From 76cb841cb886eef6b3bee341a2266c76578724ad Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Mon, 6 May 2024 03:02:30 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 4.19.249. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- tools/testing/ktest/compare-ktest-sample.pl | 33 + tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl | 770 ++++ tools/testing/ktest/examples/README | 32 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/crosstests.conf | 225 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/bisect.conf | 90 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/defaults.conf | 157 + .../testing/ktest/examples/include/min-config.conf | 60 + .../testing/ktest/examples/include/patchcheck.conf | 111 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/tests.conf | 74 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/kvm.conf | 92 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/snowball.conf | 53 + tools/testing/ktest/examples/test.conf | 62 + tools/testing/ktest/ktest.pl | 4425 ++++++++++++++++++++ tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf | 1348 ++++++ 14 files changed, 7532 insertions(+) create mode 100755 tools/testing/ktest/compare-ktest-sample.pl create mode 100755 tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/README create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/crosstests.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/bisect.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/defaults.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/min-config.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/patchcheck.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/tests.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/kvm.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/snowball.conf create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/examples/test.conf create mode 100755 tools/testing/ktest/ktest.pl create mode 100644 tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf (limited to 'tools/testing/ktest') diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/compare-ktest-sample.pl b/tools/testing/ktest/compare-ktest-sample.pl new file mode 100755 index 000000000..ebea21d0a --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/compare-ktest-sample.pl @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env perl +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +open (IN,"ktest.pl"); +while () { + # hashes are now used + if (/\$opt\{"?([A-Z].*?)(\[.*\])?"?\}/ || + /^\s*"?([A-Z].*?)"?\s*=>\s*/ || + /set_test_option\("(.*?)"/) { + $opt{$1} = 1; + } +} +close IN; + +open (IN, "sample.conf"); +while () { + if (/^\s*#?\s*([A-Z]\S*)\s*=/) { + $samp{$1} = 1; + } +} +close IN; + +foreach $opt (keys %opt) { + if (!defined($samp{$opt})) { + print "opt = $opt\n"; + } +} + +foreach $samp (keys %samp) { + if (!defined($opt{$samp})) { + print "samp = $samp\n"; + } +} diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl b/tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl new file mode 100755 index 000000000..b28feea7c --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl @@ -0,0 +1,770 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl -w +# +# Copyright 2015 - Steven Rostedt, Red Hat Inc. +# Copyright 2017 - Steven Rostedt, VMware, Inc. +# +# Licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL License version 2 +# + +# usage: +# config-bisect.pl [options] good-config bad-config [good|bad] +# + +# Compares a good config to a bad config, then takes half of the diffs +# and produces a config that is somewhere between the good config and +# the bad config. That is, the resulting config will start with the +# good config and will try to make half of the differences of between +# the good and bad configs match the bad config. It tries because of +# dependencies between the two configs it may not be able to change +# exactly half of the configs that are different between the two config +# files. + +# Here's a normal way to use it: +# +# $ cd /path/to/linux/kernel +# $ config-bisect.pl /path/to/good/config /path/to/bad/config + +# This will now pull in good config (blowing away .config in that directory +# so do not make that be one of the good or bad configs), and then +# build the config with "make oldconfig" to make sure it matches the +# current kernel. It will then store the configs in that result for +# the good config. It does the same for the bad config as well. +# The algorithm will run, merging half of the differences between +# the two configs and building them with "make oldconfig" to make sure +# the result changes (dependencies may reset changes the tool had made). +# It then copies the result of its good config to /path/to/good/config.tmp +# and the bad config to /path/to/bad/config.tmp (just appends ".tmp" to the +# files passed in). And the ".config" that you should test will be in +# directory + +# After the first run, determine if the result is good or bad then +# run the same command appending the result + +# For good results: +# $ config-bisect.pl /path/to/good/config /path/to/bad/config good + +# For bad results: +# $ config-bisect.pl /path/to/good/config /path/to/bad/config bad + +# Do not change the good-config or bad-config, config-bisect.pl will +# copy the good-config to a temp file with the same name as good-config +# but with a ".tmp" after it. It will do the same with the bad-config. + +# If "good" or "bad" is not stated at the end, it will copy the good and +# bad configs to the .tmp versions. If a .tmp version already exists, it will +# warn before writing over them (-r will not warn, and just write over them). +# If the last config is labeled "good", then it will copy it to the good .tmp +# version. If the last config is labeled "bad", it will copy it to the bad +# .tmp version. It will continue this until it can not merge the two any more +# without the result being equal to either the good or bad .tmp configs. + +my $start = 0; +my $val = ""; + +my $pwd = `pwd`; +chomp $pwd; +my $tree = $pwd; +my $build; + +my $output_config; +my $reset_bisect; + +sub usage { + print << "EOF" + +usage: config-bisect.pl [-l linux-tree][-b build-dir] good-config bad-config [good|bad] + -l [optional] define location of linux-tree (default is current directory) + -b [optional] define location to build (O=build-dir) (default is linux-tree) + good-config the config that is considered good + bad-config the config that does not work + "good" add this if the last run produced a good config + "bad" add this if the last run produced a bad config + If "good" or "bad" is not specified, then it is the start of a new bisect + + Note, each run will create copy of good and bad configs with ".tmp" appended. + +EOF +; + + exit(-1); +} + +sub doprint { + print @_; +} + +sub dodie { + doprint "CRITICAL FAILURE... ", @_, "\n"; + + die @_, "\n"; +} + +sub expand_path { + my ($file) = @_; + + if ($file =~ m,^/,) { + return $file; + } + return "$pwd/$file"; +} + +sub read_prompt { + my ($cancel, $prompt) = @_; + + my $ans; + + for (;;) { + if ($cancel) { + print "$prompt [y/n/C] "; + } else { + print "$prompt [y/N] "; + } + $ans = ; + chomp $ans; + if ($ans =~ /^\s*$/) { + if ($cancel) { + $ans = "c"; + } else { + $ans = "n"; + } + } + last if ($ans =~ /^y$/i || $ans =~ /^n$/i); + if ($cancel) { + last if ($ans =~ /^c$/i); + print "Please answer either 'y', 'n' or 'c'.\n"; + } else { + print "Please answer either 'y' or 'n'.\n"; + } + } + if ($ans =~ /^c/i) { + exit; + } + if ($ans !~ /^y$/i) { + return 0; + } + return 1; +} + +sub read_yn { + my ($prompt) = @_; + + return read_prompt 0, $prompt; +} + +sub read_ync { + my ($prompt) = @_; + + return read_prompt 1, $prompt; +} + +sub run_command { + my ($command, $redirect) = @_; + my $start_time; + my $end_time; + my $dord = 0; + my $pid; + + $start_time = time; + + doprint("$command ... "); + + $pid = open(CMD, "$command 2>&1 |") or + dodie "unable to exec $command"; + + if (defined($redirect)) { + open (RD, ">$redirect") or + dodie "failed to write to redirect $redirect"; + $dord = 1; + } + + while () { + print RD if ($dord); + } + + waitpid($pid, 0); + my $failed = $?; + + close(CMD); + close(RD) if ($dord); + + $end_time = time; + my $delta = $end_time - $start_time; + + if ($delta == 1) { + doprint "[1 second] "; + } else { + doprint "[$delta seconds] "; + } + + if ($failed) { + doprint "FAILED!\n"; + } else { + doprint "SUCCESS\n"; + } + + return !$failed; +} + +###### CONFIG BISECT ###### + +# config_ignore holds the configs that were set (or unset) for +# a good config and we will ignore these configs for the rest +# of a config bisect. These configs stay as they were. +my %config_ignore; + +# config_set holds what all configs were set as. +my %config_set; + +# config_off holds the set of configs that the bad config had disabled. +# We need to record them and set them in the .config when running +# olddefconfig, because olddefconfig keeps the defaults. +my %config_off; + +# config_off_tmp holds a set of configs to turn off for now +my @config_off_tmp; + +# config_list is the set of configs that are being tested +my %config_list; +my %null_config; + +my %dependency; + +my $make; + +sub make_oldconfig { + + if (!run_command "$make olddefconfig") { + # Perhaps olddefconfig doesn't exist in this version of the kernel + # try oldnoconfig + doprint "olddefconfig failed, trying make oldnoconfig\n"; + if (!run_command "$make oldnoconfig") { + doprint "oldnoconfig failed, trying yes '' | make oldconfig\n"; + # try a yes '' | oldconfig + run_command "yes '' | $make oldconfig" or + dodie "failed make config oldconfig"; + } + } +} + +sub assign_configs { + my ($hash, $config) = @_; + + doprint "Reading configs from $config\n"; + + open (IN, $config) + or dodie "Failed to read $config"; + + while () { + chomp; + if (/^((CONFIG\S*)=.*)/) { + ${$hash}{$2} = $1; + } elsif (/^(# (CONFIG\S*) is not set)/) { + ${$hash}{$2} = $1; + } + } + + close(IN); +} + +sub process_config_ignore { + my ($config) = @_; + + assign_configs \%config_ignore, $config; +} + +sub get_dependencies { + my ($config) = @_; + + my $arr = $dependency{$config}; + if (!defined($arr)) { + return (); + } + + my @deps = @{$arr}; + + foreach my $dep (@{$arr}) { + print "ADD DEP $dep\n"; + @deps = (@deps, get_dependencies $dep); + } + + return @deps; +} + +sub save_config { + my ($pc, $file) = @_; + + my %configs = %{$pc}; + + doprint "Saving configs into $file\n"; + + open(OUT, ">$file") or dodie "Can not write to $file"; + + foreach my $config (keys %configs) { + print OUT "$configs{$config}\n"; + } + close(OUT); +} + +sub create_config { + my ($name, $pc) = @_; + + doprint "Creating old config from $name configs\n"; + + save_config $pc, $output_config; + + make_oldconfig; +} + +# compare two config hashes, and return configs with different vals. +# It returns B's config values, but you can use A to see what A was. +sub diff_config_vals { + my ($pa, $pb) = @_; + + # crappy Perl way to pass in hashes. + my %a = %{$pa}; + my %b = %{$pb}; + + my %ret; + + foreach my $item (keys %a) { + if (defined($b{$item}) && $b{$item} ne $a{$item}) { + $ret{$item} = $b{$item}; + } + } + + return %ret; +} + +# compare two config hashes and return the configs in B but not A +sub diff_configs { + my ($pa, $pb) = @_; + + my %ret; + + # crappy Perl way to pass in hashes. + my %a = %{$pa}; + my %b = %{$pb}; + + foreach my $item (keys %b) { + if (!defined($a{$item})) { + $ret{$item} = $b{$item}; + } + } + + return %ret; +} + +# return if two configs are equal or not +# 0 is equal +1 b has something a does not +# +1 if a and b have a different item. +# -1 if a has something b does not +sub compare_configs { + my ($pa, $pb) = @_; + + my %ret; + + # crappy Perl way to pass in hashes. + my %a = %{$pa}; + my %b = %{$pb}; + + foreach my $item (keys %b) { + if (!defined($a{$item})) { + return 1; + } + if ($a{$item} ne $b{$item}) { + return 1; + } + } + + foreach my $item (keys %a) { + if (!defined($b{$item})) { + return -1; + } + } + + return 0; +} + +sub process_failed { + my ($config) = @_; + + doprint "\n\n***************************************\n"; + doprint "Found bad config: $config\n"; + doprint "***************************************\n\n"; +} + +sub process_new_config { + my ($tc, $nc, $gc, $bc) = @_; + + my %tmp_config = %{$tc}; + my %good_configs = %{$gc}; + my %bad_configs = %{$bc}; + + my %new_configs; + + my $runtest = 1; + my $ret; + + create_config "tmp_configs", \%tmp_config; + assign_configs \%new_configs, $output_config; + + $ret = compare_configs \%new_configs, \%bad_configs; + if (!$ret) { + doprint "New config equals bad config, try next test\n"; + $runtest = 0; + } + + if ($runtest) { + $ret = compare_configs \%new_configs, \%good_configs; + if (!$ret) { + doprint "New config equals good config, try next test\n"; + $runtest = 0; + } + } + + %{$nc} = %new_configs; + + return $runtest; +} + +sub convert_config { + my ($config) = @_; + + if ($config =~ /^# (.*) is not set/) { + $config = "$1=n"; + } + + $config =~ s/^CONFIG_//; + return $config; +} + +sub print_config { + my ($sym, $config) = @_; + + $config = convert_config $config; + doprint "$sym$config\n"; +} + +sub print_config_compare { + my ($good_config, $bad_config) = @_; + + $good_config = convert_config $good_config; + $bad_config = convert_config $bad_config; + + my $good_value = $good_config; + my $bad_value = $bad_config; + $good_value =~ s/(.*)=//; + my $config = $1; + + $bad_value =~ s/.*=//; + + doprint " $config $good_value -> $bad_value\n"; +} + +# Pass in: +# $phalf: half of the configs names you want to add +# $oconfigs: The orginial configs to start with +# $sconfigs: The source to update $oconfigs with (from $phalf) +# $which: The name of which half that is updating (top / bottom) +# $type: The name of the source type (good / bad) +sub make_half { + my ($phalf, $oconfigs, $sconfigs, $which, $type) = @_; + + my @half = @{$phalf}; + my %orig_configs = %{$oconfigs}; + my %source_configs = %{$sconfigs}; + + my %tmp_config = %orig_configs; + + doprint "Settings bisect with $which half of $type configs:\n"; + foreach my $item (@half) { + doprint "Updating $item to $source_configs{$item}\n"; + $tmp_config{$item} = $source_configs{$item}; + } + + return %tmp_config; +} + +sub run_config_bisect { + my ($pgood, $pbad) = @_; + + my %good_configs = %{$pgood}; + my %bad_configs = %{$pbad}; + + my %diff_configs = diff_config_vals \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + my %b_configs = diff_configs \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + my %g_configs = diff_configs \%bad_configs, \%good_configs; + + # diff_arr is what is in both good and bad but are different (y->n) + my @diff_arr = keys %diff_configs; + my $len_diff = $#diff_arr + 1; + + # b_arr is what is in bad but not in good (has depends) + my @b_arr = keys %b_configs; + my $len_b = $#b_arr + 1; + + # g_arr is what is in good but not in bad + my @g_arr = keys %g_configs; + my $len_g = $#g_arr + 1; + + my $runtest = 0; + my %new_configs; + my $ret; + + # Look at the configs that are different between good and bad. + # This does not include those that depend on other configs + # (configs depending on other configs that are not set would + # not show up even as a "# CONFIG_FOO is not set" + + + doprint "# of configs to check: $len_diff\n"; + doprint "# of configs showing only in good: $len_g\n"; + doprint "# of configs showing only in bad: $len_b\n"; + + if ($len_diff > 0) { + # Now test for different values + + doprint "Configs left to check:\n"; + doprint " Good Config\t\t\tBad Config\n"; + doprint " -----------\t\t\t----------\n"; + foreach my $item (@diff_arr) { + doprint " $good_configs{$item}\t$bad_configs{$item}\n"; + } + + my $half = int($#diff_arr / 2); + my @tophalf = @diff_arr[0 .. $half]; + + doprint "Set tmp config to be good config with some bad config values\n"; + + my %tmp_config = make_half \@tophalf, \%good_configs, + \%bad_configs, "top", "bad"; + + $runtest = process_new_config \%tmp_config, \%new_configs, + \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + + if (!$runtest) { + doprint "Set tmp config to be bad config with some good config values\n"; + + my %tmp_config = make_half \@tophalf, \%bad_configs, + \%good_configs, "top", "good"; + + $runtest = process_new_config \%tmp_config, \%new_configs, + \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + } + } + + if (!$runtest && $len_diff > 0) { + # do the same thing, but this time with bottom half + + my $half = int($#diff_arr / 2); + my @bottomhalf = @diff_arr[$half+1 .. $#diff_arr]; + + doprint "Set tmp config to be good config with some bad config values\n"; + + my %tmp_config = make_half \@bottomhalf, \%good_configs, + \%bad_configs, "bottom", "bad"; + + $runtest = process_new_config \%tmp_config, \%new_configs, + \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + + if (!$runtest) { + doprint "Set tmp config to be bad config with some good config values\n"; + + my %tmp_config = make_half \@bottomhalf, \%bad_configs, + \%good_configs, "bottom", "good"; + + $runtest = process_new_config \%tmp_config, \%new_configs, + \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; + } + } + + if ($runtest) { + make_oldconfig; + doprint "READY TO TEST .config IN $build\n"; + return 0; + } + + doprint "\n%%%%%%%% FAILED TO FIND SINGLE BAD CONFIG %%%%%%%%\n"; + doprint "Hmm, can't make any more changes without making good == bad?\n"; + doprint "Difference between good (+) and bad (-)\n"; + + foreach my $item (keys %bad_configs) { + if (!defined($good_configs{$item})) { + print_config "-", $bad_configs{$item}; + } + } + + foreach my $item (keys %good_configs) { + next if (!defined($bad_configs{$item})); + if ($good_configs{$item} ne $bad_configs{$item}) { + print_config_compare $good_configs{$item}, $bad_configs{$item}; + } + } + + foreach my $item (keys %good_configs) { + if (!defined($bad_configs{$item})) { + print_config "+", $good_configs{$item}; + } + } + return -1; +} + +sub config_bisect { + my ($good_config, $bad_config) = @_; + my $ret; + + my %good_configs; + my %bad_configs; + my %tmp_configs; + + doprint "Run good configs through make oldconfig\n"; + assign_configs \%tmp_configs, $good_config; + create_config "$good_config", \%tmp_configs; + assign_configs \%good_configs, $output_config; + + doprint "Run bad configs through make oldconfig\n"; + assign_configs \%tmp_configs, $bad_config; + create_config "$bad_config", \%tmp_configs; + assign_configs \%bad_configs, $output_config; + + save_config \%good_configs, $good_config; + save_config \%bad_configs, $bad_config; + + return run_config_bisect \%good_configs, \%bad_configs; +} + +while ($#ARGV >= 0) { + if ($ARGV[0] !~ m/^-/) { + last; + } + my $opt = shift @ARGV; + + if ($opt eq "-b") { + $val = shift @ARGV; + if (!defined($val)) { + die "-b requires value\n"; + } + $build = $val; + } + + elsif ($opt eq "-l") { + $val = shift @ARGV; + if (!defined($val)) { + die "-l requires value\n"; + } + $tree = $val; + } + + elsif ($opt eq "-r") { + $reset_bisect = 1; + } + + elsif ($opt eq "-h") { + usage; + } + + else { + die "Unknow option $opt\n"; + } +} + +$build = $tree if (!defined($build)); + +$tree = expand_path $tree; +$build = expand_path $build; + +if ( ! -d $tree ) { + die "$tree not a directory\n"; +} + +if ( ! -d $build ) { + die "$build not a directory\n"; +} + +usage if $#ARGV < 1; + +if ($#ARGV == 1) { + $start = 1; +} elsif ($#ARGV == 2) { + $val = $ARGV[2]; + if ($val ne "good" && $val ne "bad") { + die "Unknown command '$val', bust be either \"good\" or \"bad\"\n"; + } +} else { + usage; +} + +my $good_start = expand_path $ARGV[0]; +my $bad_start = expand_path $ARGV[1]; + +my $good = "$good_start.tmp"; +my $bad = "$bad_start.tmp"; + +$make = "make"; + +if ($build ne $tree) { + $make = "make O=$build" +} + +$output_config = "$build/.config"; + +if ($start) { + if ( ! -f $good_start ) { + die "$good_start not found\n"; + } + if ( ! -f $bad_start ) { + die "$bad_start not found\n"; + } + if ( -f $good || -f $bad ) { + my $p = ""; + + if ( -f $good ) { + $p = "$good exists\n"; + } + + if ( -f $bad ) { + $p = "$p$bad exists\n"; + } + + if (!defined($reset_bisect)) { + if (!read_yn "${p}Overwrite and start new bisect anyway?") { + exit (-1); + } + } + } + run_command "cp $good_start $good" or die "failed to copy to $good\n"; + run_command "cp $bad_start $bad" or die "faield to copy to $bad\n"; +} else { + if ( ! -f $good ) { + die "Can not find file $good\n"; + } + if ( ! -f $bad ) { + die "Can not find file $bad\n"; + } + if ($val eq "good") { + run_command "cp $output_config $good" or die "failed to copy $config to $good\n"; + } elsif ($val eq "bad") { + run_command "cp $output_config $bad" or die "failed to copy $config to $bad\n"; + } +} + +chdir $tree || die "can't change directory to $tree"; + +my $ret = config_bisect $good, $bad; + +if (!$ret) { + exit(0); +} + +if ($ret > 0) { + doprint "Cleaning temp files\n"; + run_command "rm $good"; + run_command "rm $bad"; + exit(1); +} else { + doprint "See good and bad configs for details:\n"; + doprint "good: $good\n"; + doprint "bad: $bad\n"; + doprint "%%%%%%%% FAILED TO FIND SINGLE BAD CONFIG %%%%%%%%\n"; +} +exit(2); diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/README b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/README new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a12d295a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/README @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +This directory contains example configs to use ktest for various tasks. +The configs still need to be customized for your environment, but it +is broken up by task which makes it easier to understand how to set up +ktest. + +The configs are based off of real working configs but have been modified +and commented to show more generic use cases that are more helpful for +developers. + +crosstests.conf - this config shows an example of testing a git repo against + lots of different architectures. It only does build tests, but makes + it easy to compile test different archs. You can download the arch + cross compilers from: + http://kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/ + +test.conf - A generic example of a config. This is based on an actual config + used to perform real testing. + +kvm.conf - A example of a config that is used to test a virtual guest running + on a host. + +snowball.conf - An example config that was used to demo ktest.pl against + a snowball ARM board. + +include/ - The include directory holds default configs that can be + included into other configs. This is a real use example that shows how + to reuse configs for various machines or set ups. The files here + are included by other config files, where the other config files define + options and variables that will make the included config work for the + given environment. + + diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/crosstests.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/crosstests.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6907f3259 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/crosstests.conf @@ -0,0 +1,225 @@ +# +# Example config for cross compiling +# +# In this config, it is expected that the tool chains from: +# +# http://kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/ +# +# running on a x86_64 system have been downloaded and installed into: +# +# /usr/local/ +# +# such that the compiler binaries are something like: +# +# /usr/local/gcc-4.5.2-nolibc/mips-linux/bin/mips-linux-gcc +# +# Some of the archs will use gcc-4.5.1 instead of gcc-4.5.2 +# this config uses variables to differentiate them. +# +# Comments describe some of the options, but full descriptions of +# options are described in the samples.conf file. + +# ${PWD} is defined by ktest.pl to be the directory that the user +# was in when they executed ktest.pl. It may be better to hardcode the +# path name here. THIS_DIR is the variable used through out the config file +# in case you want to change it. + +THIS_DIR := ${PWD} + +# Update the BUILD_DIR option to the location of your git repo you want to test. +BUILD_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/linux.git + +# The build will go into this directory. It will be created when you run the test. +OUTPUT_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/cross-compile + +# The build will be compiled with -j8 +BUILD_OPTIONS = -j8 + +# The test will not stop when it hits a failure. +DIE_ON_FAILURE = 0 + +# If you want to have ktest.pl store the failure somewhere, uncomment this option +# and change the directory where ktest should store the failures. +#STORE_FAILURES = ${THIS_DIR}/failures + +# The log file is stored in the OUTPUT_DIR called cross.log +# If you enable this, you need to create the OUTPUT_DIR. It wont be created for you. +LOG_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR}/cross.log + +# The log file will be cleared each time you run ktest. +CLEAR_LOG = 1 + +# As some archs do not build with the defconfig, they have been marked +# to be ignored. If you want to test them anyway, change DO_FAILED to 1. +# If a test that has been marked as DO_FAILED passes, then you should change +# that test to be DO_DEFAULT + +DO_FAILED := 0 +DO_DEFAULT := 1 + +# By setting both DO_FAILED and DO_DEFAULT to zero, you can pick a single +# arch that you want to test. (uncomment RUN and chose your arch) +#RUN := arm + +# At the bottom of the config file exists a bisect test. You can update that +# test and set DO_FAILED and DO_DEFAULT to zero, and uncomment this variable +# to run the bisect on the arch. +#RUN := bisect + +# By default all tests will be running gcc 4.5.2. Some tests are using 4.5.1 +# and they select that in the test. +# Note: GCC_VER is declared as on option and not a variable ('=' instead of ':=') +# This is important. A variable is used only in the config file and if it is set +# it stays that way for the rest of the config file until it is change again. +# Here we want GCC_VER to remain persistent and change for each test, as it is used in +# the MAKE_CMD. By using '=' instead of ':=' we achieve our goal. + +GCC_VER = 4.5.2 +MAKE_CMD = PATH=/usr/local/gcc-${GCC_VER}-nolibc/${CROSS}/bin:$PATH CROSS_COMPILE=${CROSS}- make ARCH=${ARCH} + +# all tests are only doing builds. +TEST_TYPE = build + +# If you want to add configs on top of the defconfig, you can add those configs into +# the add-config file and uncomment this option. This is useful if you want to test +# all cross compiles with PREEMPT set, or TRACING on, etc. +#ADD_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/add-config + +# All tests are using defconfig +BUILD_TYPE = defconfig + +# The test names will have the arch and cross compiler used. This will be shown in +# the results. +TEST_NAME = ${ARCH} ${CROSS} + +# alpha +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == alpha || ${DO_DEFAULT} +# Notice that CROSS and ARCH are also options and not variables (again '=' instead +# of ':='). This is because TEST_NAME and MAKE_CMD wil use them for each test. +# Only options are available during runs. Variables are only present in parsing the +# config file. +CROSS = alpha-linux +ARCH = alpha + +# arm +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == arm || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi +ARCH = arm + +# ia64 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == ia64 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = ia64-linux +ARCH = ia64 + +# m68k fails with error? +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == m68k || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = m68k-linux +ARCH = m68k + +# mips64 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == mips || ${RUN} == mips64 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = mips64-linux +ARCH = mips + +# mips32 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == mips || ${RUN} == mips32 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = mips-linux +ARCH = mips + +# parisc64 failed? +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == hppa || ${RUN} == hppa64 || ${DO_FAILED} +CROSS = hppa64-linux +ARCH = parisc + +# parisc +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == hppa || ${RUN} == hppa32 || ${DO_FAILED} +CROSS = hppa-linux +ARCH = parisc + +# ppc +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == ppc || ${RUN} == ppc32 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = powerpc-linux +ARCH = powerpc + +# ppc64 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == ppc || ${RUN} == ppc64 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = powerpc64-linux +ARCH = powerpc + +# s390 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == s390 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = s390x-linux +ARCH = s390 + +# sh +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == sh || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = sh4-linux +ARCH = sh + +# sparc64 +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == sparc || ${RUN} == sparc64 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = sparc64-linux +ARCH = sparc64 + +# sparc +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == sparc || ${RUN} == sparc32 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +CROSS = sparc-linux +ARCH = sparc + +# xtensa failed +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == xtensa || ${DO_FAILED} +CROSS = xtensa-linux +ARCH = xtensa + +# UML +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == uml || ${DO_DEFAULT} +MAKE_CMD = make ARCH=um SUBARCH=x86_64 +ARCH = uml +CROSS = + +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == x86 || ${RUN} == i386 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +MAKE_CMD = make ARCH=i386 +ARCH = i386 +CROSS = + +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == x86 || ${RUN} == x86_64 || ${DO_DEFAULT} +MAKE_CMD = make ARCH=x86_64 +ARCH = x86_64 +CROSS = + +################################# + +# This is a bisect if needed. You need to give it a MIN_CONFIG that +# will be the config file it uses. Basically, just copy the created defconfig +# for the arch someplace and point MIN_CONFIG to it. +TEST_START IF ${RUN} == bisect +MIN_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/min-config +CROSS = s390x-linux +ARCH = s390 +TEST_TYPE = bisect +BISECT_TYPE = build +BISECT_GOOD = v3.1 +BISECT_BAD = v3.2 +CHECKOUT = v3.2 + +################################# + +# These defaults are needed to keep ktest.pl from complaining. They are +# ignored because the test does not go pass the build. No install or +# booting of the target images. + +DEFAULTS +MACHINE = crosstest +SSH_USER = root +BUILD_TARGET = cross +TARGET_IMAGE = image +POWER_CYCLE = cycle +CONSOLE = console +LOCALVERSION = version +GRUB_MENU = grub + +REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 +REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 0 + diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/bisect.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/bisect.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..009bea65b --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/bisect.conf @@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ +# +# This example shows the bisect tests (git bisect and config bisect) +# + + +# The config that includes this file may define a RUN_TEST +# variable that will tell this config what test to run. +# (what to set the TEST option to). +# +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED RUN_TEST +# Requires that hackbench is in the PATH +RUN_TEST := ${SSH} hackbench 50 + + +# Set TEST to 'bisect' to do a normal git bisect. You need +# to modify the options below to make it bisect the exact +# commits you are interested in. +# +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == bisect +TEST_TYPE = bisect +# You must set the commit that was considered good (git bisect good) +BISECT_GOOD = v3.3 +# You must set the commit that was considered bad (git bisect bad) +BISECT_BAD = HEAD +# It's best to specify the branch to checkout before starting the bisect. +CHECKOUT = origin/master +# This can be build, boot, or test. Here we are doing a bisect +# that requires to run a test to know if the bisect was good or bad. +# The test should exit with 0 on good, non-zero for bad. But see +# the BISECT_RET_* options in samples.conf to override this. +BISECT_TYPE = test +TEST = ${RUN_TEST} +# It is usually a good idea to confirm that the GOOD and the BAD +# commits are truly good and bad respectively. Having BISECT_CHECK +# set to 1 will check both that the good commit works and the bad +# commit fails. If you only want to check one or the other, +# set BISECT_CHECK to 'good' or to 'bad'. +BISECT_CHECK = 1 +#BISECT_CHECK = good +#BISECT_CHECK = bad + +# Usually it's a good idea to specify the exact config you +# want to use throughout the entire bisect. Here we placed +# it in the directory we called ktest.pl from and named it +# 'config-bisect'. +MIN_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config-bisect +# By default, if we are doing a BISECT_TYPE = test run but the +# build or boot fails, ktest.pl will do a 'git bisect skip'. +# Uncomment the below option to make ktest stop testing on such +# an error. +#BISECT_SKIP = 0 +# Now if you had BISECT_SKIP = 0 and the test fails, you can +# examine what happened and then do 'git bisect log > /tmp/replay' +# Set BISECT_REPLAY to /tmp/replay and ktest.pl will run the +# 'git bisect replay /tmp/replay' before continuing the bisect test. +#BISECT_REPLAY = /tmp/replay +# If you used BISECT_REPLAY after the bisect test failed, you may +# not want to continue the bisect on that commit that failed. +# By setting BISECT_START to a new commit. ktest.pl will checkout +# that commit after it has performed the 'git bisect replay' but +# before it continues running the bisect test. +#BISECT_START = 2545eb6198e7e1ec50daa0cfc64a4cdfecf24ec9 + +# Now if you don't trust ktest.pl to make the decisions for you, then +# set BISECT_MANUAL to 1. This will cause ktest.pl not to decide +# if the commit was good or bad. Instead, it will ask you to tell +# it if the current commit was good. In the mean time, you could +# take the result, load it on any machine you want. Run several tests, +# or whatever you feel like. Then, when you are happy, you can tell +# ktest if you think it was good or not and ktest.pl will continue +# the git bisect. You can even change what commit it is currently at. +#BISECT_MANUAL = 1 + + +# One of the unique tests that ktest does is the config bisect. +# Currently (which hopefully will be fixed soon), the bad config +# must be a superset of the good config. This is because it only +# searches for a config that causes the target to fail. If the +# good config is not a subset of the bad config, or if the target +# fails because of a lack of a config, then it will not find +# the config for you. +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == config-bisect +TEST_TYPE = config_bisect +# set to build, boot, test +CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE = boot +# Set the config that is considered bad. +CONFIG_BISECT = ${THIS_DIR}/config-bad +# This config is optional. By default it uses the +# MIN_CONFIG as the good config. +CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD = ${THIS_DIR}/config-good diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/defaults.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/defaults.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..63a1a83f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/defaults.conf @@ -0,0 +1,157 @@ +# This file holds defaults for most the tests. It defines the options that +# are most common to tests that are likely to be shared. +# +# Note, after including this file, a config file may override any option +# with a DEFAULTS OVERRIDE section. +# + +# For those cases that use the same machine to boot a 64 bit +# and a 32 bit version. The MACHINE is the DNS name to get to the +# box (usually different if it was 64 bit or 32 bit) but the +# BOX here is defined as a variable that will be the name of the box +# itself. It is useful for calling scripts that will power cycle +# the box, as only one script needs to be created to power cycle +# even though the box itself has multiple operating systems on it. +# By default, BOX and MACHINE are the same. + +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED BOX +BOX := ${MACHINE} + + +# Consider each box as 64 bit box, unless the config including this file +# has defined BITS = 32 + +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED BITS +BITS := 64 + + +DEFAULTS + +# THIS_DIR is used through out the configs and defaults to ${PWD} which +# is the directory that ktest.pl was called from. + +THIS_DIR := ${PWD} + + +# to organize your configs, having each machine save their configs +# into a separate directly is useful. +CONFIG_DIR := ${THIS_DIR}/configs/${MACHINE} + +# Reset the log before running each test. +CLEAR_LOG = 1 + +# As installing kernels usually requires root privilege, default the +# user on the target as root. It is also required that the target +# allows ssh to root from the host without asking for a password. + +SSH_USER = root + +# For accesing the machine, we will ssh to root@machine. +SSH := ssh ${SSH_USER}@${MACHINE} + +# Update this. The default here is ktest will ssh to the target box +# and run a script called 'run-test' located on that box. +TEST = ${SSH} run-test + +# Point build dir to the git repo you use +BUILD_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/linux.git + +# Each machine will have its own output build directory. +OUTPUT_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/build/${MACHINE} + +# Yes this config is focused on x86 (but ktest works for other archs too) +BUILD_TARGET = arch/x86/boot/bzImage +TARGET_IMAGE = /boot/vmlinuz-test + +# have directory for the scripts to reboot and power cycle the boxes +SCRIPTS_DIR := ${THIS_DIR}/scripts + +# You can have each box/machine have a script to power cycle it. +# Name your script -cycle. +POWER_CYCLE = ${SCRIPTS_DIR}/${BOX}-cycle + +# This script is used to power off the box. +POWER_OFF = ${SCRIPTS_DIR}/${BOX}-poweroff + +# Keep your test kernels separate from your other kernels. +LOCALVERSION = -test + +# The /boot/grub/menu.lst is searched for the line: +# title Test Kernel +# and ktest will use that kernel to reboot into. +# For grub2 or other boot loaders, you need to set BOOT_TYPE +# to 'script' and define other ways to load the kernel. +# See snowball.conf example. +# +GRUB_MENU = Test Kernel + +# The kernel build will use this option. +BUILD_OPTIONS = -j8 + +# Keeping the log file with the output dir is convenient. +LOG_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR}/${MACHINE}.log + +# Each box should have their own minum configuration +# See min-config.conf +MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-min + +# For things like randconfigs, there may be configs you find that +# are already broken, or there may be some configs that you always +# want set. Uncomment ADD_CONFIG and point it to the make config files +# that set the configs you want to keep on (or off) in your build. +# ADD_CONFIG is usually something to add configs to all machines, +# where as, MIN_CONFIG is specific per machine. +#ADD_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config-broken ${THIS_DIR}/config-general + +# To speed up reboots for bisects and patchcheck, instead of +# waiting 60 seconds for the console to be idle, if this line is +# seen in the console output, ktest will know the good kernel has +# finished rebooting and it will be able to continue the tests. +REBOOT_SUCCESS_LINE = ${MACHINE} login: + +# The following is different ways to end the test. +# by setting the variable REBOOT to: none, error, fail or +# something else, ktest will power cycle or reboot the target box +# at the end of the tests. +# +# REBOOT := none +# Don't do anything at the end of the test. +# +# REBOOT := error +# Reboot the box if ktest detects an error +# +# REBOOT := fail +# Do not stop on failure, and after all tests are complete +# power off the box (for both success and error) +# This is good to run over a weekend and you don't want to waste +# electricity. +# + +DEFAULTS IF ${REBOOT} == none +REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 0 +REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 + +DEFAULTS ELSE IF ${REBOOT} == error +REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 0 +REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 1 +POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 + +DEFAULTS ELSE IF ${REBOOT} == fail +REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 1 +POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 1 +POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 120 +DIE_ON_FAILURE = 0 + +# Store the failure information into this directory +# such as the .config, dmesg, and build log. +STORE_FAILURES = ${THIS_DIR}/failures + +DEFAULTS ELSE +REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 1 +REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 1 +POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 +POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/min-config.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/min-config.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c703cc46d --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/min-config.conf @@ -0,0 +1,60 @@ +# +# This file has some examples for creating a MIN_CONFIG. +# (A .config file that is the minimum for a machine to boot, or +# to boot and make a network connection.) +# +# A MIN_CONFIG is very useful as it is the minimum configuration +# needed to boot a given machine. You can debug someone else's +# .config by only setting the configs in your MIN_CONFIG. The closer +# your MIN_CONFIG is to the true minimum set of configs needed to +# boot your machine, the closer the config you test with will be +# to the users config that had the failure. +# +# The make_min_config test allows you to create a MIN_CONFIG that +# is truly the minimum set of configs needed to boot a box. +# +# In this example, the final config will reside in +# ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-new-min and ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-new-min-net. +# Just move one to the location you have set for MIN_CONFIG. +# +# The first test creates a MIN_CONFIG that will be the minimum +# configuration to boot ${MACHINE} and be able to ssh to it. +# +# The second test creates a MIN_CONFIG that will only boot +# the target and most likely will not let you ssh to it. (Notice +# how the second test uses the first test's result to continue with. +# This is because the second test config is a subset of the first). +# +# The ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-skip (and -net) will hold the configs +# that ktest.pl found would not boot the target without them set. +# The config-new-min holds configs that ktest.pl could not test +# directly because another config that was needed to boot the box +# selected them. Sometimes it is possible that this file will hold +# the true minimum configuration. You can test to see if this is +# the case by running the boot test with BOOT_TYPE = allnoconfig and +# setting setting the MIN_CONFIG to ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-skip. If the +# machine still boots, then you can use the config-skip as your MIN_CONFIG. +# +# These tests can run for several hours (and perhaps days). +# It's OK to kill the test with a Ctrl^C. By restarting without +# modifying this config, ktest.pl will notice that the config-new-min(-net) +# exists, and will use that instead as the starting point. +# The USE_OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG is set to 1 to keep ktest.pl from asking +# you if you want to use the OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG as the starting point. +# By using the OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG as the starting point will allow ktest.pl to +# start almost where it left off. +# +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == min-config +TEST_TYPE = make_min_config +OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-new-min-net +IGNORE_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-skip-net +MIN_CONFIG_TYPE = test +TEST = ${SSH} echo hi +USE_OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = 1 + +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == min-config && ${MULTI} +TEST_TYPE = make_min_config +OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-new-min +IGNORE_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-skip +MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-new-min-net +USE_OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = 1 diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/patchcheck.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/patchcheck.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0eb0a5ac7 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/patchcheck.conf @@ -0,0 +1,111 @@ +# patchcheck.conf +# +# This contains a test that takes two git commits and will test each +# commit between the two. The build test will look at what files the +# commit has touched, and if any of those files produce a warning, then +# the build will fail. + + +# PATCH_START is the commit to begin with and PATCH_END is the commit +# to end with (inclusive). This is similar to doing a git rebase -i PATCH_START~1 +# and then testing each commit and doing a git rebase --continue. +# You can use a SHA1, a git tag, or anything that git will accept for a checkout + +PATCH_START := HEAD~3 +PATCH_END := HEAD + +# Use the oldconfig if build_type wasn't defined +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED BUILD_TYPE +DO_BUILD_TYPE := oldconfig + +DEFAULTS ELSE +DO_BUILD_TYPE := ${BUILD_TYPE} + +DEFAULTS + + +# Change PATCH_CHECKOUT to be the branch you want to test. The test will +# do a git checkout of this branch before starting. Obviously both +# PATCH_START and PATCH_END must be in this branch (and PATCH_START must +# be contained by PATCH_END). + +PATCH_CHECKOUT := test/branch + +# Usually it's a good idea to have a set config to use for testing individual +# patches. +PATCH_CONFIG := ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-patchcheck + +# Change PATCH_TEST to run some test for each patch. Each commit that is +# tested, after it is built and installed on the test machine, this command +# will be executed. Usually what is done is to ssh to the target box and +# run some test scripts. If you just want to boot test your patches +# comment PATCH_TEST out. +PATCH_TEST := ${SSH} "/usr/local/bin/ktest-test-script" + +DEFAULTS IF DEFINED PATCH_TEST +PATCH_TEST_TYPE := test + +DEFAULTS ELSE +PATCH_TEST_TYPE := boot + +# If for some reason a file has a warning that one of your patches touch +# but you do not care about it, set IGNORE_WARNINGS to that commit(s) +# (space delimited) +#IGNORE_WARNINGS = 39eaf7ef884dcc44f7ff1bac803ca2a1dcf43544 6edb2a8a385f0cdef51dae37ff23e74d76d8a6ce + +# Instead of just checking for warnings to files that are changed +# it can be advantageous to check for any new warnings. If a +# header file is changed, it could cause a warning in a file not +# touched by the commit. To detect these kinds of warnings, you +# can use the WARNINGS_FILE option. +# +# If the variable CREATE_WARNINGS_FILE is set, this config will +# enable the WARNINGS_FILE during the patchcheck test. Also, +# before running the patchcheck test, it will create the +# warnings file. +# +DEFAULTS IF DEFINED CREATE_WARNINGS_FILE +WARNINGS_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR}/warnings_file + +TEST_START IF DEFINED CREATE_WARNINGS_FILE +# WARNINGS_FILE is already set by the DEFAULTS above +TEST_TYPE = make_warnings_file +# Checkout the commit before the patches to test, +# and record all the warnings that exist before the patches +# to test are added +CHECKOUT = ${PATCHCHECK_START}~1 +# Force a full build +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 0 +BUILD_TYPE = ${DO_BUILD_TYPE} + +# If you are running a multi test, and the test failed on the first +# test but on, say the 5th patch. If you want to restart on the +# fifth patch, set PATCH_START1. This will make the first test start +# from this commit instead of the PATCH_START commit. +# Note, do not change this option. Just define PATCH_START1 in the +# top config (the one you pass to ktest.pl), and this will use it, +# otherwise it will just use PATCH_START if PATCH_START1 is not defined. +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED PATCH_START1 +PATCH_START1 := ${PATCH_START} + +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == patchcheck +TEST_TYPE = patchcheck +MIN_CONFIG = ${PATCH_CONFIG} +TEST = ${PATCH_TEST} +PATCHCHECK_TYPE = ${PATCH_TEST_TYPE} +PATCHCHECK_START = ${PATCH_START1} +PATCHCHECK_END = ${PATCH_END} +CHECKOUT = ${PATCH_CHECKOUT} +BUILD_TYPE = ${DO_BUILD_TYPE} + +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == patchcheck && ${MULTI} +TEST_TYPE = patchcheck +MIN_CONFIG = ${PATCH_CONFIG} +TEST = ${PATCH_TEST} +PATCHCHECK_TYPE = ${PATCH_TEST_TYPE} +PATCHCHECK_START = ${PATCH_START} +PATCHCHECK_END = ${PATCH_END} +CHECKOUT = ${PATCH_CHECKOUT} +# Use multi to test different compilers? +MAKE_CMD = CC=gcc-4.5.1 make +BUILD_TYPE = ${DO_BUILD_TYPE} diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/tests.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/tests.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..60cedb1a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/include/tests.conf @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ +# +# This is an example of various tests that you can run +# +# The variable TEST can be of boot, build, randconfig, or test. +# +# Note that TEST is a variable created with ':=' and only exists +# throughout the config processing (not during the tests itself). +# +# The TEST option (defined with '=') is used to tell ktest.pl +# what test to run after a successful boot. The TEST option is +# persistent into the test runs. +# + +# The config that includes this file may define a BOOT_TYPE +# variable that tells this config what type of boot test to run. +# If it's not defined, the below DEFAULTS will set the default +# to 'oldconfig'. +# +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED BOOT_TYPE +BOOT_TYPE := oldconfig + +# The config that includes this file may define a RUN_TEST +# variable that will tell this config what test to run. +# (what to set the TEST option to). +# +DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED RUN_TEST +# Requires that hackbench is in the PATH +RUN_TEST := ${SSH} hackbench 50 + + +# If TEST is set to 'boot' then just build a kernel and boot +# the target. +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == boot +TEST_TYPE = boot +# Notice how we set the BUILD_TYPE option to the BOOT_TYPE variable. +BUILD_TYPE = ${BOOT_TYPE} +# Do not do a make mrproper. +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 1 + +# If you only want to build the kernel, and perhaps install +# and test it yourself, then just set TEST to build. +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == build +TEST_TYPE = build +BUILD_TYPE = ${BOOT_TYPE} +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 1 + +# Build, install, boot and test with a randconfg 10 times. +# It is important that you have set MIN_CONFIG in the config +# that includes this file otherwise it is likely that the +# randconfig will not have the necessary configs needed to +# boot your box. This version of the test requires a min +# config that has enough to make sure the target has network +# working. +TEST_START ITERATE 10 IF ${TEST} == randconfig +MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-min-net +TEST_TYPE = test +BUILD_TYPE = randconfig +TEST = ${RUN_TEST} + +# This is the same as above, but only tests to a boot prompt. +# The MIN_CONFIG used here does not need to have networking +# working. +TEST_START ITERATE 10 IF ${TEST} == randconfig && ${MULTI} +TEST_TYPE = boot +BUILD_TYPE = randconfig +MIN_CONFIG = ${CONFIG_DIR}/config-min +MAKE_CMD = make + +# This builds, installs, boots and tests the target. +TEST_START IF ${TEST} == test +TEST_TYPE = test +BUILD_TYPE = ${BOOT_TYPE} +TEST = ${RUN_TEST} +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 1 diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/kvm.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/kvm.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fbc134f9a --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/kvm.conf @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +# +# This config is an example usage of ktest.pl with a kvm guest +# +# The guest is called 'Guest' and this would be something that +# could be run on the host to test a virtual machine target. + +MACHINE = Guest + + +# Use virsh to read the serial console of the guest +CONSOLE = virsh console ${MACHINE} + +# Use SIGKILL to terminate virsh console. We can't kill virsh console +# by the default signal, SIGINT. +CLOSE_CONSOLE_SIGNAL = KILL + +#*************************************# +# This part is the same as test.conf # +#*************************************# + +# The include files will set up the type of test to run. Just set TEST to +# which test you want to run. +# +# TESTS = patchcheck, randconfig, boot, test, config-bisect, bisect, min-config +# +# See the include/*.conf files that define these tests +# +TEST := patchcheck + +# Some tests may have more than one test to run. Define MULTI := 1 to run +# the extra tests. +MULTI := 0 + +# In case you want to differentiate which type of system you are testing +BITS := 64 + +# REBOOT = none, error, fail, empty +# See include/defaults.conf +REBOOT := empty + + +# The defaults file will set up various settings that can be used by all +# machine configs. +INCLUDE include/defaults.conf + + +#*************************************# +# Now we are different from test.conf # +#*************************************# + + +# The example here assumes that Guest is running a Fedora release +# that uses dracut for its initfs. The POST_INSTALL will be executed +# after the install of the kernel and modules are complete. +# +POST_INSTALL = ${SSH} /sbin/dracut -f /boot/initramfs-test.img $KERNEL_VERSION + +# Guests sometimes get stuck on reboot. We wait 3 seconds after running +# the reboot command and then do a full power-cycle of the guest. +# This forces the guest to restart. +# +POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT = 3 + +# We do the same after the halt command, but this time we wait 20 seconds. +POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 20 + + +# As the defaults.conf file has a POWER_CYCLE option already defined, +# and options can not be defined in the same section more than once +# (all DEFAULTS sections are considered the same). We use the +# DEFAULTS OVERRIDE to tell ktest.pl to ignore the previous defined +# options, for the options set in the OVERRIDE section. +# +DEFAULTS OVERRIDE + +# Instead of using the default POWER_CYCLE option defined in +# defaults.conf, we use virsh to cycle it. To do so, we destroy +# the guest, wait 5 seconds, and then start it up again. +# Crude, but effective. +# +POWER_CYCLE = virsh destroy ${MACHINE}; sleep 5; virsh start ${MACHINE} + + +DEFAULTS + +# The following files each handle a different test case. +# Having them included allows you to set up more than one machine and share +# the same tests. +INCLUDE include/patchcheck.conf +INCLUDE include/tests.conf +INCLUDE include/bisect.conf +INCLUDE include/min-config.conf diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/snowball.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/snowball.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a82a3c5bc --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/snowball.conf @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +# This example was used to boot the snowball ARM board. +# See http://people.redhat.com/srostedt/ktest-embedded-2012/ + +# PWD is a ktest.pl variable that will result in the process working +# directory that ktest.pl is executed in. + +# THIS_DIR is automatically assigned the PWD of the path that generated +# the config file. It is best to use this variable when assigning other +# directory paths within this directory. This allows you to easily +# move the test cases to other locations or to other machines. +# +THIS_DIR := /home/rostedt/work/demo/ktest-embed +LOG_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR}/snowball.log +CLEAR_LOG = 1 +MAKE_CMD = PATH=/usr/local/gcc-4.5.2-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/bin:$PATH CROSS_COMPILE=arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi- make ARCH=arm +ADD_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/addconfig + +SCP_TO_TARGET = echo "don't do scp" + +TFTPBOOT := /var/lib/tftpboot +TFTPDEF := ${TFTPBOOT}/snowball-default +TFTPTEST := ${OUTPUT_DIR}/${BUILD_TARGET} + +SWITCH_TO_GOOD = cp ${TFTPDEF} ${TARGET_IMAGE} +SWITCH_TO_TEST = cp ${TFTPTEST} ${TARGET_IMAGE} + +# Define each test with TEST_START +# The config options below it will override the defaults +TEST_START SKIP +TEST_TYPE = boot +BUILD_TYPE = u8500_defconfig +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 1 + +TEST_START +TEST_TYPE = make_min_config +OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config.newmin +START_MIN_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config.orig +IGNORE_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config.ignore +BUILD_NOCLEAN = 1 + + +DEFAULTS +LOCALVERSION = -test +POWER_CYCLE = echo use the thumb luke; read a +CONSOLE = cat ${THIS_DIR}/snowball-cat +REBOOT_TYPE = script +SSH_USER = root +BUILD_OPTIONS = -j8 uImage +BUILD_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/linux.git +OUTPUT_DIR = ${THIS_DIR}/snowball-build +MACHINE = snowball +TARGET_IMAGE = /var/lib/tftpboot/snowball-image +BUILD_TARGET = arch/arm/boot/uImage diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/examples/test.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/test.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b725210ef --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/examples/test.conf @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +# +# Generic config for a machine +# + +# Name your machine (the DNS name, what you ssh to) +MACHINE = foo + +# BOX can be different than foo, if the machine BOX has +# multiple partitions with different systems installed. For example, +# you may have a i386 and x86_64 installation on a test box. +# If this is the case, MACHINE defines the way to connect to the +# machine, which may be different between which system the machine +# is booting into. BOX is used for the scripts to reboot and power cycle +# the machine, where it does not matter which system the machine boots into. +# +#BOX := bar + +# Define a way to read the console +CONSOLE = stty -F /dev/ttyS0 115200 parodd; cat /dev/ttyS0 + +# The include files will set up the type of test to run. Just set TEST to +# which test you want to run. +# +# TESTS = patchcheck, randconfig, boot, test, config-bisect, bisect, min-config +# +# See the include/*.conf files that define these tests +# +TEST := patchcheck + +# Some tests may have more than one test to run. Define MULTI := 1 to run +# the extra tests. +MULTI := 0 + +# In case you want to differentiate which type of system you are testing +BITS := 64 + +# REBOOT = none, error, fail, empty +# See include/defaults.conf +REBOOT := empty + +# The defaults file will set up various settings that can be used by all +# machine configs. +INCLUDE include/defaults.conf + +# In case you need to add a patch for a bisect or something +#PRE_BUILD = patch -p1 < ${THIS_DIR}/fix.patch + +# Reset the repo after the build and remove all 'test' modules from the target +# Notice that DO_POST_BUILD is a variable (defined by ':=') and POST_BUILD +# is the option (defined by '=') + +DO_POST_BUILD := git reset --hard +POST_BUILD = ${SSH} 'rm -rf /lib/modules/*-test*'; ${DO_POST_BUILD} + +# The following files each handle a different test case. +# Having them included allows you to set up more than one machine and share +# the same tests. +INCLUDE include/patchcheck.conf +INCLUDE include/tests.conf +INCLUDE include/bisect.conf +INCLUDE include/min-config.conf + diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/ktest.pl b/tools/testing/ktest/ktest.pl new file mode 100755 index 000000000..406401f1a --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/ktest.pl @@ -0,0 +1,4425 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl -w +# +# Copyright 2010 - Steven Rostedt , Red Hat Inc. +# Licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL License version 2 +# + +use strict; +use IPC::Open2; +use Fcntl qw(F_GETFL F_SETFL O_NONBLOCK); +use File::Path qw(mkpath); +use File::Copy qw(cp); +use FileHandle; +use FindBin; + +my $VERSION = "0.2"; + +$| = 1; + +my %opt; +my %repeat_tests; +my %repeats; +my %evals; + +#default opts +my %default = ( + "MAILER" => "sendmail", # default mailer + "EMAIL_ON_ERROR" => 1, + "EMAIL_WHEN_FINISHED" => 1, + "EMAIL_WHEN_CANCELED" => 0, + "EMAIL_WHEN_STARTED" => 0, + "NUM_TESTS" => 1, + "TEST_TYPE" => "build", + "BUILD_TYPE" => "randconfig", + "MAKE_CMD" => "make", + "CLOSE_CONSOLE_SIGNAL" => "INT", + "TIMEOUT" => 120, + "TMP_DIR" => "/tmp/ktest/\${MACHINE}", + "SLEEP_TIME" => 60, # sleep time between tests + "BUILD_NOCLEAN" => 0, + "REBOOT_ON_ERROR" => 0, + "POWEROFF_ON_ERROR" => 0, + "REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS" => 1, + "POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS" => 0, + "BUILD_OPTIONS" => "", + "BISECT_SLEEP_TIME" => 60, # sleep time between bisects + "PATCHCHECK_SLEEP_TIME" => 60, # sleep time between patch checks + "CLEAR_LOG" => 0, + "BISECT_MANUAL" => 0, + "BISECT_SKIP" => 1, + "BISECT_TRIES" => 1, + "MIN_CONFIG_TYPE" => "boot", + "SUCCESS_LINE" => "login:", + "DETECT_TRIPLE_FAULT" => 1, + "NO_INSTALL" => 0, + "BOOTED_TIMEOUT" => 1, + "DIE_ON_FAILURE" => 1, + "SSH_EXEC" => "ssh \$SSH_USER\@\$MACHINE \$SSH_COMMAND", + "SCP_TO_TARGET" => "scp \$SRC_FILE \$SSH_USER\@\$MACHINE:\$DST_FILE", + "SCP_TO_TARGET_INSTALL" => "\${SCP_TO_TARGET}", + "REBOOT" => "ssh \$SSH_USER\@\$MACHINE reboot", + "STOP_AFTER_SUCCESS" => 10, + "STOP_AFTER_FAILURE" => 60, + "STOP_TEST_AFTER" => 600, + "MAX_MONITOR_WAIT" => 1800, + "GRUB_REBOOT" => "grub2-reboot", + "SYSLINUX" => "extlinux", + "SYSLINUX_PATH" => "/boot/extlinux", + "CONNECT_TIMEOUT" => 25, + +# required, and we will ask users if they don't have them but we keep the default +# value something that is common. + "REBOOT_TYPE" => "grub", + "LOCALVERSION" => "-test", + "SSH_USER" => "root", + "BUILD_TARGET" => "arch/x86/boot/bzImage", + "TARGET_IMAGE" => "/boot/vmlinuz-test", + + "LOG_FILE" => undef, + "IGNORE_UNUSED" => 0, +); + +my $ktest_config = "ktest.conf"; +my $version; +my $have_version = 0; +my $machine; +my $last_machine; +my $ssh_user; +my $tmpdir; +my $builddir; +my $outputdir; +my $output_config; +my $test_type; +my $build_type; +my $build_options; +my $final_post_ktest; +my $pre_ktest; +my $post_ktest; +my $pre_test; +my $post_test; +my $pre_build; +my $post_build; +my $pre_build_die; +my $post_build_die; +my $reboot_type; +my $reboot_script; +my $power_cycle; +my $reboot; +my $reboot_on_error; +my $switch_to_good; +my $switch_to_test; +my $poweroff_on_error; +my $reboot_on_success; +my $die_on_failure; +my $powercycle_after_reboot; +my $poweroff_after_halt; +my $max_monitor_wait; +my $ssh_exec; +my $scp_to_target; +my $scp_to_target_install; +my $power_off; +my $grub_menu; +my $last_grub_menu; +my $grub_file; +my $grub_number; +my $grub_reboot; +my $syslinux; +my $syslinux_path; +my $syslinux_label; +my $target; +my $make; +my $pre_install; +my $post_install; +my $no_install; +my $noclean; +my $minconfig; +my $start_minconfig; +my $start_minconfig_defined; +my $output_minconfig; +my $minconfig_type; +my $use_output_minconfig; +my $warnings_file; +my $ignore_config; +my $ignore_errors; +my $addconfig; +my $in_bisect = 0; +my $bisect_bad_commit = ""; +my $reverse_bisect; +my $bisect_manual; +my $bisect_skip; +my $bisect_tries; +my $config_bisect_good; +my $bisect_ret_good; +my $bisect_ret_bad; +my $bisect_ret_skip; +my $bisect_ret_abort; +my $bisect_ret_default; +my $in_patchcheck = 0; +my $run_test; +my $buildlog; +my $testlog; +my $dmesg; +my $monitor_fp; +my $monitor_pid; +my $monitor_cnt = 0; +my $sleep_time; +my $bisect_sleep_time; +my $patchcheck_sleep_time; +my $ignore_warnings; +my $store_failures; +my $store_successes; +my $test_name; +my $timeout; +my $connect_timeout; +my $config_bisect_exec; +my $booted_timeout; +my $detect_triplefault; +my $console; +my $close_console_signal; +my $reboot_success_line; +my $success_line; +my $stop_after_success; +my $stop_after_failure; +my $stop_test_after; +my $build_target; +my $target_image; +my $checkout; +my $localversion; +my $iteration = 0; +my $successes = 0; +my $stty_orig; +my $run_command_status = 0; + +my $bisect_good; +my $bisect_bad; +my $bisect_type; +my $bisect_start; +my $bisect_replay; +my $bisect_files; +my $bisect_reverse; +my $bisect_check; + +my $config_bisect; +my $config_bisect_type; +my $config_bisect_check; + +my $patchcheck_type; +my $patchcheck_start; +my $patchcheck_cherry; +my $patchcheck_end; + +my $build_time; +my $install_time; +my $reboot_time; +my $test_time; + +my $pwd; +my $dirname = $FindBin::Bin; + +my $mailto; +my $mailer; +my $mail_path; +my $mail_command; +my $email_on_error; +my $email_when_finished; +my $email_when_started; +my $email_when_canceled; + +my $script_start_time = localtime(); + +# set when a test is something other that just building or install +# which would require more options. +my $buildonly = 1; + +# tell build not to worry about warnings, even when WARNINGS_FILE is set +my $warnings_ok = 0; + +# set when creating a new config +my $newconfig = 0; + +my %entered_configs; +my %config_help; +my %variable; + +# force_config is the list of configs that we force enabled (or disabled) +# in a .config file. The MIN_CONFIG and ADD_CONFIG configs. +my %force_config; + +# do not force reboots on config problems +my $no_reboot = 1; + +# reboot on success +my $reboot_success = 0; + +my %option_map = ( + "MAILTO" => \$mailto, + "MAILER" => \$mailer, + "MAIL_PATH" => \$mail_path, + "MAIL_COMMAND" => \$mail_command, + "EMAIL_ON_ERROR" => \$email_on_error, + "EMAIL_WHEN_FINISHED" => \$email_when_finished, + "EMAIL_WHEN_STARTED" => \$email_when_started, + "EMAIL_WHEN_CANCELED" => \$email_when_canceled, + "MACHINE" => \$machine, + "SSH_USER" => \$ssh_user, + "TMP_DIR" => \$tmpdir, + "OUTPUT_DIR" => \$outputdir, + "BUILD_DIR" => \$builddir, + "TEST_TYPE" => \$test_type, + "PRE_KTEST" => \$pre_ktest, + "POST_KTEST" => \$post_ktest, + "PRE_TEST" => \$pre_test, + "POST_TEST" => \$post_test, + "BUILD_TYPE" => \$build_type, + "BUILD_OPTIONS" => \$build_options, + "PRE_BUILD" => \$pre_build, + "POST_BUILD" => \$post_build, + "PRE_BUILD_DIE" => \$pre_build_die, + "POST_BUILD_DIE" => \$post_build_die, + "POWER_CYCLE" => \$power_cycle, + "REBOOT" => \$reboot, + "BUILD_NOCLEAN" => \$noclean, + "MIN_CONFIG" => \$minconfig, + "OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG" => \$output_minconfig, + "START_MIN_CONFIG" => \$start_minconfig, + "MIN_CONFIG_TYPE" => \$minconfig_type, + "USE_OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG" => \$use_output_minconfig, + "WARNINGS_FILE" => \$warnings_file, + "IGNORE_CONFIG" => \$ignore_config, + "TEST" => \$run_test, + "ADD_CONFIG" => \$addconfig, + "REBOOT_TYPE" => \$reboot_type, + "GRUB_MENU" => \$grub_menu, + "GRUB_FILE" => \$grub_file, + "GRUB_REBOOT" => \$grub_reboot, + "SYSLINUX" => \$syslinux, + "SYSLINUX_PATH" => \$syslinux_path, + "SYSLINUX_LABEL" => \$syslinux_label, + "PRE_INSTALL" => \$pre_install, + "POST_INSTALL" => \$post_install, + "NO_INSTALL" => \$no_install, + "REBOOT_SCRIPT" => \$reboot_script, + "REBOOT_ON_ERROR" => \$reboot_on_error, + "SWITCH_TO_GOOD" => \$switch_to_good, + "SWITCH_TO_TEST" => \$switch_to_test, + "POWEROFF_ON_ERROR" => \$poweroff_on_error, + "REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS" => \$reboot_on_success, + "DIE_ON_FAILURE" => \$die_on_failure, + "POWER_OFF" => \$power_off, + "POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT" => \$powercycle_after_reboot, + "POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT" => \$poweroff_after_halt, + "MAX_MONITOR_WAIT" => \$max_monitor_wait, + "SLEEP_TIME" => \$sleep_time, + "BISECT_SLEEP_TIME" => \$bisect_sleep_time, + "PATCHCHECK_SLEEP_TIME" => \$patchcheck_sleep_time, + "IGNORE_WARNINGS" => \$ignore_warnings, + "IGNORE_ERRORS" => \$ignore_errors, + "BISECT_MANUAL" => \$bisect_manual, + "BISECT_SKIP" => \$bisect_skip, + "BISECT_TRIES" => \$bisect_tries, + "CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD" => \$config_bisect_good, + "BISECT_RET_GOOD" => \$bisect_ret_good, + "BISECT_RET_BAD" => \$bisect_ret_bad, + "BISECT_RET_SKIP" => \$bisect_ret_skip, + "BISECT_RET_ABORT" => \$bisect_ret_abort, + "BISECT_RET_DEFAULT" => \$bisect_ret_default, + "STORE_FAILURES" => \$store_failures, + "STORE_SUCCESSES" => \$store_successes, + "TEST_NAME" => \$test_name, + "TIMEOUT" => \$timeout, + "CONNECT_TIMEOUT" => \$connect_timeout, + "CONFIG_BISECT_EXEC" => \$config_bisect_exec, + "BOOTED_TIMEOUT" => \$booted_timeout, + "CONSOLE" => \$console, + "CLOSE_CONSOLE_SIGNAL" => \$close_console_signal, + "DETECT_TRIPLE_FAULT" => \$detect_triplefault, + "SUCCESS_LINE" => \$success_line, + "REBOOT_SUCCESS_LINE" => \$reboot_success_line, + "STOP_AFTER_SUCCESS" => \$stop_after_success, + "STOP_AFTER_FAILURE" => \$stop_after_failure, + "STOP_TEST_AFTER" => \$stop_test_after, + "BUILD_TARGET" => \$build_target, + "SSH_EXEC" => \$ssh_exec, + "SCP_TO_TARGET" => \$scp_to_target, + "SCP_TO_TARGET_INSTALL" => \$scp_to_target_install, + "CHECKOUT" => \$checkout, + "TARGET_IMAGE" => \$target_image, + "LOCALVERSION" => \$localversion, + + "BISECT_GOOD" => \$bisect_good, + "BISECT_BAD" => \$bisect_bad, + "BISECT_TYPE" => \$bisect_type, + "BISECT_START" => \$bisect_start, + "BISECT_REPLAY" => \$bisect_replay, + "BISECT_FILES" => \$bisect_files, + "BISECT_REVERSE" => \$bisect_reverse, + "BISECT_CHECK" => \$bisect_check, + + "CONFIG_BISECT" => \$config_bisect, + "CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE" => \$config_bisect_type, + "CONFIG_BISECT_CHECK" => \$config_bisect_check, + + "PATCHCHECK_TYPE" => \$patchcheck_type, + "PATCHCHECK_START" => \$patchcheck_start, + "PATCHCHECK_CHERRY" => \$patchcheck_cherry, + "PATCHCHECK_END" => \$patchcheck_end, +); + +# Options may be used by other options, record them. +my %used_options; + +# default variables that can be used +chomp ($variable{"PWD"} = `pwd`); +$pwd = $variable{"PWD"}; + +$config_help{"MACHINE"} = << "EOF" + The machine hostname that you will test. + For build only tests, it is still needed to differentiate log files. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"SSH_USER"} = << "EOF" + The box is expected to have ssh on normal bootup, provide the user + (most likely root, since you need privileged operations) +EOF + ; +$config_help{"BUILD_DIR"} = << "EOF" + The directory that contains the Linux source code (full path). + You can use \${PWD} that will be the path where ktest.pl is run, or use + \${THIS_DIR} which is assigned \${PWD} but may be changed later. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"OUTPUT_DIR"} = << "EOF" + The directory that the objects will be built (full path). + (can not be same as BUILD_DIR) + You can use \${PWD} that will be the path where ktest.pl is run, or use + \${THIS_DIR} which is assigned \${PWD} but may be changed later. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"BUILD_TARGET"} = << "EOF" + The location of the compiled file to copy to the target. + (relative to OUTPUT_DIR) +EOF + ; +$config_help{"BUILD_OPTIONS"} = << "EOF" + Options to add to \"make\" when building. + i.e. -j20 +EOF + ; +$config_help{"TARGET_IMAGE"} = << "EOF" + The place to put your image on the test machine. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"POWER_CYCLE"} = << "EOF" + A script or command to reboot the box. + + Here is a digital loggers power switch example + POWER_CYCLE = wget --no-proxy -O /dev/null -q --auth-no-challenge 'http://admin:admin\@power/outlet?5=CCL' + + Here is an example to reboot a virtual box on the current host + with the name "Guest". + POWER_CYCLE = virsh destroy Guest; sleep 5; virsh start Guest +EOF + ; +$config_help{"CONSOLE"} = << "EOF" + The script or command that reads the console + + If you use ttywatch server, something like the following would work. +CONSOLE = nc -d localhost 3001 + + For a virtual machine with guest name "Guest". +CONSOLE = virsh console Guest +EOF + ; +$config_help{"LOCALVERSION"} = << "EOF" + Required version ending to differentiate the test + from other linux builds on the system. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"REBOOT_TYPE"} = << "EOF" + Way to reboot the box to the test kernel. + Only valid options so far are "grub", "grub2", "syslinux", and "script". + + If you specify grub, it will assume grub version 1 + and will search in /boot/grub/menu.lst for the title \$GRUB_MENU + and select that target to reboot to the kernel. If this is not + your setup, then specify "script" and have a command or script + specified in REBOOT_SCRIPT to boot to the target. + + The entry in /boot/grub/menu.lst must be entered in manually. + The test will not modify that file. + + If you specify grub2, then you also need to specify both \$GRUB_MENU + and \$GRUB_FILE. + + If you specify syslinux, then you may use SYSLINUX to define the syslinux + command (defaults to extlinux), and SYSLINUX_PATH to specify the path to + the syslinux install (defaults to /boot/extlinux). But you have to specify + SYSLINUX_LABEL to define the label to boot to for the test kernel. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"GRUB_MENU"} = << "EOF" + The grub title name for the test kernel to boot + (Only mandatory if REBOOT_TYPE = grub or grub2) + + Note, ktest.pl will not update the grub menu.lst, you need to + manually add an option for the test. ktest.pl will search + the grub menu.lst for this option to find what kernel to + reboot into. + + For example, if in the /boot/grub/menu.lst the test kernel title has: + title Test Kernel + kernel vmlinuz-test + GRUB_MENU = Test Kernel + + For grub2, a search of \$GRUB_FILE is performed for the lines + that begin with "menuentry". It will not detect submenus. The + menu must be a non-nested menu. Add the quotes used in the menu + to guarantee your selection, as the first menuentry with the content + of \$GRUB_MENU that is found will be used. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"GRUB_FILE"} = << "EOF" + If grub2 is used, the full path for the grub.cfg file is placed + here. Use something like /boot/grub2/grub.cfg to search. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"SYSLINUX_LABEL"} = << "EOF" + If syslinux is used, the label that boots the target kernel must + be specified with SYSLINUX_LABEL. +EOF + ; +$config_help{"REBOOT_SCRIPT"} = << "EOF" + A script to reboot the target into the test kernel + (Only mandatory if REBOOT_TYPE = script) +EOF + ; + +sub _logit { + if (defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + open(OUT, ">> $opt{LOG_FILE}") or die "Can't write to $opt{LOG_FILE}"; + print OUT @_; + close(OUT); + } +} + +sub logit { + if (defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + _logit @_; + } else { + print @_; + } +} + +sub doprint { + print @_; + _logit @_; +} + +sub read_prompt { + my ($cancel, $prompt) = @_; + + my $ans; + + for (;;) { + if ($cancel) { + print "$prompt [y/n/C] "; + } else { + print "$prompt [Y/n] "; + } + $ans = ; + chomp $ans; + if ($ans =~ /^\s*$/) { + if ($cancel) { + $ans = "c"; + } else { + $ans = "y"; + } + } + last if ($ans =~ /^y$/i || $ans =~ /^n$/i); + if ($cancel) { + last if ($ans =~ /^c$/i); + print "Please answer either 'y', 'n' or 'c'.\n"; + } else { + print "Please answer either 'y' or 'n'.\n"; + } + } + if ($ans =~ /^c/i) { + exit; + } + if ($ans !~ /^y$/i) { + return 0; + } + return 1; +} + +sub read_yn { + my ($prompt) = @_; + + return read_prompt 0, $prompt; +} + +sub read_ync { + my ($prompt) = @_; + + return read_prompt 1, $prompt; +} + +sub get_mandatory_config { + my ($config) = @_; + my $ans; + + return if (defined($opt{$config})); + + if (defined($config_help{$config})) { + print "\n"; + print $config_help{$config}; + } + + for (;;) { + print "$config = "; + if (defined($default{$config}) && length($default{$config})) { + print "\[$default{$config}\] "; + } + $ans = ; + $ans =~ s/^\s*(.*\S)\s*$/$1/; + if ($ans =~ /^\s*$/) { + if ($default{$config}) { + $ans = $default{$config}; + } else { + print "Your answer can not be blank\n"; + next; + } + } + $entered_configs{$config} = ${ans}; + last; + } +} + +sub show_time { + my ($time) = @_; + + my $hours = 0; + my $minutes = 0; + + if ($time > 3600) { + $hours = int($time / 3600); + $time -= $hours * 3600; + } + if ($time > 60) { + $minutes = int($time / 60); + $time -= $minutes * 60; + } + + if ($hours > 0) { + doprint "$hours hour"; + doprint "s" if ($hours > 1); + doprint " "; + } + + if ($minutes > 0) { + doprint "$minutes minute"; + doprint "s" if ($minutes > 1); + doprint " "; + } + + doprint "$time second"; + doprint "s" if ($time != 1); +} + +sub print_times { + doprint "\n"; + if ($build_time) { + doprint "Build time: "; + show_time($build_time); + doprint "\n"; + } + if ($install_time) { + doprint "Install time: "; + show_time($install_time); + doprint "\n"; + } + if ($reboot_time) { + doprint "Reboot time: "; + show_time($reboot_time); + doprint "\n"; + } + if ($test_time) { + doprint "Test time: "; + show_time($test_time); + doprint "\n"; + } + # reset for iterations like bisect + $build_time = 0; + $install_time = 0; + $reboot_time = 0; + $test_time = 0; +} + +sub get_mandatory_configs { + get_mandatory_config("MACHINE"); + get_mandatory_config("BUILD_DIR"); + get_mandatory_config("OUTPUT_DIR"); + + if ($newconfig) { + get_mandatory_config("BUILD_OPTIONS"); + } + + # options required for other than just building a kernel + if (!$buildonly) { + get_mandatory_config("POWER_CYCLE"); + get_mandatory_config("CONSOLE"); + } + + # options required for install and more + if ($buildonly != 1) { + get_mandatory_config("SSH_USER"); + get_mandatory_config("BUILD_TARGET"); + get_mandatory_config("TARGET_IMAGE"); + } + + get_mandatory_config("LOCALVERSION"); + + return if ($buildonly); + + my $rtype = $opt{"REBOOT_TYPE"}; + + if (!defined($rtype)) { + if (!defined($opt{"GRUB_MENU"})) { + get_mandatory_config("REBOOT_TYPE"); + $rtype = $entered_configs{"REBOOT_TYPE"}; + } else { + $rtype = "grub"; + } + } + + if ($rtype eq "grub") { + get_mandatory_config("GRUB_MENU"); + } + + if ($rtype eq "grub2") { + get_mandatory_config("GRUB_MENU"); + get_mandatory_config("GRUB_FILE"); + } + + if ($rtype eq "syslinux") { + get_mandatory_config("SYSLINUX_LABEL"); + } +} + +sub process_variables { + my ($value, $remove_undef) = @_; + my $retval = ""; + + # We want to check for '\', and it is just easier + # to check the previous characet of '$' and not need + # to worry if '$' is the first character. By adding + # a space to $value, we can just check [^\\]\$ and + # it will still work. + $value = " $value"; + + while ($value =~ /(.*?[^\\])\$\{(.*?)\}(.*)/) { + my $begin = $1; + my $var = $2; + my $end = $3; + # append beginning of value to retval + $retval = "$retval$begin"; + if (defined($variable{$var})) { + $retval = "$retval$variable{$var}"; + } elsif (defined($remove_undef) && $remove_undef) { + # for if statements, any variable that is not defined, + # we simple convert to 0 + $retval = "${retval}0"; + } else { + # put back the origin piece. + $retval = "$retval\$\{$var\}"; + # This could be an option that is used later, save + # it so we don't warn if this option is not one of + # ktests options. + $used_options{$var} = 1; + } + $value = $end; + } + $retval = "$retval$value"; + + # remove the space added in the beginning + $retval =~ s/ //; + + return "$retval" +} + +sub set_value { + my ($lvalue, $rvalue, $override, $overrides, $name) = @_; + + my $prvalue = process_variables($rvalue); + + if ($lvalue =~ /^(TEST|BISECT|CONFIG_BISECT)_TYPE(\[.*\])?$/ && + $prvalue !~ /^(config_|)bisect$/ && + $prvalue !~ /^build$/ && + $buildonly) { + + # Note if a test is something other than build, then we + # will need other mandatory options. + if ($prvalue ne "install") { + $buildonly = 0; + } else { + # install still limits some mandatory options. + $buildonly = 2; + } + } + + if (defined($opt{$lvalue})) { + if (!$override || defined(${$overrides}{$lvalue})) { + my $extra = ""; + if ($override) { + $extra = "In the same override section!\n"; + } + die "$name: $.: Option $lvalue defined more than once!\n$extra"; + } + ${$overrides}{$lvalue} = $prvalue; + } + + $opt{$lvalue} = $prvalue; +} + +sub set_eval { + my ($lvalue, $rvalue, $name) = @_; + + my $prvalue = process_variables($rvalue); + my $arr; + + if (defined($evals{$lvalue})) { + $arr = $evals{$lvalue}; + } else { + $arr = []; + $evals{$lvalue} = $arr; + } + + push @{$arr}, $rvalue; +} + +sub set_variable { + my ($lvalue, $rvalue) = @_; + + if ($rvalue =~ /^\s*$/) { + delete $variable{$lvalue}; + } else { + $rvalue = process_variables($rvalue); + $variable{$lvalue} = $rvalue; + } +} + +sub process_compare { + my ($lval, $cmp, $rval) = @_; + + # remove whitespace + + $lval =~ s/^\s*//; + $lval =~ s/\s*$//; + + $rval =~ s/^\s*//; + $rval =~ s/\s*$//; + + if ($cmp eq "==") { + return $lval eq $rval; + } elsif ($cmp eq "!=") { + return $lval ne $rval; + } elsif ($cmp eq "=~") { + return $lval =~ m/$rval/; + } elsif ($cmp eq "!~") { + return $lval !~ m/$rval/; + } + + my $statement = "$lval $cmp $rval"; + my $ret = eval $statement; + + # $@ stores error of eval + if ($@) { + return -1; + } + + return $ret; +} + +sub value_defined { + my ($val) = @_; + + return defined($variable{$2}) || + defined($opt{$2}); +} + +my $d = 0; +sub process_expression { + my ($name, $val) = @_; + + my $c = $d++; + + while ($val =~ s/\(([^\(]*?)\)/\&\&\&\&VAL\&\&\&\&/) { + my $express = $1; + + if (process_expression($name, $express)) { + $val =~ s/\&\&\&\&VAL\&\&\&\&/ 1 /; + } else { + $val =~ s/\&\&\&\&VAL\&\&\&\&/ 0 /; + } + } + + $d--; + my $OR = "\\|\\|"; + my $AND = "\\&\\&"; + + while ($val =~ s/^(.*?)($OR|$AND)//) { + my $express = $1; + my $op = $2; + + if (process_expression($name, $express)) { + if ($op eq "||") { + return 1; + } + } else { + if ($op eq "&&") { + return 0; + } + } + } + + if ($val =~ /(.*)(==|\!=|>=|<=|>|<|=~|\!~)(.*)/) { + my $ret = process_compare($1, $2, $3); + if ($ret < 0) { + die "$name: $.: Unable to process comparison\n"; + } + return $ret; + } + + if ($val =~ /^\s*(NOT\s*)?DEFINED\s+(\S+)\s*$/) { + if (defined $1) { + return !value_defined($2); + } else { + return value_defined($2); + } + } + + if ($val =~ /^\s*0\s*$/) { + return 0; + } elsif ($val =~ /^\s*\d+\s*$/) { + return 1; + } + + die ("$name: $.: Undefined content $val in if statement\n"); +} + +sub process_if { + my ($name, $value) = @_; + + # Convert variables and replace undefined ones with 0 + my $val = process_variables($value, 1); + my $ret = process_expression $name, $val; + + return $ret; +} + +sub __read_config { + my ($config, $current_test_num) = @_; + + my $in; + open($in, $config) || die "can't read file $config"; + + my $name = $config; + $name =~ s,.*/(.*),$1,; + + my $test_num = $$current_test_num; + my $default = 1; + my $repeat = 1; + my $num_tests_set = 0; + my $skip = 0; + my $rest; + my $line; + my $test_case = 0; + my $if = 0; + my $if_set = 0; + my $override = 0; + + my %overrides; + + while (<$in>) { + + # ignore blank lines and comments + next if (/^\s*$/ || /\s*\#/); + + if (/^\s*(TEST_START|DEFAULTS)\b(.*)/) { + + my $type = $1; + $rest = $2; + $line = $2; + + my $old_test_num; + my $old_repeat; + $override = 0; + + if ($type eq "TEST_START") { + + if ($num_tests_set) { + die "$name: $.: Can not specify both NUM_TESTS and TEST_START\n"; + } + + $old_test_num = $test_num; + $old_repeat = $repeat; + + $test_num += $repeat; + $default = 0; + $repeat = 1; + } else { + $default = 1; + } + + # If SKIP is anywhere in the line, the command will be skipped + if ($rest =~ s/\s+SKIP\b//) { + $skip = 1; + } else { + $test_case = 1; + $skip = 0; + } + + if ($rest =~ s/\sELSE\b//) { + if (!$if) { + die "$name: $.: ELSE found with out matching IF section\n$_"; + } + $if = 0; + + if ($if_set) { + $skip = 1; + } else { + $skip = 0; + } + } + + if ($rest =~ s/\sIF\s+(.*)//) { + if (process_if($name, $1)) { + $if_set = 1; + } else { + $skip = 1; + } + $if = 1; + } else { + $if = 0; + $if_set = 0; + } + + if (!$skip) { + if ($type eq "TEST_START") { + if ($rest =~ s/\s+ITERATE\s+(\d+)//) { + $repeat = $1; + $repeat_tests{"$test_num"} = $repeat; + } + } elsif ($rest =~ s/\sOVERRIDE\b//) { + # DEFAULT only + $override = 1; + # Clear previous overrides + %overrides = (); + } + } + + if (!$skip && $rest !~ /^\s*$/) { + die "$name: $.: Gargbage found after $type\n$_"; + } + + if ($skip && $type eq "TEST_START") { + $test_num = $old_test_num; + $repeat = $old_repeat; + } + + } elsif (/^\s*ELSE\b(.*)$/) { + if (!$if) { + die "$name: $.: ELSE found with out matching IF section\n$_"; + } + $rest = $1; + if ($if_set) { + $skip = 1; + $rest = ""; + } else { + $skip = 0; + + if ($rest =~ /\sIF\s+(.*)/) { + # May be a ELSE IF section. + if (process_if($name, $1)) { + $if_set = 1; + } else { + $skip = 1; + } + $rest = ""; + } else { + $if = 0; + } + } + + if ($rest !~ /^\s*$/) { + die "$name: $.: Gargbage found after DEFAULTS\n$_"; + } + + } elsif (/^\s*INCLUDE\s+(\S+)/) { + + next if ($skip); + + if (!$default) { + die "$name: $.: INCLUDE can only be done in default sections\n$_"; + } + + my $file = process_variables($1); + + if ($file !~ m,^/,) { + # check the path of the config file first + if ($config =~ m,(.*)/,) { + if (-f "$1/$file") { + $file = "$1/$file"; + } + } + } + + if ( ! -r $file ) { + die "$name: $.: Can't read file $file\n$_"; + } + + if (__read_config($file, \$test_num)) { + $test_case = 1; + } + + } elsif (/^\s*([A-Z_\[\]\d]+)\s*=~\s*(.*?)\s*$/) { + + next if ($skip); + + my $lvalue = $1; + my $rvalue = $2; + + if ($default || $lvalue =~ /\[\d+\]$/) { + set_eval($lvalue, $rvalue, $name); + } else { + my $val = "$lvalue\[$test_num\]"; + set_eval($val, $rvalue, $name); + } + + } elsif (/^\s*([A-Z_\[\]\d]+)\s*=\s*(.*?)\s*$/) { + + next if ($skip); + + my $lvalue = $1; + my $rvalue = $2; + + if (!$default && + ($lvalue eq "NUM_TESTS" || + $lvalue eq "LOG_FILE" || + $lvalue eq "CLEAR_LOG")) { + die "$name: $.: $lvalue must be set in DEFAULTS section\n"; + } + + if ($lvalue eq "NUM_TESTS") { + if ($test_num) { + die "$name: $.: Can not specify both NUM_TESTS and TEST_START\n"; + } + if (!$default) { + die "$name: $.: NUM_TESTS must be set in default section\n"; + } + $num_tests_set = 1; + } + + if ($default || $lvalue =~ /\[\d+\]$/) { + set_value($lvalue, $rvalue, $override, \%overrides, $name); + } else { + my $val = "$lvalue\[$test_num\]"; + set_value($val, $rvalue, $override, \%overrides, $name); + + if ($repeat > 1) { + $repeats{$val} = $repeat; + } + } + } elsif (/^\s*([A-Z_\[\]\d]+)\s*:=\s*(.*?)\s*$/) { + next if ($skip); + + my $lvalue = $1; + my $rvalue = $2; + + # process config variables. + # Config variables are only active while reading the + # config and can be defined anywhere. They also ignore + # TEST_START and DEFAULTS, but are skipped if they are in + # on of these sections that have SKIP defined. + # The save variable can be + # defined multiple times and the new one simply overrides + # the prevous one. + set_variable($lvalue, $rvalue); + + } else { + die "$name: $.: Garbage found in config\n$_"; + } + } + + if ($test_num) { + $test_num += $repeat - 1; + $opt{"NUM_TESTS"} = $test_num; + } + + close($in); + + $$current_test_num = $test_num; + + return $test_case; +} + +sub get_test_case { + print "What test case would you like to run?\n"; + print " (build, install or boot)\n"; + print " Other tests are available but require editing ktest.conf\n"; + print " (see tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf)\n"; + my $ans = ; + chomp $ans; + $default{"TEST_TYPE"} = $ans; +} + +sub read_config { + my ($config) = @_; + + my $test_case; + my $test_num = 0; + + $test_case = __read_config $config, \$test_num; + + # make sure we have all mandatory configs + get_mandatory_configs; + + # was a test specified? + if (!$test_case) { + print "No test case specified.\n"; + get_test_case; + } + + # set any defaults + + foreach my $default (keys %default) { + if (!defined($opt{$default})) { + $opt{$default} = $default{$default}; + } + } + + if ($opt{"IGNORE_UNUSED"} == 1) { + return; + } + + my %not_used; + + # check if there are any stragglers (typos?) + foreach my $option (keys %opt) { + my $op = $option; + # remove per test labels. + $op =~ s/\[.*\]//; + if (!exists($option_map{$op}) && + !exists($default{$op}) && + !exists($used_options{$op})) { + $not_used{$op} = 1; + } + } + + if (%not_used) { + my $s = "s are"; + $s = " is" if (keys %not_used == 1); + print "The following option$s not used; could be a typo:\n"; + foreach my $option (keys %not_used) { + print "$option\n"; + } + print "Set IGRNORE_UNUSED = 1 to have ktest ignore unused variables\n"; + if (!read_yn "Do you want to continue?") { + exit -1; + } + } +} + +sub __eval_option { + my ($name, $option, $i) = @_; + + # Add space to evaluate the character before $ + $option = " $option"; + my $retval = ""; + my $repeated = 0; + my $parent = 0; + + foreach my $test (keys %repeat_tests) { + if ($i >= $test && + $i < $test + $repeat_tests{$test}) { + + $repeated = 1; + $parent = $test; + last; + } + } + + while ($option =~ /(.*?[^\\])\$\{(.*?)\}(.*)/) { + my $start = $1; + my $var = $2; + my $end = $3; + + # Append beginning of line + $retval = "$retval$start"; + + # If the iteration option OPT[$i] exists, then use that. + # otherwise see if the default OPT (without [$i]) exists. + + my $o = "$var\[$i\]"; + my $parento = "$var\[$parent\]"; + + # If a variable contains itself, use the default var + if (($var eq $name) && defined($opt{$var})) { + $o = $opt{$var}; + $retval = "$retval$o"; + } elsif (defined($opt{$o})) { + $o = $opt{$o}; + $retval = "$retval$o"; + } elsif ($repeated && defined($opt{$parento})) { + $o = $opt{$parento}; + $retval = "$retval$o"; + } elsif (defined($opt{$var})) { + $o = $opt{$var}; + $retval = "$retval$o"; + } elsif ($var eq "KERNEL_VERSION" && defined($make)) { + # special option KERNEL_VERSION uses kernel version + get_version(); + $retval = "$retval$version"; + } else { + $retval = "$retval\$\{$var\}"; + } + + $option = $end; + } + + $retval = "$retval$option"; + + $retval =~ s/^ //; + + return $retval; +} + +sub process_evals { + my ($name, $option, $i) = @_; + + my $option_name = "$name\[$i\]"; + my $ev; + + my $old_option = $option; + + if (defined($evals{$option_name})) { + $ev = $evals{$option_name}; + } elsif (defined($evals{$name})) { + $ev = $evals{$name}; + } else { + return $option; + } + + for my $e (@{$ev}) { + eval "\$option =~ $e"; + } + + if ($option ne $old_option) { + doprint("$name changed from '$old_option' to '$option'\n"); + } + + return $option; +} + +sub eval_option { + my ($name, $option, $i) = @_; + + my $prev = ""; + + # Since an option can evaluate to another option, + # keep iterating until we do not evaluate any more + # options. + my $r = 0; + while ($prev ne $option) { + # Check for recursive evaluations. + # 100 deep should be more than enough. + if ($r++ > 100) { + die "Over 100 evaluations accurred with $option\n" . + "Check for recursive variables\n"; + } + $prev = $option; + $option = __eval_option($name, $option, $i); + } + + $option = process_evals($name, $option, $i); + + return $option; +} + +sub run_command; +sub start_monitor; +sub end_monitor; +sub wait_for_monitor; + +sub reboot { + my ($time) = @_; + my $powercycle = 0; + + # test if the machine can be connected to within a few seconds + my $stat = run_ssh("echo check machine status", $connect_timeout); + if (!$stat) { + doprint("power cycle\n"); + $powercycle = 1; + } + + if ($powercycle) { + run_command "$power_cycle"; + + start_monitor; + # flush out current monitor + # May contain the reboot success line + wait_for_monitor 1; + + } else { + # Make sure everything has been written to disk + run_ssh("sync", 10); + + if (defined($time)) { + start_monitor; + # flush out current monitor + # May contain the reboot success line + wait_for_monitor 1; + } + + # try to reboot normally + if (run_command $reboot) { + if (defined($powercycle_after_reboot)) { + sleep $powercycle_after_reboot; + run_command "$power_cycle"; + } + } else { + # nope? power cycle it. + run_command "$power_cycle"; + } + } + + if (defined($time)) { + + # We only want to get to the new kernel, don't fail + # if we stumble over a call trace. + my $save_ignore_errors = $ignore_errors; + $ignore_errors = 1; + + # Look for the good kernel to boot + if (wait_for_monitor($time, "Linux version")) { + # reboot got stuck? + doprint "Reboot did not finish. Forcing power cycle\n"; + run_command "$power_cycle"; + } + + $ignore_errors = $save_ignore_errors; + + # Still need to wait for the reboot to finish + wait_for_monitor($time, $reboot_success_line); + + end_monitor; + } +} + +sub reboot_to_good { + my ($time) = @_; + + if (defined($switch_to_good)) { + run_command $switch_to_good; + } + + reboot $time; +} + +sub do_not_reboot { + my $i = $iteration; + + return $test_type eq "build" || $no_reboot || + ($test_type eq "patchcheck" && $opt{"PATCHCHECK_TYPE[$i]"} eq "build") || + ($test_type eq "bisect" && $opt{"BISECT_TYPE[$i]"} eq "build") || + ($test_type eq "config_bisect" && $opt{"CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE[$i]"} eq "build"); +} + +my $in_die = 0; + +sub dodie { + + # avoid recusion + return if ($in_die); + $in_die = 1; + + doprint "CRITICAL FAILURE... ", @_, "\n"; + + my $i = $iteration; + + if ($reboot_on_error && !do_not_reboot) { + + doprint "REBOOTING\n"; + reboot_to_good; + + } elsif ($poweroff_on_error && defined($power_off)) { + doprint "POWERING OFF\n"; + `$power_off`; + } + + if (defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + print " See $opt{LOG_FILE} for more info.\n"; + } + + if ($email_on_error) { + send_email("KTEST: critical failure for your [$test_type] test", + "Your test started at $script_start_time has failed with:\n@_\n"); + } + + if ($monitor_cnt) { + # restore terminal settings + system("stty $stty_orig"); + } + + if (defined($post_test)) { + run_command $post_test; + } + + die @_, "\n"; +} + +sub create_pty { + my ($ptm, $pts) = @_; + my $tmp; + my $TIOCSPTLCK = 0x40045431; + my $TIOCGPTN = 0x80045430; + + sysopen($ptm, "/dev/ptmx", O_RDWR | O_NONBLOCK) or + dodie "Cant open /dev/ptmx"; + + # unlockpt() + $tmp = pack("i", 0); + ioctl($ptm, $TIOCSPTLCK, $tmp) or + dodie "ioctl TIOCSPTLCK for /dev/ptmx failed"; + + # ptsname() + ioctl($ptm, $TIOCGPTN, $tmp) or + dodie "ioctl TIOCGPTN for /dev/ptmx failed"; + $tmp = unpack("i", $tmp); + + sysopen($pts, "/dev/pts/$tmp", O_RDWR | O_NONBLOCK) or + dodie "Can't open /dev/pts/$tmp"; +} + +sub exec_console { + my ($ptm, $pts) = @_; + + close($ptm); + + close(\*STDIN); + close(\*STDOUT); + close(\*STDERR); + + open(\*STDIN, '<&', $pts); + open(\*STDOUT, '>&', $pts); + open(\*STDERR, '>&', $pts); + + close($pts); + + exec $console or + dodie "Can't open console $console"; +} + +sub open_console { + my ($ptm) = @_; + my $pts = \*PTSFD; + my $pid; + + # save terminal settings + $stty_orig = `stty -g`; + + # place terminal in cbreak mode so that stdin can be read one character at + # a time without having to wait for a newline + system("stty -icanon -echo -icrnl"); + + create_pty($ptm, $pts); + + $pid = fork; + + if (!$pid) { + # child + exec_console($ptm, $pts) + } + + # parent + close($pts); + + return $pid; + + open(PTSFD, "Stop perl from warning about single use of PTSFD"); +} + +sub close_console { + my ($fp, $pid) = @_; + + doprint "kill child process $pid\n"; + kill $close_console_signal, $pid; + + doprint "wait for child process $pid to exit\n"; + waitpid($pid, 0); + + print "closing!\n"; + close($fp); + + # restore terminal settings + system("stty $stty_orig"); +} + +sub start_monitor { + if ($monitor_cnt++) { + return; + } + $monitor_fp = \*MONFD; + $monitor_pid = open_console $monitor_fp; + + return; + + open(MONFD, "Stop perl from warning about single use of MONFD"); +} + +sub end_monitor { + return if (!defined $console); + if (--$monitor_cnt) { + return; + } + close_console($monitor_fp, $monitor_pid); +} + +sub wait_for_monitor { + my ($time, $stop) = @_; + my $full_line = ""; + my $line; + my $booted = 0; + my $start_time = time; + my $skip_call_trace = 0; + my $bug = 0; + my $bug_ignored = 0; + my $now; + + doprint "** Wait for monitor to settle down **\n"; + + # read the monitor and wait for the system to calm down + while (!$booted) { + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp, $time); + last if (!defined($line)); + print "$line"; + $full_line .= $line; + + if (defined($stop) && $full_line =~ /$stop/) { + doprint "wait for monitor detected $stop\n"; + $booted = 1; + } + + if ($full_line =~ /\[ backtrace testing \]/) { + $skip_call_trace = 1; + } + + if ($full_line =~ /call trace:/i) { + if (!$bug && !$skip_call_trace) { + if ($ignore_errors) { + $bug_ignored = 1; + } else { + $bug = 1; + } + } + } + + if ($full_line =~ /\[ end of backtrace testing \]/) { + $skip_call_trace = 0; + } + + if ($full_line =~ /Kernel panic -/) { + $bug = 1; + } + + if ($line =~ /\n/) { + $full_line = ""; + } + $now = time; + if ($now - $start_time >= $max_monitor_wait) { + doprint "Exiting monitor flush due to hitting MAX_MONITOR_WAIT\n"; + return 1; + } + } + print "** Monitor flushed **\n"; + + # if stop is defined but wasn't hit, return error + # used by reboot (which wants to see a reboot) + if (defined($stop) && !$booted) { + $bug = 1; + } + return $bug; +} + +sub save_logs { + my ($result, $basedir) = @_; + my @t = localtime; + my $date = sprintf "%04d%02d%02d%02d%02d%02d", + 1900+$t[5],$t[4],$t[3],$t[2],$t[1],$t[0]; + + my $type = $build_type; + if ($type =~ /useconfig/) { + $type = "useconfig"; + } + + my $dir = "$machine-$test_type-$type-$result-$date"; + + $dir = "$basedir/$dir"; + + if (!-d $dir) { + mkpath($dir) or + dodie "can't create $dir"; + } + + my %files = ( + "config" => $output_config, + "buildlog" => $buildlog, + "dmesg" => $dmesg, + "testlog" => $testlog, + ); + + while (my ($name, $source) = each(%files)) { + if (-f "$source") { + cp "$source", "$dir/$name" or + dodie "failed to copy $source"; + } + } + + doprint "*** Saved info to $dir ***\n"; +} + +sub fail { + + if ($die_on_failure) { + dodie @_; + } + + doprint "FAILED\n"; + + my $i = $iteration; + + # no need to reboot for just building. + if (!do_not_reboot) { + doprint "REBOOTING\n"; + reboot_to_good $sleep_time; + } + + my $name = ""; + + if (defined($test_name)) { + $name = " ($test_name)"; + } + + print_times; + + doprint "%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%\n"; + doprint "%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%\n"; + doprint "KTEST RESULT: TEST $i$name Failed: ", @_, "\n"; + doprint "%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%\n"; + doprint "%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%\n"; + + if (defined($store_failures)) { + save_logs "fail", $store_failures; + } + + if (defined($post_test)) { + run_command $post_test; + } + + return 1; +} + +sub run_command { + my ($command, $redirect, $timeout) = @_; + my $start_time; + my $end_time; + my $dolog = 0; + my $dord = 0; + my $dostdout = 0; + my $pid; + + $command =~ s/\$SSH_USER/$ssh_user/g; + $command =~ s/\$MACHINE/$machine/g; + + doprint("$command ... "); + $start_time = time; + + $pid = open(CMD, "$command 2>&1 |") or + (fail "unable to exec $command" and return 0); + + if (defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + open(LOG, ">>$opt{LOG_FILE}") or + dodie "failed to write to log"; + $dolog = 1; + } + + if (defined($redirect)) { + if ($redirect eq 1) { + $dostdout = 1; + # Have the output of the command on its own line + doprint "\n"; + } else { + open (RD, ">$redirect") or + dodie "failed to write to redirect $redirect"; + $dord = 1; + } + } + + my $hit_timeout = 0; + + while (1) { + my $fp = \*CMD; + if (defined($timeout)) { + doprint "timeout = $timeout\n"; + } + my $line = wait_for_input($fp, $timeout); + if (!defined($line)) { + my $now = time; + if (defined($timeout) && (($now - $start_time) >= $timeout)) { + doprint "Hit timeout of $timeout, killing process\n"; + $hit_timeout = 1; + kill 9, $pid; + } + last; + } + print LOG $line if ($dolog); + print RD $line if ($dord); + print $line if ($dostdout); + } + + waitpid($pid, 0); + # shift 8 for real exit status + $run_command_status = $? >> 8; + + close(CMD); + close(LOG) if ($dolog); + close(RD) if ($dord); + + $end_time = time; + my $delta = $end_time - $start_time; + + if ($delta == 1) { + doprint "[1 second] "; + } else { + doprint "[$delta seconds] "; + } + + if ($hit_timeout) { + $run_command_status = 1; + } + + if ($run_command_status) { + doprint "FAILED!\n"; + } else { + doprint "SUCCESS\n"; + } + + return !$run_command_status; +} + +sub run_ssh { + my ($cmd, $timeout) = @_; + my $cp_exec = $ssh_exec; + + $cp_exec =~ s/\$SSH_COMMAND/$cmd/g; + return run_command "$cp_exec", undef , $timeout; +} + +sub run_scp { + my ($src, $dst, $cp_scp) = @_; + + $cp_scp =~ s/\$SRC_FILE/$src/g; + $cp_scp =~ s/\$DST_FILE/$dst/g; + + return run_command "$cp_scp"; +} + +sub run_scp_install { + my ($src, $dst) = @_; + + my $cp_scp = $scp_to_target_install; + + return run_scp($src, $dst, $cp_scp); +} + +sub run_scp_mod { + my ($src, $dst) = @_; + + my $cp_scp = $scp_to_target; + + return run_scp($src, $dst, $cp_scp); +} + +sub get_grub2_index { + + return if (defined($grub_number) && defined($last_grub_menu) && + $last_grub_menu eq $grub_menu && defined($last_machine) && + $last_machine eq $machine); + + doprint "Find grub2 menu ... "; + $grub_number = -1; + + my $ssh_grub = $ssh_exec; + $ssh_grub =~ s,\$SSH_COMMAND,cat $grub_file,g; + + open(IN, "$ssh_grub |") + or dodie "unable to get $grub_file"; + + my $found = 0; + + while () { + if (/^menuentry.*$grub_menu/) { + $grub_number++; + $found = 1; + last; + } elsif (/^menuentry\s|^submenu\s/) { + $grub_number++; + } + } + close(IN); + + dodie "Could not find '$grub_menu' in $grub_file on $machine" + if (!$found); + doprint "$grub_number\n"; + $last_grub_menu = $grub_menu; + $last_machine = $machine; +} + +sub get_grub_index { + + if ($reboot_type eq "grub2") { + get_grub2_index; + return; + } + + if ($reboot_type ne "grub") { + return; + } + return if (defined($grub_number) && defined($last_grub_menu) && + $last_grub_menu eq $grub_menu && defined($last_machine) && + $last_machine eq $machine); + + doprint "Find grub menu ... "; + $grub_number = -1; + + my $ssh_grub = $ssh_exec; + $ssh_grub =~ s,\$SSH_COMMAND,cat /boot/grub/menu.lst,g; + + open(IN, "$ssh_grub |") + or dodie "unable to get menu.lst"; + + my $found = 0; + + while () { + if (/^\s*title\s+$grub_menu\s*$/) { + $grub_number++; + $found = 1; + last; + } elsif (/^\s*title\s/) { + $grub_number++; + } + } + close(IN); + + dodie "Could not find '$grub_menu' in /boot/grub/menu on $machine" + if (!$found); + doprint "$grub_number\n"; + $last_grub_menu = $grub_menu; + $last_machine = $machine; +} + +sub wait_for_input +{ + my ($fp, $time) = @_; + my $start_time; + my $rin; + my $rout; + my $nr; + my $buf; + my $line; + my $ch; + + if (!defined($time)) { + $time = $timeout; + } + + $rin = ''; + vec($rin, fileno($fp), 1) = 1; + vec($rin, fileno(\*STDIN), 1) = 1; + + $start_time = time; + + while (1) { + $nr = select($rout=$rin, undef, undef, $time); + + last if ($nr <= 0); + + # copy data from stdin to the console + if (vec($rout, fileno(\*STDIN), 1) == 1) { + $nr = sysread(\*STDIN, $buf, 1000); + syswrite($fp, $buf, $nr) if ($nr > 0); + } + + # The timeout is based on time waiting for the fp data + if (vec($rout, fileno($fp), 1) != 1) { + last if (defined($time) && (time - $start_time > $time)); + next; + } + + $line = ""; + + # try to read one char at a time + while (sysread $fp, $ch, 1) { + $line .= $ch; + last if ($ch eq "\n"); + } + + last if (!length($line)); + + return $line; + } + return undef; +} + +sub reboot_to { + if (defined($switch_to_test)) { + run_command $switch_to_test; + } + + if ($reboot_type eq "grub") { + run_ssh "'(echo \"savedefault --default=$grub_number --once\" | grub --batch)'"; + } elsif ($reboot_type eq "grub2") { + run_ssh "$grub_reboot $grub_number"; + } elsif ($reboot_type eq "syslinux") { + run_ssh "$syslinux --once \\\"$syslinux_label\\\" $syslinux_path"; + } elsif (defined $reboot_script) { + run_command "$reboot_script"; + } + reboot; +} + +sub get_sha1 { + my ($commit) = @_; + + doprint "git rev-list --max-count=1 $commit ... "; + my $sha1 = `git rev-list --max-count=1 $commit`; + my $ret = $?; + + logit $sha1; + + if ($ret) { + doprint "FAILED\n"; + dodie "Failed to get git $commit"; + } + + print "SUCCESS\n"; + + chomp $sha1; + + return $sha1; +} + +sub monitor { + my $booted = 0; + my $bug = 0; + my $bug_ignored = 0; + my $skip_call_trace = 0; + my $loops; + + my $start_time = time; + + wait_for_monitor 5; + + my $line; + my $full_line = ""; + + open(DMESG, "> $dmesg") or + dodie "unable to write to $dmesg"; + + reboot_to; + + my $success_start; + my $failure_start; + my $monitor_start = time; + my $done = 0; + my $version_found = 0; + + while (!$done) { + + if ($bug && defined($stop_after_failure) && + $stop_after_failure >= 0) { + my $time = $stop_after_failure - (time - $failure_start); + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp, $time); + if (!defined($line)) { + doprint "bug timed out after $booted_timeout seconds\n"; + doprint "Test forced to stop after $stop_after_failure seconds after failure\n"; + last; + } + } elsif ($booted) { + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp, $booted_timeout); + if (!defined($line)) { + my $s = $booted_timeout == 1 ? "" : "s"; + doprint "Successful boot found: break after $booted_timeout second$s\n"; + last; + } + } else { + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp); + if (!defined($line)) { + my $s = $timeout == 1 ? "" : "s"; + doprint "Timed out after $timeout second$s\n"; + last; + } + } + + doprint $line; + print DMESG $line; + + # we are not guaranteed to get a full line + $full_line .= $line; + + if ($full_line =~ /$success_line/) { + $booted = 1; + $success_start = time; + } + + if ($booted && defined($stop_after_success) && + $stop_after_success >= 0) { + my $now = time; + if ($now - $success_start >= $stop_after_success) { + doprint "Test forced to stop after $stop_after_success seconds after success\n"; + last; + } + } + + if ($full_line =~ /\[ backtrace testing \]/) { + $skip_call_trace = 1; + } + + if ($full_line =~ /call trace:/i) { + if (!$bug && !$skip_call_trace) { + if ($ignore_errors) { + $bug_ignored = 1; + } else { + $bug = 1; + $failure_start = time; + } + } + } + + if ($bug && defined($stop_after_failure) && + $stop_after_failure >= 0) { + my $now = time; + if ($now - $failure_start >= $stop_after_failure) { + doprint "Test forced to stop after $stop_after_failure seconds after failure\n"; + last; + } + } + + if ($full_line =~ /\[ end of backtrace testing \]/) { + $skip_call_trace = 0; + } + + if ($full_line =~ /Kernel panic -/) { + $failure_start = time; + $bug = 1; + } + + # Detect triple faults by testing the banner + if ($full_line =~ /\bLinux version (\S+).*\n/) { + if ($1 eq $version) { + $version_found = 1; + } elsif ($version_found && $detect_triplefault) { + # We already booted into the kernel we are testing, + # but now we booted into another kernel? + # Consider this a triple fault. + doprint "Already booted in Linux kernel $version, but now\n"; + doprint "we booted into Linux kernel $1.\n"; + doprint "Assuming that this is a triple fault.\n"; + doprint "To disable this: set DETECT_TRIPLE_FAULT to 0\n"; + last; + } + } + + if ($line =~ /\n/) { + $full_line = ""; + } + + if ($stop_test_after > 0 && !$booted && !$bug) { + if (time - $monitor_start > $stop_test_after) { + doprint "STOP_TEST_AFTER ($stop_test_after seconds) timed out\n"; + $done = 1; + } + } + } + + my $end_time = time; + $reboot_time = $end_time - $start_time; + + close(DMESG); + + if ($bug) { + return 0 if ($in_bisect); + fail "failed - got a bug report" and return 0; + } + + if (!$booted) { + return 0 if ($in_bisect); + fail "failed - never got a boot prompt." and return 0; + } + + if ($bug_ignored) { + doprint "WARNING: Call Trace detected but ignored due to IGNORE_ERRORS=1\n"; + } + + return 1; +} + +sub eval_kernel_version { + my ($option) = @_; + + $option =~ s/\$KERNEL_VERSION/$version/g; + + return $option; +} + +sub do_post_install { + + return if (!defined($post_install)); + + my $cp_post_install = eval_kernel_version $post_install; + run_command "$cp_post_install" or + dodie "Failed to run post install"; +} + +# Sometimes the reboot fails, and will hang. We try to ssh to the box +# and if we fail, we force another reboot, that should powercycle it. +sub test_booted { + if (!run_ssh "echo testing connection") { + reboot $sleep_time; + } +} + +sub install { + + return if ($no_install); + + my $start_time = time; + + if (defined($pre_install)) { + my $cp_pre_install = eval_kernel_version $pre_install; + run_command "$cp_pre_install" or + dodie "Failed to run pre install"; + } + + my $cp_target = eval_kernel_version $target_image; + + test_booted; + + run_scp_install "$outputdir/$build_target", "$cp_target" or + dodie "failed to copy image"; + + my $install_mods = 0; + + # should we process modules? + $install_mods = 0; + open(IN, "$output_config") or dodie("Can't read config file"); + while () { + if (/CONFIG_MODULES(=y)?/) { + if (defined($1)) { + $install_mods = 1; + last; + } + } + } + close(IN); + + if (!$install_mods) { + do_post_install; + doprint "No modules needed\n"; + my $end_time = time; + $install_time = $end_time - $start_time; + return; + } + + run_command "$make INSTALL_MOD_STRIP=1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH=$tmpdir modules_install" or + dodie "Failed to install modules"; + + my $modlib = "/lib/modules/$version"; + my $modtar = "ktest-mods.tar.bz2"; + + run_ssh "rm -rf $modlib" or + dodie "failed to remove old mods: $modlib"; + + # would be nice if scp -r did not follow symbolic links + run_command "cd $tmpdir && tar -cjf $modtar lib/modules/$version" or + dodie "making tarball"; + + run_scp_mod "$tmpdir/$modtar", "/tmp" or + dodie "failed to copy modules"; + + unlink "$tmpdir/$modtar"; + + run_ssh "'(cd / && tar xjf /tmp/$modtar)'" or + dodie "failed to tar modules"; + + run_ssh "rm -f /tmp/$modtar"; + + do_post_install; + + my $end_time = time; + $install_time = $end_time - $start_time; +} + +sub get_version { + # get the release name + return if ($have_version); + doprint "$make kernelrelease ... "; + $version = `$make -s kernelrelease | tail -1`; + chomp($version); + doprint "$version\n"; + $have_version = 1; +} + +sub start_monitor_and_install { + # Make sure the stable kernel has finished booting + + # Install bisects, don't need console + if (defined $console) { + start_monitor; + wait_for_monitor 5; + end_monitor; + } + + get_grub_index; + get_version; + install; + + start_monitor if (defined $console); + return monitor; +} + +my $check_build_re = ".*:.*(warning|error|Error):.*"; +my $utf8_quote = "\\x{e2}\\x{80}(\\x{98}|\\x{99})"; + +sub process_warning_line { + my ($line) = @_; + + chomp $line; + + # for distcc heterogeneous systems, some compilers + # do things differently causing warning lines + # to be slightly different. This makes an attempt + # to fixe those issues. + + # chop off the index into the line + # using distcc, some compilers give different indexes + # depending on white space + $line =~ s/^(\s*\S+:\d+:)\d+/$1/; + + # Some compilers use UTF-8 extended for quotes and some don't. + $line =~ s/$utf8_quote/'/g; + + return $line; +} + +# Read buildlog and check against warnings file for any +# new warnings. +# +# Returns 1 if OK +# 0 otherwise +sub check_buildlog { + return 1 if (!defined $warnings_file); + + my %warnings_list; + + # Failed builds should not reboot the target + my $save_no_reboot = $no_reboot; + $no_reboot = 1; + + if (-f $warnings_file) { + open(IN, $warnings_file) or + dodie "Error opening $warnings_file"; + + while () { + if (/$check_build_re/) { + my $warning = process_warning_line $_; + + $warnings_list{$warning} = 1; + } + } + close(IN); + } + + # If warnings file didn't exist, and WARNINGS_FILE exist, + # then we fail on any warning! + + open(IN, $buildlog) or dodie "Can't open $buildlog"; + while () { + if (/$check_build_re/) { + my $warning = process_warning_line $_; + + if (!defined $warnings_list{$warning}) { + fail "New warning found (not in $warnings_file)\n$_\n"; + $no_reboot = $save_no_reboot; + return 0; + } + } + } + $no_reboot = $save_no_reboot; + close(IN); +} + +sub check_patch_buildlog { + my ($patch) = @_; + + my @files = `git show $patch | diffstat -l`; + + foreach my $file (@files) { + chomp $file; + } + + open(IN, "git show $patch |") or + dodie "failed to show $patch"; + while () { + if (m,^--- a/(.*),) { + chomp $1; + $files[$#files] = $1; + } + } + close(IN); + + open(IN, $buildlog) or dodie "Can't open $buildlog"; + while () { + if (/^\s*(.*?):.*(warning|error)/) { + my $err = $1; + foreach my $file (@files) { + my $fullpath = "$builddir/$file"; + if ($file eq $err || $fullpath eq $err) { + fail "$file built with warnings" and return 0; + } + } + } + } + close(IN); + + return 1; +} + +sub apply_min_config { + my $outconfig = "$output_config.new"; + + # Read the config file and remove anything that + # is in the force_config hash (from minconfig and others) + # then add the force config back. + + doprint "Applying minimum configurations into $output_config.new\n"; + + open (OUT, ">$outconfig") or + dodie "Can't create $outconfig"; + + if (-f $output_config) { + open (IN, $output_config) or + dodie "Failed to open $output_config"; + while () { + if (/^(# )?(CONFIG_[^\s=]*)/) { + next if (defined($force_config{$2})); + } + print OUT; + } + close IN; + } + foreach my $config (keys %force_config) { + print OUT "$force_config{$config}\n"; + } + close OUT; + + run_command "mv $outconfig $output_config"; +} + +sub make_oldconfig { + + my @force_list = keys %force_config; + + if ($#force_list >= 0) { + apply_min_config; + } + + if (!run_command "$make olddefconfig") { + # Perhaps olddefconfig doesn't exist in this version of the kernel + # try oldnoconfig + doprint "olddefconfig failed, trying make oldnoconfig\n"; + if (!run_command "$make oldnoconfig") { + doprint "oldnoconfig failed, trying yes '' | make oldconfig\n"; + # try a yes '' | oldconfig + run_command "yes '' | $make oldconfig" or + dodie "failed make config oldconfig"; + } + } +} + +# read a config file and use this to force new configs. +sub load_force_config { + my ($config) = @_; + + doprint "Loading force configs from $config\n"; + open(IN, $config) or + dodie "failed to read $config"; + while () { + chomp; + if (/^(CONFIG[^\s=]*)(\s*=.*)/) { + $force_config{$1} = $_; + } elsif (/^# (CONFIG_\S*) is not set/) { + $force_config{$1} = $_; + } + } + close IN; +} + +sub build { + my ($type) = @_; + + unlink $buildlog; + + my $start_time = time; + + # Failed builds should not reboot the target + my $save_no_reboot = $no_reboot; + $no_reboot = 1; + + # Calculate a new version from here. + $have_version = 0; + + if (defined($pre_build)) { + my $ret = run_command $pre_build; + if (!$ret && defined($pre_build_die) && + $pre_build_die) { + dodie "failed to pre_build\n"; + } + } + + if ($type =~ /^useconfig:(.*)/) { + run_command "cp $1 $output_config" or + dodie "could not copy $1 to .config"; + + $type = "oldconfig"; + } + + # old config can ask questions + if ($type eq "oldconfig") { + $type = "olddefconfig"; + + # allow for empty configs + run_command "touch $output_config"; + + if (!$noclean) { + run_command "mv $output_config $outputdir/config_temp" or + dodie "moving .config"; + + run_command "$make mrproper" or dodie "make mrproper"; + + run_command "mv $outputdir/config_temp $output_config" or + dodie "moving config_temp"; + } + + } elsif (!$noclean) { + unlink "$output_config"; + run_command "$make mrproper" or + dodie "make mrproper"; + } + + # add something to distinguish this build + open(OUT, "> $outputdir/localversion") or dodie("Can't make localversion file"); + print OUT "$localversion\n"; + close(OUT); + + if (defined($minconfig)) { + load_force_config($minconfig); + } + + if ($type ne "olddefconfig") { + run_command "$make $type" or + dodie "failed make config"; + } + # Run old config regardless, to enforce min configurations + make_oldconfig; + + my $build_ret = run_command "$make $build_options", $buildlog; + + if (defined($post_build)) { + # Because a post build may change the kernel version + # do it now. + get_version; + my $ret = run_command $post_build; + if (!$ret && defined($post_build_die) && + $post_build_die) { + dodie "failed to post_build\n"; + } + } + + if (!$build_ret) { + # bisect may need this to pass + if ($in_bisect) { + $no_reboot = $save_no_reboot; + return 0; + } + fail "failed build" and return 0; + } + + $no_reboot = $save_no_reboot; + + my $end_time = time; + $build_time = $end_time - $start_time; + + return 1; +} + +sub halt { + if (!run_ssh "halt" or defined($power_off)) { + if (defined($poweroff_after_halt)) { + sleep $poweroff_after_halt; + run_command "$power_off"; + } + } else { + # nope? the zap it! + run_command "$power_off"; + } +} + +sub success { + my ($i) = @_; + + $successes++; + + my $name = ""; + + if (defined($test_name)) { + $name = " ($test_name)"; + } + + print_times; + + doprint "\n\n*******************************************\n"; + doprint "*******************************************\n"; + doprint "KTEST RESULT: TEST $i$name SUCCESS!!!! **\n"; + doprint "*******************************************\n"; + doprint "*******************************************\n"; + + if (defined($store_successes)) { + save_logs "success", $store_successes; + } + + if ($i != $opt{"NUM_TESTS"} && !do_not_reboot) { + doprint "Reboot and wait $sleep_time seconds\n"; + reboot_to_good $sleep_time; + } + + if (defined($post_test)) { + run_command $post_test; + } +} + +sub answer_bisect { + for (;;) { + doprint "Pass, fail, or skip? [p/f/s]"; + my $ans = ; + chomp $ans; + if ($ans eq "p" || $ans eq "P") { + return 1; + } elsif ($ans eq "f" || $ans eq "F") { + return 0; + } elsif ($ans eq "s" || $ans eq "S") { + return -1; + } else { + print "Please answer 'p', 'f', or 's'\n"; + } + } +} + +sub child_run_test { + + # child should have no power + $reboot_on_error = 0; + $poweroff_on_error = 0; + $die_on_failure = 1; + + run_command $run_test, $testlog; + + exit $run_command_status; +} + +my $child_done; + +sub child_finished { + $child_done = 1; +} + +sub do_run_test { + my $child_pid; + my $child_exit; + my $line; + my $full_line; + my $bug = 0; + my $bug_ignored = 0; + + my $start_time = time; + + wait_for_monitor 1; + + doprint "run test $run_test\n"; + + $child_done = 0; + + $SIG{CHLD} = qw(child_finished); + + $child_pid = fork; + + child_run_test if (!$child_pid); + + $full_line = ""; + + do { + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp, 1); + if (defined($line)) { + + # we are not guaranteed to get a full line + $full_line .= $line; + doprint $line; + + if ($full_line =~ /call trace:/i) { + if ($ignore_errors) { + $bug_ignored = 1; + } else { + $bug = 1; + } + } + + if ($full_line =~ /Kernel panic -/) { + $bug = 1; + } + + if ($line =~ /\n/) { + $full_line = ""; + } + } + } while (!$child_done && !$bug); + + if (!$bug && $bug_ignored) { + doprint "WARNING: Call Trace detected but ignored due to IGNORE_ERRORS=1\n"; + } + + if ($bug) { + my $failure_start = time; + my $now; + do { + $line = wait_for_input($monitor_fp, 1); + if (defined($line)) { + doprint $line; + } + $now = time; + if ($now - $failure_start >= $stop_after_failure) { + last; + } + } while (defined($line)); + + doprint "Detected kernel crash!\n"; + # kill the child with extreme prejudice + kill 9, $child_pid; + } + + waitpid $child_pid, 0; + $child_exit = $? >> 8; + + my $end_time = time; + $test_time = $end_time - $start_time; + + if (!$bug && $in_bisect) { + if (defined($bisect_ret_good)) { + if ($child_exit == $bisect_ret_good) { + return 1; + } + } + if (defined($bisect_ret_skip)) { + if ($child_exit == $bisect_ret_skip) { + return -1; + } + } + if (defined($bisect_ret_abort)) { + if ($child_exit == $bisect_ret_abort) { + fail "test abort" and return -2; + } + } + if (defined($bisect_ret_bad)) { + if ($child_exit == $bisect_ret_skip) { + return 0; + } + } + if (defined($bisect_ret_default)) { + if ($bisect_ret_default eq "good") { + return 1; + } elsif ($bisect_ret_default eq "bad") { + return 0; + } elsif ($bisect_ret_default eq "skip") { + return -1; + } elsif ($bisect_ret_default eq "abort") { + return -2; + } else { + fail "unknown default action: $bisect_ret_default" + and return -2; + } + } + } + + if ($bug || $child_exit) { + return 0 if $in_bisect; + fail "test failed" and return 0; + } + return 1; +} + +sub run_git_bisect { + my ($command) = @_; + + doprint "$command ... "; + + my $output = `$command 2>&1`; + my $ret = $?; + + logit $output; + + if ($ret) { + doprint "FAILED\n"; + dodie "Failed to git bisect"; + } + + doprint "SUCCESS\n"; + if ($output =~ m/^(Bisecting: .*\(roughly \d+ steps?\))\s+\[([[:xdigit:]]+)\]/) { + doprint "$1 [$2]\n"; + } elsif ($output =~ m/^([[:xdigit:]]+) is the first bad commit/) { + $bisect_bad_commit = $1; + doprint "Found bad commit... $1\n"; + return 0; + } else { + # we already logged it, just print it now. + print $output; + } + + return 1; +} + +sub bisect_reboot { + doprint "Reboot and sleep $bisect_sleep_time seconds\n"; + reboot_to_good $bisect_sleep_time; +} + +# returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 on skip +sub run_bisect_test { + my ($type, $buildtype) = @_; + + my $failed = 0; + my $result; + my $output; + my $ret; + + $in_bisect = 1; + + build $buildtype or $failed = 1; + + if ($type ne "build") { + if ($failed && $bisect_skip) { + $in_bisect = 0; + return -1; + } + dodie "Failed on build" if $failed; + + # Now boot the box + start_monitor_and_install or $failed = 1; + + if ($type ne "boot") { + if ($failed && $bisect_skip) { + end_monitor; + bisect_reboot; + $in_bisect = 0; + return -1; + } + dodie "Failed on boot" if $failed; + + do_run_test or $failed = 1; + } + end_monitor; + } + + if ($failed) { + $result = 0; + } else { + $result = 1; + } + + # reboot the box to a kernel we can ssh to + if ($type ne "build") { + bisect_reboot; + } + $in_bisect = 0; + + return $result; +} + +sub run_bisect { + my ($type) = @_; + my $buildtype = "oldconfig"; + + # We should have a minconfig to use? + if (defined($minconfig)) { + $buildtype = "useconfig:$minconfig"; + } + + # If the user sets bisect_tries to less than 1, then no tries + # is a success. + my $ret = 1; + + # Still let the user manually decide that though. + if ($bisect_tries < 1 && $bisect_manual) { + $ret = answer_bisect; + } + + for (my $i = 0; $i < $bisect_tries; $i++) { + if ($bisect_tries > 1) { + my $t = $i + 1; + doprint("Running bisect trial $t of $bisect_tries:\n"); + } + $ret = run_bisect_test $type, $buildtype; + + if ($bisect_manual) { + $ret = answer_bisect; + } + + last if (!$ret); + } + + # Are we looking for where it worked, not failed? + if ($reverse_bisect && $ret >= 0) { + $ret = !$ret; + } + + if ($ret > 0) { + return "good"; + } elsif ($ret == 0) { + return "bad"; + } elsif ($bisect_skip) { + doprint "HIT A BAD COMMIT ... SKIPPING\n"; + return "skip"; + } +} + +sub update_bisect_replay { + my $tmp_log = "$tmpdir/ktest_bisect_log"; + run_command "git bisect log > $tmp_log" or + dodie "can't create bisect log"; + return $tmp_log; +} + +sub bisect { + my ($i) = @_; + + my $result; + + dodie "BISECT_GOOD[$i] not defined\n" if (!defined($bisect_good)); + dodie "BISECT_BAD[$i] not defined\n" if (!defined($bisect_bad)); + dodie "BISECT_TYPE[$i] not defined\n" if (!defined($bisect_type)); + + my $good = $bisect_good; + my $bad = $bisect_bad; + my $type = $bisect_type; + my $start = $bisect_start; + my $replay = $bisect_replay; + my $start_files = $bisect_files; + + if (defined($start_files)) { + $start_files = " -- " . $start_files; + } else { + $start_files = ""; + } + + # convert to true sha1's + $good = get_sha1($good); + $bad = get_sha1($bad); + + if (defined($bisect_reverse) && $bisect_reverse == 1) { + doprint "Performing a reverse bisect (bad is good, good is bad!)\n"; + $reverse_bisect = 1; + } else { + $reverse_bisect = 0; + } + + # Can't have a test without having a test to run + if ($type eq "test" && !defined($run_test)) { + $type = "boot"; + } + + # Check if a bisect was running + my $bisect_start_file = "$builddir/.git/BISECT_START"; + + my $check = $bisect_check; + my $do_check = defined($check) && $check ne "0"; + + if ( -f $bisect_start_file ) { + print "Bisect in progress found\n"; + if ($do_check) { + print " If you say yes, then no checks of good or bad will be done\n"; + } + if (defined($replay)) { + print "** BISECT_REPLAY is defined in config file **"; + print " Ignore config option and perform new git bisect log?\n"; + if (read_ync " (yes, no, or cancel) ") { + $replay = update_bisect_replay; + $do_check = 0; + } + } elsif (read_yn "read git log and continue?") { + $replay = update_bisect_replay; + $do_check = 0; + } + } + + if ($do_check) { + + # get current HEAD + my $head = get_sha1("HEAD"); + + if ($check ne "good") { + doprint "TESTING BISECT BAD [$bad]\n"; + run_command "git checkout $bad" or + dodie "Failed to checkout $bad"; + + $result = run_bisect $type; + + if ($result ne "bad") { + fail "Tested BISECT_BAD [$bad] and it succeeded" and return 0; + } + } + + if ($check ne "bad") { + doprint "TESTING BISECT GOOD [$good]\n"; + run_command "git checkout $good" or + dodie "Failed to checkout $good"; + + $result = run_bisect $type; + + if ($result ne "good") { + fail "Tested BISECT_GOOD [$good] and it failed" and return 0; + } + } + + # checkout where we started + run_command "git checkout $head" or + dodie "Failed to checkout $head"; + } + + run_command "git bisect start$start_files" or + dodie "could not start bisect"; + + if (defined($replay)) { + run_command "git bisect replay $replay" or + dodie "failed to run replay"; + } else { + + run_command "git bisect good $good" or + dodie "could not set bisect good to $good"; + + run_git_bisect "git bisect bad $bad" or + dodie "could not set bisect bad to $bad"; + + } + + if (defined($start)) { + run_command "git checkout $start" or + dodie "failed to checkout $start"; + } + + my $test; + do { + $result = run_bisect $type; + $test = run_git_bisect "git bisect $result"; + print_times; + } while ($test); + + run_command "git bisect log" or + dodie "could not capture git bisect log"; + + run_command "git bisect reset" or + dodie "could not reset git bisect"; + + doprint "Bad commit was [$bisect_bad_commit]\n"; + + success $i; +} + +# config_ignore holds the configs that were set (or unset) for +# a good config and we will ignore these configs for the rest +# of a config bisect. These configs stay as they were. +my %config_ignore; + +# config_set holds what all configs were set as. +my %config_set; + +# config_off holds the set of configs that the bad config had disabled. +# We need to record them and set them in the .config when running +# olddefconfig, because olddefconfig keeps the defaults. +my %config_off; + +# config_off_tmp holds a set of configs to turn off for now +my @config_off_tmp; + +# config_list is the set of configs that are being tested +my %config_list; +my %null_config; + +my %dependency; + +sub assign_configs { + my ($hash, $config) = @_; + + doprint "Reading configs from $config\n"; + + open (IN, $config) + or dodie "Failed to read $config"; + + while () { + chomp; + if (/^((CONFIG\S*)=.*)/) { + ${$hash}{$2} = $1; + } elsif (/^(# (CONFIG\S*) is not set)/) { + ${$hash}{$2} = $1; + } + } + + close(IN); +} + +sub process_config_ignore { + my ($config) = @_; + + assign_configs \%config_ignore, $config; +} + +sub get_dependencies { + my ($config) = @_; + + my $arr = $dependency{$config}; + if (!defined($arr)) { + return (); + } + + my @deps = @{$arr}; + + foreach my $dep (@{$arr}) { + print "ADD DEP $dep\n"; + @deps = (@deps, get_dependencies $dep); + } + + return @deps; +} + +sub save_config { + my ($pc, $file) = @_; + + my %configs = %{$pc}; + + doprint "Saving configs into $file\n"; + + open(OUT, ">$file") or dodie "Can not write to $file"; + + foreach my $config (keys %configs) { + print OUT "$configs{$config}\n"; + } + close(OUT); +} + +sub create_config { + my ($name, $pc) = @_; + + doprint "Creating old config from $name configs\n"; + + save_config $pc, $output_config; + + make_oldconfig; +} + +sub run_config_bisect_test { + my ($type) = @_; + + my $ret = run_bisect_test $type, "oldconfig"; + + if ($bisect_manual) { + $ret = answer_bisect; + } + + return $ret; +} + +sub config_bisect_end { + my ($good, $bad) = @_; + my $diffexec = "diff -u"; + + if (-f "$builddir/scripts/diffconfig") { + $diffexec = "$builddir/scripts/diffconfig"; + } + doprint "\n\n***************************************\n"; + doprint "No more config bisecting possible.\n"; + run_command "$diffexec $good $bad", 1; + doprint "***************************************\n\n"; +} + +sub run_config_bisect { + my ($good, $bad, $last_result) = @_; + my $reset = ""; + my $cmd; + my $ret; + + if (!length($last_result)) { + $reset = "-r"; + } + run_command "$config_bisect_exec $reset -b $outputdir $good $bad $last_result", 1; + + # config-bisect returns: + # 0 if there is more to bisect + # 1 for finding a good config + # 2 if it can not find any more configs + # -1 (255) on error + if ($run_command_status) { + return $run_command_status; + } + + $ret = run_config_bisect_test $config_bisect_type; + if ($ret) { + doprint "NEW GOOD CONFIG\n"; + # Return 3 for good config + return 3; + } else { + doprint "NEW BAD CONFIG\n"; + # Return 4 for bad config + return 4; + } +} + +sub config_bisect { + my ($i) = @_; + + my $good_config; + my $bad_config; + + my $type = $config_bisect_type; + my $ret; + + $bad_config = $config_bisect; + + if (defined($config_bisect_good)) { + $good_config = $config_bisect_good; + } elsif (defined($minconfig)) { + $good_config = $minconfig; + } else { + doprint "No config specified, checking if defconfig works"; + $ret = run_bisect_test $type, "defconfig"; + if (!$ret) { + fail "Have no good config to compare with, please set CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD"; + return 1; + } + $good_config = $output_config; + } + + if (!defined($config_bisect_exec)) { + # First check the location that ktest.pl ran + my @locations = ( "$pwd/config-bisect.pl", + "$dirname/config-bisect.pl", + "$builddir/tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl", + undef ); + foreach my $loc (@locations) { + doprint "loc = $loc\n"; + $config_bisect_exec = $loc; + last if (defined($config_bisect_exec && -x $config_bisect_exec)); + } + if (!defined($config_bisect_exec)) { + fail "Could not find an executable config-bisect.pl\n", + " Set CONFIG_BISECT_EXEC to point to config-bisect.pl"; + return 1; + } + } + + # we don't want min configs to cause issues here. + doprint "Disabling 'MIN_CONFIG' for this test\n"; + undef $minconfig; + + my %good_configs; + my %bad_configs; + my %tmp_configs; + + if (-f "$tmpdir/good_config.tmp" || -f "$tmpdir/bad_config.tmp") { + if (read_yn "Interrupted config-bisect. Continue (n - will start new)?") { + if (-f "$tmpdir/good_config.tmp") { + $good_config = "$tmpdir/good_config.tmp"; + } else { + $good_config = "$tmpdir/good_config"; + } + if (-f "$tmpdir/bad_config.tmp") { + $bad_config = "$tmpdir/bad_config.tmp"; + } else { + $bad_config = "$tmpdir/bad_config"; + } + } + } + doprint "Run good configs through make oldconfig\n"; + assign_configs \%tmp_configs, $good_config; + create_config "$good_config", \%tmp_configs; + $good_config = "$tmpdir/good_config"; + system("cp $output_config $good_config") == 0 or dodie "cp good config"; + + doprint "Run bad configs through make oldconfig\n"; + assign_configs \%tmp_configs, $bad_config; + create_config "$bad_config", \%tmp_configs; + $bad_config = "$tmpdir/bad_config"; + system("cp $output_config $bad_config") == 0 or dodie "cp bad config"; + + if (defined($config_bisect_check) && $config_bisect_check ne "0") { + if ($config_bisect_check ne "good") { + doprint "Testing bad config\n"; + + $ret = run_bisect_test $type, "useconfig:$bad_config"; + if ($ret) { + fail "Bad config succeeded when expected to fail!"; + return 0; + } + } + if ($config_bisect_check ne "bad") { + doprint "Testing good config\n"; + + $ret = run_bisect_test $type, "useconfig:$good_config"; + if (!$ret) { + fail "Good config failed when expected to succeed!"; + return 0; + } + } + } + + my $last_run = ""; + + do { + $ret = run_config_bisect $good_config, $bad_config, $last_run; + if ($ret == 3) { + $last_run = "good"; + } elsif ($ret == 4) { + $last_run = "bad"; + } + print_times; + } while ($ret == 3 || $ret == 4); + + if ($ret == 2) { + config_bisect_end "$good_config.tmp", "$bad_config.tmp"; + } + + return $ret if ($ret < 0); + + success $i; +} + +sub patchcheck_reboot { + doprint "Reboot and sleep $patchcheck_sleep_time seconds\n"; + reboot_to_good $patchcheck_sleep_time; +} + +sub patchcheck { + my ($i) = @_; + + dodie "PATCHCHECK_START[$i] not defined\n" + if (!defined($patchcheck_start)); + dodie "PATCHCHECK_TYPE[$i] not defined\n" + if (!defined($patchcheck_type)); + + my $start = $patchcheck_start; + + my $cherry = $patchcheck_cherry; + if (!defined($cherry)) { + $cherry = 0; + } + + my $end = "HEAD"; + if (defined($patchcheck_end)) { + $end = $patchcheck_end; + } elsif ($cherry) { + dodie "PATCHCHECK_END must be defined with PATCHCHECK_CHERRY\n"; + } + + # Get the true sha1's since we can use things like HEAD~3 + $start = get_sha1($start); + $end = get_sha1($end); + + my $type = $patchcheck_type; + + # Can't have a test without having a test to run + if ($type eq "test" && !defined($run_test)) { + $type = "boot"; + } + + if ($cherry) { + open (IN, "git cherry -v $start $end|") or + dodie "could not get git list"; + } else { + open (IN, "git log --pretty=oneline $end|") or + dodie "could not get git list"; + } + + my @list; + + while () { + chomp; + # git cherry adds a '+' we want to remove + s/^\+ //; + $list[$#list+1] = $_; + last if (/^$start/); + } + close(IN); + + if (!$cherry) { + if ($list[$#list] !~ /^$start/) { + fail "SHA1 $start not found"; + } + + # go backwards in the list + @list = reverse @list; + } + + doprint("Going to test the following commits:\n"); + foreach my $l (@list) { + doprint "$l\n"; + } + + my $save_clean = $noclean; + my %ignored_warnings; + + if (defined($ignore_warnings)) { + foreach my $sha1 (split /\s+/, $ignore_warnings) { + $ignored_warnings{$sha1} = 1; + } + } + + $in_patchcheck = 1; + foreach my $item (@list) { + my $sha1 = $item; + $sha1 =~ s/^([[:xdigit:]]+).*/$1/; + + doprint "\nProcessing commit \"$item\"\n\n"; + + run_command "git checkout $sha1" or + dodie "Failed to checkout $sha1"; + + # only clean on the first and last patch + if ($item eq $list[0] || + $item eq $list[$#list]) { + $noclean = $save_clean; + } else { + $noclean = 1; + } + + if (defined($minconfig)) { + build "useconfig:$minconfig" or return 0; + } else { + # ?? no config to use? + build "oldconfig" or return 0; + } + + # No need to do per patch checking if warnings file exists + if (!defined($warnings_file) && !defined($ignored_warnings{$sha1})) { + check_patch_buildlog $sha1 or return 0; + } + + check_buildlog or return 0; + + next if ($type eq "build"); + + my $failed = 0; + + start_monitor_and_install or $failed = 1; + + if (!$failed && $type ne "boot"){ + do_run_test or $failed = 1; + } + end_monitor; + if ($failed) { + print_times; + return 0; + } + patchcheck_reboot; + print_times; + } + $in_patchcheck = 0; + success $i; + + return 1; +} + +my %depends; +my %depcount; +my $iflevel = 0; +my @ifdeps; + +# prevent recursion +my %read_kconfigs; + +sub add_dep { + # $config depends on $dep + my ($config, $dep) = @_; + + if (defined($depends{$config})) { + $depends{$config} .= " " . $dep; + } else { + $depends{$config} = $dep; + } + + # record the number of configs depending on $dep + if (defined $depcount{$dep}) { + $depcount{$dep}++; + } else { + $depcount{$dep} = 1; + } +} + +# taken from streamline_config.pl +sub read_kconfig { + my ($kconfig) = @_; + + my $state = "NONE"; + my $config; + my @kconfigs; + + my $cont = 0; + my $line; + + + if (! -f $kconfig) { + doprint "file $kconfig does not exist, skipping\n"; + return; + } + + open(KIN, "$kconfig") + or dodie "Can't open $kconfig"; + while () { + chomp; + + # Make sure that lines ending with \ continue + if ($cont) { + $_ = $line . " " . $_; + } + + if (s/\\$//) { + $cont = 1; + $line = $_; + next; + } + + $cont = 0; + + # collect any Kconfig sources + if (/^source\s*"(.*)"/) { + $kconfigs[$#kconfigs+1] = $1; + } + + # configs found + if (/^\s*(menu)?config\s+(\S+)\s*$/) { + $state = "NEW"; + $config = $2; + + for (my $i = 0; $i < $iflevel; $i++) { + add_dep $config, $ifdeps[$i]; + } + + # collect the depends for the config + } elsif ($state eq "NEW" && /^\s*depends\s+on\s+(.*)$/) { + + add_dep $config, $1; + + # Get the configs that select this config + } elsif ($state eq "NEW" && /^\s*select\s+(\S+)/) { + + # selected by depends on config + add_dep $1, $config; + + # Check for if statements + } elsif (/^if\s+(.*\S)\s*$/) { + my $deps = $1; + # remove beginning and ending non text + $deps =~ s/^[^a-zA-Z0-9_]*//; + $deps =~ s/[^a-zA-Z0-9_]*$//; + + my @deps = split /[^a-zA-Z0-9_]+/, $deps; + + $ifdeps[$iflevel++] = join ':', @deps; + + } elsif (/^endif/) { + + $iflevel-- if ($iflevel); + + # stop on "help" + } elsif (/^\s*help\s*$/) { + $state = "NONE"; + } + } + close(KIN); + + # read in any configs that were found. + foreach $kconfig (@kconfigs) { + if (!defined($read_kconfigs{$kconfig})) { + $read_kconfigs{$kconfig} = 1; + read_kconfig("$builddir/$kconfig"); + } + } +} + +sub read_depends { + # find out which arch this is by the kconfig file + open (IN, $output_config) + or dodie "Failed to read $output_config"; + my $arch; + while () { + if (m,Linux/(\S+)\s+\S+\s+Kernel Configuration,) { + $arch = $1; + last; + } + } + close IN; + + if (!defined($arch)) { + doprint "Could not find arch from config file\n"; + doprint "no dependencies used\n"; + return; + } + + # arch is really the subarch, we need to know + # what directory to look at. + if ($arch eq "i386" || $arch eq "x86_64") { + $arch = "x86"; + } + + my $kconfig = "$builddir/arch/$arch/Kconfig"; + + if (! -f $kconfig && $arch =~ /\d$/) { + my $orig = $arch; + # some subarchs have numbers, truncate them + $arch =~ s/\d*$//; + $kconfig = "$builddir/arch/$arch/Kconfig"; + if (! -f $kconfig) { + doprint "No idea what arch dir $orig is for\n"; + doprint "no dependencies used\n"; + return; + } + } + + read_kconfig($kconfig); +} + +sub make_new_config { + my @configs = @_; + + open (OUT, ">$output_config") + or dodie "Failed to write $output_config"; + + foreach my $config (@configs) { + print OUT "$config\n"; + } + close OUT; +} + +sub chomp_config { + my ($config) = @_; + + $config =~ s/CONFIG_//; + + return $config; +} + +sub get_depends { + my ($dep) = @_; + + my $kconfig = chomp_config $dep; + + $dep = $depends{"$kconfig"}; + + # the dep string we have saves the dependencies as they + # were found, including expressions like ! && ||. We + # want to split this out into just an array of configs. + + my $valid = "A-Za-z_0-9"; + + my @configs; + + while ($dep =~ /[$valid]/) { + + if ($dep =~ /^[^$valid]*([$valid]+)/) { + my $conf = "CONFIG_" . $1; + + $configs[$#configs + 1] = $conf; + + $dep =~ s/^[^$valid]*[$valid]+//; + } else { + dodie "this should never happen"; + } + } + + return @configs; +} + +my %min_configs; +my %keep_configs; +my %save_configs; +my %processed_configs; +my %nochange_config; + +sub test_this_config { + my ($config) = @_; + + my $found; + + # if we already processed this config, skip it + if (defined($processed_configs{$config})) { + return undef; + } + $processed_configs{$config} = 1; + + # if this config failed during this round, skip it + if (defined($nochange_config{$config})) { + return undef; + } + + my $kconfig = chomp_config $config; + + # Test dependencies first + if (defined($depends{"$kconfig"})) { + my @parents = get_depends $config; + foreach my $parent (@parents) { + # if the parent is in the min config, check it first + next if (!defined($min_configs{$parent})); + $found = test_this_config($parent); + if (defined($found)) { + return $found; + } + } + } + + # Remove this config from the list of configs + # do a make olddefconfig and then read the resulting + # .config to make sure it is missing the config that + # we had before + my %configs = %min_configs; + delete $configs{$config}; + make_new_config ((values %configs), (values %keep_configs)); + make_oldconfig; + undef %configs; + assign_configs \%configs, $output_config; + + if (!defined($configs{$config}) || $configs{$config} =~ /^#/) { + return $config; + } + + doprint "disabling config $config did not change .config\n"; + + $nochange_config{$config} = 1; + + return undef; +} + +sub make_min_config { + my ($i) = @_; + + my $type = $minconfig_type; + if ($type ne "boot" && $type ne "test") { + fail "Invalid MIN_CONFIG_TYPE '$minconfig_type'\n" . + " make_min_config works only with 'boot' and 'test'\n" and return; + } + + if (!defined($output_minconfig)) { + fail "OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG not defined" and return; + } + + # If output_minconfig exists, and the start_minconfig + # came from min_config, than ask if we should use + # that instead. + if (-f $output_minconfig && !$start_minconfig_defined) { + print "$output_minconfig exists\n"; + if (!defined($use_output_minconfig)) { + if (read_yn " Use it as minconfig?") { + $start_minconfig = $output_minconfig; + } + } elsif ($use_output_minconfig > 0) { + doprint "Using $output_minconfig as MIN_CONFIG\n"; + $start_minconfig = $output_minconfig; + } else { + doprint "Set to still use MIN_CONFIG as starting point\n"; + } + } + + if (!defined($start_minconfig)) { + fail "START_MIN_CONFIG or MIN_CONFIG not defined" and return; + } + + my $temp_config = "$tmpdir/temp_config"; + + # First things first. We build an allnoconfig to find + # out what the defaults are that we can't touch. + # Some are selections, but we really can't handle selections. + + my $save_minconfig = $minconfig; + undef $minconfig; + + run_command "$make allnoconfig" or return 0; + + read_depends; + + process_config_ignore $output_config; + + undef %save_configs; + undef %min_configs; + + if (defined($ignore_config)) { + # make sure the file exists + `touch $ignore_config`; + assign_configs \%save_configs, $ignore_config; + } + + %keep_configs = %save_configs; + + doprint "Load initial configs from $start_minconfig\n"; + + # Look at the current min configs, and save off all the + # ones that were set via the allnoconfig + assign_configs \%min_configs, $start_minconfig; + + my @config_keys = keys %min_configs; + + # All configs need a depcount + foreach my $config (@config_keys) { + my $kconfig = chomp_config $config; + if (!defined $depcount{$kconfig}) { + $depcount{$kconfig} = 0; + } + } + + # Remove anything that was set by the make allnoconfig + # we shouldn't need them as they get set for us anyway. + foreach my $config (@config_keys) { + # Remove anything in the ignore_config + if (defined($keep_configs{$config})) { + my $file = $ignore_config; + $file =~ s,.*/(.*?)$,$1,; + doprint "$config set by $file ... ignored\n"; + delete $min_configs{$config}; + next; + } + # But make sure the settings are the same. If a min config + # sets a selection, we do not want to get rid of it if + # it is not the same as what we have. Just move it into + # the keep configs. + if (defined($config_ignore{$config})) { + if ($config_ignore{$config} ne $min_configs{$config}) { + doprint "$config is in allnoconfig as '$config_ignore{$config}'"; + doprint " but it is '$min_configs{$config}' in minconfig .. keeping\n"; + $keep_configs{$config} = $min_configs{$config}; + } else { + doprint "$config set by allnoconfig ... ignored\n"; + } + delete $min_configs{$config}; + } + } + + my $done = 0; + my $take_two = 0; + + while (!$done) { + + my $config; + my $found; + + # Now disable each config one by one and do a make oldconfig + # till we find a config that changes our list. + + my @test_configs = keys %min_configs; + + # Sort keys by who is most dependent on + @test_configs = sort { $depcount{chomp_config($b)} <=> $depcount{chomp_config($a)} } + @test_configs ; + + # Put configs that did not modify the config at the end. + my $reset = 1; + for (my $i = 0; $i < $#test_configs; $i++) { + if (!defined($nochange_config{$test_configs[0]})) { + $reset = 0; + last; + } + # This config didn't change the .config last time. + # Place it at the end + my $config = shift @test_configs; + push @test_configs, $config; + } + + # if every test config has failed to modify the .config file + # in the past, then reset and start over. + if ($reset) { + undef %nochange_config; + } + + undef %processed_configs; + + foreach my $config (@test_configs) { + + $found = test_this_config $config; + + last if (defined($found)); + + # oh well, try another config + } + + if (!defined($found)) { + # we could have failed due to the nochange_config hash + # reset and try again + if (!$take_two) { + undef %nochange_config; + $take_two = 1; + next; + } + doprint "No more configs found that we can disable\n"; + $done = 1; + last; + } + $take_two = 0; + + $config = $found; + + doprint "Test with $config disabled\n"; + + # set in_bisect to keep build and monitor from dieing + $in_bisect = 1; + + my $failed = 0; + build "oldconfig" or $failed = 1; + if (!$failed) { + start_monitor_and_install or $failed = 1; + + if ($type eq "test" && !$failed) { + do_run_test or $failed = 1; + } + + end_monitor; + } + + $in_bisect = 0; + + if ($failed) { + doprint "$min_configs{$config} is needed to boot the box... keeping\n"; + # this config is needed, add it to the ignore list. + $keep_configs{$config} = $min_configs{$config}; + $save_configs{$config} = $min_configs{$config}; + delete $min_configs{$config}; + + # update new ignore configs + if (defined($ignore_config)) { + open (OUT, ">$temp_config") + or dodie "Can't write to $temp_config"; + foreach my $config (keys %save_configs) { + print OUT "$save_configs{$config}\n"; + } + close OUT; + run_command "mv $temp_config $ignore_config" or + dodie "failed to copy update to $ignore_config"; + } + + } else { + # We booted without this config, remove it from the minconfigs. + doprint "$config is not needed, disabling\n"; + + delete $min_configs{$config}; + + # Also disable anything that is not enabled in this config + my %configs; + assign_configs \%configs, $output_config; + my @config_keys = keys %min_configs; + foreach my $config (@config_keys) { + if (!defined($configs{$config})) { + doprint "$config is not set, disabling\n"; + delete $min_configs{$config}; + } + } + + # Save off all the current mandatory configs + open (OUT, ">$temp_config") + or dodie "Can't write to $temp_config"; + foreach my $config (keys %keep_configs) { + print OUT "$keep_configs{$config}\n"; + } + foreach my $config (keys %min_configs) { + print OUT "$min_configs{$config}\n"; + } + close OUT; + + run_command "mv $temp_config $output_minconfig" or + dodie "failed to copy update to $output_minconfig"; + } + + doprint "Reboot and wait $sleep_time seconds\n"; + reboot_to_good $sleep_time; + } + + success $i; + return 1; +} + +sub make_warnings_file { + my ($i) = @_; + + if (!defined($warnings_file)) { + dodie "Must define WARNINGS_FILE for make_warnings_file test"; + } + + if ($build_type eq "nobuild") { + dodie "BUILD_TYPE can not be 'nobuild' for make_warnings_file test"; + } + + build $build_type or dodie "Failed to build"; + + open(OUT, ">$warnings_file") or dodie "Can't create $warnings_file"; + + open(IN, $buildlog) or dodie "Can't open $buildlog"; + while () { + + # Some compilers use UTF-8 extended for quotes + # for distcc heterogeneous systems, this causes issues + s/$utf8_quote/'/g; + + if (/$check_build_re/) { + print OUT; + } + } + close(IN); + + close(OUT); + + success $i; +} + +$#ARGV < 1 or die "ktest.pl version: $VERSION\n usage: ktest.pl [config-file]\n"; + +if ($#ARGV == 0) { + $ktest_config = $ARGV[0]; + if (! -f $ktest_config) { + print "$ktest_config does not exist.\n"; + if (!read_yn "Create it?") { + exit 0; + } + } +} + +if (! -f $ktest_config) { + $newconfig = 1; + get_test_case; + open(OUT, ">$ktest_config") or die "Can not create $ktest_config"; + print OUT << "EOF" +# Generated by ktest.pl +# + +# PWD is a ktest.pl variable that will result in the process working +# directory that ktest.pl is executed in. + +# THIS_DIR is automatically assigned the PWD of the path that generated +# the config file. It is best to use this variable when assigning other +# directory paths within this directory. This allows you to easily +# move the test cases to other locations or to other machines. +# +THIS_DIR := $variable{"PWD"} + +# Define each test with TEST_START +# The config options below it will override the defaults +TEST_START +TEST_TYPE = $default{"TEST_TYPE"} + +DEFAULTS +EOF +; + close(OUT); +} +read_config $ktest_config; + +if (defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + $opt{"LOG_FILE"} = eval_option("LOG_FILE", $opt{"LOG_FILE"}, -1); +} + +# Append any configs entered in manually to the config file. +my @new_configs = keys %entered_configs; +if ($#new_configs >= 0) { + print "\nAppending entered in configs to $ktest_config\n"; + open(OUT, ">>$ktest_config") or die "Can not append to $ktest_config"; + foreach my $config (@new_configs) { + print OUT "$config = $entered_configs{$config}\n"; + $opt{$config} = process_variables($entered_configs{$config}); + } +} + +if ($opt{"CLEAR_LOG"} && defined($opt{"LOG_FILE"})) { + unlink $opt{"LOG_FILE"}; +} + +doprint "\n\nSTARTING AUTOMATED TESTS\n\n"; + +for (my $i = 0, my $repeat = 1; $i <= $opt{"NUM_TESTS"}; $i += $repeat) { + + if (!$i) { + doprint "DEFAULT OPTIONS:\n"; + } else { + doprint "\nTEST $i OPTIONS"; + if (defined($repeat_tests{$i})) { + $repeat = $repeat_tests{$i}; + doprint " ITERATE $repeat"; + } + doprint "\n"; + } + + foreach my $option (sort keys %opt) { + + if ($option =~ /\[(\d+)\]$/) { + next if ($i != $1); + } else { + next if ($i); + } + + doprint "$option = $opt{$option}\n"; + } +} + +sub option_defined { + my ($option) = @_; + + if (defined($opt{$option}) && $opt{$option} !~ /^\s*$/) { + return 1; + } + + return 0; +} + +sub __set_test_option { + my ($name, $i) = @_; + + my $option = "$name\[$i\]"; + + if (option_defined($option)) { + return $opt{$option}; + } + + foreach my $test (keys %repeat_tests) { + if ($i >= $test && + $i < $test + $repeat_tests{$test}) { + $option = "$name\[$test\]"; + if (option_defined($option)) { + return $opt{$option}; + } + } + } + + if (option_defined($name)) { + return $opt{$name}; + } + + return undef; +} + +sub set_test_option { + my ($name, $i) = @_; + + my $option = __set_test_option($name, $i); + return $option if (!defined($option)); + + return eval_option($name, $option, $i); +} + +sub find_mailer { + my ($mailer) = @_; + + my @paths = split /:/, $ENV{PATH}; + + # sendmail is usually in /usr/sbin + $paths[$#paths + 1] = "/usr/sbin"; + + foreach my $path (@paths) { + if (-x "$path/$mailer") { + return $path; + } + } + + return undef; +} + +sub do_send_mail { + my ($subject, $message) = @_; + + if (!defined($mail_path)) { + # find the mailer + $mail_path = find_mailer $mailer; + if (!defined($mail_path)) { + die "\nCan not find $mailer in PATH\n"; + } + } + + if (!defined($mail_command)) { + if ($mailer eq "mail" || $mailer eq "mailx") { + $mail_command = "\$MAIL_PATH/\$MAILER -s \'\$SUBJECT\' \$MAILTO <<< \'\$MESSAGE\'"; + } elsif ($mailer eq "sendmail" ) { + $mail_command = "echo \'Subject: \$SUBJECT\n\n\$MESSAGE\' | \$MAIL_PATH/\$MAILER -t \$MAILTO"; + } else { + die "\nYour mailer: $mailer is not supported.\n"; + } + } + + $mail_command =~ s/\$MAILER/$mailer/g; + $mail_command =~ s/\$MAIL_PATH/$mail_path/g; + $mail_command =~ s/\$MAILTO/$mailto/g; + $mail_command =~ s/\$SUBJECT/$subject/g; + $mail_command =~ s/\$MESSAGE/$message/g; + + my $ret = run_command $mail_command; + if (!$ret && defined($file)) { + # try again without the file + $message .= "\n\n*** FAILED TO SEND LOG ***\n\n"; + do_send_email($subject, $message); + } +} + +sub send_email { + + if (defined($mailto)) { + if (!defined($mailer)) { + doprint "No email sent: email or mailer not specified in config.\n"; + return; + } + do_send_mail @_; + } +} + +sub cancel_test { + if ($email_when_canceled) { + send_email("KTEST: Your [$test_type] test was cancelled", + "Your test started at $script_start_time was cancelled: sig int"); + } + die "\nCaught Sig Int, test interrupted: $!\n" +} + +$SIG{INT} = qw(cancel_test); + +# First we need to do is the builds +for (my $i = 1; $i <= $opt{"NUM_TESTS"}; $i++) { + + # Do not reboot on failing test options + $no_reboot = 1; + $reboot_success = 0; + + $have_version = 0; + + $iteration = $i; + + $build_time = 0; + $install_time = 0; + $reboot_time = 0; + $test_time = 0; + + undef %force_config; + + my $makecmd = set_test_option("MAKE_CMD", $i); + + $outputdir = set_test_option("OUTPUT_DIR", $i); + $builddir = set_test_option("BUILD_DIR", $i); + + chdir $builddir || dodie "can't change directory to $builddir"; + + if (!-d $outputdir) { + mkpath($outputdir) or + dodie "can't create $outputdir"; + } + + $make = "$makecmd O=$outputdir"; + + # Load all the options into their mapped variable names + foreach my $opt (keys %option_map) { + ${$option_map{$opt}} = set_test_option($opt, $i); + } + + $start_minconfig_defined = 1; + + # The first test may override the PRE_KTEST option + if ($i == 1) { + if (defined($pre_ktest)) { + doprint "\n"; + run_command $pre_ktest; + } + if ($email_when_started) { + send_email("KTEST: Your [$test_type] test was started", + "Your test was started on $script_start_time"); + } + } + + # Any test can override the POST_KTEST option + # The last test takes precedence. + if (defined($post_ktest)) { + $final_post_ktest = $post_ktest; + } + + if (!defined($start_minconfig)) { + $start_minconfig_defined = 0; + $start_minconfig = $minconfig; + } + + if (!-d $tmpdir) { + mkpath($tmpdir) or + dodie "can't create $tmpdir"; + } + + $ENV{"SSH_USER"} = $ssh_user; + $ENV{"MACHINE"} = $machine; + + $buildlog = "$tmpdir/buildlog-$machine"; + $testlog = "$tmpdir/testlog-$machine"; + $dmesg = "$tmpdir/dmesg-$machine"; + $output_config = "$outputdir/.config"; + + if (!$buildonly) { + $target = "$ssh_user\@$machine"; + if ($reboot_type eq "grub") { + dodie "GRUB_MENU not defined" if (!defined($grub_menu)); + } elsif ($reboot_type eq "grub2") { + dodie "GRUB_MENU not defined" if (!defined($grub_menu)); + dodie "GRUB_FILE not defined" if (!defined($grub_file)); + } elsif ($reboot_type eq "syslinux") { + dodie "SYSLINUX_LABEL not defined" if (!defined($syslinux_label)); + } + } + + my $run_type = $build_type; + if ($test_type eq "patchcheck") { + $run_type = $patchcheck_type; + } elsif ($test_type eq "bisect") { + $run_type = $bisect_type; + } elsif ($test_type eq "config_bisect") { + $run_type = $config_bisect_type; + } elsif ($test_type eq "make_min_config") { + $run_type = ""; + } elsif ($test_type eq "make_warnings_file") { + $run_type = ""; + } + + # mistake in config file? + if (!defined($run_type)) { + $run_type = "ERROR"; + } + + my $installme = ""; + $installme = " no_install" if ($no_install); + + my $name = ""; + + if (defined($test_name)) { + $name = " ($test_name)"; + } + + doprint "\n\n"; + doprint "RUNNING TEST $i of $opt{NUM_TESTS}$name with option $test_type $run_type$installme\n\n"; + + if (defined($pre_test)) { + run_command $pre_test; + } + + unlink $dmesg; + unlink $buildlog; + unlink $testlog; + + if (defined($addconfig)) { + my $min = $minconfig; + if (!defined($minconfig)) { + $min = ""; + } + run_command "cat $addconfig $min > $tmpdir/add_config" or + dodie "Failed to create temp config"; + $minconfig = "$tmpdir/add_config"; + } + + if (defined($checkout)) { + run_command "git checkout $checkout" or + dodie "failed to checkout $checkout"; + } + + $no_reboot = 0; + + # A test may opt to not reboot the box + if ($reboot_on_success) { + $reboot_success = 1; + } + + if ($test_type eq "bisect") { + bisect $i; + next; + } elsif ($test_type eq "config_bisect") { + config_bisect $i; + next; + } elsif ($test_type eq "patchcheck") { + patchcheck $i; + next; + } elsif ($test_type eq "make_min_config") { + make_min_config $i; + next; + } elsif ($test_type eq "make_warnings_file") { + $no_reboot = 1; + make_warnings_file $i; + next; + } + + if ($build_type ne "nobuild") { + build $build_type or next; + check_buildlog or next; + } + + if ($test_type eq "install") { + get_version; + install; + success $i; + next; + } + + if ($test_type ne "build") { + my $failed = 0; + start_monitor_and_install or $failed = 1; + + if (!$failed && $test_type ne "boot" && defined($run_test)) { + do_run_test or $failed = 1; + } + end_monitor; + if ($failed) { + print_times; + next; + } + } + + print_times; + + success $i; +} + +if (defined($final_post_ktest)) { + run_command $final_post_ktest; +} + +if ($opt{"POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS"}) { + halt; +} elsif ($opt{"REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS"} && !do_not_reboot && $reboot_success) { + reboot_to_good; +} elsif (defined($switch_to_good)) { + # still need to get to the good kernel + run_command $switch_to_good; +} + + +doprint "\n $successes of $opt{NUM_TESTS} tests were successful\n\n"; + +if ($email_when_finished) { + send_email("KTEST: Your [$test_type] test has finished!", + "$successes of $opt{NUM_TESTS} tests started at $script_start_time were successful!"); +} +exit 0; diff --git a/tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf b/tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6ca6ca0ce --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/ktest/sample.conf @@ -0,0 +1,1348 @@ +# +# Config file for ktest.pl +# +# Place your customized version of this, in the working directory that +# ktest.pl is run from. By default, ktest.pl will look for a file +# called "ktest.conf", but you can name it anything you like and specify +# the name of your config file as the first argument of ktest.pl. +# +# Note, all paths must be absolute +# + +# Options set in the beginning of the file are considered to be +# default options. These options can be overriden by test specific +# options, with the following exceptions: +# +# LOG_FILE +# CLEAR_LOG +# POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS +# REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS +# +# Test specific options are set after the label: +# +# TEST_START +# +# The options after a TEST_START label are specific to that test. +# Each TEST_START label will set up a new test. If you want to +# perform a test more than once, you can add the ITERATE label +# to it followed by the number of times you want that test +# to iterate. If the ITERATE is left off, the test will only +# be performed once. +# +# TEST_START ITERATE 10 +# +# You can skip a test by adding SKIP (before or after the ITERATE +# and number) +# +# TEST_START SKIP +# +# TEST_START SKIP ITERATE 10 +# +# TEST_START ITERATE 10 SKIP +# +# The SKIP label causes the options and the test itself to be ignored. +# This is useful to set up several different tests in one config file, and +# only enabling the ones you want to use for a current test run. +# +# You can add default options anywhere in the file as well +# with the DEFAULTS tag. This allows you to have default options +# after the test options to keep the test options at the top +# of the file. You can even place the DEFAULTS tag between +# test cases (but not in the middle of a single test case) +# +# TEST_START +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-test1 +# +# DEFAULTS +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-default +# +# TEST_START ITERATE 10 +# +# The above will run the first test with MIN_CONFIG set to +# /home/test/config-test-1. Then 10 tests will be executed +# with MIN_CONFIG with /home/test/config-default. +# +# You can also disable defaults with the SKIP option +# +# DEFAULTS SKIP +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-use-sometimes +# +# DEFAULTS +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-most-times +# +# The above will ignore the first MIN_CONFIG. If you want to +# use the first MIN_CONFIG, remove the SKIP from the first +# DEFAULTS tag and add it to the second. Be careful, options +# may only be declared once per test or default. If you have +# the same option name under the same test or as default +# ktest will fail to execute, and no tests will run. +# +# DEFAULTS OVERRIDE +# +# Options defined in the DEFAULTS section can not be duplicated +# even if they are defined in two different DEFAULT sections. +# This is done to catch mistakes where an option is added but +# the previous option was forgotten about and not commented. +# +# The OVERRIDE keyword can be added to a section to allow this +# section to override other DEFAULT sections values that have +# been defined previously. It will only override options that +# have been defined before its use. Options defined later +# in a non override section will still error. The same option +# can not be defined in the same section even if that section +# is marked OVERRIDE. +# +# +# +# Both TEST_START and DEFAULTS sections can also have the IF keyword +# The value after the IF must evaluate into a 0 or non 0 positive +# integer, and can use the config variables (explained below). +# +# DEFAULTS IF ${IS_X86_32} +# +# The above will process the DEFAULTS section if the config +# variable IS_X86_32 evaluates to a non zero positive integer +# otherwise if it evaluates to zero, it will act the same +# as if the SKIP keyword was used. +# +# The ELSE keyword can be used directly after a section with +# a IF statement. +# +# TEST_START IF ${RUN_NET_TESTS} +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-network +# +# ELSE +# +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-normal +# +# +# The ELSE keyword can also contain an IF statement to allow multiple +# if then else sections. But all the sections must be either +# DEFAULT or TEST_START, they can not be a mixture. +# +# TEST_START IF ${RUN_NET_TESTS} +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-network +# +# ELSE IF ${RUN_DISK_TESTS} +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-tests +# +# ELSE IF ${RUN_CPU_TESTS} +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-cpu +# +# ELSE +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-network +# +# The if statement may also have comparisons that will and for +# == and !=, strings may be used for both sides. +# +# BOX_TYPE := x86_32 +# +# DEFAULTS IF ${BOX_TYPE} == x86_32 +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-32 +# ELSE +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:${CONFIG_DIR}/config-64 +# +# The DEFINED keyword can be used by the IF statements too. +# It returns true if the given config variable or option has been defined +# or false otherwise. +# +# +# DEFAULTS IF DEFINED USE_CC +# CC := ${USE_CC} +# ELSE +# CC := gcc +# +# +# As well as NOT DEFINED. +# +# DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED MAKE_CMD +# MAKE_CMD := make ARCH=x86 +# +# +# And/or ops (&&,||) may also be used to make complex conditionals. +# +# TEST_START IF (DEFINED ALL_TESTS || ${MYTEST} == boottest) && ${MACHINE} == gandalf +# +# Notice the use of parentheses. Without any parentheses the above would be +# processed the same as: +# +# TEST_START IF DEFINED ALL_TESTS || (${MYTEST} == boottest && ${MACHINE} == gandalf) +# +# +# +# INCLUDE file +# +# The INCLUDE keyword may be used in DEFAULT sections. This will +# read another config file and process that file as well. The included +# file can include other files, add new test cases or default +# statements. Config variables will be passed to these files and changes +# to config variables will be seen by top level config files. Including +# a file is processed just like the contents of the file was cut and pasted +# into the top level file, except, that include files that end with +# TEST_START sections will have that section ended at the end of +# the include file. That is, an included file is included followed +# by another DEFAULT keyword. +# +# Unlike other files referenced in this config, the file path does not need +# to be absolute. If the file does not start with '/', then the directory +# that the current config file was located in is used. If no config by the +# given name is found there, then the current directory is searched. +# +# INCLUDE myfile +# DEFAULT +# +# is the same as: +# +# INCLUDE myfile +# +# Note, if the include file does not contain a full path, the file is +# searched first by the location of the original include file, and then +# by the location that ktest.pl was executed in. +# + +#### Config variables #### +# +# This config file can also contain "config variables". +# These are assigned with ":=" instead of the ktest option +# assigment "=". +# +# The difference between ktest options and config variables +# is that config variables can be used multiple times, +# where each instance will override the previous instance. +# And that they only live at time of processing this config. +# +# The advantage to config variables are that they can be used +# by any option or any other config variables to define thing +# that you may use over and over again in the options. +# +# For example: +# +# USER := root +# TARGET := mybox +# TEST_CASE := ssh ${USER}@${TARGET} /path/to/my/test +# +# TEST_START +# MIN_CONFIG = config1 +# TEST = ${TEST_CASE} +# +# TEST_START +# MIN_CONFIG = config2 +# TEST = ${TEST_CASE} +# +# TEST_CASE := ssh ${USER}@${TARGET} /path/to/my/test2 +# +# TEST_START +# MIN_CONFIG = config1 +# TEST = ${TEST_CASE} +# +# TEST_START +# MIN_CONFIG = config2 +# TEST = ${TEST_CASE} +# +# TEST_DIR := /home/me/test +# +# BUILD_DIR = ${TEST_DIR}/linux.git +# OUTPUT_DIR = ${TEST_DIR}/test +# +# Note, the config variables are evaluated immediately, thus +# updating TARGET after TEST_CASE has been assigned does nothing +# to TEST_CASE. +# +# As shown in the example, to evaluate a config variable, you +# use the ${X} convention. Simple $X will not work. +# +# If the config variable does not exist, the ${X} will not +# be evaluated. Thus: +# +# MAKE_CMD = PATH=/mypath:${PATH} make +# +# If PATH is not a config variable, then the ${PATH} in +# the MAKE_CMD option will be evaluated by the shell when +# the MAKE_CMD option is passed into shell processing. + +#### Using options in other options #### +# +# Options that are defined in the config file may also be used +# by other options. All options are evaulated at time of +# use (except that config variables are evaluated at config +# processing time). +# +# If an ktest option is used within another option, instead of +# typing it again in that option you can simply use the option +# just like you can config variables. +# +# MACHINE = mybox +# +# TEST = ssh root@${MACHINE} /path/to/test +# +# The option will be used per test case. Thus: +# +# TEST_TYPE = test +# TEST = ssh root@{MACHINE} +# +# TEST_START +# MACHINE = box1 +# +# TEST_START +# MACHINE = box2 +# +# For both test cases, MACHINE will be evaluated at the time +# of the test case. The first test will run ssh root@box1 +# and the second will run ssh root@box2. + +#### Mandatory Default Options #### + +# These options must be in the default section, although most +# may be overridden by test options. + +# The machine hostname that you will test +#MACHINE = target + +# The box is expected to have ssh on normal bootup, provide the user +# (most likely root, since you need privileged operations) +#SSH_USER = root + +# The directory that contains the Linux source code +#BUILD_DIR = /home/test/linux.git + +# The directory that the objects will be built +# (can not be same as BUILD_DIR) +#OUTPUT_DIR = /home/test/build/target + +# The location of the compiled file to copy to the target +# (relative to OUTPUT_DIR) +#BUILD_TARGET = arch/x86/boot/bzImage + +# The place to put your image on the test machine +#TARGET_IMAGE = /boot/vmlinuz-test + +# A script or command to reboot the box +# +# Here is a digital loggers power switch example +#POWER_CYCLE = wget --no-proxy -O /dev/null -q --auth-no-challenge 'http://admin:admin@power/outlet?5=CCL' +# +# Here is an example to reboot a virtual box on the current host +# with the name "Guest". +#POWER_CYCLE = virsh destroy Guest; sleep 5; virsh start Guest + +# The script or command that reads the console +# +# If you use ttywatch server, something like the following would work. +#CONSOLE = nc -d localhost 3001 +# +# For a virtual machine with guest name "Guest". +#CONSOLE = virsh console Guest + +# Signal to send to kill console. +# ktest.pl will create a child process to monitor the console. +# When the console is finished, ktest will kill the child process +# with this signal. +# (default INT) +#CLOSE_CONSOLE_SIGNAL = HUP + +# Required version ending to differentiate the test +# from other linux builds on the system. +#LOCALVERSION = -test + +# For REBOOT_TYPE = grub2, you must specify where the grub.cfg +# file is. This is the file that is searched to find the menu +# option to boot to with GRUB_REBOOT +#GRUB_FILE = /boot/grub2/grub.cfg + +# The tool for REBOOT_TYPE = grub2 to set the next reboot kernel +# to boot into (one shot mode). +# (default grub2_reboot) +#GRUB_REBOOT = grub2_reboot + +# The grub title name for the test kernel to boot +# (Only mandatory if REBOOT_TYPE = grub or grub2) +# +# Note, ktest.pl will not update the grub menu.lst, you need to +# manually add an option for the test. ktest.pl will search +# the grub menu.lst for this option to find what kernel to +# reboot into. +# +# For example, if in the /boot/grub/menu.lst the test kernel title has: +# title Test Kernel +# kernel vmlinuz-test +# +# For grub2, a search of top level "menuentry"s are done. No +# submenu is searched. The menu is found by searching for the +# contents of GRUB_MENU in the line that starts with "menuentry". +# You may want to include the quotes around the option. For example: +# for: menuentry 'Test Kernel' +# do a: GRUB_MENU = 'Test Kernel' +# For customizing, add your entry in /etc/grub.d/40_custom. +# +#GRUB_MENU = Test Kernel + +# For REBOOT_TYPE = syslinux, the name of the syslinux executable +# (on the target) to use to set up the next reboot to boot the +# test kernel. +# (default extlinux) +#SYSLINUX = syslinux + +# For REBOOT_TYPE = syslinux, the path that is passed to to the +# syslinux command where syslinux is installed. +# (default /boot/extlinux) +#SYSLINUX_PATH = /boot/syslinux + +# For REBOOT_TYPE = syslinux, the syslinux label that references the +# test kernel in the syslinux config file. +# (default undefined) +#SYSLINUX_LABEL = "test-kernel" + +# A script to reboot the target into the test kernel +# This and SWITCH_TO_TEST are about the same, except +# SWITCH_TO_TEST is run even for REBOOT_TYPE = grub. +# This may be left undefined. +# (default undefined) +#REBOOT_SCRIPT = + +#### Optional Config Options (all have defaults) #### + +# Email options for receiving notifications. Users must setup +# the specified mailer prior to using this feature. +# +# (default undefined) +#MAILTO = +# +# Supported mailers: sendmail, mail, mailx +# (default sendmail) +#MAILER = sendmail +# +# The executable to run +# (default: for sendmail "/usr/sbin/sendmail", otherwise equals ${MAILER}) +#MAIL_EXEC = /usr/sbin/sendmail +# +# The command used to send mail, which uses the above options +# can be modified. By default if the mailer is "sendmail" then +# MAIL_COMMAND = echo \'Subject: $SUBJECT\n\n$MESSAGE\' | $MAIL_PATH/$MAILER -t $MAILTO +# For mail or mailx: +# MAIL_COMMAND = "$MAIL_PATH/$MAILER -s \'$SUBJECT\' $MAILTO <<< \'$MESSAGE\' +# ktest.pl will do the substitution for MAIL_PATH, MAILER, MAILTO at the time +# it sends the mail if "$FOO" format is used. If "${FOO}" format is used, +# then the substitutions will occur at the time the config file is read. +# But note, MAIL_PATH and MAILER require being set by the config file if +# ${MAIL_PATH} or ${MAILER} are used, but not if $MAIL_PATH or $MAILER are. +#MAIL_COMMAND = echo \'Subject: $SUBJECT\n\n$MESSAGE\' | $MAIL_PATH/$MAILER -t $MAILTO +# +# Errors are defined as those would terminate the script +# (default 1) +#EMAIL_ON_ERROR = 1 +# (default 1) +#EMAIL_WHEN_FINISHED = 1 +# (default 0) +#EMAIL_WHEN_STARTED = 1 +# +# Users can cancel the test by Ctrl^C +# (default 0) +#EMAIL_WHEN_CANCELED = 1 + +# Start a test setup. If you leave this off, all options +# will be default and the test will run once. +# This is a label and not really an option (it takes no value). +# You can append ITERATE and a number after it to iterate the +# test a number of times, or SKIP to ignore this test. +# +#TEST_START +#TEST_START ITERATE 5 +#TEST_START SKIP + +# Have the following options as default again. Used after tests +# have already been defined by TEST_START. Optionally, you can +# just define all default options before the first TEST_START +# and you do not need this option. +# +# This is a label and not really an option (it takes no value). +# You can append SKIP to this label and the options within this +# section will be ignored. +# +# DEFAULTS +# DEFAULTS SKIP + +# If you want to execute some command before the first test runs +# you can set this option. Note, it can be set as a default option +# or an option in the first test case. All other test cases will +# ignore it. If both the default and first test have this option +# set, then the first test will take precedence. +# +# default (undefined) +#PRE_KTEST = ${SSH} ~/set_up_test + +# If you want to execute some command after all the tests have +# completed, you can set this option. Note, it can be set as a +# default or any test case can override it. If multiple test cases +# set this option, then the last test case that set it will take +# precedence +# +# default (undefined) +#POST_KTEST = ${SSH} ~/dismantle_test + +# The default test type (default test) +# The test types may be: +# build - only build the kernel, do nothing else +# install - build and install, but do nothing else (does not reboot) +# boot - build, install, and boot the kernel +# test - build, boot and if TEST is set, run the test script +# (If TEST is not set, it defaults back to boot) +# bisect - Perform a bisect on the kernel (see BISECT_TYPE below) +# patchcheck - Do a test on a series of commits in git (see PATCHCHECK below) +#TEST_TYPE = test + +# Test to run if there is a successful boot and TEST_TYPE is test. +# Must exit with 0 on success and non zero on error +# default (undefined) +#TEST = ssh user@machine /root/run_test + +# The build type is any make config type or special command +# (default randconfig) +# nobuild - skip the clean and build step +# useconfig:/path/to/config - use the given config and run +# oldconfig on it. +# This option is ignored if TEST_TYPE is patchcheck or bisect +#BUILD_TYPE = randconfig + +# The make command (default make) +# If you are building a 32bit x86 on a 64 bit host +#MAKE_CMD = CC=i386-gcc AS=i386-as make ARCH=i386 + +# Any build options for the make of the kernel (not for other makes, like configs) +# (default "") +#BUILD_OPTIONS = -j20 + +# If you need to do some special handling before installing +# you can add a script with this option. +# The environment variable KERNEL_VERSION will be set to the +# kernel version that is used. +# +# default (undefined) +#PRE_INSTALL = ssh user@target rm -rf '/lib/modules/*-test*' + +# If you need an initrd, you can add a script or code here to install +# it. The environment variable KERNEL_VERSION will be set to the +# kernel version that is used. Remember to add the initrd line +# to your grub menu.lst file. +# +# Here's a couple of examples to use: +#POST_INSTALL = ssh user@target /sbin/mkinitrd --allow-missing -f /boot/initramfs-test.img $KERNEL_VERSION +# +# or on some systems: +#POST_INSTALL = ssh user@target /sbin/dracut -f /boot/initramfs-test.img $KERNEL_VERSION + +# If for some reason you just want to boot the kernel and you do not +# want the test to install anything new. For example, you may just want +# to boot test the same kernel over and over and do not want to go through +# the hassle of installing anything, you can set this option to 1 +# (default 0) +#NO_INSTALL = 1 + +# If there is a command that you want to run before the individual test +# case executes, then you can set this option +# +# default (undefined) +#PRE_TEST = ${SSH} reboot_to_special_kernel + +# If there is a command you want to run after the individual test case +# completes, then you can set this option. +# +# default (undefined) +#POST_TEST = cd ${BUILD_DIR}; git reset --hard + +# If there is a script that you require to run before the build is done +# you can specify it with PRE_BUILD. +# +# One example may be if you must add a temporary patch to the build to +# fix a unrelated bug to perform a patchcheck test. This will apply the +# patch before each build that is made. Use the POST_BUILD to do a git reset --hard +# to remove the patch. +# +# (default undef) +#PRE_BUILD = cd ${BUILD_DIR} && patch -p1 < /tmp/temp.patch + +# To specify if the test should fail if the PRE_BUILD fails, +# PRE_BUILD_DIE needs to be set to 1. Otherwise the PRE_BUILD +# result is ignored. +# (default 0) +# PRE_BUILD_DIE = 1 + +# If there is a script that should run after the build is done +# you can specify it with POST_BUILD. +# +# As the example in PRE_BUILD, POST_BUILD can be used to reset modifications +# made by the PRE_BUILD. +# +# (default undef) +#POST_BUILD = cd ${BUILD_DIR} && git reset --hard + +# To specify if the test should fail if the POST_BUILD fails, +# POST_BUILD_DIE needs to be set to 1. Otherwise the POST_BUILD +# result is ignored. +# (default 0) +#POST_BUILD_DIE = 1 + +# Way to reboot the box to the test kernel. +# Only valid options so far are "grub", "grub2", "syslinux" and "script" +# (default grub) +# If you specify grub, it will assume grub version 1 +# and will search in /boot/grub/menu.lst for the title $GRUB_MENU +# and select that target to reboot to the kernel. If this is not +# your setup, then specify "script" and have a command or script +# specified in REBOOT_SCRIPT to boot to the target. +# +# For REBOOT_TYPE = grub2, you must define both GRUB_MENU and +# GRUB_FILE. +# +# For REBOOT_TYPE = syslinux, you must define SYSLINUX_LABEL, and +# perhaps modify SYSLINUX (default extlinux) and SYSLINUX_PATH +# (default /boot/extlinux) +# +# The entry in /boot/grub/menu.lst must be entered in manually. +# The test will not modify that file. +#REBOOT_TYPE = grub + +# If you are using a machine that doesn't boot with grub, and +# perhaps gets its kernel from a remote server (tftp), then +# you can use this option to update the target image with the +# test image. +# +# You could also do the same with POST_INSTALL, but the difference +# between that option and this option is that POST_INSTALL runs +# after the install, where this one runs just before a reboot. +# (default undefined) +#SWITCH_TO_TEST = cp ${OUTPUT_DIR}/${BUILD_TARGET} ${TARGET_IMAGE} + +# If you are using a machine that doesn't boot with grub, and +# perhaps gets its kernel from a remote server (tftp), then +# you can use this option to update the target image with the +# the known good image to reboot safely back into. +# +# This option holds a command that will execute before needing +# to reboot to a good known image. +# (default undefined) +#SWITCH_TO_GOOD = ssh ${SSH_USER}/${MACHINE} cp good_image ${TARGET_IMAGE} + +# The min config that is needed to build for the machine +# A nice way to create this is with the following: +# +# $ ssh target +# $ lsmod > mymods +# $ scp mymods host:/tmp +# $ exit +# $ cd linux.git +# $ rm .config +# $ make LSMOD=mymods localyesconfig +# $ grep '^CONFIG' .config > /home/test/config-min +# +# If you want even less configs: +# +# log in directly to target (do not ssh) +# +# $ su +# # lsmod | cut -d' ' -f1 | xargs rmmod +# +# repeat the above several times +# +# # lsmod > mymods +# # reboot +# +# May need to reboot to get your network back to copy the mymods +# to the host, and then remove the previous .config and run the +# localyesconfig again. The CONFIG_MIN generated like this will +# not guarantee network activity to the box so the TEST_TYPE of +# test may fail. +# +# You might also want to set: +# CONFIG_CMDLINE="" +# randconfig may set the above and override your real command +# line options. +# (default undefined) +#MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-min + +# Sometimes there's options that just break the boot and +# you do not care about. Here are a few: +# # CONFIG_STAGING is not set +# Staging drivers are horrible, and can break the build. +# # CONFIG_SCSI_DEBUG is not set +# SCSI_DEBUG may change your root partition +# # CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE is not set +# KGDB may cause oops waiting for a connection that's not there. +# This option points to the file containing config options that will be prepended +# to the MIN_CONFIG (or be the MIN_CONFIG if it is not set) +# +# Note, config options in MIN_CONFIG will override these options. +# +# (default undefined) +#ADD_CONFIG = /home/test/config-broken + +# The location on the host where to write temp files +# (default /tmp/ktest/${MACHINE}) +#TMP_DIR = /tmp/ktest/${MACHINE} + +# Optional log file to write the status (recommended) +# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. +# (default undefined) +#LOG_FILE = /home/test/logfiles/target.log + +# Remove old logfile if it exists before starting all tests. +# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. +# (default 0) +#CLEAR_LOG = 0 + +# Line to define a successful boot up in console output. +# This is what the line contains, not the entire line. If you need +# the entire line to match, then use regural expression syntax like: +# (do not add any quotes around it) +# +# SUCCESS_LINE = ^MyBox Login:$ +# +# (default "login:") +#SUCCESS_LINE = login: + +# To speed up between reboots, defining a line that the +# default kernel produces that represents that the default +# kernel has successfully booted and can be used to pass +# a new test kernel to it. Otherwise ktest.pl will wait till +# SLEEP_TIME to continue. +# (default undefined) +#REBOOT_SUCCESS_LINE = login: + +# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having +# a specified time to stop the test after success is recommended. +# (in seconds) +# (default 10) +#STOP_AFTER_SUCCESS = 10 + +# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having +# a specified time to stop the test after failure is recommended. +# (in seconds) +# (default 60) +#STOP_AFTER_FAILURE = 60 + +# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having +# a specified time to stop the test if it never succeeds nor fails +# is recommended. +# Note: this is ignored if a success or failure is detected. +# (in seconds) +# (default 600, -1 is to never stop) +#STOP_TEST_AFTER = 600 + +# Stop testing if a build fails. If set, the script will end if +# a failure is detected, otherwise it will save off the .config, +# dmesg and bootlog in a directory called +# MACHINE-TEST_TYPE_BUILD_TYPE-fail-yyyymmddhhmmss +# if the STORE_FAILURES directory is set. +# (default 1) +# Note, even if this is set to zero, there are some errors that still +# stop the tests. +#DIE_ON_FAILURE = 1 + +# Directory to store failure directories on failure. If this is not +# set, DIE_ON_FAILURE=0 will not save off the .config, dmesg and +# bootlog. This option is ignored if DIE_ON_FAILURE is not set. +# (default undefined) +#STORE_FAILURES = /home/test/failures + +# Directory to store success directories on success. If this is not +# set, the .config, dmesg and bootlog will not be saved if a +# test succeeds. +# (default undefined) +#STORE_SUCCESSES = /home/test/successes + +# Build without doing a make mrproper, or removing .config +# (default 0) +#BUILD_NOCLEAN = 0 + +# As the test reads the console, after it hits the SUCCESS_LINE +# the time it waits for the monitor to settle down between reads +# can usually be lowered. +# (in seconds) (default 1) +#BOOTED_TIMEOUT = 1 + +# The timeout in seconds when we consider the box hung after +# the console stop producing output. Be sure to leave enough +# time here to get pass a reboot. Some machines may not produce +# any console output for a long time during a reboot. You do +# not want the test to fail just because the system was in +# the process of rebooting to the test kernel. +# (default 120) +#TIMEOUT = 120 + +# The timeout in seconds when to test if the box can be rebooted +# or not. Before issuing the reboot command, a ssh connection +# is attempted to see if the target machine is still active. +# If the target does not connect within this timeout, a power cycle +# is issued instead of a reboot. +# CONNECT_TIMEOUT = 25 + +# In between tests, a reboot of the box may occur, and this +# is the time to wait for the console after it stops producing +# output. Some machines may not produce a large lag on reboot +# so this should accommodate it. +# The difference between this and TIMEOUT, is that TIMEOUT happens +# when rebooting to the test kernel. This sleep time happens +# after a test has completed and we are about to start running +# another test. If a reboot to the reliable kernel happens, +# we wait SLEEP_TIME for the console to stop producing output +# before starting the next test. +# +# You can speed up reboot times even more by setting REBOOT_SUCCESS_LINE. +# (default 60) +#SLEEP_TIME = 60 + +# The time in between bisects to sleep (in seconds) +# (default 60) +#BISECT_SLEEP_TIME = 60 + +# The max wait time (in seconds) for waiting for the console to finish. +# If for some reason, the console is outputting content without +# ever finishing, this will cause ktest to get stuck. This +# option is the max time ktest will wait for the monitor (console) +# to settle down before continuing. +# (default 1800) +#MAX_MONITOR_WAIT + +# The time in between patch checks to sleep (in seconds) +# (default 60) +#PATCHCHECK_SLEEP_TIME = 60 + +# Reboot the target box on error (default 0) +#REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 0 + +# Power off the target on error (ignored if REBOOT_ON_ERROR is set) +# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. +# (default 0) +#POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 + +# Power off the target after all tests have completed successfully +# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. +# (default 0) +#POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 + +# Reboot the target after all test completed successfully (default 1) +# (ignored if POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS is set) +#REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 1 + +# In case there are isses with rebooting, you can specify this +# to always powercycle after this amount of time after calling +# reboot. +# Note, POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT = 0 does NOT disable it. It just +# makes it powercycle immediately after rebooting. Do not define +# it if you do not want it. +# (default undefined) +#POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT = 5 + +# In case there's isses with halting, you can specify this +# to always poweroff after this amount of time after calling +# halt. +# Note, POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 0 does NOT disable it. It just +# makes it poweroff immediately after halting. Do not define +# it if you do not want it. +# (default undefined) +#POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 20 + +# A script or command to power off the box (default undefined) +# Needed for POWEROFF_ON_ERROR and SUCCESS +# +# Example for digital loggers power switch: +#POWER_OFF = wget --no-proxy -O /dev/null -q --auth-no-challenge 'http://admin:admin@power/outlet?5=OFF' +# +# Example for a virtual guest call "Guest". +#POWER_OFF = virsh destroy Guest + +# To have the build fail on "new" warnings, create a file that +# contains a list of all known warnings (they must match exactly +# to the line with 'warning:', 'error:' or 'Error:'. If the option +# WARNINGS_FILE is set, then that file will be read, and if the +# build detects a warning, it will examine this file and if the +# warning does not exist in it, it will fail the build. +# +# Note, if this option is defined to a file that does not exist +# then any warning will fail the build. +# (see make_warnings_file below) +# +# (optional, default undefined) +#WARNINGS_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR}/warnings_file + +# The way to execute a command on the target +# (default ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE $SSH_COMMAND";) +# The variables SSH_USER, MACHINE and SSH_COMMAND are defined +#SSH_EXEC = ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE $SSH_COMMAND"; + +# The way to copy a file to the target (install and modules) +# (default scp $SRC_FILE $SSH_USER@$MACHINE:$DST_FILE) +# The variables SSH_USER, MACHINE are defined by the config +# SRC_FILE and DST_FILE are ktest internal variables and +# should only have '$' and not the '${}' notation. +# (default scp $SRC_FILE ${SSH_USER}@${MACHINE}:$DST_FILE) +#SCP_TO_TARGET = echo skip scp for $SRC_FILE $DST_FILE + +# If install needs to be different than modules, then this +# option will override the SCP_TO_TARGET for installation. +# (default ${SCP_TO_TARGET} ) +#SCP_TO_TARGET_INSTALL = scp $SRC_FILE tftp@tftpserver:$DST_FILE + +# The nice way to reboot the target +# (default ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE reboot) +# The variables SSH_USER and MACHINE are defined. +#REBOOT = ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE reboot + +# The way triple faults are detected is by testing the kernel +# banner. If the kernel banner for the kernel we are testing is +# found, and then later a kernel banner for another kernel version +# is found, it is considered that we encountered a triple fault, +# and there is no panic or callback, but simply a reboot. +# To disable this (because it did a false positive) set the following +# to 0. +# (default 1) +#DETECT_TRIPLE_FAULT = 0 + +# All options in the config file should be either used by ktest +# or could be used within a value of another option. If an option +# in the config file is not used, ktest will warn about it and ask +# if you want to continue. +# +# If you don't care if there are non-used options, enable this +# option. Be careful though, a non-used option is usually a sign +# of an option name being typed incorrectly. +# (default 0) +#IGNORE_UNUSED = 1 + +# When testing a kernel that happens to have WARNINGs, and call +# traces, ktest.pl will detect these and fail a boot or test run +# due to warnings. By setting this option, ktest will ignore +# call traces, and will not fail a test if the kernel produces +# an oops. Use this option with care. +# (default 0) +#IGNORE_ERRORS = 1 + +#### Per test run options #### +# The following options are only allowed in TEST_START sections. +# They are ignored in the DEFAULTS sections. +# +# All of these are optional and undefined by default, although +# some of these options are required for TEST_TYPE of patchcheck +# and bisect. +# +# +# CHECKOUT = branch +# +# If the BUILD_DIR is a git repository, then you can set this option +# to checkout the given branch before running the TEST. If you +# specify this for the first run, that branch will be used for +# all preceding tests until a new CHECKOUT is set. +# +# +# TEST_NAME = name +# +# If you want the test to have a name that is displayed in +# the test result banner at the end of the test, then use this +# option. This is useful to search for the RESULT keyword and +# not have to translate a test number to a test in the config. +# +# For TEST_TYPE = patchcheck +# +# This expects the BUILD_DIR to be a git repository, and +# will checkout the PATCHCHECK_START commit. +# +# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. +# +# The MIN_CONFIG will be used for all builds of the patchcheck. The build type +# used for patchcheck is oldconfig. +# +# PATCHCHECK_START is required and is the first patch to +# test (the SHA1 of the commit). You may also specify anything +# that git checkout allows (branch name, tage, HEAD~3). +# +# PATCHCHECK_END is the last patch to check (default HEAD) +# +# PATCHCHECK_CHERRY if set to non zero, then git cherry will be +# performed against PATCHCHECK_START and PATCHCHECK_END. That is +# +# git cherry ${PATCHCHECK_START} ${PATCHCHECK_END} +# +# Then the changes found will be tested. +# +# Note, PATCHCHECK_CHERRY requires PATCHCHECK_END to be defined. +# (default 0) +# +# PATCHCHECK_TYPE is required and is the type of test to run: +# build, boot, test. +# +# Note, the build test will look for warnings, if a warning occurred +# in a file that a commit touches, the build will fail, unless +# IGNORE_WARNINGS is set for the given commit's sha1 +# +# IGNORE_WARNINGS can be used to disable the failure of patchcheck +# on a particuler commit (SHA1). You can add more than one commit +# by adding a list of SHA1s that are space delimited. +# +# If BUILD_NOCLEAN is set, then make mrproper will not be run on +# any of the builds, just like all other TEST_TYPE tests. But +# what makes patchcheck different from the other tests, is if +# BUILD_NOCLEAN is not set, only the first and last patch run +# make mrproper. This helps speed up the test. +# +# Example: +# TEST_START +# TEST_TYPE = patchcheck +# CHECKOUT = mybranch +# PATCHCHECK_TYPE = boot +# PATCHCHECK_START = 747e94ae3d1b4c9bf5380e569f614eb9040b79e7 +# PATCHCHECK_END = HEAD~2 +# IGNORE_WARNINGS = 42f9c6b69b54946ffc0515f57d01dc7f5c0e4712 0c17ca2c7187f431d8ffc79e81addc730f33d128 +# +# +# +# For TEST_TYPE = bisect +# +# You can specify a git bisect if the BUILD_DIR is a git repository. +# The MIN_CONFIG will be used for all builds of the bisect. The build type +# used for bisecting is oldconfig. +# +# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. +# +# BISECT_TYPE is the type of test to perform: +# build - bad fails to build +# boot - bad builds but fails to boot +# test - bad boots but fails a test +# +# BISECT_GOOD is the commit (SHA1) to label as good (accepts all git good commit types) +# BISECT_BAD is the commit to label as bad (accepts all git bad commit types) +# +# The above three options are required for a bisect operation. +# +# BISECT_REPLAY = /path/to/replay/file (optional, default undefined) +# +# If an operation failed in the bisect that was not expected to +# fail. Then the test ends. The state of the BUILD_DIR will be +# left off at where the failure occurred. You can examine the +# reason for the failure, and perhaps even find a git commit +# that would work to continue with. You can run: +# +# git bisect log > /path/to/replay/file +# +# The adding: +# +# BISECT_REPLAY= /path/to/replay/file +# +# And running the test again. The test will perform the initial +# git bisect start, git bisect good, and git bisect bad, and +# then it will run git bisect replay on this file, before +# continuing with the bisect. +# +# BISECT_START = commit (optional, default undefined) +# +# As with BISECT_REPLAY, if the test failed on a commit that +# just happen to have a bad commit in the middle of the bisect, +# and you need to skip it. If BISECT_START is defined, it +# will checkout that commit after doing the initial git bisect start, +# git bisect good, git bisect bad, and running the git bisect replay +# if the BISECT_REPLAY is set. +# +# BISECT_SKIP = 1 (optional, default 0) +# +# If BISECT_TYPE is set to test but the build fails, ktest will +# simply fail the test and end their. You could use BISECT_REPLAY +# and BISECT_START to resume after you found a new starting point, +# or you could set BISECT_SKIP to 1. If BISECT_SKIP is set to 1, +# when something other than the BISECT_TYPE fails, ktest.pl will +# run "git bisect skip" and try again. +# +# BISECT_FILES = (optional, default undefined) +# +# To just run the git bisect on a specific path, set BISECT_FILES. +# For example: +# +# BISECT_FILES = arch/x86 kernel/time +# +# Will run the bisect with "git bisect start -- arch/x86 kernel/time" +# +# BISECT_REVERSE = 1 (optional, default 0) +# +# In those strange instances where it was broken forever +# and you are trying to find where it started to work! +# Set BISECT_GOOD to the commit that was last known to fail +# Set BISECT_BAD to the commit that is known to start working. +# With BISECT_REVERSE = 1, The test will consider failures as +# good, and success as bad. +# +# BISECT_MANUAL = 1 (optional, default 0) +# +# In case there's a problem with automating the bisect for +# whatever reason. (Can't reboot, want to inspect each iteration) +# Doing a BISECT_MANUAL will have the test wait for you to +# tell it if the test passed or failed after each iteration. +# This is basicall the same as running git bisect yourself +# but ktest will rebuild and install the kernel for you. +# +# BISECT_CHECK = 1 (optional, default 0) +# +# Just to be sure the good is good and bad is bad, setting +# BISECT_CHECK to 1 will start the bisect by first checking +# out BISECT_BAD and makes sure it fails, then it will check +# out BISECT_GOOD and makes sure it succeeds before starting +# the bisect (it works for BISECT_REVERSE too). +# +# You can limit the test to just check BISECT_GOOD or +# BISECT_BAD with BISECT_CHECK = good or +# BISECT_CHECK = bad, respectively. +# +# BISECT_TRIES = 5 (optional, default 1) +# +# For those cases that it takes several tries to hit a bug, +# the BISECT_TRIES is useful. It is the number of times the +# test is ran before it says the kernel is good. The first failure +# will stop trying and mark the current SHA1 as bad. +# +# Note, as with all race bugs, there's no guarantee that if +# it succeeds, it is really a good bisect. But it helps in case +# the bug is some what reliable. +# +# You can set BISECT_TRIES to zero, and all tests will be considered +# good, unless you also set BISECT_MANUAL. +# +# BISECT_RET_GOOD = 0 (optional, default undefined) +# +# In case the specificed test returns something other than just +# 0 for good, and non-zero for bad, you can override 0 being +# good by defining BISECT_RET_GOOD. +# +# BISECT_RET_BAD = 1 (optional, default undefined) +# +# In case the specificed test returns something other than just +# 0 for good, and non-zero for bad, you can override non-zero being +# bad by defining BISECT_RET_BAD. +# +# BISECT_RET_ABORT = 255 (optional, default undefined) +# +# If you need to abort the bisect if the test discovers something +# that was wrong, you can define BISECT_RET_ABORT to be the error +# code returned by the test in order to abort the bisect. +# +# BISECT_RET_SKIP = 2 (optional, default undefined) +# +# If the test detects that the current commit is neither good +# nor bad, but something else happened (another bug detected) +# you can specify BISECT_RET_SKIP to an error code that the +# test returns when it should skip the current commit. +# +# BISECT_RET_DEFAULT = good (optional, default undefined) +# +# You can override the default of what to do when the above +# options are not hit. This may be one of, "good", "bad", +# "abort" or "skip" (without the quotes). +# +# Note, if you do not define any of the previous BISECT_RET_* +# and define BISECT_RET_DEFAULT, all bisects results will do +# what the BISECT_RET_DEFAULT has. +# +# +# Example: +# TEST_START +# TEST_TYPE = bisect +# BISECT_GOOD = v2.6.36 +# BISECT_BAD = b5153163ed580e00c67bdfecb02b2e3843817b3e +# BISECT_TYPE = build +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-bisect +# +# +# +# For TEST_TYPE = config_bisect +# +# In those cases that you have two different configs. One of them +# work, the other does not, and you do not know what config causes +# the problem. +# The TEST_TYPE config_bisect will bisect the bad config looking for +# what config causes the failure. +# +# The way it works is this: +# +# You can specify a good config with CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD, otherwise it +# will use the MIN_CONFIG, and if that's not specified, it will use +# the config that comes with "make defconfig". +# +# It runs both the good and bad configs through a make oldconfig to +# make sure that they are set up for the kernel that is checked out. +# +# It then reads the configs that are set, as well as the ones that are +# not set for both the good and bad configs, and then compares them. +# It will set half of the good configs within the bad config (note, +# "set" means to make the bad config match the good config, a config +# in the good config that is off, will be turned off in the bad +# config. That is considered a "set"). +# +# It tests this new config and if it works, it becomes the new good +# config, otherwise it becomes the new bad config. It continues this +# process until there's only one config left and it will report that +# config. +# +# The "bad config" can also be a config that is needed to boot but was +# disabled because it depended on something that wasn't set. +# +# During this process, it saves the current good and bad configs in +# ${TMP_DIR}/good_config and ${TMP_DIR}/bad_config respectively. +# If you stop the test, you can copy them to a new location to +# reuse them again. +# +# Although the MIN_CONFIG may be the config it starts with, the +# MIN_CONFIG is ignored. +# +# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. +# +# CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE is the type of test to perform: +# build - bad fails to build +# boot - bad builds but fails to boot +# test - bad boots but fails a test +# +# CONFIG_BISECT is the config that failed to boot +# +# If BISECT_MANUAL is set, it will pause between iterations. +# This is useful to use just ktest.pl just for the config bisect. +# If you set it to build, it will run the bisect and you can +# control what happens in between iterations. It will ask you if +# the test succeeded or not and continue the config bisect. +# +# CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD (optional) +# If you have a good config to start with, then you +# can specify it with CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD. Otherwise +# the MIN_CONFIG is the base, if MIN_CONFIG is not set +# It will build a config with "make defconfig" +# +# CONFIG_BISECT_CHECK (optional) +# Set this to 1 if you want to confirm that the config ktest +# generates (the bad config with the min config) is still bad. +# It may be that the min config fixes what broke the bad config +# and the test will not return a result. +# Set it to "good" to test only the good config and set it +# to "bad" to only test the bad config. +# +# CONFIG_BISECT_EXEC (optional) +# The config bisect is a separate program that comes with ktest.pl. +# By befault, it will look for: +# `pwd`/config-bisect.pl # the location ktest.pl was executed from. +# If it does not find it there, it will look for: +# `dirname `/config-bisect.pl # The directory that holds ktest.pl +# If it does not find it there, it will look for: +# ${BUILD_DIR}/tools/testing/ktest/config-bisect.pl +# Setting CONFIG_BISECT_EXEC will override where it looks. +# +# Example: +# TEST_START +# TEST_TYPE = config_bisect +# CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE = build +# CONFIG_BISECT = /home/test/config-bad +# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-min +# BISECT_MANUAL = 1 +# +# +# +# For TEST_TYPE = make_min_config +# +# After doing a make localyesconfig, your kernel configuration may +# not be the most useful minimum configuration. Having a true minimum +# config that you can use against other configs is very useful if +# someone else has a config that breaks on your code. By only forcing +# those configurations that are truly required to boot your machine +# will give you less of a chance that one of your set configurations +# will make the bug go away. This will give you a better chance to +# be able to reproduce the reported bug matching the broken config. +# +# Note, this does take some time, and may require you to run the +# test over night, or perhaps over the weekend. But it also allows +# you to interrupt it, and gives you the current minimum config +# that was found till that time. +# +# Note, this test automatically assumes a BUILD_TYPE of oldconfig +# and its test type acts like boot. +# TODO: add a test version that makes the config do more than just +# boot, like having network access. +# +# To save time, the test does not just grab any option and test +# it. The Kconfig files are examined to determine the dependencies +# of the configs. If a config is chosen that depends on another +# config, that config will be checked first. By checking the +# parents first, we can eliminate whole groups of configs that +# may have been enabled. +# +# For example, if a USB device config is chosen and depends on CONFIG_USB, +# the CONFIG_USB will be tested before the device. If CONFIG_USB is +# found not to be needed, it, as well as all configs that depend on +# it, will be disabled and removed from the current min_config. +# +# OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG is the path and filename of the file that will +# be created from the MIN_CONFIG. If you interrupt the test, set +# this file as your new min config, and use it to continue the test. +# This file does not need to exist on start of test. +# This file is not created until a config is found that can be removed. +# If this file exists, you will be prompted if you want to use it +# as the min_config (overriding MIN_CONFIG) if START_MIN_CONFIG +# is not defined. +# (required field) +# +# START_MIN_CONFIG is the config to use to start the test with. +# you can set this as the same OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG, but if you do +# the OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG file must exist. +# (default MIN_CONFIG) +# +# IGNORE_CONFIG is used to specify a config file that has configs that +# you already know must be set. Configs are written here that have +# been tested and proved to be required. It is best to define this +# file if you intend on interrupting the test and running it where +# it left off. New configs that it finds will be written to this file +# and will not be tested again in later runs. +# (optional) +# +# MIN_CONFIG_TYPE can be either 'boot' or 'test'. With 'boot' it will +# test if the created config can just boot the machine. If this is +# set to 'test', then the TEST option must be defined and the created +# config will not only boot the target, but also make sure that the +# config lets the test succeed. This is useful to make sure the final +# config that is generated allows network activity (ssh). +# (optional) +# +# USE_OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG set this to 1 if you do not want to be prompted +# about using the OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG as the MIN_CONFIG as the starting +# point. Set it to 0 if you want to always just use the given MIN_CONFIG. +# If it is not defined, it will prompt you to pick which config +# to start with (MIN_CONFIG or OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG). +# +# Example: +# +# TEST_TYPE = make_min_config +# OUTPUT_MIN_CONFIG = /path/to/config-new-min +# START_MIN_CONFIG = /path/to/config-min +# IGNORE_CONFIG = /path/to/config-tested +# MIN_CONFIG_TYPE = test +# TEST = ssh ${USER}@${MACHINE} echo hi +# +# +# +# +# For TEST_TYPE = make_warnings_file +# +# If you want the build to fail when a new warning is discovered +# you set the WARNINGS_FILE to point to a file of known warnings. +# +# The test "make_warnings_file" will let you create a new warnings +# file before you run other tests, like patchcheck. +# +# What this test does is to run just a build, you still need to +# specify BUILD_TYPE to tell the test what type of config to use. +# A BUILD_TYPE of nobuild will fail this test. +# +# The test will do the build and scan for all warnings. Any warning +# it discovers will be saved in the WARNINGS_FILE (required) option. +# +# It is recommended (but not necessary) to make sure BUILD_NOCLEAN is +# off, so that a full build is done (make mrproper is performed). +# That way, all warnings will be captured. +# +# Example: +# +# TEST_TYPE = make_warnings_file +# WARNINGS_FILE = ${OUTPUT_DIR} +# BUILD_TYPE = useconfig:oldconfig +# CHECKOUT = v3.8 +# BUILD_NOCLEAN = 0 +# -- cgit v1.2.3