Hi Zhangjin,
On Mon, Jul 10, 2023 at 03:26:52AM +0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote:
On Thu, Jul 06, 2023 at 05:11:17PM +0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote:
two newlines are added around the test summary line to extrude the test status.
But then we're back to making it annoying to check, having to figure if we need to grep -A or grep -B etc. With grep 'status:' we would get a synthetic status and the counters together. Why do you think it's not convenient ? Or am I the only one considering it useful to just run grep "status:" on all output files and figure a global status at once ?
Sorry, Willy, my commit message may mislead you a little.
The newlines are added around the whole test summary line (with the status info), not only around the 'status info' ;-)
Ah OK, thanks for clarifying this!
It is not for status grep, it is for developers to easily see the whole summary line at a glance
I understand but both work hand-in-hand, as every time you'll perform a slight change, you'll necessarily rerun the whole series on all archs to confirm, which is why I'm particularly annoying about the ability to grep!
And further, if not consider pure-text, the colors may be more helpful, for example, red for failed/failure, yellow for skipped/warning, green for passed/success, for example:
$ echo | awk 'END{printf("138 test(s): \033[32m135\033[0m passed, \033[33m 2\033[0m skipped, \033[31m 1\033[0m failed => status: \033[31mfailure\033[0m\n");}' 138 test(s): 135 passed, 2 skipped, 1 failed => status: failure
But as we can see, the color control code is not readable and it may break the simple "status: failure" grep, we should use something like "status: .*failure" ;-)
Colors may only be used when stdout is a terminal, and still, some might find it annonying (for example some distros use unreadably dark colors that were apparently never tested over a black background, forcing users to highlight the text by selecting it with the mouse to read it). Better not start to play with this IMO, that's not really needed and may be more annoying to some than helpful to most.
Thanks, Willy