HardenedBSD/share/mk/suite.test.mk
Kyle Evans 0bc776f3da make check: suppress echo of kyua binary location
986deea5b5 inadvertently removed this; fix it.
2021-01-16 00:07:50 -06:00

127 lines
4.0 KiB
Makefile

# $FreeBSD$
#
# You must include bsd.test.mk instead of this file from your Makefile.
#
# Internal glue for the build of /usr/tests/.
.if !target(__<bsd.test.mk>__)
.error suite.test.mk cannot be included directly.
.endif
.include <bsd.opts.mk>
# Name of the test suite these tests belong to. Should rarely be changed for
# Makefiles built into the FreeBSD src tree.
TESTSUITE?= FreeBSD
# Knob to control the handling of the Kyuafile for this Makefile.
#
# If 'yes', a Kyuafile exists in the source tree and is installed into
# TESTSDIR.
#
# If 'auto', a Kyuafile is automatically generated based on the list of test
# programs built by the Makefile and is installed into TESTSDIR. This is the
# default and is sufficient in the majority of the cases.
#
# If 'no', no Kyuafile is installed.
KYUAFILE?= auto
# Per-test program interface definition.
#
# The name provided here must match one of the interface names supported by
# Kyua as this is later encoded in the Kyuafile test program definitions.
#TEST_INTERFACE.<test-program>= interface-name
# Metadata properties applicable to all test programs.
#
# All the variables for a test program defined in the Makefile are appended
# to the test program's definition in the Kyuafile. This feature can be
# used to avoid having to explicitly supply a Kyuafile in the source
# directory, allowing the caller Makefile to rely on the KYUAFILE=auto
# behavior defined here.
#TEST_METADATA+= key="value"
# Per-test program metadata properties as a list of key/value pairs.
#
# These per-test program settings _extend_ the values provided in the
# unqualified TEST_METADATA variable.
#TEST_METADATA.<test-program>+= key="value"
.if ${KYUAFILE:tl} != "no"
${PACKAGE}FILES+= Kyuafile
${PACKAGE}FILESDIR_Kyuafile= ${TESTSDIR}
.endif
.for _T in ${_TESTS}
_TEST_METADATA.${_T}= ${TEST_METADATA} ${TEST_METADATA.${_T}}
.endfor
.if ${KYUAFILE:tl} == "auto"
CLEANFILES+= Kyuafile Kyuafile.tmp
Kyuafile: Makefile
@{ \
echo '-- Automatically generated by bsd.test.mk.'; \
echo; \
echo 'syntax(2)'; \
echo; \
echo 'test_suite("${TESTSUITE}")'; \
echo; \
} > ${.TARGET}.tmp
.for _T in ${_TESTS}
@echo '${TEST_INTERFACE.${_T}}_test_program{name="${_T}"${_TEST_METADATA.${_T}:C/$/,/:tW:C/^/, /W:C/,$//W}}' \
>>${.TARGET}.tmp
.endfor
.for _T in ${TESTS_SUBDIRS:N.WAIT}
@echo "include(\"${_T}/${.TARGET}\")" >>${.TARGET}.tmp
.endfor
@mv ${.TARGET}.tmp ${.TARGET}
.endif
KYUA?= kyua
# Definition of the "make check" target and supporting variables.
#
# This target, by necessity, can only work for native builds (i.e. a FreeBSD
# host building a release for the same system). The target runs Kyua, which is
# not in the toolchain, and the tests execute code built for the target host.
#
# Due to the dependencies of the binaries built by the source tree and how they
# are used by tests, it is highly possible for a execution of "make test" to
# report bogus results unless the new binaries are put in place.
realcheck: .PHONY
@if ! which -s "${KYUA}"; then \
echo; \
echo "kyua binary not installed at expected location (${.TARGET})"; \
echo; \
echo "Please install via pkg install, or specify the path to the kyua"; \
echo "binary via the \$${KYUA} variable, e.g., "; \
echo "KYUA=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/kyua\""; \
false; \
fi
@env ${TESTS_ENV:Q} ${KYUA} test -k ${DESTDIR}${TESTSDIR}/Kyuafile
MAKE_CHECK_SANDBOX_DIR= checkdir
CLEANDIRS+= ${MAKE_CHECK_SANDBOX_DIR}
.if ${MK_MAKE_CHECK_USE_SANDBOX} != "no" && make(check)
DESTDIR:= ${.OBJDIR}/${MAKE_CHECK_SANDBOX_DIR}
beforecheck:
.for t in clean depend all
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} $t
.endfor
@cd ${SRCTOP} && ${MAKE} hierarchy DESTDIR=${DESTDIR}
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} install \
DESTDIR=${DESTDIR}
# NOTE: this is intentional to ensure that "make check" can be run multiple
# times. "aftercheck" won't be run if "make check" fails, is interrupted,
# etc.
aftercheck:
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} clean
@test ! -e ${DESTDIR} || chflags -R 0 "${DESTDIR}"
@rm -Rf "${DESTDIR}"
.endif