tests/test-fuzz-targets.t
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Sat, 15 Sep 2018 00:04:06 -0400
changeset 39647 543a788eea2d
parent 38246 46dcb9f14900
child 40726 6c01fad8de32
permissions -rw-r--r--
py3: allow run-tests.py to run on Windows This is now functional: HGMODULEPOLICY=py py -3 run-tests.py --local test-help.t --pure --view bcompare However, on this machine without a C compiler, it tries to load cext anyway, and blows up. I haven't looked into why, other than to see that it does set the environment variable. When the test exits though, I see it can't find killdaemons.py, get-with-headers.py, etc. I have no idea why these changes are needed, given that it runs on Linux. But os.system() is insisting that it take a str, and subprocess.Popen() blows up without str: Errored test-help.t: Traceback (most recent call last): File "run-tests.py", line 810, in run self.runTest() File "run-tests.py", line 858, in runTest ret, out = self._run(env) File "run-tests.py", line 1268, in _run exitcode, output = self._runcommand(cmd, env) File "run-tests.py", line 1141, in _runcommand env=env) File "C:\Program Files\Python37\lib\subprocess.py", line 756, in __init__ restore_signals, start_new_session) File "C:\Program Files\Python37\lib\subprocess.py", line 1100, in _execute_child args = list2cmdline(args) File "C:\Program Files\Python37\lib\subprocess.py", line 511, in list2cmdline needquote = (" " in arg) or ("\t" in arg) or not arg TypeError: argument of type 'int' is not iterable This is exactly how it crashes when trying to spin up a pager too. I left one instance of os.system() unchanged in _installhg(), because it doesn't get there.

#require test-repo

  $ cd $TESTDIR/../contrib/fuzz

#if clang-libfuzzer
  $ make -s clean all
#endif
#if no-clang-libfuzzer clang-6.0
  $ make -s clean all CC=clang-6.0 CXX=clang++-6.0
#endif
#if no-clang-libfuzzer no-clang-6.0
  $ exit 80
#endif

Just run the fuzzers for five seconds each to verify it works at all.
  $ ./bdiff -max_total_time 5
  $ ./mpatch -max_total_time 5
  $ ./xdiff -max_total_time 5