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Nobody has been compiling Clutter with profiling enabled in a long time. UProf itself hasn't been updated in 5 years, and it still depends on deprecated components like dbus-glib, with no port to GDBus in sight. The profiling code was moderately useful in the past, but these days it's probably better to profile Cogl than Clutter itself; timing information can be extracted by the timestamp on each diagnostic message that is now available by default in the CLUTTER_NOTE macro, and we can add ad hoc counters where needed. |
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accessibility | ||
conform | ||
interactive | ||
micro-bench | ||
performance | ||
clutter-1.0.suppressions | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README |
Outline of test categories: The conform/ tests should be non-interactive unit-tests that verify a single feature is behaving as documented. Use the GLib and Clutter test API and macros to write the test units. The conformance test suites are meant to be used with continuous integration builds. The performance/ tests are performance tests, both focused tests testing single metrics and larger tests. These tests are used to report one or more performance markers for the build of Clutter. Each performance marker is picked up from the standard output of running the tests from strings having the form "\n@ marker-name: 42.23" where 'marker-name' and '42.23' are the key/value pairs of a single metric. Each test can provide multiple key/value pairs. Note that if framerate is the feedback metric the test should forcibly enable FPS debugging itself. The file test-common.h contains utility function helping to do fps reporting. The interactive/ tests are any tests whose status can not be determined without a user looking at some visual output, or providing some manual input etc. This covers most of the original Clutter tests. Ideally some of these tests will be migrated into the conform/ directory. The accessibility/ tests are tests created to test the accessibility support of clutter, testing some of the atk interfaces. Other notes: • All tests should ideally include a detailed description in the source explaining exactly what the test is for, how the test was designed to work, and possibly a rationale for the approach taken for testing. Tests for specific bugs should reference the bug report URL or number. • When running tests under Valgrind, you should follow the instructions available here: https://wiki.gnome.org/Valgrind and also use the suppression file available in the Git repository.