stdout and stderr are names reserved for the implementation
and musl uses them rightfully as macro - and the expansion
causes (of course) unexpected results.
rename the struct members stdout to out and stderr
to err, to be 1) compliant 2) cause compilation to
succeed.
fixes build with musl libc.
- Fix infinite loop when path is relative
- Fix not considering EEXIST as a success
- General refactor to mkdir_p so it never calls mkdir for an existing
dir (given no one creates it from outside)
Instead of linking dynamically with libkmod, use libkmod-private.la. We
disallow creating a static libkmod because we can't hide symbols there
and it cause problems with external programs. However this should not
prevent users that are only interested in the tools we provide not being
able to ship only them keeping the library alone.
Other projects also do this to allow our tools to use certain functions
that should not be used outside of the project.
The reason to have a kmod-nolib binary is that we need to call kmod on
test cases (or a symlink to it) and for testing things in tree. Since
we are using libtool if we are dinamically linking to libkmod what we
end up having is a shell script that (depending on the version *)
changes argv[0] to contain an "lt-" prefix. Since this screws with our
compat stuff, we had a kmod-nolib that links statically.
This all workaround works fine iff we are using one of the compat
commands, i.e. we are using the symlinks insmod, rmmod, modprobe, etc.
However if we are actually trying the kmod binary, this doesn't work
because we can't create a kmod symlink since there's already a kmod
binary.
So, completely give up on libtool fixing their mess. Now we create a
tool/test/ directory and the symlinks and kmod is put there.
* http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-libtool/2011-12/msg00023.html
Use an if instead of a case statemente. If __NR_finit_module is not
defined in system headers we define it to -1, causing a "duplicate case
value" error. Yet, we don't want to actually call our finit_module()
function if -1 is passed.
This also fix errno being set with negative value.
When we don't have finit_module() in libc (most likely because as of
today glibc didn't add it yet), we end up using
syscall(__NR_finit_module, ...). In this case we would not wrap the
function in the testsuite and thus having some tests failing:
TESTSUITE: ERR: could not insert module: Operation not permitted
This implementation relies on the fact that this is the only caller of
syscall(2), because we can't call libc's syscall(). There's an abort()
in place to be future safe: as soon as we need more calls to syscall(),
we can detect (and decide what to do).
Now we have all tests passing in the testsuite again.
Check for finit_module() and don't use our own static inline function if
there's such function in libc (or another lib).
In testsuite we need to unconditionally define HAVE_FINIT_MODULE because
we want to override this function, and never use the static inline one
in missing.h
Putting something like "alias psmouse deadbeef" is a hackish way to
blacklist a module. While I don't encourage doing so, let's not explode
if we fiund such config files.
A small difference from the behavior of module-init-tools: we exit with
0 instead of 1.
Put this one /etc/modprobe.d/bougs.conf:
alias psmouse deaddood
`modprobe --show-depends --quiet psmouse` explodes in an assertion
(unless you have a module named deaddood). Some people and initrd's use
"alias psmouse off" to disable a module instead of blacklisting it or
adding a install rule.
Add a test with expected_fail == true before fixing this.
This gives the test cases the ability to supply files that must be
checked after the test is run, rather than just checking stdout/stderr.
This is intended to be used with tools that generate files, like depmod.
It includes a poor's man implementation of a "check for differences in
files". Not really optimized, but it's simple enough and does what it
proposes to.
Instead of replicating the same code several times, define and use macros for
the various types of wrapped functions in the testsuite's path.c LD_PRELOAD
wrapper.
Add various __xstat() variants and open64(), which are being used when enabling
large file support.
Only the public header maintains #ifndef in the header, together with
pragma. The other ones contain only pragma.
As reported by Shawn Landden on systemd mailing list this is compatible
with all major compilers and gcc has this since version 3.3.
We need to cope with the case in which a 32 bits machine is opening a 64
bits kernel module and vice-versa. The offset in `struct module' are
different and do not depend on the architecture we are running, but
rather on the architecture they were created for.
This fixes `make check' in 32 bits machines (since we are shipping 64
bits modules for testing)
Autofoo make the dist dir as readonly. If we copy it, tools needing to
create sysfs entries will not be able to do so, because they can't
create the needed directories/files.
It would be much better if autofoo allowed to let the files as is
instead of converting them to read-only.
This loop is similar to the one that comes with install rules of
alsa-utils package. It can be easily verified by reverting commit
abd5557 and running the testsuite.
Each test must run under 2 seconds. Ideally they should run in much less
than this; just give an arbitrary number so we don't wait forever in
case we reached an infinite loop somewhere.
Keep around a stamp-rootfs file that is generated together with the
rootfs. testsuite checks each test directory if its mtime is greater
than stamp's mtime, deciding if rootfs should be re-generated.
Add a modprobe.conf with some blacklist entries in a test rootfs, and
then ensure our blacklist function actually cuts out the two listed
entries (and doesn't cut out the others).
We can't use the rootfs directory because it breaks out-of-tree build
and in future we want to make modifications to the fake filesystem such
as adding and removing files.
We need to call "chmod -R +w" in the resulting directory because when we
distribute the source with make dist all files will be readonly.
Fix 'make distcheck'
The current configuration is dumb in any number of ways:
1) If the rationale was for space savings, it works the opposite- the
git repo gets more bloated because we are adding binary compressed
blobs that share little in common with their parent, and anyone that
wants to run the test suite has to unzip it anyway.
2) It is a pain in the butt to add new tests, and not accidentally lose
any new rootfs you built in the directory.
3) `git status` won't help you if you are tweaking files in the rootfs
and don't know they have been changed, or if some test did that and
you couldn't detect it.
4) `git log` won't help you find out what is changing in the rootfs test
directory itself when changes are made to the binary blob, such as
new files being added or even existing files being tweaked.
5) The files just aren't that big anyway- 2.7MB unzipped.
Search modules.builtin file before saying the module was not found.
Note: these "modules" should not appear as dependencies of other modules
(in modules.dep) even if they appear in modinfo. This fixes the return
code of modprobe with builtin modules.
Also fixes a small coding style issue in module_is_inkernel().