Test suite
Additional build requirements for running "make check"
The following additional software (in addition to the requirements at Building) is needed to run "make check". As for the packages listed at Building, the software packages are identified by their Debian / Ubuntu package names.
- csh (for some of the Berkeley DB tests)
- dejagnu (for many dejagnu-based tests)
- expect (needed by dejagnu)
- g++ (for some API sanity checks)
- portmap (for lib/rpc/unit-test)
- tcl (needed by expect)
- tcl-dev (to build some kadm5 test programs)
Known test suite issues
On Linux systems, sometimes the --disable-rpath
option to configure
is required in order to avoid problems with previously-installed versions of MIT krb5. Alternatively, you can run "make install" before "make check".
Prior to krb5-1.9, calls to krb5_c_random_os_entropy that pass the value 1 in the strong
argument (which causes the library to read from the strong OS random number source) can cause stalls and timeouts in the test suite. Changing those calls to pass 0 instead will reduce the stalls. Starting in krb5-1.9, we disable the reading of strong random numbers during tests. This is primarily a problem on Linux systems.
Prior to krb5-1.9, the test suite tripped a bug where Dejagnu breaks the autoloading required by modern versions of Tcl. This manifests as errors such as:
ERROR: (DejaGnu) proc "::tcl::tm::UnknownHandler ::tclPkgUnknown msgcat 1.4" does not exist.
The Dejagnu maintainers are aware of this problem (http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/dejagnu/2011-03/msg00002.html), but as of June 2011 there doesn't seem to be a release containing the fix. Since krb5-1.9, the offending piece of Tcl code (clock format [clock seconds]
) is no longer used.
If an existing kdc.conf exists in the "installed" location, it can disrupt the automated tests, especially if it contains syntax errors.
On older Debian or Ubuntu systems, a bug in expect
could cause stalls in the dejagnu parts of the test suite. It is documented at http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=421187. Current stable releases of Debian and Ubuntu no longer have an affected version of the expect
package.