[Buildroot] [PATCH v4] docs/manual: run-tests test framework

Yann E. MORIN yann.morin.1998 at free.fr
Tue Jan 14 16:31:53 UTC 2020


Matthew, All,

On 2020-01-14 09:04 -0600, Matt Weber spake thusly:
> This patch adds a new manual section that captures an overview
> of the run-tests tool, how to manually run a test and where to
> find the test case script.
> 
> A brief set of steps is included to go through how to add a new
> test case and suggestions on how to test/debug.
> 
> Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski at gmail.com>
> Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists at googlemail.com>
> Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber at rockwellcollins.com>

Applied to master with those changes:
  - switch the creating and debugging sections
  - minor reformatting

Thanks!

Regards,
Yann E. MORIN.

> ---
> 
> Changes
> v3 -> v4
> [Yegor
>  - Fixed some typos/wording
> 
> v2 -> v3
> [Thomas
>  - Created new sections for use / debug / create test cases
>  - Rewording of how gitlab ci is used in the descriptions
>  - Moved around section material for use vs test creation
>  - Expanded gitlab branch naming for job execution section instead
>    of referencing commit hash description
>  - Added brief notes on test creation
> 
> [Romain
>  - capitalized Buildroot
>  - added notes about default defconfig
> ---
>  docs/manual/contribute.txt | 167 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 167 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git a/docs/manual/contribute.txt b/docs/manual/contribute.txt
> index f339ca50b8..906fe06c36 100644
> --- a/docs/manual/contribute.txt
> +++ b/docs/manual/contribute.txt
> @@ -487,3 +487,170 @@ preserve Unix-style line terminators when downloading raw pastes.
>  Following pastebin services are known to work correctly:
>  - https://gist.github.com/
>  - http://code.bulix.org/
> +
> +=== Using the run-tests framework
> +
> +Buildroot includes a run-time testing framework called run-tests built
> +upon Python scripting and QEMU runtime execution. There are two types of
> +test cases within the framework, one for build time tests and another for
> +run-time tests that have a QEMU dependency. The goals of the framework are
> +the following.
> +
> +* Build a well defined configuration
> +* Optionally, verify some properties of the build output
> +* If a run-time test, boot it under QEMU
> +* Lastly, run some test condition to verify that a given feature is working
> +
> +The run-tests tool has a series of options documented in the tool's help '-h'
> +description. Some common options include setting the download folder, the
> +output folder, keeping build output, and for multiple test cases, you can set
> +the JLEVEL for each.
> +
> +Here is an example walk through of running a test case.
> +
> +* For a first step, let us see what all the test case options are. The test
> +cases can be listed by executing +support/testing/run-tests -l+. These tests
> +can all be run individually during test development from the console. Both
> +one at a time and selectively as a group of a subset of tests.
> +
> +---------------------
> +$ support/testing/run-tests -l
> +List of tests
> +test_run (tests.utils.test_check_package.TestCheckPackage)
> +Test the various ways the script can be called in a simple top to ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainBuildrootMusl) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainBuildrootuClibc) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainCCache) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainCtngMusl) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainLinaroArm) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainSourceryArmv4) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainSourceryArmv5) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.toolchain.test_external.TestExternalToolchainSourceryArmv7) ... ok
> +[snip]
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRoFull) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRoIfupdown) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRoNetworkd) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRwFull) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRwIfupdown) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_systemd.TestInitSystemSystemdRwNetworkd) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRo) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRoNet) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRw) ... ok
> +test_run (tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRwNet) ... ok
> +
> +Ran 157 tests in 0.021s
> +
> +OK
> +---------------------
> +
> +Those runtime tests are regularly executed by Buildroot Gitlab CI
> +infrastructure, see .gitlab.yml and https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs.
> +
> +==== Debugging a test case
> +
> +Within the Buildroot repository, the testing framework is organized at the
> +top level in +support/testing/+ by folders of +conf+, +infra+ and +tests+.
> +All the test cases live under the +test+ folder and are organized in various
> +folders representing the catagory of test.
> +
> +Lets walk through an example.
> +
> +* Using the Busybox Init system test case with a read/write rootfs
> ++tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRw+
> +* A minimal set of command line arguments when debugging a test case would
> +include '-d' which points to your dl folder, '-o' to an output folder, and
> +'-k' to keep any output on both pass/fail. With those options, the test will
> +retain logging and build artifacts providing status of the build and
> +execution of the test case.
> +
> +---------------------
> +$ support/testing/run-tests -d dl -o output_folder -k tests.init.test_busybox.TestInitSystemBusyboxRw
> +15:03:26 TestInitSystemBusyboxRw                  Starting
> +15:03:28 TestInitSystemBusyboxRw                  Building
> +15:08:18 TestInitSystemBusyboxRw                  Building done
> +15:08:27 TestInitSystemBusyboxRw                  Cleaning up
> +.
> +Ran 1 test in 301.140s
> +
> +OK
> +---------------------
> +
> +* For the case of a successful build, the +output_folder+ would contain a
> +<test name> folder with the Buildroot build, build log and run-time log. If
> +the build failed, the console output would show the stage at which it failed
> +(setup / build / run). Depending on the failure stage, the build/run logs
> +and/or Buildroot build artifacts can be inspected and instrumented. If the
> +QEMU instance needs to be launched for additional testing, the first few
> +lines of the run-time log capture it and it would allow some incremental
> +testing without re-running +support/testing/run-tests+.
> +
> +* You can also make modifications to the current sources inside the
> ++output_folder+ (e.g. for debug purposes) and rerun the standard
> +Buildroot make targets (in order to regenerate the complete image with
> +the new modifications) and then rerun the test. Modifying the sources
> +directly can speed up debugging compared to adding patch files, wiping the
> +output directoy, and starting the test again.
> +
> +---------------------
> +$ ls output_folder/
> +TestInitSystemBusyboxRw/
> +TestInitSystemBusyboxRw-build.log
> +TestInitSystemBusyboxRw-run.log
> +---------------------
> +
> +* The source file used to implement this example test is found under
> ++support/testing/tests/init/test_busybox.py+. This file outlines the
> +minimal defconfig that creates the build, QEMU configuration to launch
> +the built images and the test case assertions.
> +
> +To test an existing or new test case within Gitlab CI, there is a method of
> +invoking a specific test by creating a Buildroot fork in Gitlab under your
> +account. This can be handy when adding/changing a run-time test or fixing a
> +bug on a use case tested by a run-time test case.
> +
> +
> +In the examples below, the <name> component of the branch name is a unique
> +string you choose to identify this specific job being created.
> +
> +* to trigger all run-test test case jobs:
> +
> +---------------------
> + $ git push gitlab HEAD:<name>-runtime-tests
> +---------------------
> +
> +* to trigger one test case job, a specific branch naming string is used that
> +includes the full test case name.
> +
> +---------------------
> + $ git push gitlab HEAD:<name>-<test case name>
> +---------------------
> +
> +==== Creating a test case
> +
> +The best way to get familiar with how to create a test case is to look at a
> +few of the basic file system +support/testing/tests/fs/+ and init
> ++support/testing/tests/init/+ test scripts. Those tests give good examples
> +of a basic build and build with run type of tests. There are other more
> +advanced cases that use things like nested +br2-external+ folders to provide
> +skeletons and additional packages.
> +
> +The test cases by default use a br-arm-full-* uClibc-ng toolchain and the
> +prebuild kernel for a armv5/7 cpu. It is recommended to use the default
> +defconfig test configuration except when Glibc/musl or a newer kernel are
> +necessary. By using the default it saves build time and the test would
> +automatically inherit a kernel/std library upgrade when the default is
> +updated.
> +
> +The basic test case definition involves
> +
> +* Creation of a new test file
> +* Defining a unique test class
> +* Determining if the default defconfig plus test options can be used
> +* Implementing a +def test_run(self):+ function to optionally startup the
> +emulator and provide test case conditions.
> +
> +Beyond creating the test script, there are a couple of additional steps that
> +should be taken once you have your initial test case script. The first is
> +to add yourself to the +DEVELOPERS+ file to be the maintainer of that test
> +case. The second is to update the Gitlab CI yml by executing
> ++make .gitlab-ci.yml+.
> -- 
> 2.18.0
> 
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> http://lists.busybox.net/mailman/listinfo/buildroot

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