libdb/test/cxx/README

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# $Id$
Use the scripts testall or testone to run all, or just one of the C++
tests. You must be in this directory to run them. For example,
$ export LIBS="-L/usr/include/BerkeleyDB/lib"
$ export CXXFLAGS="-I/usr/include/BerkeleyDB/include"
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/usr/include/BerkeleyDB/lib"
$ ./testone TestAppendRecno
$ ./testall
The scripts will use c++ in your path. Set environment variables $CXX
to override this. It will also honor any $CXXFLAGS and $LIBS
variables that are set, except that -c are silently removed from
$CXXFLAGS (since we do the compilation in one step).
To run successfully, you will probably need to set $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
to be the directory containing libdb_cxx-X.Y.so
As an alternative, use the --prefix=<DIR> option, a la configure
to set the top of the BerkeleyDB install directory. This forces
the proper options to be added to $LIBS, $CXXFLAGS $LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
For example,
$ ./testone --prefix=/usr/include/BerkeleyDB TestAppendRecno
$ ./testall --prefix=/usr/include/BerkeleyDB
The test framework is pretty simple. Any <name>.cpp file in this
directory that is not mentioned in the 'ignore' file represents a
test. If the test is not compiled successfully, the compiler output
is left in <name>.compileout . Otherwise, the java program is run in
a clean subdirectory using as input <name>.testin, or if that doesn't
exist, /dev/null. Output and error from the test run are put into
<name>.out, <name>.err . If <name>.testout, <name>.testerr exist,
they are used as reference files and any differences are reported.
If either of the reference files does not exist, /dev/null is used.