view tests/automated/syntax-tests.el @ 5146:88bd4f3ef8e4

make lrecord UID's have a separate UID space for each object, resurrect debug SOE code in extents.c -------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: -------------------- src/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-15 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * alloc.c: * alloc.c (c_readonly): * alloc.c (deadbeef_memory): * alloc.c (make_compiled_function): * alloc.c (make_button_data): * alloc.c (make_motion_data): * alloc.c (make_process_data): * alloc.c (make_timeout_data): * alloc.c (make_magic_data): * alloc.c (make_magic_eval_data): * alloc.c (make_eval_data): * alloc.c (make_misc_user_data): * alloc.c (noseeum_make_marker): * alloc.c (ADDITIONAL_FREE_string): * alloc.c (common_init_alloc_early): * alloc.c (init_alloc_once_early): * bytecode.c (print_compiled_function): * bytecode.c (mark_compiled_function): * casetab.c: * casetab.c (print_case_table): * console.c: * console.c (print_console): * database.c (print_database): * database.c (finalize_database): * device-msw.c (sync_printer_with_devmode): * device-msw.c (print_devmode): * device-msw.c (finalize_devmode): * device.c: * device.c (print_device): * elhash.c: * elhash.c (print_hash_table): * eval.c (print_multiple_value): * eval.c (mark_multiple_value): * events.c (deinitialize_event): * events.c (print_event): * events.c (event_equal): * extents.c: * extents.c (soe_dump): * extents.c (soe_insert): * extents.c (soe_delete): * extents.c (soe_move): * extents.c (extent_fragment_update): * extents.c (print_extent_1): * extents.c (print_extent): * extents.c (vars_of_extents): * frame.c: * frame.c (print_frame): * free-hook.c: * free-hook.c (check_free): * glyphs.c: * glyphs.c (print_image_instance): * glyphs.c (print_glyph): * gui.c: * gui.c (copy_gui_item): * hash.c: * hash.c (NULL_ENTRY): * hash.c (KEYS_DIFFER_P): * keymap.c (print_keymap): * keymap.c (MARKED_SLOT): * lisp.h: * lrecord.h: * lrecord.h (LISP_OBJECT_UID): * lrecord.h (set_lheader_implementation): * lrecord.h (struct old_lcrecord_header): * lstream.c (print_lstream): * lstream.c (finalize_lstream): * marker.c (print_marker): * marker.c (marker_equal): * mc-alloc.c (visit_all_used_page_headers): * mule-charset.c: * mule-charset.c (print_charset): * objects.c (print_color_instance): * objects.c (print_font_instance): * objects.c (finalize_font_instance): * opaque.c (print_opaque): * opaque.c (print_opaque_ptr): * opaque.c (equal_opaque_ptr): * print.c (internal_object_printer): * print.c (enum printing_badness): * rangetab.c (print_range_table): * rangetab.c (range_table_equal): * specifier.c (print_specifier): * specifier.c (finalize_specifier): * symbols.c: * symbols.c (print_symbol_value_magic): * tooltalk.c: * tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_message): * tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_pattern): * window.c (print_window): * window.c (debug_print_window): (1) Make lrecord UID's have a separate UID space for each object. Otherwise, with 20-bit UID's, we rapidly wrap around, especially when common objects like conses and strings increment the UID value for every object created. (Originally I tried making two UID spaces, one for objects that always print readably and hence don't display the UID, and one for other objects. But certain objects like markers for which a UID is displayed are still generated rapidly enough that UID overflow is a serious issue.) This also has the advantage of making UID values smaller, hence easier to remember -- their main purpose is to make it easier to keep track of different objects of the same type when debugging code. Make sure we dump lrecord UID's so that we don't have problems with pdumped and non-dumped objects having the same UID. (2) Display UID's consistently whenever an object (a) doesn't consistently print readably (objects like cons and string, which always print readably, can't display a UID), and (b) doesn't otherwise have a unique property that makes objects of a particular type distinguishable. (E.g. buffers didn't and still don't print an ID, but the buffer name uniquely identifies the buffer.) Some types, such as event, extent, compiled-function, didn't always (or didn't ever) display an ID; others (such as marker, extent, lstream, opaque, opaque-ptr, any object using internal_object_printer()) used to display the actual machine pointer instead. (3) Rename NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_UID to LISP_OBJECT_UID; make it work over all Lisp objects and take a Lisp object, not a struct pointer. (4) Some misc cleanups in alloc.c, elhash.c. (5) Change code in events.c that "deinitializes" an event so that it doesn't increment the event UID counter in the process. Also use deadbeef_memory() to overwrite memory instead of doing the same with custom code. In the process, make deadbeef_memory() in alloc.c always available, and delete extraneous copy in mc-alloc.c. Also capitalize all uses of 0xDEADBEEF. Similarly in elhash.c call deadbeef_memory(). (6) Resurrect "debug SOE" code in extents.c. Make it conditional on DEBUG_XEMACS and on a `debug-soe' variable, rather than on SOE_DEBUG. Make it output to stderr, not stdout. (7) Delete some custom print methods that were identical to external_object_printer().
author Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
date Mon, 15 Mar 2010 16:35:38 -0500
parents 0f66906b6e37
children 308d34e9f07d
line wrap: on
line source

;; Copyright (C) 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; Author: Yoshiki Hayashi  <t90553@mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
;; Maintainer: Yoshiki Hayashi  <t90553@mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
;; Created: 1999
;; Keywords: tests

;; This file is part of XEmacs.

;; XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.

;; XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
;; General Public License for more details.

;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the Free
;; Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA
;; 02111-1307, USA.

;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF.

;;; Commentary:

;; Test syntax related functions.
;; Right now it tests scan_words using forward-word and backward-word.
;; See test-harness.el for instructions on how to run these tests.

;;; Notation
;; W:   word constituent character.
;; NW:  non word constituent character.
;; -!-: current point.
;; EOB: end of buffer
;; BOB: beginning of buffer.

;; Algorithm of scan_words is simple.  It just searches SW and then
;; moves to NW.  When with MULE, it also stops at word boundary.  Word
;; boundary is tricky and listing all possible cases will be huge.
;; Those test are omitted here as it doesn't affect core
;; functionality.

(defun test-forward-word (string stop)
  (goto-char (point-max))
  (let ((point (point)))
    (insert string)
    (goto-char point)
    (forward-word 1)
    (Assert (eq (point) (+ point stop)))))

(with-temp-buffer
  ;; -!- W NW
  (test-forward-word "W " 1)
  (test-forward-word "WO " 2)
  ;; -!- W EOB
  (test-forward-word "W" 1)
  (test-forward-word "WO" 2)
  ;; -!- NW EOB
  (test-forward-word " " 1)
  (test-forward-word " !" 2)
  ;; -!- NW W NW
  (test-forward-word " W " 2)
  (test-forward-word " WO " 3)
  (test-forward-word " !W " 3)
  (test-forward-word " !WO " 4)
  ;; -!- NW W EOB
  (test-forward-word " W" 2)
  (test-forward-word " WO" 3)
  (test-forward-word " !W" 3)
  (test-forward-word " !WO" 4))

(defun test-backward-word (string stop)
  (goto-char (point-min))
  (insert string)
  (let ((point (point)))
    (backward-word 1)
    (Assert (eq (point) (- point stop)))))

(with-temp-buffer
  ;; NW W -!-
  (test-backward-word " W" 1)
  (test-backward-word " WO" 2)
  ;; BOB W -!-
  (test-backward-word "W" 1)
  (test-backward-word "WO" 2)
  ;; BOB NW -!-
  ;; -!-NW EOB
  (test-backward-word " " 1)
  (test-backward-word " !" 2)
  ;; NW W NW -!-
  (test-backward-word " W " 2)
  (test-backward-word " WO " 3)
  (test-backward-word " W !" 3)
  (test-backward-word " WO !" 4)
  ;; BOB W NW -!-
  (test-backward-word "W " 2)
  (test-backward-word "WO " 3)
  (test-backward-word "W !" 3)
  (test-backward-word "WO !" 4))

;; Works like test-forward-word, except for the following:
;; after <string> is inserted, the syntax-table <apply-syntax>
;; is applied to position <apply-pos>.
;; <apply-pos> can be in the form (start . end), or can be a
;; character position.
(defun test-syntax-table (string apply-pos apply-syntax stop)
  ;; We don't necessarily have syntax-table properties ...
  (when (fboundp 'lookup-syntax-properties) ; backwards compatible kludge
    ;; ... and they may not be enabled by default if we do.
    (setq lookup-syntax-properties t)
    (goto-char (point-max))
    (unless (consp apply-pos)
      (setq apply-pos `(,apply-pos . ,(+ 1 apply-pos))))
    (let ((point (point)))
      (insert string)
      (put-text-property (+ point (car apply-pos)) (+ point (cdr apply-pos))
			 'syntax-table apply-syntax)
      (goto-char point)
      (forward-word 1)
      (Assert (eq (point) (+ point stop))))))

;; test syntax-table extents
(with-temp-buffer
  ;; Apply punctuation to word
  (test-syntax-table "WO" 1 `(,(syntax-string-to-code ".")) 1)
  ;; Apply word to punctuation
  (test-syntax-table "W." 1 `(,(syntax-string-to-code "w")) 2))

;; According to Ralf Angeli in
;; http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.xemacs.beta/17353:
;; Using a fresh CVS checkout of XEmacs trunk the following snippet
;; returns "1" when evaluated whereas it returns "5" in GNU Emacs 21.3,
;; CVS GNU Emacs and XEmacs 21.4.15.
;; If `set-syntax-table' is used instead of `with-syntax-table', CVS
;; XEmacs returns "5" as well, so I suppose that there is a problem in
;; `with-syntax-table' or a function called by it.

;; Fixed 2007-03-25 Olivier Galibert <20070324221053.GA48218@dspnet.fr.eu.org>
(with-temp-buffer
  (with-syntax-table (make-syntax-table)
    (insert "foo bar")
    (backward-sexp 1)
    (Assert (eql (point) 5))))

;; Test forward-comment at buffer boundaries
;; #### The second Assert fails (once interpreted, once compiled) on 21.4.9
;; with sjt's version of Andy's syntax-text-property-killer patch.
(with-temp-buffer
  (Skip-Test-Unless (fboundp 'c-mode)
		    "c-mode unavailable"
		    "comment and parse-partial-sexp tests"
    (c-mode)
    
    (insert "// comment\n")
    (forward-comment -2)
    (Assert (eq (point) (point-min)))

    (let ((point (point)))
      (insert "/* comment */")
      (goto-char point)
      (forward-comment 2)
      (Assert (eq (point) (point-max)))

      ;; this last used to crash
      (parse-partial-sexp point (point-max)))))

;; Test backward-up-list
;; Known-Bug: report = Evgeny Zacjev ca 2005-12-01, confirm = Aidan Kehoe

(with-temp-buffer
  ;; We are now using the standard syntax table.  Thus there's no need to
  ;; worry about a bogus syntax setting, eg, in a Gnus Article buffer the
  ;; bug doesn't manifest.

  ;; value of point to the immediate left of this character
  ;;       0          1           2
  ;;       1234 56789 012 34567 890 12 3456 7
  (insert "a ( \"b (c\" (\"defg\") \")\") h\n")

  ;; #### This test should check *every* position.
  (flet ((backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to (start expected-end)
	   (goto-char start)
	   (backward-up-list 1)
	   (= (point) expected-end)))
    (Known-Bug-Expect-Failure
     ;; Evgeny's case
     (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 16 12)))
    (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 19 12))
    (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 20 3))
    (Known-Bug-Expect-Failure
     (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 22 3)))
    (Known-Bug-Expect-Error scan-error
     (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 23 3))
     )
    (Assert (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 24 3))
    ;; This is maybe a little tricky, since we don't expect the position
    ;; check to happen -- so use an illegal expected position
    ;; I don't think there's any other way for this to fail that way,
    ;; barring hardware error....
    (Check-Error-Message syntax-error
			 "Unbalanced parentheses"
			 (backward-up-list-moves-point-from-to 25 nil))
    ;; special-case check that point didn't move
    (Assert (= (point) 25))))

(loop
  with envvar-not-existing = (symbol-name (gensym "whatever"))
  with envvar-existing = (symbol-name (gensym "whatever"))
  with envvar-existing-val = (make-string #x10000 ?\xe1)
  with examples = 
  (list (list (format "%chome%cwhatever%c%chi-there%c$%s"
                      directory-sep-char
                      directory-sep-char
                      directory-sep-char
                      directory-sep-char
                      directory-sep-char
                      envvar-existing)
              (format "%chi-there%c%s"
                      directory-sep-char
                      directory-sep-char
                      envvar-existing-val))
        (if (memq system-type '(windows-nt cygwin32))
            '("//network-path/c$" "//network-path/c$")
          '("/network-path/c$" "/network-path/c$"))
        (list (format "/home/whoever/$%s" envvar-not-existing)
              (format "/home/whoever/$%s" envvar-not-existing))
        (list (format "/home/whoever/$%s" envvar-existing)
              (format "/home/whoever/%s" envvar-existing-val))
        (list (format "/home/whoever/${%s}" envvar-existing)
              (format "/home/whoever/%s" envvar-existing-val))
        (list (format "/home/whoever/${%s}" envvar-not-existing)
              (format "/home/whoever/${%s}" envvar-not-existing)))
  initially (progn (setenv envvar-not-existing nil t)
                   (setenv envvar-existing envvar-existing-val))
  for (pre post)
  in examples
  do 
  (Assert (string= post (substitute-in-file-name pre))))