Dollarg 2009: Difference between revisions
Bradley Berg (talk | contribs) |
Bradley Berg (talk | contribs) |
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Testing is helpful to find bugs, detect problems discovered by system upgrades, and to help make sure projects are working on a daily basis. | Testing is helpful to find bugs, detect problems discovered by system upgrades, and to help make sure projects are working on a daily basis. | ||
Each project should contain a simple smoke test with the target name "test". | |||
It should ensure basic functionality and run reasonably fast. | |||
For example, to run | For example, to run the test for the wrist project you would type: | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
cd /map/gfx0/users/foo/project/wrist | > cd /map/gfx0/users/foo/project/wrist | ||
make test | > make test | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Projects can include additional tests. | |||
By convention the make target should be named with a prefix, "test" (e.g. testmore). | |||
Revision as of 17:28, 6 January 2009
Getting Started with $G - January 2009
Setting Environment Variables for your User Account
Edit your ~/.cshrc file and add the lines:
setenv GROOT /map/gfx0 source $GROOT/tools/gfxtools-startup-csh setenv CVSROOT /map/gfx0/cvsroot
Checking out a project
$G uses CVS for source control and you can read more about it here.
You can work anywhere except under the $G directory. At Brown ample disk space has been allocated here for students:
/map/gfx0/users/$USER
So, for example, if your user id is "goo" and you wanted to check out the "wrist" project, you should type:
> mkdir /map/gfx0/users/goo > cd /map/gfx0/users/goo > cvs co project/wrist # Creates: /map/gfx0/users/goo/project/wrist/...
Please do not waste space and retain only the files you need. When you are done with your account please be sure to delete it.
Building a project
Type "make all" to build a project. Continuing the wrist project example from above, you would type:
> cd /map/gfx0/users/foo/project/wrist > make all
By convention simple projects that build a single program or library can be built just by typing "make".
Creating a "test" for a project
Testing is helpful to find bugs, detect problems discovered by system upgrades, and to help make sure projects are working on a daily basis.
Each project should contain a simple smoke test with the target name "test". It should ensure basic functionality and run reasonably fast. For example, to run the test for the wrist project you would type:
> cd /map/gfx0/users/foo/project/wrist > make test
Projects can include additional tests. By convention the make target should be named with a prefix, "test" (e.g. testmore).