Btw., I should add that rxvt as well as xterm (and aterm) all
seem to work fine and display colors correctly. They're also
*A LOT* smaller than gnome-terminal, both in terms of the
size of the executable as well as in terms of the amount of
memory they consume when running :) That, of course, doesn't
mean that our test driver shouldn't work correctly under Gnome.

Martin

Martin Sebor wrote:
What version of Gnome terminal are you using? I couldn't reproduce
this behavior with Gnome gnome-terminal 2.2.2 (running on Linux).
I get monochromatic output with no garbage in it suggesting that
the terminal isn't capable of recognizing the VT100 escape
sequences (the test driver should be able to detect it and avoid
using the sequences).

Martin

Scott Zhong wrote:
I am seeing these characters using gnome on opensuse.

Yu (Scott) Zhong



-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Brown [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sat 3/31/2007 3:57 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: strange characters in test output on gnome-terminal
Hi!

After I switched to a different terminal (gnome-terminal) I see these strange characters when I run stdcxx tests. It seems as though the terminal doesn't interpret the color commands correctly. Has anyone experienced anything like this? Is there a way to get the correct output with this type of terminal, either with colors working or plain?

# +-----------------------+----------+----------+----------+
# | DIAGNOSTIC            |  ACTIVE  |   TOTAL  | INACTIVE |
# +-----------------------+----------+----------+----------+
# | (S1) INFO             |?[30;m       53 |       53 |       0% |
# | (S2) NOTE             |        0 |       52 |     100% |
# | (S7) ASSERTION        |        0 |     2042 |     100% |
# +-----------------------+----------+----------+----------+

-- Mark

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