On 24/10/14 06:05, Shuah Khan wrote:
On 10/14/24 11:21, Alessandro Zanni wrote:
This fix solves theses errors, when calling kselftest with targets "intel_pstate":
./run.sh: line 90: / 1000: syntax error: operand expected (error token is "/ 1000")
./run.sh: line 92: / 1000: syntax error: operand expected (error token is "/ 1000")
To error was found by running tests manually with the command: make kselftest TARGETS=intel_pstate
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zanni alessandro.zanni87@gmail.com
Notes: v2: removed debug echos
See my comments on your v1. It would help to wait a bit to send v2.
Ok and thanks for the comments.
I can't reproduce this problem on Linux 6.12-rc3. What's you environment like?
My kernel version is 6.12.0-rc3 from "make kernelversion".
I think the errors are related to the bash type and version, rather than the kernel version. My bash version is: GNU bash, version 5.2.21(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
In fact, some shell do not complete expressions in variables and $var and command substitutions are done before the arithmetic expression itself is parsed. That expansion happens without regard for the arithmetic syntax, so with $var you can mess with that. So, I suggest to avoid to use $var inside a arithmetic expansion in order to be cross-platform.
Hello, any thoughts about this patch?
Were you able to replicate the error?
tools/testing/selftests/intel_pstate/run.sh | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/intel_pstate/run.sh b/tools/testing/selftests/intel_pstate/run.sh index e7008f614ad7..0c1b6c1308a4 100755 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/intel_pstate/run.sh +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/intel_pstate/run.sh @@ -87,9 +87,9 @@ mkt_freq=${_mkt_freq}0 # Get the ranges from cpupower _min_freq=$(cpupower frequency-info -l | tail -1 | awk ' { print $1 } ') -min_freq=$(($_min_freq / 1000)) +min_freq=$((_min_freq / 1000)) _max_freq=$(cpupower frequency-info -l | tail -1 | awk ' { print $2 } ') -max_freq=$(($_max_freq / 1000)) +max_freq=$((_max_freq / 1000)) [ $EVALUATE_ONLY -eq 0 ] && for freq in `seq $max_freq -100 $min_freq`
thanks, -- Shuah
Thanks, Alessandro
Feel free to indicate if I can provide something useful for your evaluation.
Thanks, Alessandro