In article
03006e3fc39b5a48ab9dbccc101090a8234493f...@redroof2.alohasunset.com,
Mark Pizzolato - Info Comm m...@infocomm.com writes:
Well, if you're trying to 'test' a particular instruction implementation.
You can drive that test with SCP commands which:
1) load some memory with the
In article 201412030438.sb34cpyk078...@ultimate.com,
Phil Budne p...@ultimate.com writes:
Mark Pizzolato wrote:
... Running these needs some sort of scripting paradigm to load, start
and examine the results of such tests.
Over a decade ago I wrote a Tcl expect script to install ITS on
* On Wed, Dec 03, 2014 at 02:27:33AM -0500, J. David Bryan jdbr...@acm.org
wrote:
On Tuesday, December 2, 2014 at 19:54, Seth Morabito wrote:
SIMH is entirely without test suites, so of course I've had to forge
on ahead without that safety net.
I'm not sure I understand your comment.
On Tuesday, December 02, 2014 at 8:38 PM, Phil Budne wrote:
Mark Pizzolato wrote:
... Running these needs some sort of scripting paradigm to load, start and
examine the results of such tests.
Over a decade ago I wrote a Tcl expect script to install ITS on a SIMH
simulated KS-10 from
On Wednesday, December 3, 2014 at 18:19, Seth Morabito wrote:
I meant unit tests in the Kent Beck sense of unit testing, i.e. code
that is automatically run at or shortly after compile time to verify
correctness of units (likely C functions, in this case).
I understand now, thanks.
There