On Jul 1, 7:40 am, "Edward K. Ream" <[email protected]> wrote:
> The new sentinels code has past its first major milestone.

Another important milestone has just passed.  Round tripping from old
sentinels, to new, and back to old does *nothing* except delete @nonl
sentinels.  I did this by using Leo to write all of Leo's core files.
This may be an even better test than the compareClass script.  You
could say that it is another kind of double-entry accounting.  BTW, I
disabled caching while doing all the round-tripping.

I'm not at all willing to declare testing complete, but this gives me
enough confidence to start eating my own dog food.

20 unit tests fail when the new sentinels are in effect.  At least one
of those fails because caching was disabled. At least half are related
to @root and can be ignored.  One or two tests may point to a real
problem.  I'll certainly resolve all failed tests before merging with
the trunk

Edward

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