view tests/0007/run-test.sh @ 400:8c7453fb5bd9 api-inversion

Invert audioDB::power_flag / audiodb_power() Here the exciting discovery is that the mmap(), memcpy(), munmap() sequence is in fact not safe. In principle an msync() call should be inserted before unmapping for in-core changes to mmap()ed files to be flushed to disk. In this case we work around the problem entirely, by not mmap()ing anything and doing everything with file descriptors. Amusingly, that's probably not desperately safe either, this time because we have to move the file descriptor position (which is also a shared resource). dup() doesn't save us, as the duplicate file descriptor shares a file position. This applies also to the filling of data_buffer in the query loop, and in fact basically any call to lseek(), which is why I'm not fixing it now. Solution: if you have multiple threads all acting at once on a single database, do one audiodb_open() per thread, for now at least.
author mas01cr
date Thu, 27 Nov 2008 16:22:52 +0000
parents fe4dc39b2dd7
children
line wrap: on
line source
#! /bin/bash

. ../test-utils.sh

if [ -f testdb ]; then rm -f testdb; fi

${AUDIODB} -d testdb -N

# tests that the lack of -l when the query sequence is shorter doesn't
# segfault.

intstring 2 > testfeature
floatstring 0 1 >> testfeature
floatstring 1 0 >> testfeature

${AUDIODB} -d testdb -I -f testfeature

# sequence queries require L2NORM
${AUDIODB} -d testdb -L

echo "query point (0.0,0.5)"
intstring 2 > testquery
floatstring 0 0.5 >> testquery

expect_clean_error_exit ${AUDIODB} -d testdb -Q sequence -f testquery
expect_clean_error_exit ${AUDIODB} -d testdb -Q sequence -f testquery -n 1

echo "query point (0.5,0.0)"
intstring 2 > testquery
floatstring 0.5 0 >> testquery

expect_clean_error_exit ${AUDIODB} -d testdb -Q sequence -f testquery
expect_clean_error_exit ${AUDIODB} -d testdb -Q sequence -f testquery -n 1

exit 104