linux-stable/tools/testing/selftests/kselftest_harness.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */
/*
* Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium OS Authors. All rights reserved.
*
* kselftest_harness.h: simple C unit test helper.
*
* See documentation in Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst
*
* API inspired by code.google.com/p/googletest
*/
/**
* DOC: example
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* #include "../kselftest_harness.h"
*
* TEST(standalone_test) {
* do_some_stuff;
* EXPECT_GT(10, stuff) {
* stuff_state_t state;
* enumerate_stuff_state(&state);
* TH_LOG("expectation failed with state: %s", state.msg);
* }
* more_stuff;
* ASSERT_NE(some_stuff, NULL) TH_LOG("how did it happen?!");
* last_stuff;
* EXPECT_EQ(0, last_stuff);
* }
*
* FIXTURE(my_fixture) {
* mytype_t *data;
* int awesomeness_level;
* };
* FIXTURE_SETUP(my_fixture) {
* self->data = mytype_new();
* ASSERT_NE(NULL, self->data);
* }
* FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(my_fixture) {
* mytype_free(self->data);
* }
* TEST_F(my_fixture, data_is_good) {
* EXPECT_EQ(1, is_my_data_good(self->data));
* }
*
* TEST_HARNESS_MAIN
*/
#ifndef __KSELFTEST_HARNESS_H
#define __KSELFTEST_HARNESS_H
#ifndef _GNU_SOURCE
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#endif
#include <asm/types.h>
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <setjmp.h>
#include "kselftest.h"
#define TEST_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT 30
/* Utilities exposed to the test definitions */
#ifndef TH_LOG_STREAM
# define TH_LOG_STREAM stderr
#endif
#ifndef TH_LOG_ENABLED
# define TH_LOG_ENABLED 1
#endif
/**
* TH_LOG()
*
* @fmt: format string
* @...: optional arguments
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* TH_LOG(format, ...)
*
* Optional debug logging function available for use in tests.
* Logging may be enabled or disabled by defining TH_LOG_ENABLED.
* E.g., #define TH_LOG_ENABLED 1
*
* If no definition is provided, logging is enabled by default.
*/
#define TH_LOG(fmt, ...) do { \
if (TH_LOG_ENABLED) \
__TH_LOG(fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__); \
} while (0)
/* Unconditional logger for internal use. */
#define __TH_LOG(fmt, ...) \
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM, "# %s:%d:%s:" fmt "\n", \
__FILE__, __LINE__, _metadata->name, ##__VA_ARGS__)
/**
* SKIP()
*
* @statement: statement to run after reporting SKIP
* @fmt: format string
* @...: optional arguments
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* SKIP(statement, fmt, ...);
*
* This forces a "pass" after reporting why something is being skipped
* and runs "statement", which is usually "return" or "goto skip".
*/
#define SKIP(statement, fmt, ...) do { \
snprintf(_metadata->results->reason, \
sizeof(_metadata->results->reason), fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__); \
if (TH_LOG_ENABLED) { \
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM, "# SKIP %s\n", \
_metadata->results->reason); \
} \
_metadata->exit_code = KSFT_SKIP; \
_metadata->trigger = 0; \
statement; \
} while (0)
/**
* TEST() - Defines the test function and creates the registration
* stub
*
* @test_name: test name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* TEST(name) { implementation }
*
* Defines a test by name.
* Names must be unique and tests must not be run in parallel. The
* implementation containing block is a function and scoping should be treated
* as such. Returning early may be performed with a bare "return;" statement.
*
* EXPECT_* and ASSERT_* are valid in a TEST() { } context.
*/
#define TEST(test_name) __TEST_IMPL(test_name, -1)
/**
* TEST_SIGNAL()
*
* @test_name: test name
* @signal: signal number
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* TEST_SIGNAL(name, signal) { implementation }
*
* Defines a test by name and the expected term signal.
* Names must be unique and tests must not be run in parallel. The
* implementation containing block is a function and scoping should be treated
* as such. Returning early may be performed with a bare "return;" statement.
*
* EXPECT_* and ASSERT_* are valid in a TEST() { } context.
*/
#define TEST_SIGNAL(test_name, signal) __TEST_IMPL(test_name, signal)
#define __TEST_IMPL(test_name, _signal) \
static void test_name(struct __test_metadata *_metadata); \
static inline void wrapper_##test_name( \
struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant) \
{ \
_metadata->setup_completed = true; \
if (setjmp(_metadata->env) == 0) \
test_name(_metadata); \
__test_check_assert(_metadata); \
} \
static struct __test_metadata _##test_name##_object = \
{ .name = #test_name, \
.fn = &wrapper_##test_name, \
.fixture = &_fixture_global, \
.termsig = _signal, \
.timeout = TEST_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT, }; \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) _register_##test_name(void) \
{ \
__register_test(&_##test_name##_object); \
} \
static void test_name( \
struct __test_metadata __attribute__((unused)) *_metadata)
/**
* FIXTURE_DATA() - Wraps the struct name so we have one less
* argument to pass around
*
* @datatype_name: datatype name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE_DATA(datatype_name)
*
* Almost always, you want just FIXTURE() instead (see below).
* This call may be used when the type of the fixture data
* is needed. In general, this should not be needed unless
* the *self* is being passed to a helper directly.
*/
#define FIXTURE_DATA(datatype_name) struct _test_data_##datatype_name
/**
* FIXTURE() - Called once per fixture to setup the data and
* register
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE(fixture_name) {
* type property1;
* ...
* };
*
* Defines the data provided to TEST_F()-defined tests as *self*. It should be
* populated and cleaned up using FIXTURE_SETUP() and FIXTURE_TEARDOWN().
*/
#define FIXTURE(fixture_name) \
FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name); \
static struct __fixture_metadata _##fixture_name##_fixture_object = \
{ .name = #fixture_name, }; \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) \
_register_##fixture_name##_data(void) \
{ \
__register_fixture(&_##fixture_name##_fixture_object); \
} \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name)
/**
* FIXTURE_SETUP() - Prepares the setup function for the fixture.
* *_metadata* is included so that EXPECT_*, ASSERT_* etc. work correctly.
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE_SETUP(fixture_name) { implementation }
*
* Populates the required "setup" function for a fixture. An instance of the
* datatype defined with FIXTURE_DATA() will be exposed as *self* for the
* implementation.
*
* ASSERT_* are valid for use in this context and will prempt the execution
* of any dependent fixture tests.
*
* A bare "return;" statement may be used to return early.
*/
#define FIXTURE_SETUP(fixture_name) \
void fixture_name##_setup( \
struct __test_metadata __attribute__((unused)) *_metadata, \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) __attribute__((unused)) *self, \
const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) \
__attribute__((unused)) *variant)
/**
* FIXTURE_TEARDOWN()
* *_metadata* is included so that EXPECT_*, ASSERT_* etc. work correctly.
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(fixture_name) { implementation }
*
* Populates the required "teardown" function for a fixture. An instance of the
* datatype defined with FIXTURE_DATA() will be exposed as *self* for the
* implementation to clean up.
*
* A bare "return;" statement may be used to return early.
*/
#define FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(fixture_name) \
void fixture_name##_teardown( \
struct __test_metadata __attribute__((unused)) *_metadata, \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) __attribute__((unused)) *self, \
const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) \
__attribute__((unused)) *variant)
/**
* FIXTURE_VARIANT() - Optionally called once per fixture
* to declare fixture variant
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) {
* type property1;
* ...
* };
*
* Defines type of constant parameters provided to FIXTURE_SETUP(), TEST_F() and
* FIXTURE_TEARDOWN as *variant*. Variants allow the same tests to be run with
* different arguments.
*/
#define FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) struct _fixture_variant_##fixture_name
/**
* FIXTURE_VARIANT_ADD() - Called once per fixture
* variant to setup and register the data
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
* @variant_name: name of the parameter set
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* FIXTURE_VARIANT_ADD(fixture_name, variant_name) {
* .property1 = val1,
* ...
* };
*
* Defines a variant of the test fixture, provided to FIXTURE_SETUP() and
* TEST_F() as *variant*. Tests of each fixture will be run once for each
* variant.
*/
#define FIXTURE_VARIANT_ADD(fixture_name, variant_name) \
extern FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) \
_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_variant; \
static struct __fixture_variant_metadata \
_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_object = \
{ .name = #variant_name, \
.data = &_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_variant}; \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) \
_register_##fixture_name##_##variant_name(void) \
{ \
__register_fixture_variant(&_##fixture_name##_fixture_object, \
&_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_object); \
} \
FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) \
_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_variant =
/**
* TEST_F() - Emits test registration and helpers for
* fixture-based test cases
*
* @fixture_name: fixture name
* @test_name: test name
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* TEST_F(fixture, name) { implementation }
*
* Defines a test that depends on a fixture (e.g., is part of a test case).
* Very similar to TEST() except that *self* is the setup instance of fixture's
* datatype exposed for use by the implementation.
*
* The @test_name code is run in a separate process sharing the same memory
* (i.e. vfork), which means that the test process can update its privileges
* without impacting the related FIXTURE_TEARDOWN() (e.g. to remove files from
* a directory where write access was dropped).
*/
#define TEST_F(fixture_name, test_name) \
__TEST_F_IMPL(fixture_name, test_name, -1, TEST_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT)
#define TEST_F_SIGNAL(fixture_name, test_name, signal) \
__TEST_F_IMPL(fixture_name, test_name, signal, TEST_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT)
#define TEST_F_TIMEOUT(fixture_name, test_name, timeout) \
__TEST_F_IMPL(fixture_name, test_name, -1, timeout)
#define __TEST_F_IMPL(fixture_name, test_name, signal, tmout) \
static void fixture_name##_##test_name( \
struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) *self, \
const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) *variant); \
static inline void wrapper_##fixture_name##_##test_name( \
struct __test_metadata *_metadata, \
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant) \
{ \
/* fixture data is alloced, setup, and torn down per call. */ \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) self; \
pid_t child = 1; \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
int status = 0; \
selftests/harness: Prevent infinite loop due to Assert in FIXTURE_TEARDOWN This patch addresses an issue in the selftests/harness where an assertion within FIXTURE_TEARDOWN could trigger an infinite loop. The problem arises because the teardown procedure is meant to execute once, but the presence of failing assertions (ASSERT_EQ(0, 1)) leads to repeated attempts to execute teardown due to the long jump mechanism used by the harness for handling assertions. To resolve this, the patch ensures that the teardown process runs only once, regardless of assertion outcomes, preventing the infinite loop and allowing tests to fail. A simple test demo(test.c): #include "kselftest_harness.h" FIXTURE(f) { int fd; }; FIXTURE_SETUP(f) { self->fd = 0; } FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(f) { TH_LOG("TEARDOWN"); ASSERT_EQ(0, 1); self->fd = -1; } TEST_F(f, open_close) { ASSERT_NE(self->fd, 1); } TEST_HARNESS_MAIN will always output the following output due to a dead loop until timeout: # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) ... But here's what we should and expect to get: TAP version 13 1..1 # Starting 1 tests from 2 test cases. # RUN f.open_close ... # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # open_close: Test terminated by assertion # FAIL f.open_close not ok 1 f.open_close # FAILED: 0 / 1 tests passed. # Totals: pass:0 fail:1 xfail:0 xpass:0 skip:0 error:0 also this is related to the issue mentioned in this patch https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-kselftest/patch/e2ba3f8c-80e6-477d-9cea-1c9af820e0ed@alu.unizg.hr/ Signed-off-by: Shengyu Li <shengyu.li.evgeny@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-03-26 21:13:15 +00:00
bool jmp = false; \
memset(&self, 0, sizeof(FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name))); \
if (setjmp(_metadata->env) == 0) { \
/* Use the same _metadata. */ \
child = vfork(); \
if (child == 0) { \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
fixture_name##_setup(_metadata, &self, variant->data); \
/* Let setup failure terminate early. */ \
if (_metadata->exit_code) \
_exit(0); \
_metadata->setup_completed = true; \
fixture_name##_##test_name(_metadata, &self, variant->data); \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
} else if (child < 0 || child != waitpid(child, &status, 0)) { \
ksft_print_msg("ERROR SPAWNING TEST GRANDCHILD\n"); \
_metadata->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL; \
} \
} \
selftests/harness: Prevent infinite loop due to Assert in FIXTURE_TEARDOWN This patch addresses an issue in the selftests/harness where an assertion within FIXTURE_TEARDOWN could trigger an infinite loop. The problem arises because the teardown procedure is meant to execute once, but the presence of failing assertions (ASSERT_EQ(0, 1)) leads to repeated attempts to execute teardown due to the long jump mechanism used by the harness for handling assertions. To resolve this, the patch ensures that the teardown process runs only once, regardless of assertion outcomes, preventing the infinite loop and allowing tests to fail. A simple test demo(test.c): #include "kselftest_harness.h" FIXTURE(f) { int fd; }; FIXTURE_SETUP(f) { self->fd = 0; } FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(f) { TH_LOG("TEARDOWN"); ASSERT_EQ(0, 1); self->fd = -1; } TEST_F(f, open_close) { ASSERT_NE(self->fd, 1); } TEST_HARNESS_MAIN will always output the following output due to a dead loop until timeout: # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) ... But here's what we should and expect to get: TAP version 13 1..1 # Starting 1 tests from 2 test cases. # RUN f.open_close ... # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # open_close: Test terminated by assertion # FAIL f.open_close not ok 1 f.open_close # FAILED: 0 / 1 tests passed. # Totals: pass:0 fail:1 xfail:0 xpass:0 skip:0 error:0 also this is related to the issue mentioned in this patch https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-kselftest/patch/e2ba3f8c-80e6-477d-9cea-1c9af820e0ed@alu.unizg.hr/ Signed-off-by: Shengyu Li <shengyu.li.evgeny@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-03-26 21:13:15 +00:00
else \
jmp = true; \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
if (child == 0) { \
selftests/harness: Prevent infinite loop due to Assert in FIXTURE_TEARDOWN This patch addresses an issue in the selftests/harness where an assertion within FIXTURE_TEARDOWN could trigger an infinite loop. The problem arises because the teardown procedure is meant to execute once, but the presence of failing assertions (ASSERT_EQ(0, 1)) leads to repeated attempts to execute teardown due to the long jump mechanism used by the harness for handling assertions. To resolve this, the patch ensures that the teardown process runs only once, regardless of assertion outcomes, preventing the infinite loop and allowing tests to fail. A simple test demo(test.c): #include "kselftest_harness.h" FIXTURE(f) { int fd; }; FIXTURE_SETUP(f) { self->fd = 0; } FIXTURE_TEARDOWN(f) { TH_LOG("TEARDOWN"); ASSERT_EQ(0, 1); self->fd = -1; } TEST_F(f, open_close) { ASSERT_NE(self->fd, 1); } TEST_HARNESS_MAIN will always output the following output due to a dead loop until timeout: # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) ... But here's what we should and expect to get: TAP version 13 1..1 # Starting 1 tests from 2 test cases. # RUN f.open_close ... # test.c:15:open_close:TEARDOWN # test.c:16:open_close:Expected 0 (0) == 1 (1) # open_close: Test terminated by assertion # FAIL f.open_close not ok 1 f.open_close # FAILED: 0 / 1 tests passed. # Totals: pass:0 fail:1 xfail:0 xpass:0 skip:0 error:0 also this is related to the issue mentioned in this patch https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-kselftest/patch/e2ba3f8c-80e6-477d-9cea-1c9af820e0ed@alu.unizg.hr/ Signed-off-by: Shengyu Li <shengyu.li.evgeny@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-03-26 21:13:15 +00:00
if (_metadata->setup_completed && !_metadata->teardown_parent && !jmp) \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
fixture_name##_teardown(_metadata, &self, variant->data); \
_exit(0); \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
} \
if (_metadata->setup_completed && _metadata->teardown_parent) \
fixture_name##_teardown(_metadata, &self, variant->data); \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
if (!WIFEXITED(status) && WIFSIGNALED(status)) \
/* Forward signal to __wait_for_test(). */ \
kill(getpid(), WTERMSIG(status)); \
__test_check_assert(_metadata); \
} \
static struct __test_metadata \
_##fixture_name##_##test_name##_object = { \
.name = #test_name, \
.fn = &wrapper_##fixture_name##_##test_name, \
.fixture = &_##fixture_name##_fixture_object, \
.termsig = signal, \
.timeout = tmout, \
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
.teardown_parent = false, \
}; \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) \
_register_##fixture_name##_##test_name(void) \
{ \
__register_test(&_##fixture_name##_##test_name##_object); \
} \
static void fixture_name##_##test_name( \
struct __test_metadata __attribute__((unused)) *_metadata, \
FIXTURE_DATA(fixture_name) __attribute__((unused)) *self, \
const FIXTURE_VARIANT(fixture_name) \
__attribute__((unused)) *variant)
/**
* TEST_HARNESS_MAIN - Simple wrapper to run the test harness
*
* .. code-block:: c
*
* TEST_HARNESS_MAIN
*
* Use once to append a main() to the test file.
*/
#define TEST_HARNESS_MAIN \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) \
__constructor_order_last(void) \
{ \
if (!__constructor_order) \
__constructor_order = _CONSTRUCTOR_ORDER_BACKWARD; \
} \
int main(int argc, char **argv) { \
return test_harness_run(argc, argv); \
}
/**
* DOC: operators
*
* Operators for use in TEST() and TEST_F().
* ASSERT_* calls will stop test execution immediately.
* EXPECT_* calls will emit a failure warning, note it, and continue.
*/
/**
* ASSERT_EQ()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_EQ(expected, measured): expected == measured
*/
#define ASSERT_EQ(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, ==, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_NE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_NE(expected, measured): expected != measured
*/
#define ASSERT_NE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, !=, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_LT()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_LT(expected, measured): expected < measured
*/
#define ASSERT_LT(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, <, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_LE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_LE(expected, measured): expected <= measured
*/
#define ASSERT_LE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, <=, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_GT()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_GT(expected, measured): expected > measured
*/
#define ASSERT_GT(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, >, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_GE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_GE(expected, measured): expected >= measured
*/
#define ASSERT_GE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, >=, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_NULL()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_NULL(measured): NULL == measured
*/
#define ASSERT_NULL(seen) \
__EXPECT(NULL, "NULL", seen, #seen, ==, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_TRUE()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_TRUE(measured): measured != 0
*/
#define ASSERT_TRUE(seen) \
__EXPECT(0, "0", seen, #seen, !=, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_FALSE()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_FALSE(measured): measured == 0
*/
#define ASSERT_FALSE(seen) \
__EXPECT(0, "0", seen, #seen, ==, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_STREQ()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_STREQ(expected, measured): !strcmp(expected, measured)
*/
#define ASSERT_STREQ(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT_STR(expected, seen, ==, 1)
/**
* ASSERT_STRNE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* ASSERT_STRNE(expected, measured): strcmp(expected, measured)
*/
#define ASSERT_STRNE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT_STR(expected, seen, !=, 1)
/**
* EXPECT_EQ()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_EQ(expected, measured): expected == measured
*/
#define EXPECT_EQ(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, ==, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_NE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_NE(expected, measured): expected != measured
*/
#define EXPECT_NE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, !=, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_LT()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_LT(expected, measured): expected < measured
*/
#define EXPECT_LT(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, <, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_LE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_LE(expected, measured): expected <= measured
*/
#define EXPECT_LE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, <=, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_GT()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_GT(expected, measured): expected > measured
*/
#define EXPECT_GT(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, >, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_GE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_GE(expected, measured): expected >= measured
*/
#define EXPECT_GE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT(expected, #expected, seen, #seen, >=, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_NULL()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_NULL(measured): NULL == measured
*/
#define EXPECT_NULL(seen) \
__EXPECT(NULL, "NULL", seen, #seen, ==, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_TRUE()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_TRUE(measured): 0 != measured
*/
#define EXPECT_TRUE(seen) \
__EXPECT(0, "0", seen, #seen, !=, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_FALSE()
*
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_FALSE(measured): 0 == measured
*/
#define EXPECT_FALSE(seen) \
__EXPECT(0, "0", seen, #seen, ==, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_STREQ()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_STREQ(expected, measured): !strcmp(expected, measured)
*/
#define EXPECT_STREQ(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT_STR(expected, seen, ==, 0)
/**
* EXPECT_STRNE()
*
* @expected: expected value
* @seen: measured value
*
* EXPECT_STRNE(expected, measured): strcmp(expected, measured)
*/
#define EXPECT_STRNE(expected, seen) \
__EXPECT_STR(expected, seen, !=, 0)
#ifndef ARRAY_SIZE
#define ARRAY_SIZE(a) (sizeof(a) / sizeof(a[0]))
#endif
/* Support an optional handler after and ASSERT_* or EXPECT_*. The approach is
* not thread-safe, but it should be fine in most sane test scenarios.
*
* Using __bail(), which optionally abort()s, is the easiest way to early
* return while still providing an optional block to the API consumer.
*/
#define OPTIONAL_HANDLER(_assert) \
for (; _metadata->trigger; _metadata->trigger = \
__bail(_assert, _metadata))
#define is_signed_type(var) (!!(((__typeof__(var))(-1)) < (__typeof__(var))1))
#define __EXPECT(_expected, _expected_str, _seen, _seen_str, _t, _assert) do { \
/* Avoid multiple evaluation of the cases */ \
__typeof__(_expected) __exp = (_expected); \
__typeof__(_seen) __seen = (_seen); \
if (!(__exp _t __seen)) { \
/* Report with actual signedness to avoid weird output. */ \
switch (is_signed_type(__exp) * 2 + is_signed_type(__seen)) { \
case 0: { \
unsigned long long __exp_print = (uintptr_t)__exp; \
unsigned long long __seen_print = (uintptr_t)__seen; \
__TH_LOG("Expected %s (%llu) %s %s (%llu)", \
_expected_str, __exp_print, #_t, \
_seen_str, __seen_print); \
break; \
} \
case 1: { \
unsigned long long __exp_print = (uintptr_t)__exp; \
long long __seen_print = (intptr_t)__seen; \
__TH_LOG("Expected %s (%llu) %s %s (%lld)", \
_expected_str, __exp_print, #_t, \
_seen_str, __seen_print); \
break; \
} \
case 2: { \
long long __exp_print = (intptr_t)__exp; \
unsigned long long __seen_print = (uintptr_t)__seen; \
__TH_LOG("Expected %s (%lld) %s %s (%llu)", \
_expected_str, __exp_print, #_t, \
_seen_str, __seen_print); \
break; \
} \
case 3: { \
long long __exp_print = (intptr_t)__exp; \
long long __seen_print = (intptr_t)__seen; \
__TH_LOG("Expected %s (%lld) %s %s (%lld)", \
_expected_str, __exp_print, #_t, \
_seen_str, __seen_print); \
break; \
} \
} \
_metadata->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL; \
/* Ensure the optional handler is triggered */ \
_metadata->trigger = 1; \
} \
} while (0); OPTIONAL_HANDLER(_assert)
#define __EXPECT_STR(_expected, _seen, _t, _assert) do { \
const char *__exp = (_expected); \
const char *__seen = (_seen); \
if (!(strcmp(__exp, __seen) _t 0)) { \
__TH_LOG("Expected '%s' %s '%s'.", __exp, #_t, __seen); \
_metadata->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL; \
_metadata->trigger = 1; \
} \
} while (0); OPTIONAL_HANDLER(_assert)
/* List helpers */
#define __LIST_APPEND(head, item) \
{ \
/* Circular linked list where only prev is circular. */ \
if (head == NULL) { \
head = item; \
item->next = NULL; \
item->prev = item; \
return; \
} \
if (__constructor_order == _CONSTRUCTOR_ORDER_FORWARD) { \
item->next = NULL; \
item->prev = head->prev; \
item->prev->next = item; \
head->prev = item; \
} else { \
item->next = head; \
item->next->prev = item; \
item->prev = item; \
head = item; \
} \
}
struct __test_results {
char reason[1024]; /* Reason for test result */
};
struct __test_metadata;
struct __fixture_variant_metadata;
/* Contains all the information about a fixture. */
struct __fixture_metadata {
const char *name;
struct __test_metadata *tests;
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant;
struct __fixture_metadata *prev, *next;
} _fixture_global __attribute__((unused)) = {
.name = "global",
.prev = &_fixture_global,
};
struct __test_xfail {
struct __fixture_metadata *fixture;
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant;
struct __test_metadata *test;
struct __test_xfail *prev, *next;
};
/**
* XFAIL_ADD() - mark variant + test case combination as expected to fail
* @fixture_name: name of the fixture
* @variant_name: name of the variant
* @test_name: name of the test case
*
* Mark a combination of variant + test case for a given fixture as expected
* to fail. Tests marked this way will report XPASS / XFAIL return codes,
* instead of PASS / FAIL,and use respective counters.
*/
#define XFAIL_ADD(fixture_name, variant_name, test_name) \
static struct __test_xfail \
_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_##test_name##_xfail = \
{ \
.fixture = &_##fixture_name##_fixture_object, \
.variant = &_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_object, \
.test = &_##fixture_name##_##test_name##_object, \
}; \
static void __attribute__((constructor)) \
_register_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_##test_name##_xfail(void) \
{ \
__register_xfail(&_##fixture_name##_##variant_name##_##test_name##_xfail); \
}
static struct __fixture_metadata *__fixture_list = &_fixture_global;
static int __constructor_order;
#define _CONSTRUCTOR_ORDER_FORWARD 1
#define _CONSTRUCTOR_ORDER_BACKWARD -1
static inline void __register_fixture(struct __fixture_metadata *f)
{
__LIST_APPEND(__fixture_list, f);
}
struct __fixture_variant_metadata {
const char *name;
const void *data;
struct __test_xfail *xfails;
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *prev, *next;
};
static inline void
__register_fixture_variant(struct __fixture_metadata *f,
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant)
{
__LIST_APPEND(f->variant, variant);
}
/* Contains all the information for test execution and status checking. */
struct __test_metadata {
const char *name;
void (*fn)(struct __test_metadata *,
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *);
pid_t pid; /* pid of test when being run */
struct __fixture_metadata *fixture;
int termsig;
int exit_code;
int trigger; /* extra handler after the evaluation */
int timeout; /* seconds to wait for test timeout */
bool timed_out; /* did this test timeout instead of exiting? */
bool aborted; /* stopped test due to failed ASSERT */
bool setup_completed; /* did setup finish? */
selftests/harness: Fix TEST_F()'s vfork handling Always run fixture setup in the grandchild process, and by default also run the teardown in the same process. However, this change makes it possible to run the teardown in a parent process when _metadata->teardown_parent is set to true (e.g. in fixture setup). Fix TEST_SIGNAL() by forwarding grandchild's signal to its parent. Fix seccomp tests by running the test setup in the parent of the test thread, as expected by the related test code. Fix Landlock tests by waiting for the grandchild before processing _metadata. Use of exit(3) in tests should be OK because the environment in which the vfork(2) call happen is already dedicated to the running test (with flushed stdio, setpgrp() call), see __run_test() and the call to fork(2) just before running the setup/test/teardown. Even if the test configures its own exit handlers, they will not be run by the parent because it never calls exit(3), and the test function either ends with a call to _exit(2) or a signal. Cc: Günther Noack <gnoack@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org> Cc: Will Drewry <wad@chromium.org> Fixes: 0710a1a73fb4 ("selftests/harness: Merge TEST_F_FORK() into TEST_F()") Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net> Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Tested-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305201029.1331333-1-mic@digikod.net Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2024-03-05 20:10:29 +00:00
bool teardown_parent; /* run teardown in a parent process */
jmp_buf env; /* for exiting out of test early */
struct __test_results *results;
struct __test_metadata *prev, *next;
};
static inline bool __test_passed(struct __test_metadata *metadata)
{
return metadata->exit_code != KSFT_FAIL &&
metadata->exit_code <= KSFT_SKIP;
}
/*
* Since constructors are called in reverse order, reverse the test
* list so tests are run in source declaration order.
* https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Initialization.html
* However, it seems not all toolchains do this correctly, so use
* __constructor_order to detect which direction is called first
* and adjust list building logic to get things running in the right
* direction.
*/
static inline void __register_test(struct __test_metadata *t)
{
__LIST_APPEND(t->fixture->tests, t);
}
static inline void __register_xfail(struct __test_xfail *xf)
{
__LIST_APPEND(xf->variant->xfails, xf);
}
static inline int __bail(int for_realz, struct __test_metadata *t)
{
/* if this is ASSERT, return immediately. */
if (for_realz) {
t->aborted = true;
longjmp(t->env, 1);
}
/* otherwise, end the for loop and continue. */
return 0;
}
static inline void __test_check_assert(struct __test_metadata *t)
{
if (t->aborted)
abort();
}
struct __test_metadata *__active_test;
static void __timeout_handler(int sig, siginfo_t *info, void *ucontext)
{
struct __test_metadata *t = __active_test;
/* Sanity check handler execution environment. */
if (!t) {
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# no active test in SIGALRM handler!?\n");
abort();
}
if (sig != SIGALRM || sig != info->si_signo) {
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: SIGALRM handler caught signal %d!?\n",
t->name, sig != SIGALRM ? sig : info->si_signo);
abort();
}
t->timed_out = true;
// signal process group
kill(-(t->pid), SIGKILL);
}
void __wait_for_test(struct __test_metadata *t)
{
struct sigaction action = {
.sa_sigaction = __timeout_handler,
.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO,
};
struct sigaction saved_action;
int status;
if (sigaction(SIGALRM, &action, &saved_action)) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: unable to install SIGALRM handler\n",
t->name);
return;
}
__active_test = t;
t->timed_out = false;
alarm(t->timeout);
waitpid(t->pid, &status, 0);
alarm(0);
if (sigaction(SIGALRM, &saved_action, NULL)) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: unable to uninstall SIGALRM handler\n",
t->name);
return;
}
__active_test = NULL;
if (t->timed_out) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test terminated by timeout\n", t->name);
} else if (WIFEXITED(status)) {
if (WEXITSTATUS(status) == KSFT_SKIP ||
WEXITSTATUS(status) == KSFT_XPASS ||
WEXITSTATUS(status) == KSFT_XFAIL) {
t->exit_code = WEXITSTATUS(status);
} else if (t->termsig != -1) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test exited normally instead of by signal (code: %d)\n",
t->name,
WEXITSTATUS(status));
} else {
switch (WEXITSTATUS(status)) {
/* Success */
case KSFT_PASS:
t->exit_code = KSFT_PASS;
break;
/* Failure */
default:
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test failed\n",
t->name);
}
}
} else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
if (WTERMSIG(status) == SIGABRT) {
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test terminated by assertion\n",
t->name);
} else if (WTERMSIG(status) == t->termsig) {
t->exit_code = KSFT_PASS;
} else {
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test terminated unexpectedly by signal %d\n",
t->name,
WTERMSIG(status));
}
} else {
fprintf(TH_LOG_STREAM,
"# %s: Test ended in some other way [%u]\n",
t->name,
status);
}
}
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
static void test_harness_list_tests(void)
{
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *v;
struct __fixture_metadata *f;
struct __test_metadata *t;
for (f = __fixture_list; f; f = f->next) {
v = f->variant;
t = f->tests;
if (f == __fixture_list)
fprintf(stderr, "%-20s %-25s %s\n",
"# FIXTURE", "VARIANT", "TEST");
else
fprintf(stderr, "--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\n");
do {
fprintf(stderr, "%-20s %-25s %s\n",
t == f->tests ? f->name : "",
v ? v->name : "",
t ? t->name : "");
v = v ? v->next : NULL;
t = t ? t->next : NULL;
} while (v || t);
}
}
static int test_harness_argv_check(int argc, char **argv)
{
int opt;
while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "hlF:f:V:v:t:T:r:")) != -1) {
switch (opt) {
case 'f':
case 'F':
case 'v':
case 'V':
case 't':
case 'T':
case 'r':
break;
case 'l':
test_harness_list_tests();
return KSFT_SKIP;
case 'h':
default:
fprintf(stderr,
"Usage: %s [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name]\n"
"\t-h print help\n"
"\t-l list all tests\n"
"\n"
"\t-t name include test\n"
"\t-T name exclude test\n"
"\t-v name include variant\n"
"\t-V name exclude variant\n"
"\t-f name include fixture\n"
"\t-F name exclude fixture\n"
"\t-r name run specified test\n"
"\n"
"Test filter options can be specified "
"multiple times. The filtering stops\n"
"at the first match. For example to "
"include all tests from variant 'bla'\n"
"but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'.\n"
"", argv[0]);
return opt == 'h' ? KSFT_SKIP : KSFT_FAIL;
}
}
return KSFT_PASS;
}
static bool test_enabled(int argc, char **argv,
struct __fixture_metadata *f,
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *v,
struct __test_metadata *t)
{
unsigned int flen = 0, vlen = 0, tlen = 0;
bool has_positive = false;
int opt;
optind = 1;
while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "F:f:V:v:t:T:r:")) != -1) {
has_positive |= islower(opt);
switch (tolower(opt)) {
case 't':
if (!strcmp(t->name, optarg))
return islower(opt);
break;
case 'f':
if (!strcmp(f->name, optarg))
return islower(opt);
break;
case 'v':
if (!strcmp(v->name, optarg))
return islower(opt);
break;
case 'r':
if (!tlen) {
flen = strlen(f->name);
vlen = strlen(v->name);
tlen = strlen(t->name);
}
if (strlen(optarg) == flen + 1 + vlen + !!vlen + tlen &&
!strncmp(f->name, &optarg[0], flen) &&
!strncmp(v->name, &optarg[flen + 1], vlen) &&
!strncmp(t->name, &optarg[flen + 1 + vlen + !!vlen], tlen))
return true;
break;
}
}
/*
* If there are no positive tests then we assume user just wants
* exclusions and everything else is a pass.
*/
return !has_positive;
}
void __run_test(struct __fixture_metadata *f,
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *variant,
struct __test_metadata *t)
{
struct __test_xfail *xfail;
char test_name[LINE_MAX];
const char *diagnostic;
/* reset test struct */
t->exit_code = KSFT_PASS;
t->trigger = 0;
memset(t->results->reason, 0, sizeof(t->results->reason));
snprintf(test_name, sizeof(test_name), "%s%s%s.%s",
f->name, variant->name[0] ? "." : "", variant->name, t->name);
ksft_print_msg(" RUN %s ...\n", test_name);
/* Make sure output buffers are flushed before fork */
fflush(stdout);
fflush(stderr);
t->pid = fork();
if (t->pid < 0) {
ksft_print_msg("ERROR SPAWNING TEST CHILD\n");
t->exit_code = KSFT_FAIL;
} else if (t->pid == 0) {
setpgrp();
t->fn(t, variant);
_exit(t->exit_code);
} else {
__wait_for_test(t);
}
ksft_print_msg(" %4s %s\n",
__test_passed(t) ? "OK" : "FAIL", test_name);
/* Check if we're expecting this test to fail */
for (xfail = variant->xfails; xfail; xfail = xfail->next)
if (xfail->test == t)
break;
if (xfail)
t->exit_code = __test_passed(t) ? KSFT_XPASS : KSFT_XFAIL;
if (t->results->reason[0])
diagnostic = t->results->reason;
else if (t->exit_code == KSFT_PASS || t->exit_code == KSFT_FAIL)
diagnostic = NULL;
else
diagnostic = "unknown";
ksft_test_result_code(t->exit_code, test_name,
diagnostic ? "%s" : "", diagnostic);
}
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
static int test_harness_run(int argc, char **argv)
{
struct __fixture_variant_metadata no_variant = { .name = "", };
struct __fixture_variant_metadata *v;
struct __fixture_metadata *f;
struct __test_results *results;
struct __test_metadata *t;
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
int ret;
unsigned int case_count = 0, test_count = 0;
unsigned int count = 0;
unsigned int pass_count = 0;
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
ret = test_harness_argv_check(argc, argv);
if (ret != KSFT_PASS)
return ret;
for (f = __fixture_list; f; f = f->next) {
for (v = f->variant ?: &no_variant; v; v = v->next) {
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
unsigned int old_tests = test_count;
for (t = f->tests; t; t = t->next)
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
if (test_enabled(argc, argv, f, v, t))
test_count++;
if (old_tests != test_count)
case_count++;
}
}
results = mmap(NULL, sizeof(*results), PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
MAP_SHARED | MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
ksft_print_header();
ksft_set_plan(test_count);
ksft_print_msg("Starting %u tests from %u test cases.\n",
test_count, case_count);
for (f = __fixture_list; f; f = f->next) {
for (v = f->variant ?: &no_variant; v; v = v->next) {
for (t = f->tests; t; t = t->next) {
testing: kselftest_harness: add filtering and enumerating tests As the number of test cases and length of execution grows it's useful to select only a subset of tests. In TLS for instance we have a matrix of variants for different crypto protocols and during development mostly care about testing a handful. This is quicker and makes reading output easier. This patch adds argument parsing to kselftest_harness. It supports a couple of ways to filter things, I could not come up with one way which will cover all cases. The first and simplest switch is -r which takes the name of a test to run (can be specified multiple times). For example: $ ./my_test -r some.test.name -r some.other.name will run tests some.test.name and some.other.name (where "some" is the fixture, "test" and "other" and "name is the test.) Then there is a handful of group filtering options. f/v/t for filtering by fixture/variant/test. They have both positive (match -> run) and negative versions (match -> skip). If user specifies any positive option we assume the default is not to run the tests. If only negative options are set we assume the tests are supposed to be run by default. Usage: ./tools/testing/selftests/net/tls [-h|-l] [-t|-T|-v|-V|-f|-F|-r name] -h print help -l list all tests -t name include test -T name exclude test -v name include variant -V name exclude variant -f name include fixture -F name exclude fixture -r name run specified test Test filter options can be specified multiple times. The filtering stops at the first match. For example to include all tests from variant 'bla' but not test 'foo' specify '-T foo -v bla'. Here we can request for example all tests from fixture "foo" to run: ./my_test -f foo or to skip variants var1 and var2: ./my_test -V var1 -V var2 Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-01-25 23:13:56 +00:00
if (!test_enabled(argc, argv, f, v, t))
continue;
count++;
t->results = results;
__run_test(f, v, t);
t->results = NULL;
if (__test_passed(t))
pass_count++;
else
ret = 1;
}
}
}
munmap(results, sizeof(*results));
ksft_print_msg("%s: %u / %u tests passed.\n", ret ? "FAILED" : "PASSED",
pass_count, count);
ksft_exit(ret == 0);
/* unreachable */
return KSFT_FAIL;
}
static void __attribute__((constructor)) __constructor_order_first(void)
{
if (!__constructor_order)
__constructor_order = _CONSTRUCTOR_ORDER_FORWARD;
}
#endif /* __KSELFTEST_HARNESS_H */