Files
src/contrib/one-true-awk/testdir
Warner Losh dd78d987cb ota: Merge One True Awk 20250116 bsd-feature 2dce54b053d4
Jan 14, 2025
	Fix incorrect error line number issues. unput has
	no business managing lineno. Thanks to Ozan Yigit.

Jan 05, 2025
	Fix hex detection in is_valid_number.
	Fix indirect field specification with non-numeric string
	eg. $("foo") in indirect. This is not illegal.
	Thanks to Arnold Robbins.

Jan 01, 2025
	Fixed openfile to not try to read from a directory.
	Thanks to Arnold Robbins.

Sponsored by:		Netflix
2025-02-05 13:35:45 -07:00
..

The archive of test files contains 

- A shell file called REGRESS that controls the testing process.

- Several shell files called Compare* that control sub-parts
of the testing.

- About 160 small tests called t.* that constitute a random
sampling of awk constructions collected over the years.
Not organized, but they touch almost everything.

- About 60 small tests called p.* that come from the first
two chapters of The AWK Programming Language.  This is
basic stuff -- they have to work.

These two sets are intended as regression tests, to be sure
that a new version produces the same results as a previous one.
There are a couple of standard data files used with them,
test.data and test.countries, but others would work too.

- About 20 files called T.* that are self-contained and
more systematic tests of specific language features.
For example, T.clv tests command-line variable handling.
These tests are not regressions -- they compute the right
answer by separate means, then compare the awk output.
A specific test for each new bug found shows up in at least
one of these, most often T.misc.  There are about 220 tests
total in these files.

- Two of these files, T.re and T.sub, are systematic tests
of the regular expression and substitution code.  They express
tests in a small language, then generate awk programs that
verify behavior.

- About 20 files called tt.* that are used as timing tests;
they use the most common awk constructions in straightforward
ways, against a large input file constructed by Compare.tt.


There is undoubtedly more stuff in the archive;  it's been
collecting for years and may need pruning.  Suggestions for
improvement, additional tests (especially systematic ones),
and the like are all welcome.