# Run the regression tests in this directory.
-# how we invoke SBCL
-sbcl=${1:-sbcl --noprint --noprogrammer}
+# This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
+# more information.
+#
+# While most of SBCL is derived from the CMU CL system, the test
+# files (like this one) were written from scratch after the fork
+# from CMU CL.
+#
+# This software is in the public domain and is provided with
+# absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS files for
+# more information.
+
+# how we invoke SBCL in the tests
+#
+# Until sbcl-0.6.12.8, the shell variable SBCL was bound to a relative
+# pathname, but now we take care to bind it to an absolute pathname (still
+# generated relative to `pwd` in the tests/ directory) so that tests
+# can chdir before invoking SBCL and still work.
+sbclstem=`pwd`/../src/runtime/sbcl
+SBCL="${1:-$sbclstem --core `pwd`/../output/sbcl.core --noinform --sysinit /dev/null --userinit /dev/null --noprint --disable-debugger}"
+export SBCL
+echo /running tests on SBCL=\'$SBCL\'
+# more or less like SBCL, but without enough grot removed that appending
+# a --core command line argument works
+#
+# (KLUDGE: and also without any magic to suppress --userinit and
+# --sysinit, so if you use it in a test, you need to add those
+# yourself if you want things to be clean. If many tests start using
+# this, we can redo it as a shell function or something so that the
+# magic can be done once and only once.)
+SBCL_ALLOWING_CORE=${1:-$sbclstem}
+export SBCL_ALLOWING_CORE
+echo /with SBCL_ALLOWING_CORE=\'$SBCL_ALLOWING_CORE\'
+
+# "Ten four" is the closest numerical slang I can find to "OK", so
+# it's the Unix status value that we expect from a successful test.
+# (Of course, zero is the usual success value, but we don't want to
+# use that because SBCL returns that by default, so we might think
+# we passed a test when in fact some error caused us to exit SBCL
+# in a weird unexpected way. In contrast, 104 is unlikely to be
+# returned unless we exit through the intended explicit "test
+# successful" path.
+tenfour () {
+ if [ $? = 104 ]; then
+ echo ok
+ else
+ echo test failed, expected 104 return code, got $?
+ exit 1
+ fi
+}
# *.pure.lisp files are ordinary Lisp code with no side effects,
# and we can run them all in a single Lisp process.
-(for f in *.pure.lisp; do echo \"$f\"; done) | $sbcl < pure.lisp
+echo //running '*.pure.lisp' tests
+echo //i.e. *.pure.lisp
+(
+echo "(progn"
+for f in *.pure.lisp; do
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo " (progn (format t \"//running $f test~%\") (load \"$f\"))"
+ fi
+done
+echo " (sb-ext:quit :unix-status 104)) ; Return status=success."
+) | $SBCL ; tenfour
-# *.impure.lisp files are Lisp code with side effects (e.g. doing DEFSTRUCT
-# or DEFTYPE or DEFVAR). Each one needs to be run as a separate
-# invocation of Lisp.
+# *.impure.lisp files are Lisp code with side effects (e.g. doing
+# DEFSTRUCT or DEFTYPE or DEFVAR, or messing with the read table).
+# Each one should be LOADed in a separate invocation of Lisp, so
+# that we don't need to worry about them interfering with each
+# other.
+echo //running '*.impure.lisp' tests
for f in *.impure.lisp; do
- echo $f | $sbcl < pure.lisp
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo //running $f test
+ echo "(load \"$f\")" | $SBCL ; tenfour
+ fi
done
-# *.test.sh files are scripts to test stuff, typically stuff which can't
-# so easily be tested within Lisp itself. A file foo.test.sh
+# *.test.sh files are scripts to test stuff, typically stuff which
+# can't so easily be tested within Lisp itself. A file foo.test.sh
# may be associated with other files foo*, e.g. foo.lisp, foo-1.lisp,
# or foo.pl.
+echo //running '*.test.sh' tests
for f in *.test.sh; do
- sh $f || exit failed test $f
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo //running $f test
+ sh $f "$SBCL"; tenfour
+ fi
done
# *.assertoids files contain ASSERTOID statements to test things
# interpreted and at various compilation levels.
+echo //running '*.assertoids' tests
for f in *.assertoids; do
- echo "(load \"$f\")" | $sbcl --eval '(load "assertoid.lisp")'
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo //running $f test
+ echo "(load \"$f\")" | $SBCL --eval '(load "assertoid.lisp")' ; tenfour
+ fi
+done
+
+# *.pure-cload.lisp files want to be compiled, then loaded. They
+# can all be done in the same invocation of Lisp.
+echo //running '*.pure-cload.lisp' tests
+for f in *.pure-cload.lisp; do
+ # (Actually here we LOAD each one into a separate invocation
+ # of Lisp just because I haven't figured out a concise way
+ # to LOAD them all into the same Lisp.)
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo //running $f test
+ $SBCL <<EOF ; tenfour
+ (compile-file "$f")
+ (progn
+ (unwind-protect
+ (load *)
+ (ignore-errors (delete-file (compile-file-pathname "$f"))))
+ (sb-ext:quit :unix-status 104))
+EOF
+ fi
done
+
+# *.impure-cload.lisp files want to be compiled, then loaded. They
+# can have side effects, so each one should be done in a separate
+# invocation of Lisp so that they don't interfere.
+echo //running '*.impure-cload.lisp' tests
+for f in *.impure-cload.lisp; do
+ if [ -f $f ]; then
+ echo //running $f test
+ $SBCL <<EOF ; tenfour
+ (compile-file "$f")
+ (progn
+ (unwind-protect
+ (load *)
+ (ignore-errors (delete-file (compile-file-pathname "$f"))))
+ (sb-ext:quit :unix-status 104))
+EOF
+ fi
+done
+
+# (*.before-xc.lisp and *.after-xc.lisp files aren't handled in this
+# script at all. They're tests intended to run in the cross-compiler,
+# so that some functionality can be tested even when cold init doesn't
+# work.)
+
+echo '//apparent success (reached end of run-tests.sh normally)'
+date