Harmless in the sense that ECL doesn't crash or throw me in the interactive debugger. Besides, the test failures seem to be easily fixed. The test-require.script test fails because it tries to require the :rt module which is deprecated on the develop branch and no longer build by default. A simple fix is to use the :sockets module instead:
diff --git a/test/test-require.script b/test/test-require.script index e5f70857..1ef84e8c 100644 --- a/test/test-require.script +++ b/test/test-require.script @@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ #+allegro :sax #+clisp (first (remove "asdf" *dynmod-list* :test 'equal)) #+(or clozure cmucl) :defsystem - #+ecl :rt ;; loads faster than :ecl-quicklisp + #+ecl :sockets #+lispworks "comm" #+mkcl :walker #+sbcl :sb-md5
The test-program.script test seems to fail to include uiop because of an error in the linkable-system function. Tracing it shows that the function returns nil for the uiop system object, 1> (ASDF/BUNDLE::LINKABLE-SYSTEM #<system "uiop">) <1 (ASDF/BUNDLE::LINKABLE-SYSTEM NIL) which seems to be caused by a missing call to coerce-name:
diff --git a/bundle.lisp b/bundle.lisp index 2ff56f93..42034c9f 100644 --- a/bundle.lisp +++ b/bundle.lisp @@ -529,7 +529,7 @@ which is probably not what you want; you probably need to tweak your output tran ;; If an ASDF upgrade is available from source, but not a UIOP upgrade to that, ;; then use the asdf/driver system instead of ;; the UIOP that was disabled by check-not-old-asdf-system. - (if-let (s (and (equal x "uiop") (output-files 'lib-op "asdf") (find-system "asdf/driver"))) + (if-let (s (and (equal (coerce-name x) "uiop") (output-files 'lib-op "asdf") (find-system "asdf/driver"))) (and (output-files 'lib-op s) s)) ;; If there was no source upgrade, look for modules provided by the implementation. (if-let (p (system-module-pathname (coerce-name x)))
Am 29.08.2018 um 01:22 schrieb Faré:
I can't reproduce this, for me the tests run fine without being thrown in the debugger. I only get two harmlessly looking test failures (test-program.script and test-require.script).
No test failure is harmless. The test-program.script failure is what Robert saw, that I can reproduce. I didn't reproduce a failure with test-require. I had more problems with ECL from the develop branch, but maybe it was a bad idea to use the develop branch.
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