| DEJAGNU-REPORT-CARD(1) | General Commands Manual (urm) | DEJAGNU-REPORT-CARD(1) | 
NAME¶
dejagnu report card —
    summarize results from testing multiple tools
SYNOPSIS¶
dejagnu report card | 
    [⟨option⟩ | ⟨tool⟩ | ⟨file⟩] ... | 
DESCRIPTION¶
The dejagnu report card
    command displays results from testing multiple tools in a tabular format.
    The produced table lists, for each tool (and if multiple passes were run,
    each pass) the number of tests passed, failed, unsupported, unresolved, and
    untested. Tests that are expected to fail are counted in separate columns
    from tests expected to pass, but "known" failures and
    "expected" failures are summarized together. If a test generated
    warnings or errors, a tag ‘!W!’ or
    ‘!E!’ is appended at the end of the
    relevant line.
Aside from options, the argument list may include tool or file
    names. The dejagnu report card command
    prefers to read DejaGnu summary files and will translate names
  accordingly:
- *.sum
 - Used as-is.
 - *.log
 - Rewritten to *.sum with the same stem.
 - *.
 - The string sum is appended to select a summary file. This processing is done for convenience when using Readline file name completion in a shell, which will complete to the dot.
 - *
 - Taken as a tool name; .sum is appended.
 
OPTIONS¶
-v,--verbose- Emit additional output describing the operation of
      
dejagnu report carditself. 
FILES¶
The dejagnu report card
    command produces its output by reading the summary files produced by DejaGnu
    and counting "PASS", "FAIL", etc.
If no names are given as arguments, all files matching *.sum in the current directory are read.
EXAMPLES¶
A simple example from DejaGnu's own testsuite¶
$ dejagnu report card __________________________________________________ / PASS FAIL ?PASS ?FAIL UNSUP UNRES UNTEST |-------------------------------------------------- launcher | 52 0 0 0 0 0 0 libdejagnu | 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 runtest | 135 0 0 0 0 0 0 |-------------------------------------------------- | 192 0 0 0 0 0 0 \__________________________________________________
Three tools were tested, with a total of 192 tests, all expected
    to pass. In this example, all tests did pass, so all other columns are zero.
    The ‘?PASS’ and
    ‘?FAIL’ columns count tests known or
    expected to fail that either unexpectedly passed or failed as expected. The
    remaining three columns count the exceptional results for unsupported tests,
    unresolved tests and stub tests that simply declare themselves untested.
The same example after tests were added for dejagnu-report-card¶
$ dejagnu report-card __________________________________________________ / PASS FAIL ?PASS ?FAIL UNSUP UNRES UNTEST |-------------------------------------------------- launcher | 52 0 0 0 0 0 0 libdejagnu | 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 report-card / awk | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 report-card / sh | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 report-card / tcl | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 runtest | 135 0 0 0 0 0 0 |-------------------------------------------------- awk | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 sh | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 tcl | 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 |-------------------------------------------------- | 300 0 0 0 0 0 0 \__________________________________________________
The ‘report-card’ tool has
    been added, with three passes, one for each implementation. (The shell and
    Tcl implementations were later dropped to reduce future maintenance burden.)
    As before, all tests passed as expected. The interesting difference from the
    previous example is the use of DejaGnu's multipass testing feature and the
    additional per-pass summary lines added. For this example, only the
    ‘report-card’ tool uses multipass
    testing, so each pass total is simply the count of tests for
    ‘report-card’ instead of a distinct
    total.
Also note that the command used to invoke
    dejagnu report card is slightly
    different here. The dejagnu(1) launcher will also accept
    multiple words joined with dashes into a single argument. This allows
    individual words in a command name to be separated with either dashes or
    spaces on the command line interchangeably.
SEE ALSO¶
The full documentation for DejaGnu is maintained as a Texinfo
    manual. If the info program is properly installed at
    your site, the command info dejagnu should give you
    access to the complete manual.
AUTHORS¶
Jacob Bachmeyer
| December 31, 2018 | GNU |