Test suite header code was not gaurded with test suite dependency.
But some test suites have additional code in the headers section.
Variables in that section become unused if suite functions are
gaurded. Hence gaurded the headers section.
But this changed cuased missing types in get_expression() function
that was originally accessing types defined through suite headers.
Hence had to gaurd expressions code as well.
Gaurding expressions does not allow parsing the parameters when
some types or hash defs are gaurded. Hence added function
check_test() to check if test is allowed or not before parsing the
parameters.
The change modifies the template code in tests/suites/helpers.function
and tests/suites/main.function so that error messages are printed to
stdout instead of being discarded. This makes errors visible regardless
of the --verbose flag being passed or not to the test suite programs.
Fixes the test suites to consistently use mbedtls_fprintf to output to
stdout or stderr.
Also redirects output from the tests to /dev/null to avoid confusing
output if the test suite code or library outputs anything to stdout.
The commit adds to the generate_code.pl script support to add #line directives
to generated code to allow build breaks to be more easily found from the
generated code.
Added a verbose option to the generated test suites which can list the
dependencies not met for skipped test cases.
Also clarifies internal interfaces between the main_test.function and test code,
and fixed a bug on calculating available tests in run-test-suites.pl.
Restructed test suite helper and main code to support tests suite helper
functions, changed C++ comments to C-style, and made the generated
source code more navigable.
Added to generate_code.pl:
- support for per test suite helper functions
- description of the structure of the files the script uses to construct
the test suite file
- delimiters through the source code to make the machine generated code
easier to understand
Our Windows implementation based on vsnprintf_s( ..., _TRUNCATE ) sometimes
writes *two* terminating NULLs. Allow for that, but obviously bytes past the
end of the buffer mustn't be touched.
- Added in each tests program to be sure they are run (putting them in a test
suite/function specific to the platform layer would cause them to be skipped
when PLATFORM_C is not defined).
- Platforms have already moved from a standard to a broken snprintf in the
past [1], so make sure to catch that if it ever happens again.
[1]: http://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/mailman/message/31241434/
Things that are not guaranteed by the standard but should be true of all
platforms of interest to us:
- 8-bit chars
- NULL pointers represented by all-bits-zero