NAME='Sparse Kernel Test' TIME='MEDIUM' TEST_TYPE='client' TEST_CATEGORY='Functional' TEST_CLASS='Kernel' AUTHOR='Martin Bligh <mbligh@google.com>' DOC='''\ Sparse is a semantic parser of source files: it's neither a compiler (although it could be used as a front-end for one) nor is it a preprocessor (although it contains as a part of it a preprocessing phase). It is meant to be a small - and simple - library. Scanty and meager, and partly because of that easy to use. It has one mission in life: create a semantic parse tree for some arbitrary user for further analysis. It's not a tokenizer, nor is it some generic context-free parser. In fact, context (semantics) is what it's all about - figuring out not just what the grouping of tokens are, but what the _types_ are that the grouping implies. ''' job.run_test('sparse', base_tree='/usr/local/src/linux-2.6.14.tar.bz2', patches='/usr/local/src/patch-2.6.14-git6.bz2', config='http://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/mbligh/config/config.up')