GDC/Test Suite
Contents
[hide]Running the testsuite
Execute this command in the directory where you've run configure (see GDC/Installation) to run the D test suite:
make check-d
Note: You must have built the gdc compiler using make before running the tests.
The summary and log will be saved in gcc/testsuite/gdc/ as gdc.sum and gdc.log.
XML output
To obtain xml output for the summary, use this command:
make check-d RUNTESTFLAGS="--xml"
Passing options to gdc
To pass an option to gdc which is used in every test run, use this:
make check-d RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-fno-section-anchors"
The unix part must always be included. Flags are then separated by /. For example, to pass -O3 and -fno-section-anchors, use this:
make check-d RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-fno-section-anchors/O3"
To run the testsuite against multiple targets, if testing multilib builds, you'd specify each target as in the following test flags:
make check-d RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix\{,-m32,-mx32\}"
In this example, the testsuite is ran three times. First using the default target (in this case, -m64), then it runs testsuite generating code for the targets specified (-m32 and -mx32).
Adjusting the timeouts
The test suite always enforces a certain timeout when compiling a testcase with gdc. If you see UNRESOLVED: lines in your build log with a program timed out warning your machine is too slow and you have to increase the default timeouts.
To change the timeout, edit /usr/share/dejagnu/config/unix.exp and add this line at the end:
set_board_info gcc,timeout 1200
where 1200 is the new timeout in seconds.
Running unit tests
You first have to change the directory to the libdruntime build directory:
cd objdir/${target_triplet}/libphobos/libdruntime/
where ${target_triplet} is something like armv6l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf or x86_64-unknown-linux.
Then build the unittests:
make unittest
and run them:
./unittest | tee unittest.log
Now the phobos tests:
cd ../src
make unittest
./unittest | tee unittest.log