A .may_includes file can be "advisory", which means that some
violations of the rules are expected. We will track these
violations with practracker, not as automatic errors.
Our topological sort code really deserves a function of its own.
Additionally, don't print from inside the topological sort code:
instead, return a result, and let the caller print it.
I'll want to make this block into a series of functions in a
subsequent commit, but I'm doing this separately to get the
indentation change out of the way.
This branch will end up with making checkIncludes.py an integrated
part of practracker, for ticket 31176.
Padding circuits were regular cells that got closed before their padding
machine could finish. This means that they can still receive regular cells from
their past life, but they have no way or reason to answer them anymore. Hence
let's ignore them before they even get to the proper subsystems.
This test runs practracker with a set of 0 thresholds, to make sure
that it enumerates all its values right. It tries running with an
empty exceptions file, and with an exceptions file that covers
_some_ of the data, and it makes sure that the outputs are as expected.
Now that there is only one toplevel place where we print problems,
we can redirect just that one print to a file when we are
regenerating the exceptions.txt file. Previously we redirected
sys.stdout, which is naughty, and forced us to send warnings (and
warnings alone) to stderr.
These flags let you suppress the message about the number of
problems and warnings, and let you control the thresholds above
which something counts as a problem.
I need this for testing.
Instead of having "consider" functions that have to call a global
ProblemVault, we can now generate all the metrics for the code
separately from the decision about what to do for them.
I'm about to refactor the code into a set of iterators that yield
*all* the metrics for the code, and then add a filter on top of that
to return the problems.
When an exception is present, we can now violate the limit by a little
bit and only produce a warning. The strict flag overrides this
behavior.
I've given file sizes a 2% tolerances and function sizes/include
counts a 10% tolerance.
Part of 30752
Instead of excluding directories at the last minute if they happen
to appear in our filenames, we exclude them early, before recursing
into all their subdirectories.
Part of 29746.
The practracker_tests.py unit test file called a function by its old
name.
Also, practracker counted functions as starting one line after the
function name, and ending with the closing brace. Now they start
with the open brace and end with the closing brace.
Coverity doesn't understand that if begin_cell_parse() returns 0 and
sets is_begindir to 0, its address field will always be set.
Fixes bug 30126; bugfix on 0.2.4.7-alpha; Fixes CID 1447296.
Right now, this has been done at a high level by confparse.c, but it
makes more sense to lower it.
This API is radically un-typesafe as it stands; we'll be wrapping it
in a safer API as we do #30914 and lower the struct manipulation
code as well.
Closes ticket 30864.