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  DejaGnu is a framework for testing other programs. Its purpose is to
provide a single front end for all tests.  Beyond this, DejaGnu offers
several advantages for testing:

        - The flexibility and consistency of the DejaGnu framework
          make it easy to write tests for any program.

        - DejaGnu provides a layer of abstraction which makes all
          tests (if correctly written) portable to any host or target
          where a program must be tested.  For instance, a test for
          GDB can run (from any Unix based host) on any target
          architecture supported by DejaGnu. Currently DejaGnu runs
          tests on several single board computers, whose operating
          software ranges from just a boot monitor to a full-fledged,
          Unix-like realtime OS.

        - DejaGnu is written in expect, which in turn uses Tcl
          (Tool command language).  The framework comprises two parts:
          the testing framework and the testsuites themselves. Tests
          are usually written in expect using Tcl.

  Bugs can be reported to bug-dejagnu@prep.ai.mit.edu.

                      How To Configure and Build

 To build DejaGnu, run the ``configure'' script here, e.g.:

        ./configure MYHOSTTYPE

followed by running ``make''.  (MYHOSTTYPE is a name for your host computer,
for instance "sun4".  You can use the script ``config.sub'' to test whether
a name is recognized; if it is, config.sub translates it to a triplet 
specifying CPU, vendor, and OS.) This is used when you plan to
configure and build in the source tree.

  If you use a separate tree for object files, (the recommended way),
then the --srcdir option must also be specified. This would also
require that the configure script be run from the top level directory.

        PATH/configure MYHOSTYPE --srcdir PATH/dejagnu

where PATH is is the directory that the contains the sources.

  To configure it so it gets installed somewhere other than the
default of /usr/local, use the --prefix option.
        
        configure MYHOSTYPE --prefix [PATH]

where PATH is the prefix used to install the programs. 

  The configure testing and building will use the native compiler "cc"
on your host machine. To change which compiler gets used (like gcc)
set a the variable "CC" in your environment to point to it. 
        
        For csh users:          "setenv CC gcc"
        For bourne shell users: "CC=gcc;export CC"

  Then when you compile, use "make CC=$CC". 

See etc/cfg-paper.texi, etc/configure.texi, and/or the README files in
various subdirectories, for more details. 

 As DejaGnu is a Tcl program, there is nothing to build. However, the
documentation is not built by default. Use these targets:
"make info"     - Convert the texinfo document to something that can
                  be used the GNU info program or info mode in emacs.
"make dvi"      - Convert the texinfo document to something that can
                  be printed. This produces dvi output.
"make doc"      - This builds both.
"make ps"       - This converts the dvi file into postscript. This
                  requires a copy of dvips.
"make install"  - This installs DejaGnu based on the --prefix option
                  when configuring. Otherwise it defaults to
                  /usr/local. See the DejaGnu manual for more
                  information on installation.

                          Changes from 1.1.1
        1. Works with (included in release) Tcl 7.3 and Expect 5.6.
        2. Much better error trapping and handling, including the
           execution of sub scripts.
        3. Re-worked configuration subsystem.
        4. Default handling for testing unknown targets.
        5. New testsuite for expect and runtest.
        6. More debugging procedures.

                          Changes from 1.0

        1. DejaGnu now conforms to POSIX 1003.3, a standard for
           testing frameworks.
        2. A Tcl debugger written by Don Libes has been added.
        3. Lots of bug fixes.

                          Changes from 0.9

        1. DejaGnu now installs itself like other utilities.
        2. 700 G++ tests are included.
        3. The bugs in the GCC tests have been fixed.
        4. Testsuites are released separately.
        5. Testsuite sources now reside with the within each tool's
           source tree. 

-------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's is a posting on the Free OS testing project. (FROST)
-------------------------------------------------------------------
If you have built up your own tests for system calls, library
routines, networking protocols, or common utilities, this posting
offers you an opportunity to put them to good use.  You can do a good
deed for the Linux community, the Berkeley UNIX community, and the
wider world of free software users.

Also, if you would like to learn some good test tools and strategies,
and devote some time on a volunteer basis to writing tests -- perhaps
a couple of weeks full-time, or a couple hours per week over a period
of several months -- then here is a project you should get involved
in.

I am helping to coordinate a test effort for Linux.  In the following
four sections of this message I will describe the goals, the process,
the people trying to do it, and what you can do to help.

Goals

  Linux and BSD share a number of libraries and utilities, both
  because BSD software was ported to Linux, and because several free
  software (GNU) utilities have been ported to both operating
  systems.

  Linux shows startling differences and failures as you move from one
  set of hardware to another.  People who hope to base their own
  commercial products on Linux would like to see proof that it is
  robust, portable, and standard-conforming.  The problem is that
  cross-platform testing is very hard to do, and few decent test
  suites exist either for free software or for UNIX.  (Look at all the
  differences you find among systems that are SVID-conforming,
  particularly at higher levels such as the utilities.)

  Therefore, a number of us who are interested n Linux have decided to
  enter the modern age of formal, automated software testing -- but in
  a manner that is proper for the free software community.

  Using DejaGnu, a test platform developed by Cygnus Support and
  placed under the GPL, we want to collect the best tests we can from
  people everywhere, and integrate them into suites that any user can
  download, run, and interpret with a few commands.  DejaGnu already
  runs under BSD, and Cygnus is porting it to Linux.

  Our goal is to test as many parts of the system as possible,
  including system calls (particularly for POSIX 1003.1 compliance),
  libraries in the official distribution, networking protocols,
  and utilities.  We need help with

    1) integrating good tests donated by the community (and probably
       written in a variety of programming languages and command
       shells) into the DejaGnu framework, and

    2) writing new tests for major functional areas for which no
       adequate tests exist.

  The tests we use will be placed under the GPL and distributed by
  Cygnus Support along with DejaGnu.  H. J. Lu, who maintains the C
  library for Linux, has offered to run the POSIX 1003.1 tests and as
  many others as he can.

Process

  First let me summarize the advantages of using DejaGnu, a free
  software product that will be the umbrella for all the tests, and
  then explain how we plan to conduct this project.

  Cygnus Support released DejaGnu to the public on January 3, along
  with several test suites for GNU language tools.  The product is
  designed for portability and easy cross-platform development and
  execution.  It works more uniformly than typical tests using the
  UNIX shell, and also supports interactive testing better than most
  test platforms -- for instance, Cygnus has written over 1300 unit
  tests for the gdb debugger using it.

  The implementation of DejaGnu is based on tcl and expect, two simple
  existing languages for writing commands.  You can develop new tests
  in two major ways: by placing keyword-based comments in C source
  code, or by writing tests in tcl.

  While Cygnus is still increasing their body of tests for language
  tools, they are also turning their resources toward the libraries
  and GNU utilities.  While most of the tests are written at Cygnus,
  they have reached out to communities of testers and are now porting
  substantial sets of donated tests.

  We are hoping to broaden this successful use of collaboration across
  user communities.  We hope that suites of useful tests are sitting
  in desk drawers out there.  We also hope to gather and mobilize
  people who appreciate the value of formal tests in legitimizing free
  software, and would like to help write them.

  I am not an employee of Cygnus, but have volunteered to talk to
  interested people and do an initial classification of tests, just to
  offload some of this routine work from them.  I will discuss all
  offers with Cygnus staff to find out what is most needed and decide
  which tests to incorporate into DejaGnu.  There are several criteria
  for choosing tests, including the degree to which an area is
  covered, and its importance in the overall stability of the
  operating system.  Some tests may have to be rejected just because
  they are hard to fit into the DejaGnu model.

People

  Now you can find out why each of us got involved with this project.

  Cygnus writes and distributes free software, selling support as a
  means to make money.  The company is not directly in the business of
  supporting operating systems or common UNIX utilities, so this kind
  of testing is tangential to their main goals.  But they may want to
  support those things in the future.  In any case, they would like to
  see Linux do well, and this big test project will be a good
  promotion for DejaGnu.
  H. K. Lu, as a volunteer for Linux, has been using his own system to
  implement, port, maintain, and ensure ANSI and POSIX compliance for
  the C library (mostly the GNU C library along with the iostream
  class from the g++ library).  He is looking for ways to validate the
  work that he and many other contributors have put in.

  As an editor at a publisher of computer books, my relationship to
  Linux and BSD is even more distant than that of Cygnus.  But we are
  thinking about putting out books about Linux, from either the Linux
  Documentation Project or independent authors, and would like to make
  sure Linux is stable enough to be documented.  The testing of
  utilities is particularly important to me, because it can provide
  quality assurance for our books, including the BSD version of UNIX
  in a Nutshell.

What you can do

  We ask people who have written tests in the areas I have described
  to donate them to this project and see them benefit the public.
  Don't just send me stuff -- write or call to discuss what you've got
  in general.  You also have to assign the tests to the Free Software
  Foundation (a simple matter, so long as you are the owner of the
  tests) so that they can be distributed under the GPL.

  Also, please don't starting flaming about the GPL.  Either join our
  project and donate your tests, or don't.  Personally, I do not take
  a side in this war.

  People who are interested in testing as a discipline, and have some
  time to donate, are invited to contact me to help write tests.  Tell
  me:

        Your knowledge of computer languages and tools

        Previous software test efforts you have engaged in, if any

        How much time you can devote

        What functional areas you think are important and have a
        particular interest in

  Cygnus staff will tell volunteers which areas need testing, and
  offer guidance while you learn and apply DejaGnu.  The most
  important trait for the project is rigorous thinking along the lines
  of software quality (so the best preparation is to have done some
  formal testing before).  You do not need to know any particular
  language or tool; you can learn tcl or other aspects of DejaGnu
  fairly quickly.

  Contact information for me is in my signature.  I am at the phone
  number during traditional U.S. business hours.  So send mail any
  time, or try calling from Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM,
  Eastern Daylight Saving Time (four hours later than Greenwich Mean
  Time).

  Feel free to distribute and repost this message elsewhere, in its
  entirety.

----------------------------------------------------------------------
Andy Oram    O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.                 andyo@ora.com
             90 Sherman Street, Cambridge, MA 02140     (617) 354-5800
                                                    fax (617) 661-1116
----------------------------------------------------------------------

There is a new listserv based mailing list for the FROST project. To
subscribe, send email to "listserv@cygnus.com" and the body should
contain "SUBSCRIBE FROST <your name>". Messages sent to
frost@cygnus.com go to the mailing list.

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