Currently fallback-resolution is included in the test suite if we have all
of the vector surfaces available. This commit enables individual support
for the vector surfaces, so that the test can be run even if one or more
of the surfaces are not available.
In order to run under memfault, the framework is first extended to handle
running concurrent tests - i.e. multi-threading. (Not that this is a
requirement for memfault, instead it shares a common goal of storing
per-test data). To that end all the global data is moved into a per-test
context and the targets are adjusted to avoid overlap on shared, global
resources (such as output files and frame buffers). In order to preserve
the simplicity of the standard draw routines, the context is not passed
explicitly as a parameter to the routines, but is instead attached to the
cairo_t via the user_data.
For the masochist, to enable the tests to be run across multiple threads
simply set the environment variable CAIRO_TEST_NUM_THREADS to the desired
number.
In the long run, we can hope the need for memfault (runtime testing of
error paths) will be mitigated by static analysis. A promising candidate
for this task would appear to be http://hal.cs.berkeley.edu/cil/.
- Remove cairo_test_expect_failure. cairo-test.c now checks
env var CAIRO_XFAIL_TESTS to see if the running test is
expected to fail. The reason for expected failure is
appended to the test description.
- Test description is written out.
- Failed/crashed tests also write a line out to stderr (in red),
so one can now redirect stdout to /dev/null to only see failures.
- cairo_test() has been changed to not take the draw function
anymore, instead, draw function is now part of the test struct.
- "make check" doesn't allow limiting backends to test using env
var anymore. To limit backends to test, one should use the
TARGETS variable on the make command line.
- "make check-valgrind" now writes its log to valgrind-log instead
of valgrind.log, to not interfere with test log file processing.
This just provides the mechanics for storing the value and removing the old
function calls. The new value is still not used anywhere (though nor where
the old values), so there should be no functional change (other than forcing
any programs calling the old API to be updated).