#include <stdio.h>/* Break string in two parts to avoid buggy C compilers that ignore characters after nulls in strings. */char string1[] = "Testing distribution of nonprinting chars:\n\Should be 0177: \177 Should be 0377: \377 Should be 0212: \212.\n\Should be 0000: ";char string2[] = ".\n\This file is read by the `test-distribution' program.\n\If you change it, you will make that program fail.\n";char buf[300];/* Like `read' but keeps trying until it gets SIZE bytes or reaches eof. */intcool_read (fd, buf, size) int fd; char *buf; int size;{ int num, sofar = 0; while (1) { if ((num = read (fd, buf + sofar, size - sofar)) == 0) return sofar; else if (num < 0) return num; sofar += num; }}main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv;{ int fd; if (argc != 2) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s testfile\n", argv[0]); exit (2); } fd = open (argv[1], 0); if (fd < 0) { perror (argv[1]); exit (2); } if (cool_read (fd, buf, sizeof string1) != sizeof string1 || strcmp (buf, string1) || cool_read (fd, buf, sizeof string2) != sizeof string2 - 1 || strncmp (buf, string2, sizeof string2 - 1)) { fprintf (stderr, "Data in file `%s' has been damaged.\n\Most likely this means that many nonprinting characters\n\have been corrupted in the files of Emacs, and it will not work.\n", argv[1]); exit (2); } close (fd);#ifdef VMS exit (1); /* On VMS, success is 1. */#else exit (0);#endif}