How to use “configure” and “make” commands for Ruby¶ ↑
This is for developers of Ruby. If you are a user of Ruby, please see README.md.
In-place build¶ ↑
$ ./autogen.sh $ ./configure --prefix=$PWD/local $ make $ make install $ ./local/bin/ruby -e 'puts "Hello"' Hello
Out-of-place build¶ ↑
$ ./autogen.sh $ mkdir ../ruby-build $ cd ../ruby-build $ ../ruby-src/configure --prefix=$PWD/local $ make $ make install $ ./local/bin/ruby -e 'puts "Hello"' Hello
How to run the whole test suite¶ ↑
$ make check
It runs (about) three test suites:
-
make test
(a test suite for the interpreter core) -
make test-all
(for all builtin classes and libraries) -
make test-spec
(a conformance test suite for Ruby implementations) -
make test-bundler
(a test suite for the bundler examples)
How to run the test suite with log¶ ↑
$ make test OPTS=-v $ make test-all TESTS=-v $ make test-spec MSPECOPT=-Vfs
How to run a part of the test suite¶ ↑
Runs a directory¶ ↑
$ make test-all TESTS=test/rubygems $ make test-all TESTS=rubygems
Runs a file¶ ↑
$ make test-all TESTS=test/ruby/test_foo.rb $ make test-all TESTS=ruby/foo
Runs a test whose name includes test_bar¶ ↑
$ make test-all TESTS="test/ruby/test_foo.rb -n /test_bar/"
Runs a file or directory with GNU make¶ ↑
$ make test/ruby/test_foo.rb $ make test/ruby/test_foo.rb TESTOPTS="-n /test_bar/"
Runs a ruby-spec directory¶ ↑
$ make test-spec MSPECOPT=spec/ruby/core/foo
Runs a ruby-spec file¶ ↑
$ make test-spec MSPECOPT=spec/ruby/core/foo/bar_spec.rb
Runs a ruby-spec file or directory with GNU make¶ ↑
$ make spec/ruby/core/foo/bar_spec.rb
Runs a bundler spec file¶ ↑
$ make test-bundler BUNDLER_SPECS=commands/exec_spec.rb:58
How to measure coverage of C and Ruby code¶ ↑
You need to be able to use gcc (gcov) and lcov visualizer.
$ ./autogen.sh $ ./configure --enable-gcov $ make $ make update-coverage $ rm -f test-coverage.dat $ make test-all COVERAGE=true $ make lcov $ open lcov-out/index.html
If you need only C code coverage, you can remove COVERAGE=true
from the above process. You can also use gcov
command directly to get per-file coverage.
If you need only Ruby code coverage, you can remove --enable-gcov
. Note that test-coverage.dat
accumulates all runs of make test-all
. Make sure that you remove the file if you want to measure one test run.
You can see the coverage result of CI: rubyci.org/coverage
How to benchmark¶ ↑
see github.com/ruby/ruby/tree/master/benchmark#make-benchmark