kmod/testsuite
John Spencer bd4e7340bc testsuite: fix usage of reserved names
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.
2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
..
rootfs-pristine testsuite: Add test for parameter with no value in kcmdline 2013-08-13 22:03:26 -03:00
.gitignore
COPYING
README
delete_module.c
init_module.c util: Add len arg to mkdir_p() 2013-07-15 12:44:33 -03:00
path.c
stripped-module.h
test-alias.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
test-blacklist.c Use "-internal" suffix instead of "-private" 2013-07-04 16:13:11 -03:00
test-dependencies.c
test-depmod.c tools: Do not link dynamically with libkmod 2013-07-04 16:08:10 -03:00
test-init.c
test-loaded.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
test-modinfo.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
test-modprobe.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
test-new-module.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
test-testsuite.c
testsuite.c testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
testsuite.h testsuite: fix usage of reserved names 2013-08-29 01:22:20 -03:00
uname.c

README

testsuite

OVERVIEW
========

Kmod's testsuite was designed to automate the process of running tests with
different scenarios, configurations and architectures. The idea is that once we
received a bug report, we reproduce it using the testsuite so we avoid
recurring on the same bug in future.


FEATURES
========

- Isolate each test by running them in separate processes;
- Exec a binary, so we can test the tools and not only the lib API
- Fake accesses to filesystem so we can provide a test rootfs with all the
  configuration, indexes, etc that test needs to be executed.
- Fake calls to init_module(), delete_module() and uname(), so we don't have to
  run tests as root and figure out how to deal with different architectures.

HOW TO ADD A TEST
=================

The simplest way to add a test is to copy and paste one already there. Most of
the options you can have are covered by another tests. This is what you need to
pay attention when writing a test:

1 - Look at testsuite.h, struct test, to see all the options available.

2 - Use TESTSUITE_MAIN and DEFINE_TEST to add new tests. Don't forget to fill
    its description.

3 - If you want testsuite to compare the stdout/stderr of your tests in order
    to check if it worked or not, fill in output.{stderr,stdout} the file with
    the expected output. Bare in mind the same file is used for all
    architectures, so don't print arch-dependent content if you are comparing
    the output.

4 - Fill in the config vector. Setting any of these configuration will make
    testsuite to export LD_PRELOAD with the necessary override libs before
    executing the test. If you are not exec'ing an external binary, you need to
    pass "need_spawn = true" below, otherwise it will not work (LD_PRELOAD is
    only applied when exec'ing a binary). See each config description in
    testsuite.h

5 - need_spawn: if testsuite will exec itself before running a test

6 - expected_fail: if that test is expected to fail, i.e. the return code is
    expected not to be 0.

7 - If you added files to the rootfs, be sure to compact it back to
    rootfs.tar.xz before sending patches: use 'make testsuite-pack-rootfs'

8 - Tests can be run individually, outside of 'make check'. strace and gdb work
    too, as long as you tell them to operate on child process.

9 - Make sure test passes when using "default" build flags, i.e. by running
    bootstrap-configure instead of simpler bootstrap/autogen.sh