#! /bin/sh # This script is a hack for lazy developers who want to get a quick # start on the result file. The code here is rather dirty, but it works # If you have a spare moment feel free to improve it - the right way is # to start mysqld yourself and run mysqltest -r RESULT_DIR=r if [ -z "$EDITOR" ] ; then EDITOR=vi fi function die() { echo $1 exit 1 } function usage() { echo "Usage: $0 test_name" exit 1 } test_name=$1 [ -z "$test_name" ] && usage result_file=$RESULT_DIR/$test_name.result reject_file=$RESULT_DIR/$test_name.reject [ -f $result_file ] && die "result file $result_file has already been created" touch $result_file echo "Running the test case against empty file, will fail, but don't worry" ./mysql-test-run --local $test_name if [ -f $reject_file ] ; then echo "Below are the contents of the reject file:" echo "-----start---------------------" cat $reject_file echo "-----end-----------------------" echo "Is this the output you expected from your test case?(y/n)[n]" read yes_no if [ x$yes_no = xy ] ; then echo "Press any key to edit it in $EDITOR, or Ctrl-C to abort" read junk $EDITOR $reject_file edited="edited" fi echo "Save $edited file as master result? (y/n)[y]" read yes_no if [ x$yes_no != xn ]; then mv $reject_file $result_file fi else echo "Your test failed so bad, it did not even produce a reject file" echo "You need to fix your bugs in the test case, the code, or both" exit 1 fi