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To do so, a few dependencies have been imported: * external/bsd/lutok * external/mit/lua * external/public-domain/sqlite * external/public-domain/xz The Kyua framework is the new generation of ATF (Automated Test Framework), it is composed of: * external/bsd/atf * external/bsd/kyua-atf-compat * external/bsd/kyua-cli * external/bsd/kyua-tester * tests Kyua/ATF being written in C++, it depends on libstdc++ which is provided by GCC. As this is not part of the sources, Kyua is only compiled when the native GCC utils are installed. To install Kyua do the following: * In a cross-build enviromnent, add the following to the build.sh commandline: -V MKBINUTILS=yes -V MKGCCCMDS=yes WARNING: At this point the import is still experimental, and not supported on native builds (a.k.a make build). Change-Id: I26aee23c5bbd2d64adcb7c1beb98fe0d479d7ada |
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data | ||
debug.c | ||
main.c | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
split.c | ||
t_exhaust.c | ||
t_regex.sh | ||
t_regex_att.c | ||
test_regex.h |
regular expression test set Lines are at least three fields, separated by one or more tabs. "" stands for an empty field. First field is an RE. Second field is flags. If C flag given, regcomp() is expected to fail, and the third field is the error name (minus the leading REG_). Otherwise it is expected to succeed, and the third field is the string to try matching it against. If there is no fourth field, the match is expected to fail. If there is a fourth field, it is the substring that the RE is expected to match. If there is a fifth field, it is a comma- separated list of what the subexpressions should match, with - indicating no match for that one. In both the fourth and fifth fields, a (sub)field starting with @ indicates that the (sub)expression is expected to match a null string followed by the stuff after the @; this provides a way to test where null strings match. The character `N' in REs and strings is newline, `S' is space, `T' is tab, `Z' is NUL. The full list of flags: - placeholder, does nothing b RE is a BRE, not an ERE & try it as both an ERE and a BRE C regcomp() error expected, third field is error name i REG_ICASE m ("mundane") REG_NOSPEC s REG_NOSUB (not really testable) n REG_NEWLINE ^ REG_NOTBOL $ REG_NOTEOL # REG_STARTEND (see below) p REG_PEND For REG_STARTEND, the start/end offsets are those of the substring enclosed in ().