This changes the selftest output is several ways: - total test count is reported at start. - each test's result is on a single line with "# SKIP" as needed per spec. - each test's output is prefixed with "# " as a "diagnostic line".
This creates a bit of a kernel-specific TAP dialect where the diagnostics precede the results. The TAP spec isn't entirely clear about this, though, so I think it's the correct solution so as to keep interactive runs making sense. If the output _followed_ the result line in the spec-suggested YAML form, each test would dump all of its output at once instead of as it went, making debugging harder.
This does, however, solve the recursive TAP output problem, as sub-tests will simply be prefixed by "# ". Parsing sub-tests becomes a simple problem of just removing the first two characters of a given top-level test's diagnostic output, and parsing the results.
Note that the shell construct needed to both get an exit code from the first command in a pipe and still filter the pipe (to add the "# " prefix) uses a POSIX solution rather than the bash "pipefail" option which is not supported by dash.
Example:
$ tools/testing/selftests $ make --silent -C x86 run_tests TAP version 13 1..15 selftests: x86 # selftests: x86: single_step_syscall_64 # [RUN] Set TF and check nop # [OK] Survived with TF set and 9 traps # [RUN] Set TF and check syscall-less opportunistic sysret # [OK] Survived with TF set and 12 traps # [RUN] Set TF and check a fast syscall # [OK] Survived with TF set and 22 traps # [RUN] Fast syscall with TF cleared # [OK] Nothing unexpected happened ok 1 selftests: x86: single_step_syscall_64 # selftests: x86: sysret_ss_attrs_64 # [RUN] Syscalls followed by SS validation # [OK] We survived ok 2 selftests: x86: sysret_ss_attrs_64 # selftests: x86: syscall_nt_64 # [RUN] Set NT and issue a syscall # [OK] The syscall worked and flags are still set # [RUN] Set NT|TF and issue a syscall # [OK] The syscall worked and flags are still set ok 3 selftests: x86: syscall_nt_64 ...[skipping example output]... ok 15 selftests: x86: sysret_rip_64
$ make --silent -C x86 run_tests | tappy ............F.. ====================================================================== FAIL: <file=stream> selftests: x86: mov_ss_trap_64 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 15 tests in 0.000s
FAILED (failures=1)
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook keescook@chromium.org --- No longer RFC! :) --- tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk | 59 ++++++++++++++++++------------- tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl | 23 ++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) create mode 100755 tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl
diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk b/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk index 8b0f16409ed7..d3267c08a7b1 100644 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk @@ -5,6 +5,8 @@ CC := $(CROSS_COMPILE)gcc ifeq (0,$(MAKELEVEL)) OUTPUT := $(shell pwd) endif +testname = $(notdir $(shell pwd)) +selfdir = $(realpath $(dir $(filter %/lib.mk,$(MAKEFILE_LIST))))
# The following are built by lib.mk common compile rules. # TEST_CUSTOM_PROGS should be used by tests that require @@ -32,38 +34,45 @@ endif
.ONESHELL: define RUN_TEST_PRINT_RESULT - TEST_HDR_MSG="selftests: "`basename $$PWD`:" $$BASENAME_TEST"; \ - echo $$TEST_HDR_MSG; \ - echo "========================================"; \ + TEST_HDR_MSG="selftests: $(testname): $$BASENAME_TEST"; \ if [ ! -x $$TEST ]; then \ - echo "$$TEST_HDR_MSG: Warning: file $$BASENAME_TEST is not executable, correct this.";\ - echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \ - else \ - cd `dirname $$TEST` > /dev/null; \ - if [ "X$(summary)" != "X" ]; then \ - (./$$BASENAME_TEST > /tmp/$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1 && \ - echo "ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [PASS]") || \ - (if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \ - echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [SKIP]"; \ - else echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \ - fi;) \ - else \ - (./$$BASENAME_TEST && \ - echo "ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [PASS]") || \ - (if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \ - echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [SKIP]"; \ - else echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \ - fi;) \ - fi; \ - cd - > /dev/null; \ + if [ "X$(summary)" = "X" ]; then \ + echo "# warning: 'file $$TEST is not executable, correct this.'";\ + fi; \ + echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG"; \ + else \ + cd `dirname $$TEST` > /dev/null; \ + if [ "X$(summary)" != "X" ]; then \ + (./$$BASENAME_TEST > /tmp/$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1 &&\ + echo "ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG") || \ + (if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \ + echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG # SKIP"; \ + else \ + echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG";\ + fi); \ + else \ + echo "# $$TEST_HDR_MSG"; \ + (((((stdbuf -i0 -o0 -e0 ./$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1; echo $$? >&3) | \ + $(selfdir)/prefix.pl >&4) 3>&1) | \ + (read xs; exit $$xs)) 4>&1 && \ + echo "ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG") || \ + (if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \ + echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG # SKIP"; \ + else \ + echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG";\ + fi); \ + fi; \ + cd - > /dev/null; \ fi; endef
define RUN_TESTS @export KSFT_TAP_LEVEL=`echo 1`; \ - test_num=`echo 0`; \ - skip=`echo 4`; \ + test_num=0; \ + total=`echo "$(1)" | wc -w`; \ + skip=4; \ echo "TAP version 13"; \ + echo "1..$$total selftests: $(testname)"; \ for TEST in $(1); do \ BASENAME_TEST=`basename $$TEST`; \ test_num=`echo $$test_num+1 | bc`; \ diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl b/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl new file mode 100755 index 000000000000..ec7e48118183 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +# Prefix all lines with "# ", unbuffered. Command being piped in may need +# to have unbuffering forced with "stdbuf -i0 -o0 -e0 $cmd". +use strict; + +binmode STDIN; +binmode STDOUT; + +STDOUT->autoflush(1); + +my $needed = 1; +while (1) { + my $char; + my $bytes = sysread(STDIN, $char, 1); + exit 0 if ($bytes == 0); + if ($needed) { + print "# "; + $needed = 0; + } + print $char; + $needed = 1 if ($char eq "\n"); +}
Hi Kees,
On 4/8/19 2:30 PM, Kees Cook wrote:
This changes the selftest output is several ways:
- total test count is reported at start.
- each test's result is on a single line with "# SKIP" as needed per spec.
- each test's output is prefixed with "# " as a "diagnostic line".
Thanks for taking this on. I like the way you are doing this. A few comments and concerns.
This creates a bit of a kernel-specific TAP dialect where the diagnostics precede the results. The TAP spec isn't entirely clear about this, though, so I think it's the correct solution so as to keep interactive runs making sense. If the output _followed_ the result line in the spec-suggested YAML form, each test would dump all of its output at once instead of as it went, making debugging harder.
This does, however, solve the recursive TAP output problem, as sub-tests will simply be prefixed by "# ". Parsing sub-tests becomes a simple problem of just removing the first two characters of a given top-level test's diagnostic output, and parsing the results.
Note that the shell construct needed to both get an exit code from the first command in a pipe and still filter the pipe (to add the "# " prefix) uses a POSIX solution rather than the bash "pipefail" option which is not supported by dash.
Couple of things to consider: - will this work on embedded test system with limited applications shell support? - It does add dependecy on perl for running tests - not a problem since kernel build system uses it, however it might not be the case when tests get run on system without perl. - there is the emit_tests support that creates a shell script that runs. The results format should stay the is same when tests get run using run_tests vs. tests are built and installed. Take a look at emit_tests and EMIT_TESTS in Makefile and lib.mk
Example:
$ tools/testing/selftests $ make --silent -C x86 run_tests TAP version 13 1..15 selftests: x86 # selftests: x86: single_step_syscall_64 # [RUN] Set TF and check nop # [OK] Survived with TF set and 9 traps # [RUN] Set TF and check syscall-less opportunistic sysret # [OK] Survived with TF set and 12 traps # [RUN] Set TF and check a fast syscall # [OK] Survived with TF set and 22 traps # [RUN] Fast syscall with TF cleared # [OK] Nothing unexpected happened ok 1 selftests: x86: single_step_syscall_64 # selftests: x86: sysret_ss_attrs_64 # [RUN] Syscalls followed by SS validation # [OK] We survived ok 2 selftests: x86: sysret_ss_attrs_64 # selftests: x86: syscall_nt_64 # [RUN] Set NT and issue a syscall # [OK] The syscall worked and flags are still set # [RUN] Set NT|TF and issue a syscall # [OK] The syscall worked and flags are still set ok 3 selftests: x86: syscall_nt_64 ...[skipping example output]... ok 15 selftests: x86: sysret_rip_64
$ make --silent -C x86 run_tests | tappy ............F.. ====================================================================== FAIL: <file=stream> selftests: x86: mov_ss_trap_64
Ran 15 tests in 0.000s
FAILED (failures=1)
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook keescook@chromium.org
No longer RFC! :)
tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk | 59 ++++++++++++++++++------------- tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl | 23 ++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) create mode 100755 tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl
Can we change the name to say tap13_prefix.pl
Anyway this can be a shell instead of perl?
diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk b/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk index 8b0f16409ed7..d3267c08a7b1 100644 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/lib.mk @@ -5,6 +5,8 @@ CC := $(CROSS_COMPILE)gcc ifeq (0,$(MAKELEVEL)) OUTPUT := $(shell pwd) endif +testname = $(notdir $(shell pwd)) +selfdir = $(realpath $(dir $(filter %/lib.mk,$(MAKEFILE_LIST)))) # The following are built by lib.mk common compile rules. # TEST_CUSTOM_PROGS should be used by tests that require @@ -32,38 +34,45 @@ endif .ONESHELL: define RUN_TEST_PRINT_RESULT
- TEST_HDR_MSG="selftests: "`basename $$PWD`:" $$BASENAME_TEST"; \
- echo $$TEST_HDR_MSG; \
- echo "========================================"; \
- TEST_HDR_MSG="selftests: $(testname): $$BASENAME_TEST"; \ if [ ! -x $$TEST ]; then \
echo "$$TEST_HDR_MSG: Warning: file $$BASENAME_TEST is not executable, correct this.";\
echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \
- else \
cd `dirname $$TEST` > /dev/null; \
if [ "X$(summary)" != "X" ]; then \
(./$$BASENAME_TEST > /tmp/$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1 && \
echo "ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [PASS]") || \
(if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \
echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [SKIP]"; \
else echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \
fi;) \
else \
(./$$BASENAME_TEST && \
echo "ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [PASS]") || \
(if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \
echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [SKIP]"; \
else echo "not ok 1..$$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG [FAIL]"; \
fi;) \
fi; \
cd - > /dev/null; \
if [ "X$(summary)" = "X" ]; then \
echo "# warning: 'file $$TEST is not executable, correct this.'";\
fi; \
echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG"; \
- else \
cd `dirname $$TEST` > /dev/null; \
if [ "X$(summary)" != "X" ]; then \
(./$$BASENAME_TEST > /tmp/$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1 &&\
echo "ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG") || \
(if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \
echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG # SKIP"; \
else \
echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG";\
fi); \
else \
echo "# $$TEST_HDR_MSG"; \
(((((stdbuf -i0 -o0 -e0 ./$$BASENAME_TEST 2>&1; echo $$? >&3) | \
$(selfdir)/prefix.pl >&4) 3>&1) | \
(read xs; exit $$xs)) 4>&1 && \
echo "ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG") || \
(if [ $$? -eq $$skip ]; then \
echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG # SKIP"; \
else \
echo "not ok $$test_num $$TEST_HDR_MSG";\
fi); \
fi; \
fi; endefcd - > /dev/null; \
define RUN_TESTS @export KSFT_TAP_LEVEL=`echo 1`; \
- test_num=`echo 0`; \
- skip=`echo 4`; \
- test_num=0; \
- total=`echo "$(1)" | wc -w`; \
- skip=4; \ echo "TAP version 13"; \
- echo "1..$$total selftests: $(testname)"; \ for TEST in $(1); do \ BASENAME_TEST=`basename $$TEST`; \ test_num=`echo $$test_num+1 | bc`; \
diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl b/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl new file mode 100755 index 000000000000..ec7e48118183 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/prefix.pl @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +# Prefix all lines with "# ", unbuffered. Command being piped in may need +# to have unbuffering forced with "stdbuf -i0 -o0 -e0 $cmd". +use strict;
+binmode STDIN; +binmode STDOUT;
+STDOUT->autoflush(1);
+my $needed = 1; +while (1) {
- my $char;
- my $bytes = sysread(STDIN, $char, 1);
- exit 0 if ($bytes == 0);
- if ($needed) {
print "# ";
$needed = 0;
- }
- print $char;
- $needed = 1 if ($char eq "\n");
+}
thanks, -- Shuah
On Mon, Apr 8, 2019 at 2:32 PM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
Couple of things to consider:
- will this work on embedded test system with limited applications shell support?
I was assuming the availability of "stdbuf" which is part of coreutils, and "perl" which is already required for at least one other test (sysctl). What do you have in mind for the "maximum supported environment" (and where's best to document this)? Also, I see python is used by several tests. Should python be considered instead of perl?
- It does add dependecy on perl for running tests - not a problem since kernel build system uses it, however it might not be the case when tests get run on system without perl.
I could likely rewrite the "prefix.pl" in C, and the test could use a built binary instead? Or in python (as noted above). Where are tests being run right now with such a limited environment?
- there is the emit_tests support that creates a shell script that runs. The results format should stay the is same when tests get run using run_tests vs. tests are built and installed. Take a look at emit_tests and EMIT_TESTS in Makefile and lib.mk
Ah yeah. I will adjust EMIT_TESTS too.
Thanks!
On 4/9/19 10:06 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
On Mon, Apr 8, 2019 at 2:32 PM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
Couple of things to consider:
- will this work on embedded test system with limited applications shell support?
I was assuming the availability of "stdbuf" which is part of coreutils, and "perl" which is already required for at least one other test (sysctl). What do you have in mind for the "maximum supported environment" (and where's best to document this)? Also, I see python is used by several tests. Should python be considered instead of perl?
- It does add dependecy on perl for running tests - not a problem since kernel build system uses it, however it might not be the case when tests get run on system without perl.
I could likely rewrite the "prefix.pl" in C, and the test could use a built binary instead? Or in python (as noted above). Where are tests being run right now with such a limited environment?
Some embedded systems as I recall with just busybox env. I am thinking shell rather C/perl/python.
- there is the emit_tests support that creates a shell script that runs. The results format should stay the is same when tests get run using run_tests vs. tests are built and installed. Take a look at emit_tests and EMIT_TESTS in Makefile and lib.mk
Ah yeah. I will adjust EMIT_TESTS too.
Thanks!
thanks, -- Shuah
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 9:56 AM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
On 4/9/19 10:06 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
On Mon, Apr 8, 2019 at 2:32 PM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
Couple of things to consider:
- will this work on embedded test system with limited applications shell support?
I was assuming the availability of "stdbuf" which is part of coreutils, and "perl" which is already required for at least one other test (sysctl). What do you have in mind for the "maximum supported environment" (and where's best to document this)? Also, I see python is used by several tests. Should python be considered instead of perl?
- It does add dependecy on perl for running tests - not a problem since kernel build system uses it, however it might not be the case when tests get run on system without perl.
I could likely rewrite the "prefix.pl" in C, and the test could use a built binary instead? Or in python (as noted above). Where are tests being run right now with such a limited environment?
Some embedded systems as I recall with just busybox env. I am thinking shell rather C/perl/python.
It can't be done with shell alone if we want to retain the unbuffered output. Don't we already ship binaries in this situation, though? (i.e. such environments clearly aren't building test binaries...) Why not also ship kselftest binaries?
-Kees
On 4/9/19 10:57 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 9:56 AM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
On 4/9/19 10:06 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
On Mon, Apr 8, 2019 at 2:32 PM shuah shuah@kernel.org wrote:
Couple of things to consider:
- will this work on embedded test system with limited applications shell support?
I was assuming the availability of "stdbuf" which is part of coreutils, and "perl" which is already required for at least one other test (sysctl). What do you have in mind for the "maximum supported environment" (and where's best to document this)? Also, I see python is used by several tests. Should python be considered instead of perl?
- It does add dependecy on perl for running tests - not a problem since kernel build system uses it, however it might not be the case when tests get run on system without perl.
I could likely rewrite the "prefix.pl" in C, and the test could use a built binary instead? Or in python (as noted above). Where are tests being run right now with such a limited environment?
Some embedded systems as I recall with just busybox env. I am thinking shell rather C/perl/python.
It can't be done with shell alone if we want to retain the unbuffered output. Don't we already ship binaries in this situation, though? (i.e. such environments clearly aren't building test binaries...) Why not also ship kselftest binaries?
They don't build them and run from install. Let's give this a try with perl and see how this will work. Once you have the emit_tests covered, I will upload it to a kselftest topic branch and we can ask Kernci and Linaro folks to test this in their environments.
Thanks for working on this.
thanks, -- Shuah
linux-kselftest-mirror@lists.linaro.org