From fea20a9af56d5b7640ced14cde92fe6746291502 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Robillard Date: Sat, 12 May 2018 20:39:23 +0200 Subject: Use a fixed-size reader stack This improves performance, and makes the reader more suitable for embedded or network-facing applications, at the cost of requiring the user to specify a maximum stack size. --- tests/serd_test.c | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'tests') diff --git a/tests/serd_test.c b/tests/serd_test.c index a77bcbbb..d9fc1388 100644 --- a/tests/serd_test.c +++ b/tests/serd_test.c @@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ main(void) const char* msg = NULL; assert(!strcmp((msg = serd_strerror(SERD_SUCCESS)), "Success")); - for (int i = SERD_FAILURE; i <= SERD_ERR_INTERNAL; ++i) { + for (int i = SERD_FAILURE; i <= SERD_ERR_OVERFLOW; ++i) { msg = serd_strerror((SerdStatus)i); assert(strcmp(msg, "Success")); } @@ -570,7 +570,7 @@ main(void) ReaderTest rt = { 0, NULL }; SerdSink sink = { &rt, NULL, NULL, test_sink, NULL }; - SerdReader* reader = serd_reader_new(world, SERD_TURTLE, &sink); + SerdReader* reader = serd_reader_new(world, SERD_TURTLE, &sink, 4096); assert(reader); SerdNode* g = serd_node_new_uri("http://example.org/"); -- cgit v1.2.1