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[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]]

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Here are some hints about how to approach testing after nontrivial changes to
glibc have been done.

---

First step is having the build of glibc succeed.  This is actually more
difficult than one might expect as it involves (towards the end of the build
process -- unless you are [[building/cross-compiling]], of course -- that the
newly created libraries and loader actually work: they'll be used to run the
`rpcgen` program.  If that step doesn't succeed, it'll look similar to this:

    [...]
    CPP='gcc -E -x c-header' [...]/build/elf/ld.so.1 --library-path [...] [...]/build/sunrpc/rpcgen [...]
    Segmentation fault

---

Unless [[building/cross-compiling]], the next thing you'll probably want to do
is running the test suite, or parts of it.

Here is a list of known failures:

[TODO].

---

If you've been doing simple changes to glibc functions that end up in
`libc.so`, you may test them like this (like for a `strerror_l` implementation
in this case):

    $ LD_PRELOAD=./libc.so ./ld.so ./a.out 10 1073741928 de_DE.utf8
    1073741928 (0x40000068): Computer bought the farm
    1073741928 (0x40000068): Der Computer hat den Bauernhof erworben

You usually will only have luck using the new `libc.so` (from
`[glibc-build]/libc.so`) in combination together with the new `ld.so` (from
`[glibc-build]/elf/ld.so`):

    $ LD_PRELOAD=./libc.so ./a.out 10 1073741928 de_DE.utf8
    Killed
    $ LD_PRELOAD=./libc.so /lib/ld.so ./a.out 10 1073741928 de_DE.utf8
    Killed

Make sure static linking is working OK at all.  Running the
`[glibc-build]/elf/sln` program (a stripped-down `ln` that is statically
linked) ought to test that.  Also, static linking under various conditions will
already have been tested when running the test suite, especially in `elf/` and
`dlfcn/`.

Make sure static linking with cthreads is working.  If you can get an
`ext2fs.static` compiled and linked against the new glibc, that is good.

[TODO].

Then debug its startup as a normal program on your working hurd.

    $ [...]/ext2fs.static --help
    [...]

Then try its full server startup.

    $ settrans -ca node [...]/ext2fs.static BACKING_STORE
    $ ls -l node/
    [...]

Make sure dynamic linking for servers is working.  If you haven't broken the
ABI, you can just use an existing `/hurd/foobar` binary, started the way
glibc's `testrun.sh` does it.

[TODO]: Is this the correct way to do that?

    $ settrans -ca node [glibc]/build/testrun.sh /hurd/ext2fs BACKING_STORE
    $ cd node/
    [...]

---

Test it in a [[subhurd]].

---

Test it on a real system.