Please put a revision number in the subject so we know what's the latest
one, eg:
[PATCH v5] fstests: Tests can use any name now, not 3 digits only
On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 02:35:33PM +0100, Jan Ťulák wrote:
> Tests can use any name now, not 3 digits only.
> (e.g. a test can be named "tests/generic/001-some-name")
>
> Names are limited to alphanumeric characters and dash and are always prefixed
> with an unique id for easier identification of a specific patch.
patch or test?
> --- a/README
> +++ b/README
> @@ -205,7 +205,7 @@ Test script environment:
>
> Verified output:
>
> - Each test script has a numerical name, e.g. 007, and an associated
> + Each test script has a name, e.g. 007, and an associated
> verified output, e.g. 007.out.
I think the naming scheme could be described in the README, probably in
the "Creating new tests scripts:" section.
> +if [[ "$REPLY" =~ ^[Yy]$ ]]; then
You don't need to quote variables in the [[ ]] block as it's a builtin,
unlike [ (in general). Also, [[ $variable = glob ]] does really match
globs, so it's simple [[ $REPLY = [yY] ]] if you insist on using [[ .
> + for found in `tail -n +$line $tdir/group | $AWK_PROG '{ print $1 }'`; do
> + foundId=$(echo "$found" | tr - ' ' | $AWK_PROG '{ print $1 }')
> + line=$((line+1))
> + if [ -z "$found" ] || [ "$found" == "#" ]; then
> + continue
> + elif [[ "$found" > "$name" ]] || [ "$foundId" -gt "$id" ]; then
Bash guide advices not to use [[ ]] for arithmetic expressions, in favor
of (( )). Besides, I find mixing [[ ]] and [ ] inconsistent, choose one.
> + eof=0
> + break
> + fi
> + done
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