Prevents wrong or missing characters with LuaTeX and 8-bit fonts.
Also "uninvert" the corresponding test case and two other
no longer failing "unicodesymbols" exports.
If Document>Settings>Language>Encoding is set to any value except "auto" or "default", we
expect the whole document to use this encoding. Wiht encodings from the CJK package, this means
one big "CJK" environment and no encoding switches.
Characters that are not handled by the CJK package need to be "forced" in lib/unicodesymbols.
This is completed for "euc-cn", the others will follow.
LyX expectedly gives the following warning:
TextClass.cpp (1385): The layout does not provide a list command for
the float `sidebar'. LyX will not be able to produce a float list.
This issue was reported to the maintainer. This commit is consistent
with 00f7a95f.
The cls is obsolete, so all PDF exports are disabled. We keep the
1.6.x and 2.1.x tests because those only check roundtrip
convergence, and do not export to PDF.
It used to give an endless loop, so we "ignored" it (did not run the
test). Now it gives a lyx2lyx warning, which is reported at #11455,
so it is appropriate to invert the test.
The 001-4-latin_utf8x_pdf2 test passes and the
001-4-latin_utf8-cjk_pdf2 test fails, which means that there are
characters in the .lyx file that are only available with
utf8-extended encoding, so the utf8 test is never expected to pass
in the future.
Thanks to Kornel.
utf8-plain (Unicode (utf8 XeTeX)) is a power-user setting
for the input encoding with two use cases:
a) setup of system fonts or
b) setup of input encoding supportuser preamble
in the document class or user preamble.
The test file is an example for use case b.
The Korean splash.lyx is expected to fail with pdflatex. The lyx22x
and lyx23x tests were not failing before because they were exporting
to XeTeX with system fonts, which succeeds. After c9e62dec (which
corrects the export format to the default), the lyx22x and lyx23x
tests should be inverted.
Amend eec3d1eb,7568571a
We are trying to check if the resulting file after lyx2lyx
is compilable, we have to ensure that copying the original file
to the test directory does not mangle use_non_tex_fonts-entry.
These tests failed because of (multiple instances of) the following
warning:
Warning: a buffer should not have two parents!
This warning is expected, because, for example, chapter-1 includes
Bibliography.lyx and chapter-2 includes Bibliography.lyx. thesis.lyx
includes both chapter-1 and chapter-2, so both are loaded (but
hidden), and Bibliography.lyx is loaded (but hidden), and LyX then
sees that more than one buffer includes Bibliography.lyx
The consequence of ignoring this warning is that we will not catch
any future regression that triggers this warning when it should not.
Exception: findadv-21, but it is not a regression,
because this one never passed.
The problem here is, that we cannot differentiate
between enumeration, itemize, description and labeling
environment here.
Now tests findadv-01 ... findadv-20 pass too.
keytest.py: Expanded time for controll keys (like \[Return])
findadv*: expanded time for normal keys
lyxfind.cpp: Handle math equations
The compilations fail because the macro
\DeclareUnicodeCharacter
is not defined. Also the sequence
\ifnum\pdfoutput=\z@
is making troubles.
The exports to previous lyx-versions is disabled too,
because there is no layout defined there.
Uses the correct shortcuts from lib/bind/sk/menus.bind, but fails nonetheless
because the regex for advanced search cannot find the correct list type.
(That is: it cannot distinguish between 'enumerate', 'itemize', 'labeling', etc.)
These file don't contain the \\origin tag. So the possibly included
files with relative path would not be found. The compilation to
the default pdf would then anyway fail.
Use the LaTeX internal character representation (LICR) macros
provided by lgrenc.def (since version 0.8 from 2013-05-13)
in lib/unicodesymbols. This fixes the PDF bookmarks (except for the
legacy input encoding iso-8859-7) and solves the problem of a missing
"v" character in Libertine LGR fonts (see lyx-users from 2018-01-29).
The ctest unicodesymbols/008-greek-and-coptic_iso8859-7_pdf2" now fails
(due to #9681). This is not a regression, as it is already
"unreliable" (wrong output, Latin character instead of Greek).
Drop compatibility definition of \~ as perispomeni accent
(that was required with lgrenc.def < 0.8).
If, after the 10th iteration, the exported lyx16x file still
differs from the one in the previous iteration, the test
is marked as failing, even if still loadable.
The "bxjsarticle" class only supports export with XeLaTeX and system
fonts.
This commit uses the new exclusion functionality introduced at
10cd5dd2.
The following tests are now ignored:
export/examples/ja/knitr_dvi
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf3
export/examples/ja/sweave_dvi
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf3
The following tests are no longer ignored:
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf4_systemF
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf4_systemF
This allows us to exclude matches of certain patterns in
invertedTests, ignoredTests, unreliableTests, and suspendedTests.
To use this new functionality, prefix "!" to the pattern.
This functionality serves as a workaround in some cases to not being
able to use advanced regular expression techniques, such as
"negative lookahead", with CMake's regular expression engine.
Output of "ctest -N" is unchanged by this commit.
This functionality will be used soon (see next commits).
Patch from Kornel Benko.
The export ja/lilypond_pdf fails because ps2pdf gives an error. It
is thus still inverted, under the category 'externalissues'. As
Jürgen discovered, ps2pdf succeeds if the -dNOSAFER flag is used.
Note that Kornel is seeing strange behavior with the sweave test,
and thus the label of that test might be changed soon (e.g. to
"unreliable"). For discussion, see:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20171001032524.fr5xfngylththwv2%40steph
Handle name may be arbitrary string mathing '[A-Za-z0-9]*'.
This is then used by appending to the commands for the control file.
For instance select 'Alpha' as handle for the control file 'abc'
'COAlpha: abc' ==> open 'abc' for write
'CCAlpha:' ==> close 'abc'
Could not find a suitable tex font for the following tests:
export/doc/uk/Intro_pdf4_texF
export/examples/uk/splash_pdf4_texF
export/examples/minted-filelisting_pdf4_texF
1.) Handle also 'LatexCommand inputminted' in lyxStatus.pm
2.) Add '-shell-escape' to the appropriate converters.
This applies only to the ctest-environment iff calling
the script 'prefTest.pl' in the build directory.
keytest.py: This gives the os some time to update the status.
All keys with modifier and all possible shortcuts are affected.
Shortcut use corrected in findadv-11-in.txt and findadv-17-in.txt
Now, before starting a test with 'TestBegin' in any *-in.txt file
we can create ne shortcuts used by this test.
Defining a shortcut:
UseShortcut "<shortcut>" "<function>"
Actually adding the new shortcuts to be used by the next lyx-session:
PrepareShortcuts
Use example is found in findadv-combined-in.txt
The UseShortcut-entries will be traslated into '\bind "<shortcut>" "<function>"'
and with the PrepareShortcuts-entry added to the active use file 'user.bind'
Function keys are sent to xvkbd as e.g. \[F15], so we should
not split a sequence like "\C\[F15]" into two text pieces.
(Do it like other keys not having a digit in their name (e.g. \[Return]) )
The controls are described in hello-world-in.txt as
Cr: not expected regex search pattern before next expected match
Cp: not expected search pattern before next expected match
See also findadv-re-04-in.txt for an example
In this test-case, searching for case sensitive and format considering
search is failing.
This test started failing after 8bf3d7bb. I did not look deeply into
why, because the corresponding de and es tests were already
inverted, and because in general we do not expect texF tests to work
well.
The controls are described in hello-world-in.txt as
CO: for control file open for write
CN: control notice
CP: simple search pattern
CR: regex search pattern
CC: close control file
The control-file will be used at the end of test by searchPatterns.pl
Suppose, we want to test a key sequence which should produce
logs in defined sequence. ATM, we use pcregrep to see, if
a pattern occurs in the log-file. This is OK, if using only single
tests with only one message to care about.
But it is not OK for combined tests.
As an example, the file 'findadv-combine-in.txt' is combining
tests findadv-re-01-in.txt, findadv-re-02-in.txt and findadv-re-03-in.txt.
This test runns here about 25 seconds, while the time for the other three
is about 144 secs.
(Most time is with starting/stopping lyx)
Often the relevant entry (e.g. /proc/xxxx/status) exists,
but is empty. This led to many tests fail, mostly at
the first tests after the start of the OS.
The culprit in keytest is the possibility to lose some keystrokes.
The idead here is that the keystokes are cached by QT until some
control character is entered forcing e.g. new dialog.
So, splitting input lines at these characters should be enough
to ensure that the next chars are not lost.
iconv fails, if a nomenclature inset contains an uncodable character
This led to failure of the indonesian UserGuide in the attic.
Fix it there and add a minimal, specific test sample instead.
1.) Don't modify the line as it happened at start of sendKeystringLocal()
2.) Split lines on each keysym (e.g. \[Return])
3.) Beatify the debug output of the sent text
This makes the wrapper working smoothly even for more complicated
input lines.
Also we do not need the window- parameter in call to xvkbd.
Still, there _is_ something fishy. At first run it can happen that
some keytest fail. But not reproducible at subsequent calls.
It feels like QT would cache some data and therefore lyx reacts
later faster.
This work is a result of collaboration with Tommaso Cucinotta.
Changes are:
1.) make it python3 compatible
2.) rewritten the lyx_status() routine
3.) routines lyx_sleeping(), lyx_zombie(), lyx_dead() now depend on lyx_status()
4.) dont send keystring "\Afn" at start as it is language dependent
5.) handling of TestEnd uses now lyx-commands to stop the lyx-session.
Use 'kill -9' only if unsuccessful
- from specific dependency on wish8.5, to just wish
- from checking the 2nd line of /proc/*/status, to grep-ing on sleeping (old system was failing on newer kernels)
- mode debugging and python output during tests
We don't invert unreliable tests for the same reason they are
inverted but, e.g., a nonstandard test that fails for some reason even with the
additional requirements installed or a test that shows wrong output
but also an error.
Added "export/export/latex/arabic_simple_pdf4_systemF"
and "export/doc/ar/Intro_pdf4_systemF"
to the list of tests which ignore "missing glyph" error.
Thanks to Jürgen Spitzmüller.
An update in TeX Live causes the test to pass (also for Kornel), so
now we uninvert the test.
I looked at the output file, and it seems fine to me (although it is
long, and I just checked briefly).
The new TeXLive uses font encoding TU for Unicode fonts with Xe- and LuaTeX.
The command \textquotedbl for straight quotes is no longer supported,
\textipa no longer supported with LuaTeX.
Problems with Spanish Babel and Xe/LuaTeX with 8-bit fonts lead to new errors
in some cases.
New file: ignoreLatexErrorsTests
The sublabels in this list of export-testnames specify which error
messages should be ignored.
For each sublabel (for example "xxx") the lyx-command line is expanded with
"--ignore-error-message xxx"
Using this label in invertedTests expands the testname unnecessary, so that
we get e.g. labels like:
SUSPENDED.UNRELIABLE.WRONG_OUTPUT.UNRELIABLE_export/doc/de/EmbeddedObjects_pdf4_texF
OTOH, if using label 'unreliable', we get a warning about label-names clash.
The best is to reset any previous label setting.
This encoding (modified Mac Cyrillic for Asian languages) is rarely used and not supported by Gnu iconv.
Update comments in lib/encodings.
Update ctests: Gnu iconv only supports cp858, if configured with "--enable-extra-encodings".
The missing character problem is fixed upstream.
Also fix the scaling of the \sun-symbol-index by wrapping the symbol in \text.
(wasysym's \sun is valid in text and math mode. LyX currently adds a spurious \ensuremath.)
These tests are "unreliable" and thus their export status contains
less information than reliable tests. However, it contains some
information and could still be used to find regressions. This commit
helps keep the output of a vanilla "ctest" command clean.
See discussion here:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20161127205800.epvjxkeri5yoeqwj%40steph
Test unicodesymbols for most supported input encodings with Kornel's addition to ctests.
Add required "forces" to unicodesymbols:
* utf8x does not support all characters supported by LyX
* several 8-bit encodings map characters to math-mode commands - force replacement in text-mode so that LyX can wrap them in \\ensuremath.
Fix a misalignment (wrong replacements) in the Cyrillic Unicode block.
Use \\mathscr for Mathematical Script characters in Mathematical Alphanumeric Characters (in line with the characters in other unicode blocks.
Rename the directory for test samples "export/latex/Unicode-characters" to "export/latex/unicodesymbols". This matches the purpose to test the lib/unicodesymbols file.
First run of Kornels patch for tests with all input encodings in lib/encodings.
Remove redundant sample files - keep only one sample and change the input encoding in the test script.
Put remaining failing test in "unreliableTests" for later sorting...
* custom non-tex fonts with all required characters
* use 2.2 fileformat (easier backporting)
* test all export formats
Also, fix pattern for "mixing_inTitle_layouts" in unreliableTests.
Specify non-TeX fonts that work in the source for documents that
fail with "missing characters" if compiling with "non-TeX fonts"=true.
(This does not interfere with the default output in any way.)
Add an exception to the conversion of "missing character" warnings into errors.
The PGF package deliberately uses the dummy font "nullfont" to suppress output.
Therefore, warnings about missing characters in "nullfont" are really only warnings.
Also updated the comment: "Missing character" warnigns are especially widespread
in XeTeX/LuaTeX but can also happen with "classical" 8-bit TeX.
Feel free to port this to branch.
Move them to a subdir, ignore this subdir for other tests.
Dedicated test samples for LaTeX-specific problems don't give additional value if tested for loading, conversion, or other exports.
This led to errors when compiling with polyglossia (and non-TeX fonts).
A minimal (currently non-compiling) test sample is kept in autotests/export/
and inverted in suspiciousTests.
europeCV and modernCV examples can now be exported to PDF using
LuaTeX. For the specific output that was fixed, look at the diff and
see the description in suspiciousTests that was removed by this
commit. The output was checked manually and appears fine. These
tests are thus "uninverted".
Exporting those examples to DVI with LuaTeX does not exit with
error, but the output drops characters with accents. Thus, these
tests are now marked with the "wrong_output" label. I reported this
issue on the LuaTeX mailing list at [1], but since DVI export is not
given high priority, I don't expect much action.
Note that these changes reflect an updated TeX Live 2016
installation.
[1]
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20160831134006.4fewxothddqfeyw4%40steph
As of 0b1cf133 we now warn in the GUI of this issue, but there is a
discussion about whether we should change our LaTeX output and allow
for the workflow of mixing inTitle layouts. For more information,
see #10347.
The keytests were previously enabled by default if the necessary
dependencies were found. They require a GUI and mouse so can
sometimes be annoying. Further, they are not currently reliable.
They are thus now disabled by default.
XeTeX with TeX fonts is only safe with ASCII input encoding (see #9740)
and we therefore force "ascii" when exporting with XeTeX and 8-bit TeX-fonts.
However, "utf8-plain" is a "power-user" option, which allows to switch off LyX's
encoding of the LaTeX file:
keep this also for "XeTeX with TeX fonts".
The user is responsible to ensure all characters can be processed and are
correctly shown in the output. The provided test sample shows the problems
with this encoding without special measures (like loading fontspec in the
user-preamble or a document class).
In collaboration with Günter Milde:
1.) Allow char ':' be part of a ctest-label
2.) Eliminate redundant label naming and directory names
(The testnames should not repeat the directory name)
When updating to the latest TeX Live revision, these exports now
succeed.
Inspecting the differences between the "good" PDF and the "bad" PDF
(where the test failed) there are three differences, which can be
found on the printed page numbers 81 and 82 (PDF page numbers 91 and
92). The accented i in "lím" was printed incorrectly (and the
missing glyph was correctly detected). After the update the
character is printed correctly and there is no longer an error.
The package that caused the change is likely babel or babel-spanish.
You can see the log from the TeX Live update that caused the fix by
seeing the attachment to the message here:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20160313015902.lny3g5aujh4c4aps%40scott-Za1510
It could happen that the variable was set in creating a previous test-case.
Some combinations in the controlling files (suspiciousTests, unrelibleTests, ...)
did not set this variable.
* sort and comment remaining unsorted filter patterns in suspiciousTests
(mostly just move to TODO and state what needs to be done).
* comment the patterns for achemso and Math,
(LuTeX incompatibility fixed in TeXLive 2016-01-07).
Simplify the logic for language package selection and make it more consistent:
Use polyglossia with non-TeX fonts (system fonts/Unicode fonts) for all
export flavours (XeTeX, LuaTeX, DVI-LuaTeX), if the language package setting
is "auto" and there is no language not supported by Babel and no package
providing Babel.
This solves some Babel-related autotest cases and leads to some new failures
due to the polyglossia language nesting problem.
* missing characters in linguistics example with system fonts
* language nesting problem in fr/linguistics example
* 110f505b63 solved one failure (Basque example file)
Works with system-fonts due to font substitution in the test-script.
TODO: set system fonts that work in the lyx source(s) to allow compilation
"by hand".
testcases_speed_lyx21 added to suspiciousTests
Handling unknown body token: `\begin_manifest'at line ...
Literate_lyx16 and noweb2lyx_lyx16 added to ignoredTests
Plenty of warnings (~ 390)
New sublabels LyXBug, ERT.
Renamed sublabel TeXLimit to TeXissue.
More sorting and unification of regular expressions.
Removing double entries.
Fixes for some expressions (eu_UserGuide_pdf, examples/ja/(knitr|lilypond|sweave))
Since the stop condition is that the last two consecutive created
files are identical, we do not need to check the last file.
Also checking for load of the created files is not needed, because
exporting the previous file implicitly loads too.
Exporting to some previous lyx format:
Inside the loop
Stop at export with errors/warnings
Stop if exported file not loadable
Stop if exported file identical to previous exported file (OK case)
This is done through creating MD5SUM
We test here, if any \end_{somethig} matches \begin_{something}.
Exeptions are \end_index and \end_branch ATM, they should
match \index and \branch respectively.
Also added new testfile.
Remove patterns matching tests now ignored (CJK/Korean, latex8).
Move patterns matching documents in the attic under new sublabel.
Add more verbose comments.
Comment by Günter Milde:
Actually, *all* Spanish manuals either fail or have wrong output with
Unicode TeX engines and 8-bit fonts. The reason is known: a bug in Babel
that uses utf8 strings whenever Xe- or LuaTeX is detected.
Always-Babel now set in the example document.
Adapted the autotest categorization:
* fails for some developers (why?)
* wrong output with pdflatex/LuaTeX and DVI (missing landscape slides).
Previously all labels got the depth '7' while processing 'suspiciousTestss'.
The depth is used to sort how our labels are used to build a test-label.
Say a test gets label a, b, and c, with depth 3, 8 and 2.
The constructed test-label will be "b🅰️c"
For new (to be implemented) 'reason-labels' it is more convenient to assign them higher values.
suspiciousTests: Remove Tutorial from the regex
suspendedTests: Explicit list of languages needed
ignoredTests: Language-string is separated from other strings only by '/'. '|', '_', '(' and ')'
LyXMacros.cmake: Overseen the macro 'setmarkedtestlabel()' which added it automatically
if the test was to invert the test result.
ExportTests.cmake: Correct label handling
This works around a limitation of the test machinery, which never switches
TeX fonts on for format that need that, it only switches TeX fonts off for
formats needing it.
Thanks to Kornel we do now have the infrastructure for running dedicated
export tests. This is the first one, showing a language nesting bug which is
already in 2.1. It is inverted for now, but this will hopefully change soon.
and introduce sublabels
Sublabels section in *.Tests starts with 'Sublabel: name'
and is valid until start of a new sublabel.
'name' contains only ascii characters [a-z]+
To test all export use 'ctest -L export'. This is unchanged.
The following lists directories and assigned sub-label
lib/doc: manuals
lib/templates: templates
lib/examples: examples
development/mathmacro: mathmacros
autotests: autotests
Now
'ctest -L export' should be without errors
If there _are_ errors, the appropriate test should go to nonstandardTests
'ctest -L reverted' should be without errors
If there _are_ errors, the appropriate test should go to nonstandardTests
'ctest -L nonstandard'
Tests here may, or may not fail. Depends of installed tex extensions
All comments in revertedTests comes from Günter Milde
Non standard test is new. It should collect all tests
which may not work because of some missing non-standard
tex package or some exotic system font.