On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 3:39 PM wrote:
>
>
>
> >> the amount of test code is likely to far
> >> exceed the amount of code being tested!
>
>
> The industry standard rule of thumb for ASICs is the pre-tapeout
> verification effort is 3x the desigm effort.
Yeah, but hardware bugs are much harder to
the amount of test code is likely to far
exceed the amount of code being tested!
The industry standard rule of thumb for ASICs is the pre-tapeout
verification effort is 3x the desigm effort.
On 2022-09-13 09:05, Bill Ricker via Boston-pm wrote:
On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 9:38 AM Adam
On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 9:38 AM Adam Russell wrote:
> Ok, I think I definitely mixed up some terms here.
>
✓
> Yes, it does seem that separate Unit and Integration testing is the
> winning meta-pattern!
>
Indeed, both is better than either alone. (This bothers some theologians.)
> that the
-pm@pm.org
Subject: Re: [Boston.pm] unit testing socket code
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:31 PM Adam Russell via Boston-pm
mailto:boston-pm@pm.org>> wrote:
I have some networking code in Perl. Fairly low level in that I use raw
sockets, accept(), etc instead of the higher level IO::Socket p
Hi Adam!
On Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:31:14 +
Adam Russell via Boston-pm wrote:
> I have some networking code in Perl. Fairly low level in that I use raw
> sockets, accept(), etc instead of the higher level IO::Socket package. I'd
> like to test this code but am not sure what the best approach
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:31 PM Adam Russell via Boston-pm <
boston-pm@pm.org> wrote:
> I have some networking code in Perl. Fairly low level in that I use raw
> sockets, accept(), etc instead of the higher level IO::Socket package. I'd
> like to test this code but am not sure what the best
I have some networking code in Perl. Fairly low level in that I use raw
sockets, accept(), etc instead of the higher level IO::Socket package. I'd like
to test this code but am not sure what the best approach is. There doesn't seem
to be a convenient testing framework like there is with WWW
7 matches
Mail list logo