Contents ======== 1. Running the tests 1.1 Standard test procedure 1.2 Summary report 1.3 Prerequisites 1.3.1 Required programs 1.3.2 Required locales 1.4 Repeatability 1.5 Execution time 1.6 Testing package in designated directory 1.7 Pre-packaging check 1.8 Post-install check 1.9 Testing less than everything 1.10 Valgrind 2. Troubleshooting 2.1 Missing programs 2.2 Broken programs 2.3 Color name file 2.4 Multiple versions 2.5 System dependent issues 3. Reporting test failures ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1. Running the tests ==================== 1.1 Standard test procedure =========================== The recommended method of running the tests is after packaging: make make package make check To capture the output do: make check 2>&1 | less Or: make check > check.log 2>&1 1.2 Summary report ================== Like most other test routines, these produce much output. A summary will appear at the end: Test summary: ================== SUCCESS 83 FAILURE 1 TOTAL TESTABLE 84 ================== All tests done. Sat, 08 Jun 2013 09:30:33 +0000 make: *** [check] Error 1 1.3 Prerequisites ================= 1.3.1 Required programs ----------------------- The tests require the Bash command shell. The script Execute-Tests has some expressions unique to Bash. Quite old versions work, at least back to Bash v. 2.05b. Awk is also required, but the constructs are all simple. Gawk, Mawk and BWK Awk (the "One True Awk") are all known to work. The tests use the following utilities: - sh - awk - basename - cat - cksum - cmp - comm - cp - cut - date - dirname - egrep - fgrep - file - grep - gs - head - iconv - mkdir - mktemp - perl - rm - sed - seq - sh - sort - tee - tr - uniq - wc 1.3.2 Required locales ---------------------- For full covereage the following locales must be available: en_US.iso88591, en_US.utf8 To check whether they are available, execute the following and see if they are reported: locale -a | grep en_US The output should contain these lines: en_US.iso88591 en_US.utf8 If these locales are absent some pbmtext tests will be skipped. 1.4 Repeatability ================= The current version of the test package produces identical results if you run "make check" repeatedly. The tests contain no random elements; some Netpbm programs use randomness internally, but the tests seed their random number generators with fixed values so that they too have repeatable results. 1.5 Execution time ================== Currently "make check" takes no more time to execute than "make package", and much less than "make". 1.6 Testing package in designated directory =========================================== If you specify the package directory when you do "make package", you must do the same with "make check": make make package pkgdir=/tmp/package make check pkgdir=/tmp/package 1.7 Pre-packaging check ======================= You can run the tests to check executables after compilation, before packaging. This feature is intended for developers. make check-tree This test method is incompatible with merge build. This works when Netpbm is compiled in the source tree and also when a separate build directory is used. 1.8 Post-install check ====================== You can run the tests after installation. Run this way, the tests are of programs in the default search path. make check-install Make sure to set RGBDEF if the color dictionary file rgb.txt is in a non-standard location. This must be an absolute path. RGBDEF=/etc/colors/rgb.txt make check-install 1.9 Testing less than everything ================================ The file test/Test-Order is a list of tests which are run. If you want to skip a test, remove the line or comment it out with a "#". If you want to run just a few of the tests, use the make variable "target", a comma-separated list of Netpbm programs. make check target=giftopnm,pamtogif This runs only the tests of 'giftopnm' and 'pamtogif', in the package (staging) directory. make check-tree target=ppmbrighten This runs only the tests of 'ppmbrighten', from the build tree. 1.10 Valgrind ============= You can run the whole test under Valgrind. This is an advanced feature intended for programmers who work on Netpbm code. To turn on Valgrind, set VALGRIND_TESTS to "on": make check VALGRIND_TESTS="on" Valgrind version 3.6.0 or newer is required. For information on valgrind, visit http://www.valgrind.org/ . Valgrind results are output to files, one per process in the directory /tmp/netpbm-test/valgrind . The file name consists of the test script name, process ID and the suffix ".vout", e.g.: "ppmmake.18420.vout" . Valgrind errors are not reported in the summary report and do not influence the success/failure count in any way. The following awk one-liner will report ".vout" files with a positive error count in the ERROR SUMMARY line: awk '/ERROR SUMMARY/ && $4>0 {print FILENAME}' \ /tmp/netpbm-test/valgrind/*.vout You can add or alter valgrind options by editing this line in test/Execute-Tests: vg_command_base="valgrind --trace-children=yes" To get useful information from "--trace-origins=yes", you must make two changes to config.mk before compilation: - Add -g to CFLAGS - Turn stripping off: STRIPFLAG = Without these changes valgrind will report how many errors were detected, of what kind, and at what addresses (in binary). With the above "-g" turned on during compilation valgrind reports source file and line numbers of detected problems. Valgrind significantly increases execution time. If ordinary "make check" requires 10 seconds, "make check VALGRIND_TESTS=on" will require roughly 12 minutes, maybe more. You should consider either setting "target=..." or paring down the items in Test-Order. In the latter case, you probably don't need to run "all-in-place.test" and "legacy-names.test"; consider commenting them out. The option "--trace-children-skip" is used to prevent valgrind from stepping into child processes that are not relevant. This option appears in valgrind v. 3.6.0. If you wish to conduct valgrind tests with an older version, comment out the line in Execute-Tests with "--trace-children-skip". 2. Troubleshooting ================== 2.1 Missing programs ==================== The first two tests run, "all-in-place.test" and "legacy-names.test" detect missing programs. If you work around a build glitch with "make --keep-going" you will get a few errors here. A wholesale failure with "all-in-place.test" indicates a systemic problem, such as a misconfigured dynamic library or a directory-wide permission issue. This kind of failure is known to happen when N is set too high with "make -jN" (overambitious parallel make.) Configuration choices affect tests. If a choice you make during configure causes "make" to skip compilation of certain programs, the corresponding test routines will be skipped and reported as NOT TESTABLE. However, if you override a glitch with "make --keep-going" the test programs won't know and quite certainly you'll get failure messages. If you run the tests as "make check-install" information about configuration choices is deliberately ignored. This is because the post-install check is typically run on systems with multiple versions of Netpbm and in this case most users would want to get a clear idea of absent components. For details on the effects of missing libraries, read 'Netpbm Library Prerequisites': http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/prereq.html . 2.2 Broken programs =================== Broken programs will invariably lead to failures. Certain programs (for instance, image generators 'pbmmake' and 'pgmmake') are used in numerous test scripts. Problems in them will lead to multiple failures. To aid you in this situation each test routine lists the necessary programs near the top. Each test routine comes in two parts, a ".test" file which is a shell script and a ".ok" file which denotes its proper output. When a test fails, a ".out" file will be produced in the /tmp/netpbm-test/ directory. By comparing ".ok" and ".out" you can tell exactly what went wrong. Often one does not need to go this far; the error messages tell enough. In some cases the ".ok" file is generated dynamically. See "2.5 System Dependent Issues." 2.3 Color dictionary file ========================= If you get the following error message, it indicates a problem with the color dictionary file rgb.txt. ppmmake: can't open color names dictionary file from the path '/usr/share/ netpbm/rgb.txt:/usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt:/usr/share/X11/rgb.txt:/usr/X11R6/lib/ X11/rgb.txt' and Environment variable RGBDEF not set. Set RGBDEF to the pathname of your rgb.txt file or don't use color names. This is highly unlikely to occur with "make check" right after packaging, but may appear in the post-installation check "make check-install". To check manually after installation, execute the following and see whether the proper output or the error message appears: ppmmake red 1 1 -plain Proper output: P3 1 1 255 255 0 0 The simple remedy is properly setting the environment value RGBDEF to the location of rgb.txt. RGBDEF must be an absolute path. The following will not work: RGBDEF=./lib/rgb.txt make check-install If you want to hardcode the path, modify RGB_DB_PATH in pm_config.h and run "make" again. Note that running "configure" will cause pm_config.h to be overwritten; changes by editing will be lost. 2.4 Multiple versions ===================== If multiple versions of Netpbm executables are installed on your system, you should do a post-installation check to ensure that the newly built version is in place and in working condition. The test routines can test binaries other than the intended target, for example pre-compiled binaries distributed in .rpm or .deb format. If the default binary search path gives priority to a directory that contains programs from such a source, you should expect multiple failures due to missing features, etc. with "make check-install". Netpbm distributed with Debian or Ubuntu is called "Netpbm-Free" and is based on a fork which broke off in 2002. There are many differences. Many tests will fail. However, the test framework itself is valid for these distributions. The following procedure will allow you to run the tests on installed Netpbm programs, regardless of the version: ./configure # accept the defaults make check-install As of this writing (April 2018) Debian is working on resolving the fork. A new version, tagged as "experimental", based on the Sourceforge line of source files is available. 2.5 System dependent issues =========================== The tests have worked on x86 and x86_64 GNU/Linux systems and with several versions of GCC and Clang and also Mac OS/Clang. Reports from users of other systems including OS, Sun SPARC and BSD and compilers other than GCC are highly welcome. Floating point math precision seems to be an issue. Some discrepancies have been observed between x86 32 bit and 64 bit; the tests are written to work around them as much as possible. The use of the "--fast-math" c compiler flag by default may also be a factor. Another cause of discrepancies is the qsort function. The tests are written to circumvent this issue at some cost to accuracy and coverage. The test directory Makefile checks whether the random number generator is the one from glibc or Mac OS and automatically generates the proper ".ok" files from master files with the suffix ".rand-ok". If some other random number generator is detected the affected tests are skipped. 3. Reporting test failures ========================== When reporting problems with the tests, please give both the output of "make check" and the contents of the "netpbm-test" directory.