The testing suite contains two main trees (plus translations for strings used in the shell scripts): the Bonsai tree and the POSIX tree: . ├── bonsai │   ├── test_env │   ├── dj.sh │   ├── false.sh │   ├── fop.sh │   ├── hru.sh │   ├── intcmp.sh │   ├── mm.sh │   ├── strcmp.sh │   └── true.sh ├── locales │   ├── en_US.UTF-8 │   └── tok ├── posix │   ├── bin │   │   ├── cat │   │   ├── false │   │   └── true │   └── posix_env ├── README └── test.sh The Bonsai tree tests the functionality of Harakit utilities for regressions and other issues relating to compliance to our standards of practice. The POSIX tree tests the use of Harakit utilities in place of the standard usage of POSIX utilities. These scripts test the ability of Harakit to comply to POSIX standards using its native utilities in shell scripts as a compatibility shim. Each shell script in the top directory should contain a set of tests for each POSIX utility and be named for that utility. The bin directory should contain a set of shim scripts which will be imported into the path as POSIX utilities. Each test will compare the behavior of the shim script to the real utility on the system. Currently, due to the limitations of POSIX shell quoting, a subset of argument parsing is supported: arguments containing characters from POSIX’s Portable Filename Character Set [0]. The bonsai/test_env and posix/posix_env files contain prerequisite shared environments for each of the tests. These scripts both contain lines which set the shell to write all commands run in them (-x) and to fail if any command fails (-e). See set(1p) for more information. Both sets of tests also inherit the environment set by the test.sh script, which sets the $BIN environment variable to the bin directory at the root of the project for easy and idiomatic access to the built Harakit binaries. When calling the POSIX test scripts, test.sh also sets the variable $realutil to be the absolute path to the currently tested utility’s counterpart on the system. [0] -- Copyright © 2024 Emma Tebibyte This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit .