view test/automated/README @ 3496:78fc8ea578b2

Joe 2009-11-23 21:31:10 PST If type is ::SDL_HAPTIC_CARTESIAN, direction is encoded by three positions 367 * (X axis, Y axis and Z axis (with 3 axes)). ::SDL_HAPTIC_CARTESIAN uses 368 * the first three \c dir parameters. The cardinal directions would be: 369 * - North: 0,-1, 0 370 * - East: -1, 0, 0 371 * - South: 0, 1, 0 372 * - West: 1, 0, 0 typedef struct SDL_HapticDirection { Uint8 type; /**< The type of encoding. */ Uint16 dir[3]; /**< The encoded direction. */ } SDL_HapticDirection; An unsigned int can't store negative values and I don't see an alternate way to encode them in the docs or source. The best I have been able to come up with is using a negative magnitude for the effect but this will only get me 2 of the 4 quadrants in the plane for 2d effects. I looked at the win32 and linux implementations and I believe is is safe to use signed ints in the direction struct. I am unfamiliar with the darwin haptics API so I don't know if it is safe.
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Fri, 27 Nov 2009 19:29:27 +0000
parents 22ac66da0765
children
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   SDL Automated Testing Framework User Documentation
   by Edgar Simo Serra



   Abstract

   The SDL Automated Testing Framework, hereby after called SDL_AT, is a meant
to test the SDL code for regressions and other possible failures. It can also
be used to display what your SDL set up supports.



   Basics

   The main way to use the framework is to compile it and run it, that can be
done with the following command:

  $> make test
  
  It should then display something like:

  Platform : All tests successful (2)
  SDL_RWops : All tests successful (5)
  SDL_Surface : All tests successful (6)
  Rendering with x11 driver : All tests successful (4)

  Indicating that all tests were successful. If however a test fails output it
will report the failure to stderr indicating where and why it happened. This
output can then be sent to the developers so they can attempt to fix the
problem.



   Advanced

   By passing the "-h" or "--help" parameter to testsdl you can get an overview
of all the possible options you can set to furthur tweak the testing. A sample
of the options would be the following:

   Usage: ./testsdl [OPTIONS]
   Options are:
      -m, --manual    enables tests that require user interaction
      --noplatform    do not run the platform tests
      --norwops       do not run the rwops tests
      --nosurface     do not run the surface tests
      --norender      do not run the render tests
      -v, --verbose   increases verbosity level by 1 for each -v
      -q, --quiet     only displays errors
      -h, --help      display this message and exit


  
  Developers

  See SDL_at.h for developer information.