John-Paul Bader <hukl at berlin.ccc.de> wrote:> Hi,
>
> I just read that the FreeBSD support was improved which is great news
> for me as I am deploying almost exclusively on unicorn and made already
> good experiences with it on 7.2
>
> Now I''d love to run the tests by myself but somehow fail to do so.
>
> I cloned the git repo and adjusted my local.mk, then i ran make test in
> the unicorn directory but I''m just getting a "`test''
is up to date."
>
> Is there something obvious missing or is the process different on
> FreeBSD.
Hi John,
You need GNU make, which should be gmake on FreeBSD systems. I just
pushed this out:
>From d5908cae3da3b2fac66407ed1b34fb8e3f6551bb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Eric Wong <normalperson at yhbt.net>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 10:20:25 -0800
Subject: [PATCH] HACKING: update with "gmake" in examples
Most GNU users already know their "make" is GNU make but it may
not be obvious to non-GNU users.
---
HACKING | 13 ++++++++-----
1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
diff --git a/HACKING b/HACKING
index 08aa76d..119b6b7 100644
--- a/HACKING
+++ b/HACKING
@@ -16,6 +16,9 @@ Tests are good, but slow tests make development slow, so we
make tests
faster (in parallel) with GNU make (instead of Rake) and avoiding
Rubygems.
+Users of GNU-based systems (such as GNU/Linux) usually have GNU make installed
+as "make" instead of "gmake".
+
Since we don''t load RubyGems by default, loading Rack properly
requires
setting up RUBYLIB to point to where Rack is located. Not loading
Rubygems drastically lowers the time to run the full test suite. You
@@ -25,15 +28,15 @@ file is provided for reference.
Running the entire test suite with 4 tests in parallel:
- make -j4 test
+ gmake -j4 test
Running just one unit test:
- make test/unit/test_http_parser.rb
+ gmake test/unit/test_http_parser.rb
Running just one test case in a unit test:
- make test/unit/test_http_parser.rb--test_parse_simple.n
+ gmake test/unit/test_http_parser.rb--test_parse_simple.n
=== HttpServer
@@ -103,11 +106,11 @@ It is easy to install the contents of your git working
directory:
Via RubyGems (RubyGems 1.3.5+ recommended for prerelease versions):
- make install-gem
+ gmake install-gem
Without RubyGems (via setup.rb):
- make install
+ gmake install
It is not at all recommended to mix a RubyGems installation with an
installation done without RubyGems, however.
--
Eric Wong