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diff --git a/bin/tests/system/README b/bin/tests/system/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f527e79 --- /dev/null +++ b/bin/tests/system/README @@ -0,0 +1,773 @@ +Copyright (C) Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") + +See COPYRIGHT in the source root or http://isc.org/copyright.html for terms. + +Introduction +=== +This directory holds a simple test environment for running bind9 system tests +involving multiple name servers. + +With the exception of "common" (which holds configuration information common to +multiple tests) and "win32" (which holds files needed to run the tests in a +Windows environment), each directory holds a set of scripts and configuration +files to test different parts of BIND. The directories are named for the +aspect of BIND they test, for example: + + dnssec/ DNSSEC tests + forward/ Forwarding tests + glue/ Glue handling tests + +etc. + +Typically each set of tests sets up 2-5 name servers and then performs one or +more tests against them. Within the test subdirectory, each name server has a +separate subdirectory containing its configuration data. These subdirectories +are named "nsN" or "ansN" (where N is a number between 1 and 8, e.g. ns1, ans2 +etc.) + +The tests are completely self-contained and do not require access to the real +DNS. Generally, one of the test servers (usually ns1) is set up as a root +nameserver and is listed in the hints file of the others. + + +Preparing to Run the Tests +=== +To enable all servers to run on the same machine, they bind to separate virtual +IP addresses on the loopback interface. ns1 runs on 10.53.0.1, ns2 on +10.53.0.2, etc. Before running any tests, you must set up these addresses by +running the command + + sh ifconfig.sh up + +as root. The interfaces can be removed by executing the command: + + sh ifconfig.sh down + +... also as root. + +The servers use unprivileged ports (above 1024) instead of the usual port 53, +so they can be run without root privileges once the interfaces have been set +up. + + +Note for MacOS Users +--- +If you wish to make the interfaces survive across reboots, copy +org.isc.bind.system and org.isc.bind.system.plist to /Library/LaunchDaemons +then run + + launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.isc.bind.system.plist + +... as root. + + +Running the System Tests +=== + +Running an Individual Test +--- +The tests can be run individually using the following command: + + sh run.sh [flags] <test-name> [<test-arguments>] + +e.g. + + sh run.sh [flags] notify + +Optional flags are: + + -k Keep servers running after the test completes. Each test + usually starts a number of nameservers, either instances + of the "named" being tested, or custom servers (written in + Python or Perl) that feature test-specific behavior. The + servers are automatically started before the test is run + and stopped after it ends. This flag leaves them running + at the end of the test, so that additional queries can be + sent by hand. To stop the servers afterwards, use the + command "sh stop.sh <test-name>". + + -n Noclean - do not remove the output files if the test + completes successfully. By default, files created by the + test are deleted if it passes; they are not deleted if the + test fails. + + -p <number> Sets the range of ports used by the test. A block of 100 + ports is available for each test, the number given to the + "-p" switch being the number of the start of that block + (e.g. "-p 7900" will mean that the test is able to use + ports 7900 through 7999). If not specified, the test will + have ports 5000 to 5099 available to it. + + -r The "runall" flag. This is related to cleaning up after + the tests (see "Maintenance Notes" below). If specified, + it prevents a copy of the test's output listing from being + deleted when the directory is cleaned up after the test + completes. (The test's output listing comprises messages + produced by the test during its execution; it does not + include the output files produced by utilities such as + "dig" or "rndc", nor any logging output from named itself.) + It is usually only used when "run.sh" is being called + during a run of the entire test suite. Note that if "-n" + is specified on the "run.sh" command line, the test output + is retained even if this option is omitted. + +Arguments are: + + test-name Mandatory. The name of the test, which is the name of the + subdirectory in bin/tests/system holding the test files. + + test-arguments Optional arguments that are passed to each of the test's + scripts. + + +Running All The System Tests +--- +To run all the system tests, enter the command: + + sh runall.sh [-c] [-n] [numproc] + +The optional flag "-c" forces colored output (by default system test output is +not printed in color due to run.sh being piped through "tee"). + +The optional flag "-n" has the same effect as it does for "run.sh" - it causes +the retention of all output files from all tests. + +The optional "numproc" argument specifies the maximum number of tests that can +run in parallel. The default is 1, which means that all of the tests run +sequentially. If greater than 1, up to "numproc" tests will run simultaneously, +new tests being started as tests finish. Each test will get a unique set of +ports, so there is no danger of tests interfering with one another. Parallel +running will reduce the total time taken to run the BIND system tests, but will +mean that the output from all the tests sent to the screen will be mixed up +with one another. However, the systests.output file produced at the end of the +run (in the bin/tests/system directory) will contain the output from each test +in sequential order. + +Note that it is not possible to pass arguments to tests though the "runall.sh" +script. + +A run of all the system tests can also be initiated via make: + + make [-j numproc] test + +In this case, retention of the output files after a test completes successfully +is specified by setting the environment variable SYSTEMTEST_NO_CLEAN to 1 prior +to running make, e.g. + + SYSTEMTEST_NO_CLEAN=1 make [-j numproc] test + +while setting environment variable SYSTEMTEST_FORCE_COLOR to 1 forces system +test output to be printed in color. + + +Running Multiple System Test Suites Simultaneously +--- +In some cases it may be desirable to have multiple instances of the system test +suite running simultaneously (e.g. from different terminal windows). To do +this: + +1. Each installation must have its own directory tree. The system tests create +files in the test directories, so separate directory trees are required to +avoid interference between the same test running in the different +installations. + +2. For one of the test suites, the starting port number must be specified by +setting the environment variable STARTPORT before starting the test suite. +Each test suite comprises about 100 tests, each being allocated a set of 100 +ports. The port ranges for each test are allocated sequentially, so each test +suite requires about 10,000 ports to itself. By default, the port allocation +starts at 5,000. So the following set of commands: + + Terminal Window 1: + cd <installation-1>/bin/tests/system + sh runall.sh 4 + + Terminal Window 2: + cd <installation-2>/bin/tests/system + STARTPORT=20000 sh runall.sh 4 + +... will start the test suite for installation-1 using the default base port +of 5,000, so the test suite will use ports 5,000 through 15,000 (or there +abouts). The use of "STARTPORT=20000" to prefix the run of the test suite for +installation-2 will mean the test suite uses ports 20,000 through 30,000 or so. + + +Format of Test Output +--- +All output from the system tests is in the form of lines with the following +structure: + + <letter>:<test-name>:<message> [(<number>)] + +e.g. + + I:catz:checking that dom1.example is not served by master (1) + +The meanings of the fields are as follows: + +<letter> +This indicates the type of message. This is one of: + + S Start of the test + A Start of test (retained for backwards compatibility) + T Start of test (retained for backwards compatibility) + E End of the test + I Information. A test will typically output many of these messages + during its run, indicating test progress. Note that such a message may + be of the form "I:testname:failed", indicating that a sub-test has + failed. + R Result. Each test will result in one such message, which is of the + form: + + R:<test-name>:<result> + + where <result> is one of: + + PASS The test passed + FAIL The test failed + SKIPPED The test was not run, usually because some + prerequisites required to run the test are missing. + UNTESTED The test was not run for some other reason, e.g. a + prerequisite is available but is not compatible with + the platform on which the test is run. + +<test-name> +This is the name of the test from which the message emanated, which is also the +name of the subdirectory holding the test files. + +<message> +This is text output by the test during its execution. + +(<number>) +If present, this will correlate with a file created by the test. The tests +execute commands and route the output of each command to a file. The name of +this file depends on the command and the test, but will usually be of the form: + + <command>.out.<suffix><number> + +e.g. nsupdate.out.test28, dig.out.q3. This aids diagnosis of problems by +allowing the output that caused the problem message to be identified. + + +Re-Running the Tests +--- +If there is a requirement to re-run a test (or the entire test suite), the +files produced by the tests should be deleted first. Normally, these files are +deleted if the test succeeds but are retained on error. + +Deletion of files produced by an individual test can be done with the command: + + sh clean.sh [-r] <test-name> + +The optional flag is: + + -r The "runall" flag. This is related to cleaning up after + the tests (see "Maintenance Notes" below). If specified, + it prevents a copy of the test's output listing from being + deleted when the directory is cleaned after the test + completes. + +Deletion of the files produced by the set of tests (e.g. after the execution +of "runall.sh") can be deleted by the command: + + sh cleanall.sh + +or + + make testclean + +(Note that the Makefile has two other targets for cleaning up files: "clean" +will delete all the files produced by the tests, as well as the object and +executable files used by the tests. "distclean" does all the work of "clean" +as well as deleting configuration files produced by "configure".) + + +Developer Notes +=== +This section is intended for developers writing new tests. + + +Overview +--- +As noted above, each test is in a separate directory. To interact with the +test framework, the directories contain the following standard files: + +prereq.sh Run at the beginning to determine whether the test can be run at + all; if not, we see a result of R:SKIPPED or R:UNTESTED. This file + is optional: if not present, the test is assumed to have all its + prerequisites met. + +setup.sh Run after prereq.sh, this sets up the preconditions for the tests. + Although optional, virtually all tests will require such a file to + set up the ports they should use for the test. + +tests.sh Runs the actual tests. This file is mandatory. + +clean.sh Run at the end to clean up temporary files, but only if the test + was completed successfully and its running was not inhibited by the + "-n" switch being passed to "run.sh". Otherwise the temporary + files are left in place for inspection. + +ns<N> These subdirectories contain test name servers that can be queried + or can interact with each other. The value of N indicates the + address the server listens on: for example, ns2 listens on + 10.53.0.2, and ns4 on 10.53.0.4. All test servers use an + unprivileged port, so they don't need to run as root. These + servers log at the highest debug level and the log is captured in + the file "named.run". + +ans<N> Like ns[X], but these are simple mock name servers implemented in + Perl or Python. They are generally programmed to misbehave in ways + named would not so as to exercise named's ability to interoperate + with badly behaved name servers. + + +Port Usage +--- +In order for the tests to run in parallel, each test requires a unique set of +ports. These are specified by the "-p" option passed to "run.sh", which sets +environment variables that the scripts listed above can reference. + +The convention used in the system tests is that the number passed is the start +of a range of 100 ports. The test is free to use the ports as required, +although the first ten ports in the block are named and generally tests use the +named ports for their intended purpose. The names of the environment variables +are: + + PORT Number to be used for the query port. + CONTROLPORT Number to be used as the RNDC control port. + EXTRAPORT1 - EXTRAPORT8 Eight port numbers that can be used as needed. + +Two other environment variables are defined: + + LOWPORT The lowest port number in the range. + HIGHPORT The highest port number in the range. + +Since port ranges usually start on a boundary of 10, the variables are set such +that the last digit of the port number corresponds to the number of the +EXTRAPORTn variable. For example, if the port range were to start at 5200, the +port assignments would be: + + PORT = 5200 + EXTRAPORT1 = 5201 + : + EXTRAPORT8 = 5208 + CONTROLPORT = 5209 + LOWPORT = 5200 + HIGHPORT = 5299 + +When running tests in parallel (i.e. giving a value of "numproc" greater than 1 +in the "make" or "runall.sh" commands listed above), it is guaranteed that each +test will get a set of unique port numbers. + + +Writing a Test +--- +The test framework requires up to four shell scripts (listed above) as well as +a number of nameserver instances to run. Certain expectations are put on each +script: + + +General +--- +1. Each of the four scripts will be invoked with the command + + (cd <test-directory> ; sh <script> [<arguments>] ) + +... so that working directory when the script starts executing is the test +directory. + +2. Arguments can be only passed to the script if the test is being run as a +one-off with "run.sh". In this case, everything on the command line after the +name of the test is passed to each script. For example, the command: + + sh run.sh -p 12300 mytest -D xyz + +... will run "mytest" with a port range of 12300 to 12399. Each of the +framework scripts provided by the test will be invoked using the remaining +arguments, e.g.: + + (cd mytest ; sh prereq.sh -D xyz) + (cd mytest ; sh setup.sh -D xyz) + (cd mytest ; sh tests.sh -D xyz) + (cd mytest ; sh clean.sh -D xyz) + +No arguments will be passed to the test scripts if the test is run as part of +a run of the full test suite (e.g. the tests are started with "runall.sh"). + +3. Each script should start with the following lines: + + SYSTEMTESTTOP=.. + . $SYSTEMTESTTOP/conf.sh + +"conf.sh" defines a series of environment variables together with functions +useful for the test scripts. (conf.sh.win32 is the Windows equivalent of this +file.) + + +prereq.sh +--- +As noted above, this is optional. If present, it should check whether specific +software needed to run the test is available and/or whether BIND has been +configured with the appropriate options required. + + * If the software required to run the test is present and the BIND + configure options are correct, prereq.sh should return with a status code + of 0. + + * If the software required to run the test is not available and/or BIND + has not been configured with the appropriate options, prereq.sh should + return with a status code of 1. + + * If there is some other problem (e.g. prerequisite software is available + but is not properly configured), a status code of 255 should be returned. + + +setup.sh +--- +This is responsible for setting up the configuration files used in the test. + +To cope with the varying port number, ports are not hard-coded into +configuration files (or, for that matter, scripts that emulate nameservers). +Instead, setup.sh is responsible for editing the configuration files to set the +port numbers. + +To do this, configuration files should be supplied in the form of templates +containing tokens identifying ports. The tokens have the same name as the +environment variables listed above, but are prefixed and suffixed by the "@" +symbol. For example, a fragment of a configuration file template might look +like: + + controls { + inet 10.53.0.1 port @CONTROLPORT@ allow { any; } keys { rndc_key; }; + }; + + options { + query-source address 10.53.0.1; + notify-source 10.53.0.1; + transfer-source 10.53.0.1; + port @PORT@; + allow-new-zones yes; + }; + +setup.sh should copy the template to the desired filename using the +"copy_setports" shell function defined in "conf.sh", i.e. + + copy_setports ns1/named.conf.in ns1/named.conf + +This replaces the tokens @PORT@, @CONTROLPORT@, @EXTRAPORT1@ through +@EXTRAPORT8@ with the contents of the environment variables listed above. +setup.sh should do this for all configuration files required when the test +starts. + +("setup.sh" should also use this method for replacing the tokens in any Perl or +Python name servers used in the test.) + + +tests.sh +--- +This is the main test file and the contents depend on the test. The contents +are completely up to the developer, although most test scripts have a form +similar to the following for each sub-test: + + 1. n=`expr $n + 1` + 2. echo_i "prime cache nodata.example ($n)" + 3. ret=0 + 4. $DIG -p ${PORT} @10.53.0.1 nodata.example TXT > dig.out.test$n + 5. grep "status: NOERROR" dig.out.test$n > /dev/null || ret=1 + 6. grep "ANSWER: 0," dig.out.test$n > /dev/null || ret=1 + 7. if [ $ret != 0 ]; then echo_i "failed"; fi + 8. status=`expr $status + $ret` + +1. Increment the test number "n" (initialized to zero at the start of the + script). + +2. Indicate that the sub-test is about to begin. Note that "echo_i" instead + of "echo" is used. echo_i is a function defined in "conf.sh" which will + prefix the message with "I:<testname>:", so allowing the output from each + test to be identified within the output. The test number is included in + the message in order to tie the sub-test with its output. + +3. Initialize return status. + +4 - 6. Carry out the sub-test. In this case, a nameserver is queried (note + that the port used is given by the PORT environment variable, which was set + by the inclusion of the file "conf.sh" at the start of the script). The + output is routed to a file whose suffix includes the test number. The + response from the server is examined and, in this case, if the required + string is not found, an error is indicated by setting "ret" to 1. + +7. If the sub-test failed, a message is printed. "echo_i" is used to print + the message to add the prefix "I:<test-name>:" before it is output. + +8. "status", used to track how many of the sub-tests have failed, is + incremented accordingly. The value of "status" determines the status + returned by "tests.sh", which in turn determines whether the framework + prints the PASS or FAIL message. + +Regardless of this, rules that should be followed are: + +a. Use the environment variables set by conf.sh to determine the ports to use + for sending and receiving queries. + +b. Use a counter to tag messages and to associate the messages with the output + files. + +c. Store all output produced by queries/commands into files. These files + should be named according to the command that produced them, e.g. "dig" + output should be stored in a file "dig.out.<suffix>", the suffix being + related to the value of the counter. + +d. Use "echo_i" to output informational messages. + +e. Retain a count of test failures and return this as the exit status from + the script. + + +clean.sh +--- +The inverse of "setup.sh", this is invoked by the framework to clean up the +test directory. It should delete all files that have been created by the test +during its run. + + +Starting Nameservers +--- +As noted earlier, a system test will involve a number of nameservers. These +will be either instances of named, or special servers written in a language +such as Perl or Python. + +For the former, the version of "named" being run is that in the "bin/named" +directory in the tree holding the tests (i.e. if "make test" is being run +immediately after "make", the version of "named" used is that just built). The +configuration files, zone files etc. for these servers are located in +subdirectories of the test directory named "nsN", where N is a small integer. +The latter are special nameservers, mostly used for generating deliberately bad +responses, located in subdirectories named "ansN" (again, N is an integer). +In addition to configuration files, these directories should hold the +appropriate script files as well. + +Note that the "N" for a particular test forms a single number space, e.g. if +there is an "ns2" directory, there cannot be an "ans2" directory as well. +Ideally, the directory numbers should start at 1 and work upwards. + +When running a test, the servers are started using "start.sh" (which is nothing +more than a wrapper for start.pl). The options for "start.pl" are documented +in the header for that file, so will not be repeated here. In summary, when +invoked by "run.sh", start.pl looks for directories named "nsN" or "ansN" in +the test directory and starts the servers it finds there. + + +"named" Command-Line Options +--- +By default, start.pl starts a "named" server with the following options: + + -c named.conf Specifies the configuration file to use (so by implication, + each "nsN" nameserver's configuration file must be called + named.conf). + + -d 99 Sets the maximum debugging level. + + -D <name> The "-D" option sets a string used to identify the + nameserver in a process listing. In this case, the string + is the name of the subdirectory. + + -g Runs the server in the foreground and logs everything to + stderr. + + -m record,size,mctx + Turns on these memory usage debugging flags. + + -U 4 Uses four listeners. + + -X named.lock Acquires a lock on this file in the "nsN" directory, so + preventing multiple instances of this named running in this + directory (which could possibly interfere with the test). + +In addition, start.pl also sets the following undocumented flag: + + -T clienttest Makes clients single-shot with their own memory context. + +All output is sent to a file called "named.run" in the nameserver directory. + +The options used to start named can be altered. There are three ways of doing +this. "start.pl" checks the methods in a specific order: if a check succeeds, +the options are set and any other specification is ignored. In order, these +are: + +1. Specifying options to "start.sh"/"start.pl" after the name of the test +directory, e.g. + + sh start.sh reclimit ns1 -- "-c n.conf -d 43" + +(This is only really useful when running tests interactively.) + +2. Including a file called "named.args" in the "nsN" directory. If present, +the contents of the first non-commented, non-blank line of the file are used as +the named command-line arguments. The rest of the file is ignored. + +3. Tweaking the default command line arguments with "-T" options. This flag is +used to alter the behavior of BIND for testing and is not documented in the +ARM. The "clienttest" option has already been mentioned, but the presence of +certain files in the "nsN" directory adds flags to the default command line +(the content of the files is irrelevant - it is only the presence that counts): + + named.noaa Appends "-T noaa" to the command line, which causes + "named" to never set the AA bit in an answer. + + named.dropedns Adds "-T dropedns" to the command line, which causes + "named" to recognise EDNS options in messages, but drop + messages containing them. + + named.maxudp1460 Adds "-T maxudp1460" to the command line, setting the + maximum UDP size handled by named to 1460. + + named.maxudp512 Adds "-T maxudp512" to the command line, setting the + maximum UDP size handled by named to 512. + + named.noedns Appends "-T noedns" to the command line, which disables + recognition of EDNS options in messages. + + named.notcp Adds "-T notcp", which disables TCP in "named". + + named.soa Appends "-T nosoa" to the command line, which disables + the addition of SOA records to negative responses (or to + the additional section if the response is triggered by RPZ + rewriting). + + +Starting Other Nameservers +--- +In contrast to "named", nameservers written in Perl or Python (whose script +file should have the name "ans.pl" or "ans.py" respectively) are started with a +fixed command line. In essence, the server is given the address and nothing +else. + +(This is not strictly true: Python servers are provided with the number of the +query port to use. Altering the port used by Perl servers currently requires +creating a template file containing the "@PORT@" token, and having "setup.sh" +substitute the actual port being used before the test starts.) + + +Stopping Nameservers +--- +As might be expected, the test system stops nameservers with the script +"stop.sh", which is little more than a wrapper for "stop.pl". Like "start.pl", +the options available are listed in the file's header and will not be repeated +here. + +In summary though, the nameservers for a given test, if left running by +specifying the "-k" flag to "run.sh" when the test is started, can be stopped +by the command: + + sh stop.sh <test-name> [server] + +... where if the server (e.g. "ns1", "ans3") is not specified, all servers +associated with the test are stopped. + + +Adding a Test to the System Test Suite +--- +Once a test has been created, the following files should be edited: + +* conf.sh.in The name of the test should be added to the PARALLELDIRS or +SEQUENTIALDIRS variables as appropriate. The former is used for tests that +can run in parallel with other tests, the latter for tests that are unable to +do so. + +* conf.sh.win32 This is the Windows equivalent of conf.sh.in. The name of the +test should be added to the PARALLELDIRS or SEQUENTIALDIRS variables as +appropriate. + +* Makefile.in The name of the test should be added to one of the the PARALLEL +or SEQUENTIAL variables. + +(It is likely that a future iteration of the system test suite will remove the +need to edit multiple files to add a test.) + + +Valgrind +--- +When running system tests, named can be run under Valgrind. The output from +Valgrind are sent to per-process files that can be reviewed after the test has +completed. To enable this, set the USE_VALGRIND environment variable to +"helgrind" to run the Helgrind tool, or any other value to run the Memcheck +tool. To use "helgrind" effectively, build BIND with --disable-atomic. + + +Maintenance Notes +=== +This section is aimed at developers maintaining BIND's system test framework. + +Notes on Parallel Execution +--- +Although execution of an individual test is controlled by "run.sh", which +executes the above shell scripts (and starts the relevant servers) for each +test, the running of all tests in the test suite is controlled by the Makefile. +("runall.sh" does little more than invoke "make" on the Makefile.) + +All system tests are capable of being run in parallel. For this to work, each +test needs to use a unique set of ports. To avoid the need to define which +tests use which ports (and so risk port clashes as further tests are added), +the ports are assigned when the tests are run. This is achieved by having the +"test" target in the Makefile depend on "parallel.mk". That file is created +when "make check" is run, and contains a target for each test of the form: + + <test-name>: + @$(SHELL) run.sh -r -p <baseport> <test-name> + +The <baseport> is unique and the values of <baseport> for each test are +separated by at least 100 ports. + + +Cleaning Up From Tests +--- +When a test is run, files are created in the test directory. These files fall +into three categories: + +1. Files generated by the test itself, e.g. output from "dig" and "rndc". + +2. Files produced by named which may not be cleaned up if named exits +abnormally, e.g. core files, PID files etc. + +3. The file "test.output" containing the text written to stdout by the test. +This is only produced when the test is run as part of the entire test suite +(e.g. via "runall.sh"). + +If the test fails, all these files are retained. But if the test succeeds, +they are cleaned up at different times: + +1. Files generated by the test itself are cleaned up by the test's own +"clean.sh". This is called from the system's "clean.sh", which in turn is +called from "run.sh". + +2. Files that may not be cleaned up if named exits abnormally are removed +by the system's "clean.sh". + +3. "test.output" files are deleted when the test suite ends. At this point, +the file "testsummary.sh" is called which concatenates all the "test.output" +files into a single "systest.output" file before deleting them. + +A complication arises with the "test.output" file however: + +1. "clean.sh" is called by "run.sh" if the test ends successfully. For +this reason, "clean.sh" cannot delete "test.output" as, if the test is +being run as part of a test suite, the file must be retained. + +2. If the deletion of "test.output" were to be solely the responsibility of +"testsummary.sh", should a test suite terminate abnormally, cleaning up a test +directory with "sh clean.sh <test-directory>" would leave the file present. + +3. An additional step could be added to "cleanall.sh" (which calls the +system's "clean.sh" for each test) to remove the "test.output" file. However, +although the file would be deleted should all test directories be cleaned, +it would still mean that running "clean.sh" on a particular test directory +could leave the file present. + +To get round this, the system's "clean.sh" script takes an optional flag, "-r" +(the "runall" flag). When the test suite is run, each invocation of "run.sh" +is passed the runall flag. In turn, "run.sh" passes the flag to "clean.sh", +which causes that script not to delete the "tests.output" file. In other +words, when the system's "clean.sh" is invoked standalone on a test directory +(or as part of a run of "cleanall.sh"), it will delete the "test.output" if it +is present. When invoked during a run of the entire test suite, it won't. |