On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 10:02 PM, Jim Meyering <j...@meyering.net> wrote: > On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 7:32 PM, Norihiro Tanaka <nori...@kcn.ne.jp> wrote: >> >> On Fri, 5 Aug 2016 13:29:43 -0700 >> Jim Meyering <j...@meyering.net> wrote: >> >>> On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 4:30 AM, Norihiro Tanaka <nori...@kcn.ne.jp> wrote: >>> > dfaoptimize() is not set fast flag even if it is success, but it is wrong. >>> > If success, dfa matcher uses algorithm for single byte, and it is so fast. >>> > >>> > I think this bug does not affect for grep, but it will affect with the >>> > patch that I just sent to gawk. >>> >>> Thank you for the patch. >>> I was going to push it with the attached slightly updated log message. >>> Note however that grep does use that -> fast member via dfasearch.c's >>> use of the dfaisfast function. >>> But then I realized I should at least verify with "make check", and >>> found that this makes grep's dfa-match test fail. >>> Thus, I will not be pushing it as-is. >> >> Thanks for review and adjustment. I re-ran all tests including dfa-match, >> and they were passwd again in my machine. Next, I will re-run them on >> Fedora24, as my machine is RHEL 6.8 and GCC 4.4.7 which is too old. >> >> However, I do not know why dfa-match test fails on your machine. >> dfa-match test does not use grep. It directly calls dfa functions through >> dfa-match-aux executable in order to test codes of dfa which grep does >> not use. dfa-match-aux does not referer to the ->fast member. > > I have examined the logs, which suggest it was a false positive in a > parallelized "make check" run, due to that test's 3-second timeout. I > have tried repeatedly to reproduce that failure, so far without > success, but in coreutils development, with parallelized tests, we > fixed many hard-to-reproduce tests with small timeout limits like this > -- most of them now use 10 seconds as the limit, so I will change this > one, too (and several others) with the attached patch. > > I have pushed your patch.
While trying to reproduce that, I ran some tests on OS X and saw frequent failure of one of the tests, so wrote the attached to work around what I assume is an aggressive write-to-/dev/null optimization:
From 428a433ca0a19628922554f10e55a5d91540c15f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jim Meyering <meyer...@fb.com> Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2016 21:38:30 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] tests: avoid occasional false positive on OS X * tests/backref-multibyte-slow: When redirecting the "fast" LC_ALL=C run's output to /dev/null, we got an artificially low timing (of 0), because of how some systems ignore writes to /dev/null. With an initial timing of 0 on that first run, the derived timeout for the UTF-8 run (which redirects to a file) would be a mere 1 second. The fix: also redirect that first run's output to a file, not to /dev/null. --- tests/backref-multibyte-slow | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/tests/backref-multibyte-slow b/tests/backref-multibyte-slow index d447a4a..05bb62e 100755 --- a/tests/backref-multibyte-slow +++ b/tests/backref-multibyte-slow @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ $AWK 'BEGIN {for (i=0; i<13000; i++) print "aba"}' /dev/null > in || fail=1 # when running in en_US.UTF-8. Round up to whole seconds, since timeout # can't deal with fractional seconds. max_seconds=$(LC_ALL=C perl -le 'use Time::HiRes qw(time); my $s = time(); - system q,grep -E '\''^([a-z]).\1$'\'' in > /dev/null,; + system q,grep -E '\''^([a-z]).\1$'\'' in > junk,; my $elapsed = time() - $s; print int (1 + 10 * $elapsed)') \ || { max_seconds=5; warn_ "$ME_: warning: no perl? using default of 5s timeout"; } -- 2.8.0-rc2