apenwarr-redo/t/all.do
Avery Pennarun f6fe00db5c Directory reorg: move code into redo/, generate binaries in bin/.
It's time to start preparing for a version of redo that doesn't work
unless we build it first (because it will rely on C modules, and
eventually be rewritten in C altogether).

To get rolling, remove the old-style symlinks to the main programs, and
rename those programs from redo-*.py to redo/cmd_*.py.  We'll also move
all library functions into the redo/ dir, which is a more python-style
naming convention.

Previously, install.do was generating wrappers for installing in
/usr/bin, which extend sys.path and then import+run the right file.
This made "installed" redo work quite differently from running redo
inside its source tree.  Instead, let's always generate the wrappers in
bin/, and not make anything executable except those wrappers.

Since we're generating wrappers anyway, let's actually auto-detect the
right version of python for the running system; distros can't seem to
agree on what to call their python2 binaries (sigh). We'll fill in the
right #! shebang lines.  Since we're doing that, we can stop using
/usr/bin/env, which will a) make things slightly faster, and b) let us
use "python -S", which tells python not to load a bunch of extra crap
we're not using, thus improving startup times.

Annoyingly, we now have to build redo using minimal/do, then run the
tests using bin/redo.  To make this less annoying, we add a toplevel
./do script that knows the right steps, and a Makefile (whee!) for
people who are used to typing 'make' and 'make test' and 'make clean'.
2018-12-04 02:53:40 -05:00

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redo-ifchange flush-cache
# tests that "set -e" works (.do scripts always run with -e set by default)
rm -f 000-set-minus-e/log
redo 000-set-minus-e/all
if [ "$(cat 000-set-minus-e/log)" != "ok" ]; then
echo "FATAL! .do file not run with 'set -e' in effect!" >&2
exit 5
fi
# builds 1xx*/all to test for basic/dangerous functionality.
# We don't want to run more advanced tests if the basics don't work.
/bin/ls 1[0-9][0-9]*/all.do |
sed 's/\.do$//' |
xargs redo
110-compile/hello >&2
# builds most of the rest in parallel
/bin/ls [2-9][0-9][0-9]*/all.do |
sed 's/\.do$//' |
xargs redo
# builds the tests that require non-parallel execution.
# If tests are written carefully, this should only be things that
# are checking for unnecessary extra rebuilds of some targets, which
# might happen after flush-cache.
# FIXME: a better solution might be to make flush-cache less destructive!
/bin/ls [s][0-9][0-9]*/all.do |
sed 's/\.do$//' | {
while read d; do
redo "$d"
done
}