An actual README file for the regression tests

Submitted by: Dr. George
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Marc G. Fournier 1996-08-01 04:53:22 +00:00
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From scrappy@ki.net Wed Jul 31 18:12:17 1996
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Subject: src/test/regress/README
src/test/regress/README
Introduction
The Postgres95 regression tests are a comprehensive set of tests for the
SQL implementation embeded in Postgres95 developed by Jolly Chen and
Andrew Yu. It tests standard SQL operations as well as the extensability
capabilities of Postgres95.
Preparation
The regression test is invoked thru by the 'make' command which compiles
a 'c' program with Postgres95 extension functions into a shared library
in the 'obj' directory. Localised shell scripts are also created in
the 'obj' directory. The 'expected.input' file is massaged into the
'obj/expected.out' file. The localization replaces macros in the source
files with absolute pathnames and user names.
The 'expected.input' file and the 'sample.regress.out' file
The 'expected.input' file was created on a SPARC Solaris 2.4 system
using the 'postgres5-1.02a5.tar.gz' source tree. It has been compared
with a file created on an I386 Solaris 2.4 system and the differences
are only in the floating point polygons in the 3rd digit to the right
of the decimal point. (see below)
The 'sample.regress.out' file is from the postgres-1.01 release
constructed by Jolly Chen and is included here for reference. It may
have been created on a DEC ALPHA machine as the 'Makefile.global'
in the postgres-1.01 release has PORTNAME=alpha.
Running the regression test
Change directory to the regression test directory:
cd ...../src/test/regress
If you have prevously invoked the regression test, clean up the
working directory with:
make clean
The regression test is invoked with the command:
make all runtest
Normally, the regression test should be run as the 'postgres' user as the
'src/test/regress' directory and sub-directories are owned by the
'postgres' user. If you run the regression test as another user the
'src/test/regress/obj' directory should be writeable to that user.
Comparing expected/actual output
The results are in the file 'obj/regress.out' which can be compared
with the 'obj/expected.out' file using 'diff'. The files will NOT
compare exactly. The following paragraphs attempt to explain the
differences.
OID differences
There are several places where Postgres95 OID (object identifiers) appear
in 'regress.out'. OID's are unique 32-bit integers which are generated
by the Postgres95 backend whenever a table row is inserted or updated.
If you run the regression test on a non-virgin database or run it multiple
times, the OID's reported will have different values.
The following SQL statements in 'regress.out' have shown this behavior:
QUERY: SELECT user_relns() AS user_relns ORDER BY user_relns;
The 'a,523676' row is composed from an OID.
TIME differences
Some of the tests involving date/time functions use the implicit
time zone in effect at the time the regression test is run. In other
tests the timezone to be inserted into the regression data base is
explicitly specified.
The 'expected.input' file was prepared in the 'US/Pacific' timezone
so there may be differences where the 'expected.out' file has
PST/PDT times and the 'regress.out' file has your local timezone.
FLOATING POINT differences
Some of the tests involve computing 64-bit (FLOAT8) number from table
columns. Differences in results involving mathematical functions of
FLOAT8 columns have been observed. These differences occur where
different operating systems are used on the same platform ie:
BSDI and SOLARIS on Intel/86, and where the same operating system is
used used on different platforms, ie: SOLARIS on SPARC and Intel/86.
Human eyeball comparison is needed to determine the real significance
of these differences which are usually 10 places to the right of
the decimal point.
POLYGON differences
Several of the tests involve operations on geographic date about the
Oakland/Berkley CA street map. The map data is expressed as polygons
whose verticies are represened as pairs of FLOAT8 numbers (decimal
lattitude and longitude). Initially, some tables are created and
loaded with geographic data, then some views are created which join
two tables using the polygon intersection operator (##), then a select
is done on the view.
When comparing the results from different platforms, differences occur
in the 2nd or 3rd place to the right of the decimal point. The SQL
statements where these problems occur are the folowing:
QUERY: SELECT * from street;
QUERY: SELECT * from iexit;