/lab0-c

C Programming Lab: Assessing Your C Programming Skills

Primary LanguageCOtherNOASSERTION

lab0-c

Assessing Your C Programming Skills

This lab will give you practice in the style of programming you will need to be able to do proficiently, especially for the later assignments in the class. The material covered should all be review for you. Some of the skills tested are:

  • Explicit memory management, as required in C.
  • Creating and manipulating pointer-based data structures.
  • Working with strings.
  • Enhancing the performance of key operations by storing redundant information in data structures.
  • Implementing robust code that operates correctly with invalid arguments, including NULL pointers.

The lab involves implementing a queue, supporting both last-in, first-out (LIFO) and first-in-first-out (FIFO) queueing disciplines. The underlying data structure is a singly-linked list, enhanced to make some of the operations more efficient.

Prerequisites

There are a few prerequisites which must be installed on your machine before you will be able to build and run the autograders.

The following command will install all required and optional dependencies on Ubuntu Linux 18.04 or later:

$ sudo apt install build-essential git clang-format cppcheck aspell colordiff valgrind

Running the autograders

Before running the autograders, compile your code to create the testing program qtest

$ make

Check the correctness of your code, i.e. autograders:

$ make test

Check the example usage of qtest:

$ make check

Each step about command invocation will be shown accordingly.

Check the memory issue of your code:

$ make valgrind
  • Modify ./.valgrindrc to customize arguments of Valgrind
  • Use $ make clean or $ rm /tmp/qtest.* to clean the temporary files created by target valgrind

Extra options can be recognized by make:

  • VERBOSE: control the build verbosity. If VERBOSE=1, echo eacho command in build process.
  • SANITIER: enable sanitizer(s) directed build. At the moment, AddressSanitizer is supported.

Using qtest

qtest provides a command interpreter that can create and manipulate queues.

Run $ ./qtest -h to see the list of command-line options

When you execute $ ./qtest, it will give a command prompt cmd> . Type "help" to see a list of available commands.

Files

You will handing in these two files

  • queue.h : Modified version of declarations including new fields you want to introduce
  • queue.c : Modified version of queue code to fix deficiencies of original code

Tools for evaluating your queue code

  • Makefile : Builds the evaluation program qtest
  • README.md : This file
  • scripts/driver.py : The driver program, runs qtest on a standard set of traces

Helper files

  • console.{c,h} : Implements command-line interpreter for qtest
  • report.{c,h} : Implements printing of information at different levels of verbosity
  • harness.{c,h} : Customized version of malloc/free/strdup to provide rigorous testing framework
  • qtest.c : Code for qtest

Trace files

  • traces/trace-XX-CAT.cmd : Trace files used by the driver. These are input files for qtest.
    • They are short and simple.
    • We encourage to study them to see what tests are being performed.
    • XX is the trace number (1-15). CAT describes the general nature of the test.
  • traces/trace-eg.cmd : A simple, documented trace file to demonstrate the operation of qtest

License

lab0-cis released under the BSD 2 clause license. Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.