| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The issue being that as the on-stack data is being referenced via a
zero-copy snapshot outside of the functions scope as the surface is only
finished and the source written long after the draw() returns. The
correct procedure is that the user must call cairo_surface_finish()
prior to any surface becoming inaccessible. In this case, this triggers
the snapshot to preserve a copy of the data whilst it is still valid.
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Avoid calling libtool to link every single test case, by building just one
binary from all the sources.
This binary is then given the task of choosing tests to run (based on user
selection and individual test requirement), forking each test into its own
process and accumulating the results.
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In order to run under memfault, the framework is first extended to handle
running concurrent tests - i.e. multi-threading. (Not that this is a
requirement for memfault, instead it shares a common goal of storing
per-test data). To that end all the global data is moved into a per-test
context and the targets are adjusted to avoid overlap on shared, global
resources (such as output files and frame buffers). In order to preserve
the simplicity of the standard draw routines, the context is not passed
explicitly as a parameter to the routines, but is instead attached to the
cairo_t via the user_data.
For the masochist, to enable the tests to be run across multiple threads
simply set the environment variable CAIRO_TEST_NUM_THREADS to the desired
number.
In the long run, we can hope the need for memfault (runtime testing of
error paths) will be mitigated by static analysis. A promising candidate
for this task would appear to be http://hal.cs.berkeley.edu/cil/.
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Destroy the surface so that valgrind doesn't complain about the memory
leak.
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This test demonstrates a bug when compositing an rgb24 image over an argb32
image, (the implementation appears to be examining the alpha channel
rather than ignoring it).
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