> Am 20.01.2021 um 20:13 schrieb Riccardo Mottola <riccardo.mott...@libero.it>:
>
> Hi,
>
> Fred Kiefer wrote:
>>> I will try to bisect - but I'd liek to track this down before a release,
>>> especially knowing it is something done these last months.
>> If this is really a recent bug, not something that went unnoticed for years
>> as nobody uses SPARC processors any more, than the only possible change
>> would be the float parsing change that Richard just made. No idea why this
>> would fail on something as simple as „1“ or „0“ but this is SPARC specific
>> so you probably should start of by using the test suit of base on that
>> machine.
>
>
> Yes... I confirm it is a recent commit and I tracked it down to this commit:
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> r23416 | richard.frith.macdonald | 2020-12-30 12:58:19 +0100 (Wed, 30
> Dec 2020) | 2 lines
>
> Remove internal GSScanInt and GSScanDouble functions after moving
> functionality into the -scanDouble: method. Add private class method to
> support scanning a string for a double without having to create a new
> scanner each time (use a shared lock-protected, instance with resetting
> of the string being scanned).
>
> before this, all color look fine.
>
> I'm running the tests to see if some specific failed tests can be
> identified ... but apparently they run sequentially on only one CPU and
> it takes hours....
>
> Anyway having an exact commit is also a good start.
OK, so it is this code in [NSColor colorFromString:]
double r, g, b;
NSScanner *scanner = [[NSScanner alloc] initWithString: str];
if ([scanner scanDouble: &r] &&
[scanner scanDouble: &g] &&
[scanner scanDouble: &b] &&
[scanner isAtEnd])
In a previous mail you stated that str is something like „1 1 1“ or „0 0 0“.
The next step would be to write a short test program that feeds these strings
to the code above and outputs the values for r, g and b and of course the
result of isAtEnd. That should make it easy to track down the issue. But you
are the only one with a SPARC processor.