Re: [CMake] CTest: Any way around the "one test == one program invocation" assumption?

2010-06-08 Thread Biddiscombe, John A.
All in all it'd be much nicer if there was some kind of hook in ctest which could be used to inform it that a number of tests had been run, and let it populate and submit the XML report based on that information. But, if there's any way to do that, it's highly undocumented... It doesn't app

Re: [CMake] CTest: Any way around the "one test == one program invocation" assumption?

2010-06-08 Thread Philip Lowman
On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 4:32 AM, Chris Hillery wrote: > On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 1:00 AM, Biddiscombe, John A. wrote: > >> I'm sure someone has a better answer ... but ... >> >> > I have complete control over the test >> > program and can make it output whatever I want. >> >> Have a look at the XML p

Re: [CMake] CTest: Any way around the "one test == one program invocation" assumption?

2010-06-08 Thread Chris Hillery
On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 1:00 AM, Biddiscombe, John A. wrote: > I'm sure someone has a better answer ... but ... > > > I have complete control over the test > > program and can make it output whatever I want. > > Have a look at the XML produced by ctest itself and generate it yourself? > then submit

Re: [CMake] CTest: Any way around the "one test == one program invocation" assumption?

2010-06-08 Thread Biddiscombe, John A.
I'm sure someone has a better answer ... but ... > I have complete control over the test > program and can make it output whatever I want. Have a look at the XML produced by ctest itself and generate it yourself? then submit it and you should see each test separately (Just thinking out loud) J

[CMake] CTest: Any way around the "one test == one program invocation" assumption?

2010-06-07 Thread Chris Hillery
I asked this question in a followup on the CDash mailing list the other day, but it's really not strictly a CDash question so I'll toss it here too. There are a number of situations where I would like a single test program to perform a number of tests (in one case, nearly 20,000). I'm wondering if