directory than where the Kyuafile scripts live. See the 'Build roots' section in the manual for more details. * Issue 33: Removed the kyuaify.sh script. This has been renamed to atf2kyua and moved to the kyua-atf-compat module, where it ships as a first-class utility (with a manual page and tests). * Issue 34: Changed the HTML reports to include the stdout and stderr of every test case. * Fixed the build when using a "build directory" and a clean source tree from the repository. Changes in version 0.4 ====================== Experimental version released on June 6th, 2012. * Added the 'report-html' command to generate HTML reports of the execution of any recorded action. * Changed the '--output' flag of the 'report' command to only take a path to the target file, not its format. Different formats are better supported by implementing different subcommands, as the options they may receive will vary from format to format. * Added a '--with-atf' flag to the configure script to control whether the ATF tests get built or not. May be useful for packaging systems that do not have ATF in them yet. Disabling ATF also cuts down the build time of Kyua significantly, but with the obvious drawbacks. * Grouped 'kyua' subcommands by topic both in the output of 'help' and in the documentation. In general, the user needs to be aware of commands that rely on a current project and those commands that rely purely on the database to generate reports. * Made 'help' print the descriptions of options and commands properly tabulated. * Changed most informational messages to automatically wrap on screen boundaries. * Rewrote the configuration file parsing module for extensibility. This will allow future versions of Kyua to provide additional user-facing options in the configuration file. No syntax changes have been made, so existing configuration files (version 1) will continue to be parsed without problems. There is one little exception though: all variables under the top-level 'test_suites' tree must be declared as strings. Similarly, the '-v' and '--variable' flags to the command line must now carry a 'test_suites.' prefix when referencing any variables under such tree. Changes in version 0.3 ====================== Experimental version released on February 24th, 2012. * Made the 'test' command record the results of the executed test cases into a SQLite database. As a side effect, 'test' now supports a '--store' option to indicate where the database lives. * Added the 'report' command to generate plain-text reports of the test results stored in the database. The interface of this command is certainly subject to change at this point. * Added the 'db-exec' command to directly interact with the store database. * Issue 28: Added support for the 'require.memory' test case property introduced in ATF 0.15. * Renamed the user-specific configuration file from ~/.kyuarc to ~/.kyua/kyua.conf for consistency with other files stored in the ~/.kyua/ subdirectory. * Switched to use Lutok instead of our own wrappers over the Lua C library. Lutok is just what used to be our own utils::lua module, but is now distributed separately. * Removed the 'Atffile's from the source tree. Kyua is stable enough to generate trustworthy reports, and we do not want to give the impression that atf-run / atf-report are still supported. * Enabled logging to stderr for our own test programs. This makes it slightly easier to debug problems in our own code when we get a failing test. Changes in version 0.2 ====================== Experimental version released on August 24th, 2011. The biggest change in this release is the ability for Kyua to run test programs implemented using different frameworks. What this means is that, now, a Kyua test suite can include not only ATF-based test programs, but also "legacy" (aka plain) test programs that do not use any framework. I.e. if you have tests that are simple programs that exit with 0 on success and 1 on failure, you can plug them in into a Kyua test suite. Other than this, there have been several user-visible changes. The most important are the addition of the new 'config' and 'debug' subcommands to the 'kyua' binary. The former can be used to inspect the runtime configuration of Kyua after parsing, and the latter is useful to interact with failing tests cases in order to get more data about the failure itself. Without further ado, here comes the itemized list of changes: * Generalized the run-time engine to support executing test programs that implement different interfaces. Test programs that use the ATF libraries are just a special case of this. (Issue 18.) * Added support to the engine to run "plain" test programs: i.e. test programs that do not use any framework and report their pass/fail status as an exit code. This is to simplify the integration of legacy test programs into a test suite, and also to demonstrate that the run-time engine is generic enough to support different test interfaces. (Issue 18.) * Added the 'debug' subcommand. This command allows end users to tweak the execution of a specific test case and to poke into the behavior of its execution. At the moment, all this command allows is to view the stdout and stderr of the command in real time (which the 'test' command currently completely hides). * Added the 'config' subcommand. This command allows the end user to inspect the current configuration variables after evaluation, without having to read through configuration files. (Issue 11.) * Removed the test_suites_var function from configuration files. This was used to set the value of test-suite-sepecific variables, but it was ugly-looking. It is now possible to use the more natural syntax 'test_suites.. = '. (Issue 11.) * Added a mechanism to disable the loading of configuration files altogether. Needed for testing purposes and for scriptability. Available by passing the '--config=none' flag. * Enabled detection of unused parameters and variables in the code and fixed all warnings. (Issue 23.) * Changed the behavior of "developer mode". Compiler warnings are now enabled unconditionally regardless of whether we are in developer mode or not; developer mode is now only used to perform strict warning checks and to enable assertions. Additionally, developer mode is now only automatically enabled when building from the repository, not for formal releases. (Issue 22.) * Fixed many build and portability problems to Debian sid with GCC 4.6.3 and Ubuntu 10.04.1 LTS. (Issues 20, 21, 26.) Changes in version 0.1 ====================== Experimental version released on June 23rd, 2011. This is the first public release of the kyua-cli package. The scope of this release is to provide functional replacement for the 'atf-run' utility included in the atf package. At this point, 'kyua' can reliably run the NetBSD 5.99.53 test suite delivering the same results as 'atf-run'. The reporting facilities of this release are quite limited. There is no replacement for 'atf-report' yet, and there is no easy way of debugging failing test programs other than running them by hand. These features will mark future milestones and therefore be part of other releases. Be aware that this release has suffered very limited field testing. The test suite for kyua-cli is quite comprehensive, but some bugs may be left in any place.