NetBSD/bin/ed/test/README

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The files in this directory with suffixes `.t', `.d', `.r' and `.err' are
used for testing ed. To run the tests, set the ED variable in the Makefile
for the path name of the program to be tested (e.g., /bin/ed), and type
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`make'. The tests do not exhaustively verify POSIX compliance nor do
they verify correct 8-bit or long line support.
The test file suffixes have the following meanings:
.t Template - a list of ed commands from which an ed script is
constructed
.d Data - read by an ed script
.r Result - the expected output after processing data via an ed
script.
.err Error - invalid ed commands that should generate an error
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The output of the tests is written to the two files err.o and scripts.o.
At the end of the tests, these files are grep'ed for error messages,
which look like:
*** The script u.ed exited abnormally ***
or:
*** Output u.o of script u.ed is incorrect ***
It is assumed that the ed being tested processes escapes (\) in file names.
This is so that a name starting with bang (!) can be read, via:
r \!file
Without the escape, a POSIX ed would attempt to read the output of
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the shell command `file'. If the ed being tested does not support escape
processing on file names, then the script `mkscripts.sh' should be modified
accordingly.
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The POSIX requirement that an address range not be used where at most
a single address is expected has been relaxed in this version of ed.
Therefore, the following scripts which test for compliance with this
POSIX rule exit abnormally:
=-err.ed
a1-err.ed
i1-err.ed
k1-err.ed
r1-err.ed
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In addition, one of bang1-err.ed or bang2.ed will fail, depending on
whether or not ed was compiled with the EX_BANG directive.