Xlib and X Protocol Test Suite
X Version 11 Release 6.1
Release Notes for the X Test Suite
July 1992
Copyright © 1991, 1992
UniSoft Group Limited
Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this
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Release Notes for the X Test Suite
Release Notes for the X Test Suite
1. Acknowledgements
The X Test Suite was produced by UniSoft Group Limited under
contract to the MIT X Consortium.
UniSoft Group Limited,
Spa House,
Chapel Place,
Rivington Street,
LONDON EC2A 3DQ
2. Introduction
This release of the X Test Suite tests sections 2 to 10 of
the Xlib: C Language X Interface (MIT X Consortium
Standard
- X Version 11, Release 4)1. It also tests parts of theX Window System Protocol (MIT X Consortium Standard -X Version 11) where these cannot be inferred from tests atthe Xlib level. The X Test Suite may be used to test later versions of X11.The test suite is known to build correctly using the X11R5Xlib distributed by MIT. However, only R4 functionality istested; new interfaces and functionality introduced in laterreleases are not tested. 3. Installation The distribution normally comes a single tar file, either ontape or across a network. Create a directory to hold thedistribution, cd to it, and untar everything from thatdirectory. For example: mkdir sourcedir cd sourcedir tar xfp tar-file-or-tape-device If you have obtained compressed and split tar file over thenetwork, then the sequence might be: cat xtest.?? | uncompress | (cd sourcedir; tar xfp -) The sourcedir directory you choose can be anywhere in any ofyour filesystems that is convenient to you. The X Test Suite requires about 10Mb of disk space to unpackthe sources, and perhaps 50-100Mb of disk space to build ____________________ 1. The X Window System is a trademark of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. X Window System Version 11 Release 4 is abbreviated to X11R4 in this document. X Window System Version 11 Release 5 is abbreviated to X11R5 in this document. - 1 -Release Notes for the X Test Suite
space-saving executable files (dependent on machine architecture). If you choose to build standard executable files you will require perhaps 100-250Mb of disk space. See the User Guide for build instructions.
4. Documentation
The following documentation is provided for the X Test Suite. To format the .mm files, you need the utilities soelim, tbl, and nroff/troff with the mm macros. The file xtest/doc/Makefile contains rules showing how to use these utilities to format and print the documents.
1. The User Guide gives enough information to enable an experienced test suite user, (not necessarily familiar with the X Window System) to configure, build and execute the X Test Suite, and analyse the results produced.
You can find the source of the User Guide in the file xtest/doc/userguide.mm, and in PostScript form in file xtest/doc/userguide.ps.
2. The Programmers Guide gives enough information to enable an experienced programmer familiar with the X Window System to modify or extend the X Test Suite.
You can find the source of the Programmers Guide in the file xtest/doc/progguide.mm, and in PostScript form in file xtest/doc/progguide.ps.
3. A paper distributed in the old T7 X test suite, "An Approach to Testing X Window System Servers at a Protocol Level", is included in this release. This is a technical paper which defines in outline terms the areas of the X Window System server which should be tested at the X Protocol level rather than the Xlib level.
The approach recommended in this paper, and adopted in the design of the T7 X test suite, has been maintained in this X Test Suite. The paper explains the choice of test cases and division of tests between the X Protocol tests and Xlib tests. This paper has been left "as is"; as a result, some sections of this paper are out of date in that they refer to development schedules for a previous software development project.
You can find the source of this paper in the file xtest/doc/paper.mm.5. Portability
The main portability limitations occur in the TET which is described further below. This is because the TET wasoriginally developed to run on systems which are POSIX.12compliant. To enable the X Test Suite to build easily on BSD4.2 ____________________ 2. IEEE Std 1003.1-1990, Portable Operating System Interface for Computer Environments - 2 -Release Notes for the X Test Suite
systems, a portability library has been developed which contains POSIX.1 functions not present on vanilla BSD4.2 systems. The contents and use of this library are described further in the User Guide. Beyond this, non-POSIX systems may require some porting effort dependent on the number of commonly supported functions which are absent in a particular implementation.
Maintenance and enhancement of the portability library is a low priority for the MIT X Consortium.
It should be possible to build and run this test suite against any R4 or later Xlib and X server. However, to build and execute the complete set of tests, your X server must support the XTEST protocol extension and you need the library interface to this extension. This extension is not part of R4 or R5; it was developed after R5 was released. The extension is not included in this distribution, and had only been released to members of the X Consortium at the time this distribution was released. It is expected that the extension will be released to the public sometime in the future (before R6).
It is also possible to configure the test suite to use an Xlib internal function to obtain raw connections to the X server. The interface to this function was revised after R5 was released in order to provide an adequate interface for this test suite. The Xlib changes for this had only been released to members of the X Consortium at the time this distribution was released. It is expected that these changes will be released to the public sometime in the future (before R6).6. Status of the Test Environment Toolkit ( TET )
Included in this release is a version of the "Test Environment Toolkit" ( TET ). This is required to build and execute the X Test Suite. The "Test Environment Toolkit" is a software tool developed by X/Open, UNIX International, and the Open Software Foundation.
1. The X Test Suite includes a copy of TET version 1.9 with a small number of changes described below.
2. The supplied version of TET includes fixes to several bugs reported since the TET 1.9 release.
3. The Makefiles supplied with TET 1.9 have been modified slightly to use the build configuration scheme used by the X Test Suite. This reduces the need to edit Makefiles to modify configuration variables when building the TET.
4. You should only refer to the instructions in the User Guide for the X Test Suite for details of installation of the TET .
For more complete information on the features of the TET , you can format and print the on-line documentation for the TET (see " TET Documentation").
5. It is intended that the X Test Suite should work in conjunction with future versions of the TET later than 1.9.
You can obtain the latest released version by sending electronic mail to infoserver@xopen.co.uk. A message- 3 -
Release Notes for the X Test Suite
body of
request: tet topic: index request: end will obtain the index of files available for the TET. 7. TET Documentation You need only refer to the instructions in the User Guidefor the X Test Suite for details of installation and usageof the TET. For more background information on the features and scope ofthe TET, you can format and print the following items ofdocumentation which are part of the TET. Any conflict between this documentation and the User Guidefor the X Test Suite is unintentional. You should assume theUser Guide is correct in case of conflict, because it hasbeen checked against the X Test Suite. 1. The release note for TET 1.9 is supplied in the filetet/doc/posix_c/rel_note.mm, and in PostScript form infile tet/doc/posix_c/rel_note.ps. To format rel_note.mm, you require the utilities tbl,and nroff/troff with the mm macros. 2. A manual page for the tcc utility is provided in filetet/doc/posix_c/tcc.1. To format the man page, you require the utilitynroff/troff with the man macros. 8. Filing bug reports If you find a reproducible bug in the software ordocumentation, please send a bug report to MIT using theform in the file bug-report and the destination address: xbugs@expo.lcs.mit.edu Please try to provide all of the information requested onthe form if it is applicable; the little extra time youspend on the report will make it much easier for us toreproduce, find, and fix the bug. Receipt of bug reports isgenerally acknowledged, but sometimes it can be delayed by afew weeks. This test suite will report numerous bugs in the public R4and R5 distributions from MIT, and in some cases will causethe X server to crash. In general, it is not necessary toreport bugs in the MIT Xlib and X server software found byrunning this test suite to MIT. The test suite is usedextensively at the X Consortium, and at the time of thisrelease nearly all bugs reported by this test suite whenrunning on monochrome and 8-bit color systems (as well assome 12-bit and 24-bit systems) have been corrected in thesources maintained at MIT. However, if you discover bugsthat you think will not show up on systems tested at MIT, - 4 -Release Notes for the X Test Suite
feel free to report them.
Bugs in TET/tcc software and documentation should not be reported to MIT. Send TET/tcc bug reports to tet_support@xopen.co.uk.9. Setting up your X server
Your attention is drawn to section 7.1 of the User Guide entitled "Setting up your X server". You should follow the guidelines in section 7.1.1 to obtain reliable, repeatable results against your X server, when running formal verification tests.
It is also important to ensure that your X server is running no other clients before starting formal verification tests. This is because some test programs (for example, those which enable access control) may interfere with later tests unless the X server resets in between. To ensure the X server resets after each test program, make sure you are not running any other clients at the time.- 5 -
Release Notes for the X Test Suite
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