Relying on random numbers for verification and measurements is known to be problematic.
At some point we are bound to control the seed values -- and in the actual
application usage we want to record sequence seeding in the event log.
Some initial thoughts regarding this intricate topic.
* a low-ceremony drop-in replacement for rand() is required
* we want the ability to pick-up and control each and every usage eventually
* however, some usages explicitly require true randomness
* the ability to use separate streams of random-number generation is desirable
- reformat in Lumieara-GNU style
- use the Lumiera exceptions
- use Lumiera format-string frontend
- use lib/util
NOTE: I am the original author of the code introduced here,
and thus I can re-license it under GPL 2+
[http://yoshimi.sourceforge.net/ Yoshimi] is a software sound synthesizer,
derived from `ZynAddSubFx` and developed by an OpenSource community.
The Repository [https://github.com/Ichthyostega/yoshimi-test/ Yoshimi-test]
is used by the Yoshimi developers to maintain a suite of automated
acceptance tests for the Yoshimi application.
This task involves watching execution times to detect long-term performance trends,
which in turn requires to maintain time-series data in CSV files and to perfrom some
simple statistic calculations, including linear regression. Requiring any external
statistics package as dependency was not deemed adequate for such a simple task,
and thus a set of self-contained helper functions was created as a byproduct.
This task attaches an excerpt of the Yoshimi-test history with those helpers.