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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Public Domain 2014-2019 MongoDB, Inc.
# Public Domain 2008-2014 WiredTiger, Inc.
#
# This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain.
#
# Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or
# distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled
# binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any
# means.
#
# In jurisdictions that recognize copyright laws, the author or authors
# of this software dedicate any and all copyright interest in the
# software to the public domain. We make this dedication for the benefit
# of the public at large and to the detriment of our heirs and
# successors. We intend this dedication to be an overt act of
# relinquishment in perpetuity of all present and future rights to this
# software under copyright law.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
# OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
# ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
# OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
#
# syscall.py
# Command line syscall test runner
#
# Usage: python syscall.py [ options ]
#
# For each .run file below the current directory, run the corresponding
# program and collect strace output, comparing it to the contents of
# the .run file.
#
# Options:
# --preserve preserve the outputs in a WT_TEST.* subdirectory
# of the build directory.
# --verbose verbose output to show step by step how run files are
# compared to output files.
# HOW TO DEBUG FAILURES OR CREATE A NEW TEST
#
# It will be helpful to look at an existing run file (ending in .run)
# while reading this. If you are debugging a failure, also have the
# output file (stderr.txt) available for reference. These files are
# generated in a WT_TEST.* subdirectory of the build directory and
# preserved in case of a failure, or when the --preserve option is used.
#
# For each run file under this directory, this script runs the program
# built for that directory under the 'strace' program and captures the
# output from that. (On OS/X it runs 'dtruss' instead of 'strace', otherwise
# it is largely the same). We want to compare the strace output to a known
# reference. The program typically has some of its own output, this is
# interleaved into the strace output and provides 'anchor points' during
# the comparison.
#
# The purpose of this output comparison is to determine if there are any
# system calls that we should be doing that are not happening. We'd also catch
# if there are any extra syscalls that we are doing. For example, if we
# are expecting that some operation, like WT_SESSION->create, must do an
# fdatasync at a particular point to enforce durability guarantees,
# it would be pretty bad if a future code change inadvertently stopped
# doing the fdatasync. This wouldn't be picked up by normal testing. It might
# be detected by asynchronously killing a test run and seeing if a
# recovered database gives proper results. Or it might not. This script
# attempts to add certainty to our guarantees.
#
# The run file is a template for what the resulting strace output should
# look like. The challenge is that seemingly minor changes to WiredTiger
# implementation or even runtime libraries may change what the overall output
# looks like. The run file can be written to allow runs that are resilient
# against such changes.
#
# This script's first action is to read the run file after it is run through
# the 'cpp' preprocessor. That means that the run file can use #ifdefs,
# #defines and #includes, as well as /**/ and // comments. The output
# of the preprocessor is then parsed. We expect to see a few directives
# first, each has a string argument as described here:
#
# SYSTEM("....."); to tell us what system the script can run on, the arg
# currently is either "Linux" and "Darwin".
# TRACE("....."); a comma separated list of system calls that
# we are looking at. Other system calls are ignored.
# RUN(""); arguments to the executable.
#
# When the RUN directive is seen, it indicates that this header portion is
# complete, there are no more directives. At this point, the target program
# is executed via strace. The remaining part of the run file is used to
# match the output of strace.
#
# The string '...' in the run file matches anything, and can be used to skip
# over system dependent parts of the strace output. If '...' appears on a line
# by itself, it matches any number of lines. If it appears immediately after a
# string, it matches a string that begins with the pattern. (e.g. "foo"...
# matches any string that starts with "foo"). It can also appear as a function
# argument where it matches any number of arguments.
#
# Lines of strace generally look something like:
# open("./WiredTiger.lock", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_CLOEXEC, 0666) = 3
#
# where the result of the syscall appears at the end. A matching line in
# a run file could look like this:
# fd = open("./WiredTiger.lock", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_CLOEXEC, 0666);
#
# or:
# fd = open("./WiredTiger"..., O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_CLOEXEC, 0666);
#
# or:
# fd = open("./WiredTiger"..., ...);
#
# In each of these cases, the 'fd' (which can be any variable name) becomes
# bound to the value in the strace output, in this case '3'. So if later the
# run file contains:
# write(fd, ""..., 20);
#
# then we would expect this to match strace output for a write of 20 bytes
# using file descriptor 3.
#
# Expressions are evaluated using the Python parser, so that
# hex and octal numbers are accepted, and constant values can be or-ed.
# Some limited number of defines are known (see 'defines_used' below),
# so that the run file can contain 'O_RDONLY' and it will match a numeric
# expression (as it appears in the output of dtruss on OS/X).
from __future__ import print_function
import argparse, distutils.spawn, fnmatch, os, platform, re, shutil, \
subprocess, sys
# A class that represents a context in which predefined constants can be
# set, and new variables can be assigned.
class VariableContext(object):
def __getitem__(self, key):
if key not in dir(self) or key.startswith('__'):
raise KeyError(key)
return getattr(self, key)
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
setattr(self, key, value)
################################################################
# Changable parameters
# We expect these values to evolve as tests are added or modified.
# Generally, system calls must be wrapped in an ASSERT_XX() "macro".
# Exceptions are calls in this list that return 0 on success, or
# those that are hardcoded in Runner.call_compare()
calls_returning_zero = [ 'close', 'ftruncate', 'fdatasync', 'rename' ]
# Encapsulate all the defines we can use in our scripts.
# When this program is run, we'll find out their actual values on
# the host system.
defines_used = [
'HAVE_FTRUNCATE', 'O_ACCMODE', 'O_APPEND', 'O_ASYNC',
'O_CLOEXEC', 'O_CREAT', 'O_EXCL', 'O_EXLOCK', 'O_NOATIME',
'O_NOFOLLOW', 'O_NONBLOCK', 'O_RDONLY', 'O_RDWR', 'O_SHLOCK',
'O_TRUNC', 'O_WRONLY', 'WT_USE_OPENAT' ]
################################################################
# Patterns that are used to match the .run file and/or the output.
ident = r'([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*)'
outputpat = re.compile(r'OUTPUT\("([^"]*)"\)')
argpat = re.compile(r'''((?:[^,"']|"[^"]*"|'[^']*')+)''')
discardpat = re.compile(r';')
# e.g. fd = open("blah", 0, 0);
assignpat = re.compile(ident + r'\s*=\s*' + ident + r'(\([^;]*\));')
# e.g. ASSERT_EQ(close(fd), 0);
assertpat = re.compile(r'ASSERT_([ENLG][QET])\s*\(\s*' + ident + r'\s*(\(.*\))\s*,\s*([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\);')
# e.g. close(fd); must return 0
callpat = re.compile(ident + r'(\(.*\));')
# e.g. open("blah", 0x0, 0x0) = 6 0
# We capture the errno (e.g. "0" or "Err#60"), but don't do anything with it.
# We don't currently test anything that is errno dependent.
dtruss_pat = re.compile(ident + r'(\(.*\))\s*=\s*(-*[0-9xA-F]+)\s+([-A-Za-z#0-9]*)')
# At the top of the dtruss output is a fixed string.
dtruss_init_pat = re.compile(r'\s*SYSCALL\(args\)\s*=\s*return\s*')
strace_pat = re.compile(ident + r'(\(.*\))\s*=\s(-*[0-9]+)()')
tracepat = re.compile(r'TRACE\("([^"]*)"\)')
runpat = re.compile(r'RUN\(([^\)]*)\)')
systempat = re.compile(r'SYSTEM\("([^"]*)"\)')
# If tracepat matches, set map['trace_syscalls'] to the 0'th group, etc.
headpatterns = [ [ tracepat, 'trace_syscalls', 0],
[ systempat, 'required_system', 0],
[ runpat, 'run_args', 0] ]
pwrite_in = r'pwrite64'
pwrite_out = r'pwrite'
# To create breakpoints while debugging this script
def bp():
import pdb
pdb.set_trace()
def msg(s):
print("syscall.py: " + s, file=sys.stderr)
def die(s):
msg(s)
sys.exit(1)
# If wttop appears as a prefix of pathname, strip it off.
def simplify_path(wttop, pathname):
wttop = os.path.join(wttop, "")
if pathname.startswith(wttop):
pathname = pathname[len(wttop):]
return pathname
def printfile(pathname, abbrev):
print("================================================================")
print(abbrev + " (" + pathname + "):")
with open(pathname, 'r') as f:
shutil.copyfileobj(f, sys.stdout)
print("================================================================")
# A line from a file: a modified string with the file name and line number
# associated with it.
class FileLine(str):
filename = None
linenum = 0
def __new__(cls, filename, linenum, value, *args, **kwargs):
result = super(FileLine, cls).__new__(cls, value)
result.filename = filename
result.linenum = linenum
return result
def prefix(self):
return self.filename + ':' + str(self.linenum) + ': '
def range_prefix(self, otherline):
if self == otherline:
othernum = ''
elif otherline == None:
othernum = '-EOF'
else:
othernum = '-' + str(otherline.linenum)
return self.filename + ':' + str(self.linenum) + othernum + ': '
def normalize(self):
changed = re.sub(pwrite_in, pwrite_out, self)
if changed == self:
normalized = self
else:
normalized = FileLine(self.filename, self.linenum, str(changed))
return normalized
# Manage reading from a file, tracking line numbers.
class Reader(object):
# 'raw' means we don't ignore any lines
# 'is_cpp' means input lines beginning with '#' indicate file/linenumber
def __init__(self, wttop, filename, f, raw = True, is_cpp = False):
self.wttop = wttop
self.orig_filename = filename
self.filename = filename
self.f = f
self.linenum = 1
self.raw = raw
self.is_cpp = is_cpp
self.context = []
if not self.f:
die(self.filename + ': cannot open')
def __enter__(self):
if not self.f:
return False
return self
def __exit__(self, typ, value, traceback):
if self.f:
self.f.close()
self.f = None
# Return True if the line is to be ignored.
def ignore(self, line):
if self.raw:
return False
return line == ''
# strip a line of comments
def strip_line(self, line):
if not line:
return None
line = line.strip()
if self.is_cpp and line.startswith('#'):
parts = line.split()
if len(parts) < 3 or not parts[1].isdigit():
msg('bad cpp input: ' + line)
line = ''
self.linenum = int(parts[1]) - 1
self.filename = parts[2].strip('"')
if self.filename == '<stdin>':
self.filename = self.orig_filename
if '//' in line:
if line.startswith('//'):
line = ''
else:
# This isn't exactly right, it would see "; //"
# within a string or comment.
m = re.match(r'^(.*;|.*\.\.\.)\s*//', line)
if m:
line = m.groups()[0].strip()
return line
def readline(self):
rawline = self.f.readline()
line = self.strip_line(rawline)
self.add_context(rawline)
while line != None and self.ignore(line):
self.linenum += 1
rawline = self.f.readline()
line = self.strip_line(rawline)
self.add_context(rawline)
if line:
line = FileLine(self.filename, self.linenum, line)
self.linenum += 1
else:
line = '' # make this somewhat compatible with file.readline
return line
def get_context(self):
s = ''
for line in self.context:
s += ' ' + str(line)
return s
def add_context(self, line):
self.context.append(str(self.linenum) + ': ' + line)
self.context = self.context[-5:]
def close(self):
self.f.close()
# Read from a regular file.
class FileReader(Reader):
def __init__(self, wttop, filename, raw = True):
return super(FileReader, self).__init__(wttop, filename,
open(filename), raw, False)
# Read from the C preprocessor run on a file.
class PreprocessedReader(Reader):
def __init__(self, wttop, filename, predefines, raw = True):
sourcedir = os.path.dirname(filename)
cmd = ['cc', '-E', '-I' + sourcedir]
for name in dir(predefines):
if not name.startswith('__'):
cmd.append('-D' + name + '=' + str(predefines[name]))
cmd.append('-')
proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdin=open(filename),
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True)
super(PreprocessedReader, self).__init__(wttop, filename,
proc.stdout, raw, True)
# Track options discovered in the 'head' section of the .run file.
class HeadOpts:
def __init__(self):
self.run_args = None
self.required_system = None
self.trace_syscalls = None
# Manage a run of the target program characterized by a .run file,
# comparing output from the run and reporting differences.
class Runner:
def __init__(self, wttopdir, runfilename, exedir, testexe,
strace, args, variables, defines):
self.variables = variables
self.defines = defines
self.wttopdir = wttopdir
self.runfilename = runfilename
self.testexe = testexe
self.exedir = exedir
self.strace = strace
self.args = args
self.headopts = HeadOpts()
self.dircreated = False
self.strip_syscalls = None
outfilename = args.outfilename
errfilename = args.errfilename
if outfilename == None:
self.outfilename = os.path.join(exedir, 'stdout.txt')
else:
self.outfilename = outfilename
if errfilename == None:
self.errfilename = os.path.join(exedir, 'stderr.txt')
else:
self.errfilename = errfilename
self.runfile = PreprocessedReader(self.wttopdir, runfilename,
self.defines, False)
def init(self, systemtype):
# Read up until 'RUN()', setting attributes of self.headopts
runline = '?'
m = None
while runline:
runline = self.runfile.readline()
m = None
for pat,attr,group in headpatterns:
m = re.match(pat, runline)
if m:
setattr(self.headopts, attr, m.groups()[group])
break
if not m:
self.fail(runline, "unknown header option: " + runline)
return [ False, False ]
if self.headopts.run_args != None: # found RUN()?
break
if not self.headopts.trace_syscalls:
msg("'" + self.runfile.filename + "': needs TRACE(...)")
return [ False, False ]
runargs = self.headopts.run_args.strip()
if len(runargs) > 0:
if len(runargs) < 2 or runargs[0] != '"' or runargs[-1] != '"':
msg("'" + self.runfile.filename +
"': Missing double quotes in RUN arguments")
return [ False, False ]
runargs = runargs[1:-1]
self.runargs = runargs.split()
#print("SYSCALLS: " + self.headopts.trace_syscalls
if self.headopts.required_system != None and \
self.headopts.required_system != systemtype:
msg("skipping '" + self.runfile.filename + "': for '" +
self.headopts.required_system + "', this system is '"
+ systemtype + "'")
return [ False, True ]
return [ True, False ]
def close(self, forcePreserve):
self.runfile.close()
if self.exedir and self.dircreated and \
not self.args.preserve and not forcePreserve:
os.chdir('..')
shutil.rmtree(self.exedir)
def fail(self, line, s):
# make it work if line is None or is a plain string.
try:
prefix = simplify_path(self.wttopdir, line.prefix())
except:
prefix = 'syscall.py: '
print(prefix + s, file=sys.stderr)
def failrange(self, errfile, line, lineto, s):
# make it work if line is None or is a plain string.
try:
prefix = simplify_path(self.wttopdir, line.range_prefix(lineto))
except:
prefix = 'syscall.py: '
print(prefix + s + '\n' + errfile.get_context(), file=sys.stderr)
def str_match(self, s1, s2):
fuzzyRight = False
if len(s1) < 2 or len(s2) < 2:
return False
if s1[-3:] == '...':
fuzzyRight = True
s1 = s1[:-3]
if s2[-3:] == '...':
s2 = s2[:-3]
if s1[0] != '"' or s1[-1] != '"' or s2[0] != '"' or s2[-1] != '"':
return False
s1 = s1[1:-1]
s2 = s2[1:-1]
# We allow a trailing \0
if s1[-2:] == '\\0':
s1 = s1[:-2]
if s2[-2:] == '\\0':
s2 = s2[:-2]
if fuzzyRight:
return s2.startswith(s2)
else:
return s1 == s2
def expr_eval(self, s):
return eval(s, {}, self.variables)
def arg_match(self, a1, a2):
a1 = a1.strip()
a2 = a2.strip()
if a1 == a2:
return True
if len(a1) == 0 or len(a2) == 0:
return False
if a1[0] == '"':
return self.str_match(a1, a2)
#print(' arg_match: <' + a1 + '> <' + a2 + '>')
try:
a1value = self.expr_eval(a1)
except Exception:
self.fail(a1, 'unknown expression: ' + a1)
return False
try:
a2value = self.expr_eval(a2)
except Exception:
self.fail(a2, 'unknown expression: ' + a2)
return False
return a1value == a2value or int(a1value) == int(a2value)
def split_args(self, s):
if s[0] == '(':
s = s[1:]
if s[-1] == ')':
s = s[:-1]
return argpat.split(s)[1::2]
def args_match(self, args1, args2):
#print('args_match: ' + str(s1) + ', ' + str(s2))
pos = 0
for a1 in args1:
a1 = a1.strip()
if a1 == '...': # match anything?
return True
if pos >= len(args2):
return False
if not self.arg_match(a1, args2[pos]):
return False
pos += 1
if pos < len(args2):
return False
return True
# func(args); is shorthand for for ASSERT_EQ(func(args), xxx);
# where xxx may be 0 or may be derived from one of the args.
def call_compare(self, callname, result, eargs, errline):
if callname in calls_returning_zero:
return self.compare("EQ", result, "0", errline)
elif callname == 'pwrite' or callname == 'pwrite64':
return self.compare("EQ",
re.sub(pwrite_in, pwrite_out, result),
re.sub(pwrite_in, pwrite_out, eargs[2]),
errline)
else:
self.fail(errline, 'call ' + callname +
': not known, use ASSERT_EQ()')
def compare(self, compareop, left, right, errline):
l = self.expr_eval(left)
r = self.expr_eval(right)
if (compareop == "EQ" and l == r) or \
(compareop == "NE" and l != r) or \
(compareop == "LT" and l < r) or \
(compareop == "LE" and l <= r) or \
(compareop == "GT" and l > r) or \
(compareop == "GE" and l >= r):
return True
else:
self.fail(errline,
'call returned value: ' + left + ', comparison: (' +
left + ' ' + compareop + ' ' + right +
') at line: ' + errline)
return False
def match_report(self, runline, errline, verbose, skiplines, result, desc):
if result:
if verbose:
print('MATCH:')
print(' ' + runline.prefix() + runline)
print(' ' + errline.prefix() + errline)
else:
if verbose:
if not skiplines:
msg('Expecting ' + desc)
print(' ' + runline.prefix() + runline +
' does not match:')
print(' ' + errline.prefix() + errline)
else:
print(' (... match) ' + errline.prefix() + errline)
return result
def match(self, runline, errline, verbose, skiplines):
m = re.match(outputpat, runline)
if m:
outwant = m.groups()[0]
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
errline == outwant, 'output line')
if self.args.systype == 'Linux':
em = re.match(strace_pat, errline)
elif self.args.systype == 'Darwin':
em = re.match(dtruss_pat, errline)
if not em:
self.fail(errline, 'Unknown strace/dtruss output: ' + errline)
return False
gotcall = em.groups()[0]
# filtering syscalls here if needed. If it's not a match,
# mark the errline so it is retried.
if self.strip_syscalls != None and gotcall not in self.strip_syscalls:
errline.skip = True
return False
m = re.match(assignpat, runline)
if m:
if m.groups()[1] != gotcall:
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
False, 'syscall to match assignment')
rargs = self.split_args(m.groups()[2])
eargs = self.split_args(em.groups()[1])
result = self.args_match(rargs, eargs)
if result:
self.variables[m.groups()[0]] = em.groups()[2]
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
result, 'syscall to match assignment')
# pattern groups using example ASSERT_EQ(close(fd), 0);
# 0 : comparison op ("EQ")
# 1 : function call name "close"
# 2 : function call args "(fd)"
# 3 : comparitor "0"
m = re.match(assertpat, runline)
if m:
if m.groups()[1] != gotcall:
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
False, 'syscall to match ASSERT')
rargs = self.split_args(m.groups()[2])
eargs = self.split_args(em.groups()[1])
result = self.args_match(rargs, eargs)
if not result:
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
result, 'syscall to match ASSERT')
result = self.compare(m.groups()[0], em.groups()[2],
m.groups()[3], errline)
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
result, 'ASSERT')
# A call without an enclosing ASSERT is reduced to an ASSERT,
# depending on the particular system call.
m = re.match(callpat, runline)
if m:
if m.groups()[0] != gotcall:
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
False, 'syscall')
rargs = self.split_args(m.groups()[1])
eargs = self.split_args(em.groups()[1])
result = self.args_match(rargs, eargs)
if not result:
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
result, 'syscall')
result = self.call_compare(m.groups()[0], em.groups()[2],
eargs, errline)
return self.match_report(runline, errline, verbose, skiplines,
result, 'syscall')
self.fail(runline, 'unrecognized pattern in runfile:' + runline)
return False
def match_lines(self):
outfile = FileReader(self.wttopdir, self.outfilename, True)
errfile = FileReader(self.wttopdir, self.errfilename, True)
if outfile.readline():
self.fail(None, 'output file has content, expected to be empty')
return False
with outfile, errfile:
runlines = self.order_runfile(self.runfile)
errline = errfile.readline()
if re.match(dtruss_init_pat, errline):
errline = errfile.readline()
errline = errline.normalize()
skiplines = False
for runline in runlines:
runline = runline.normalize()
if runline == '...':
skiplines = True
if self.args.verbose:
print('Fuzzy matching:')
print(' ' + runline.prefix() + runline)
continue
first_errline = errline
while errline and not self.match(runline, errline,
self.args.verbose, skiplines):
if skiplines or hasattr(errline, 'skip'):
errline = errfile.readline().normalize()
else:
self.fail(runline, "expecting " + runline)
self.failrange(errfile, first_errline, errline,
"does not match")
return False
if not errline:
self.fail(runline, "failed to match line: " + runline)
self.failrange(errfile, first_errline, errline,
"does not match")
return False
errline = errfile.readline()
if re.match(dtruss_init_pat, errline):
errline = errfile.readline()
errline = errline.normalize()
skiplines = False
if errline and not skiplines:
self.fail(errline, "extra lines seen starting at " + errline)
return False
return True
def order_runfile(self, f):
# In OS X, dtruss is implemented using dtrace's apparently buffered
# printf writes to stdout, but that is all redirected to stderr.
# Because of that, the test program's writes to stderr do not
# interleave with dtruss output as it does with Linux's strace
# (which writes directly to stderr). On OS X, we get the program's
# output first, we compensate for this by moving all the
# OUTPUT statements in the runfile to match first. This simple
# approach will break if there is more data generated by OUTPUT
# statements than a stdio buffer's size.
matchout = (self.args.systype == 'Darwin')
out = []
nonout = []
s = f.readline()
while s:
if matchout and re.match(outputpat, s):
out.append(s)
elif not re.match(discardpat, s):
nonout.append(s)
s = f.readline()
out.extend(nonout)
return out
def run(self):
if not self.exedir:
self.fail(None, "Execution directory not set")
return False
if not os.path.isfile(self.testexe):
msg("'" + self.testexe + "': no such file")
return False
shutil.rmtree(self.exedir, ignore_errors=True)
os.mkdir(self.exedir)
self.dircreated = True
os.chdir(self.exedir)
callargs = list(self.strace)
trace_syscalls = self.headopts.trace_syscalls
if self.args.systype == 'Linux':
callargs.extend(['-e', 'trace=' + trace_syscalls ])
elif self.args.systype == 'Darwin':
# dtrace has no option to limit the syscalls to be traced,
# so we'll filter the output.
self.strip_syscalls = re.sub(pwrite_in, pwrite_out,
self.headopts.trace_syscalls).split(',')
callargs.append(self.testexe)
callargs.extend(self.runargs)
outfile = open(self.outfilename, 'w')
errfile = open(self.errfilename, 'w')
if self.args.verbose:
print('RUNNING: ' + str(callargs))
subret = subprocess.call(callargs, stdout=outfile, stderr=errfile)
outfile.close()
errfile.close()
if subret != 0:
msg("'" + self.testexe + "': exit value " + str(subret))
printfile(self.outfilename, "output")
printfile(self.errfilename, "error")
return False
return True
# Run the syscall program.
class SyscallCommand:
def __init__(self, disttop, builddir):
self.disttop = disttop
self.builddir = builddir
def parse_args(self, argv):
srcdir = os.path.join(self.disttop, 'test', 'syscall')
self.exetopdir = os.path.join(self.builddir, 'test', 'syscall')
self.incdir1 = os.path.join(self.disttop, 'src', 'include')
self.incdir2 = self.builddir
ap = argparse.ArgumentParser('Syscall test runner')
ap.add_argument('--systype',
help='override system type (Linux/Windows/Darwin)')
ap.add_argument('--errfile', dest='errfilename',
help='do not run the program, use this file as stderr')
ap.add_argument('--outfile', dest='outfilename',
help='do not run the program, use this file as stdout')
ap.add_argument('--preserve', action="store_true",
help='keep the WT_TEST.* directories')
ap.add_argument('--verbose', action="store_true",
help='add some verbose information')
ap.add_argument('tests', nargs='*',
help='the tests to run (defaults to all)')
args = ap.parse_args()
if not args.systype:
args.systype = platform.system() # Linux, Windows, Darwin
self.dorun = True
if args.errfilename or args.outfilename:
if len(args.tests) != 1:
msg("one test is required when --errfile or --outfile" +
" is specified")
return False
if not args.outfilename:
args.outfilename = os.devnull
if not args.errfilename:
args.errfilename = os.devnull
self.dorun = False
# for now, we permit Linux and Darwin
straceexe = None
if args.systype == 'Linux':
strace = [ 'strace' ]
straceexe = 'strace'
elif args.systype == 'Darwin':
strace = [ 'sudo', 'dtruss' ]
straceexe = 'dtruss'
else:
msg("systype '" + args.systype + "' unsupported")
return False
if not distutils.spawn.find_executable(straceexe):
msg("strace: does not exist")
return False
self.args = args
self.strace = strace
return True
def runone(self, runfilename, exedir, testexe, args):
result = True
runner = Runner(self.disttop, runfilename, exedir, testexe,
self.strace, args, self.variables, self.defines)
okay, skip = runner.init(args.systype)
if not okay:
if not skip:
result = False
else:
if testexe:
print('running ' + testexe)
if not runner.run():
result = False
if result:
print('comparing:')
print(' ' + simplify_path(self.disttop, runfilename))
print(' ' + simplify_path(self.disttop, runner.errfilename))
result = runner.match_lines()
if not result and args.verbose:
printfile(runfilename, "runfile")
printfile(runner.errfilename, "trace output")
runner.close(not result)
if not result:
print('************************ FAILED ************************')
print(' see results in ' + exedir)
print('')
return result
# Create a C program to get values for all defines we need.
# The output of the program is Python code that we'll execute
# directly to set the values.
def build_system_defines(self):
# variables is a symbol table that is used to
# evaluate expressions both in the .run file and
# in the output file. This is needed for strace,
# which shows system call flags in symbolic form.
self.variables = VariableContext()
# defines is a symbol table that is used to
# create preprocessor defines, effectively evaluating
# all flag defines in the .run file.
self.defines = VariableContext()
program = \
'#include <stdio.h>\n' + \
'#include <fcntl.h>\n' + \
'#include <wt_internal.h>\n' + \
'int main() {\n'
for define in defines_used:
program += '#ifdef ' + define + '\n'
# output is Python that sets attributes of 'o'.
program += ' printf("o.' + define + '=%d\\n", ' + \
define + ');\n'
program += '#endif\n'
program += \
' return(0);\n' + \
'}\n'
probe_c = os.path.join(self.exetopdir, "syscall_probe.c")
probe_exe = os.path.join(self.exetopdir, "syscall_probe")
with open(probe_c, "w") as f:
f.write(program)
ccargs = ['cc', '-o', probe_exe]
ccargs.append('-I' + self.incdir1)
ccargs.append('-I' + self.incdir2)
if self.args.systype == 'Linux':
ccargs.append('-D_GNU_SOURCE')
ccargs.append(probe_c)
subret = subprocess.call(ccargs)
if subret != 0:
msg("probe compilation returned " + str(subret))
return False
proc = subprocess.Popen([probe_exe], stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
universal_newlines=True)
out, err = proc.communicate()
subret = proc.returncode
if subret != 0 or err:
msg("probe run returned " + str(subret) + ", error=" + str(err))
return False
if self.args.verbose:
print('probe output:\n' + out)
o = self.defines # The 'o' object will be modified.
exec(out) # Run the produced Python.
o = self.variables # Set these in variables too, so strace
exec(out) # symbolic output is evaluated.
if not self.args.preserve:
os.remove(probe_c)
os.remove(probe_exe)
return True
def execute(self):
args = self.args
result = True
if not self.build_system_defines():
die('cannot build system defines')
if not self.dorun:
for testname in args.tests:
result = self.runone(testname, None, None, args) and result
else:
if len(args.tests) > 0:
tests = []
for arg in args.tests:
abspath = os.path.abspath(arg)
tests.append([os.path.dirname(abspath), [],
[os.path.basename(abspath)]])
else:
tests = os.walk(syscalldir)
os.chdir(self.exetopdir)
for path, subdirs, files in tests:
testnum = -1 if len(files) <= 1 else 0
for name in files:
if fnmatch.fnmatch(name, '*.run'):
testname = os.path.basename(os.path.normpath(path))
runfilename = os.path.join(path, name)
testexe = os.path.join(self.exetopdir,
'test_' + testname)
exedir = os.path.join(self.exetopdir,
'WT_TEST.' + testname)
# If there are multiple tests in this directory,
# give each one its own execution dir.
if testnum >= 0:
exedir += '.' + str(testnum)
testnum += 1
result = self.runone(runfilename, exedir,
testexe, args) and result
return result
# Set paths, determining the top of the build.
syscalldir = sys.path[0]
wt_disttop = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(syscalldir))
# Note: this code is borrowed from test/suite/run.py
# Check for a local build that contains the wt utility. First check in
# current working directory, then in build_posix and finally in the disttop
# directory. This isn't ideal - if a user has multiple builds in a tree we
# could pick the wrong one.
if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(os.getcwd(), 'wt')):
wt_builddir = os.getcwd()
elif os.path.isfile(os.path.join(wt_disttop, 'wt')):
wt_builddir = wt_disttop
elif os.path.isfile(os.path.join(wt_disttop, 'build_posix', 'wt')):
wt_builddir = os.path.join(wt_disttop, 'build_posix')
elif os.path.isfile(os.path.join(wt_disttop, 'wt.exe')):
wt_builddir = wt_disttop
else:
die('unable to find useable WiredTiger build')
cmd = SyscallCommand(wt_disttop, wt_builddir)
if not cmd.parse_args(sys.argv):
die('bad usage')
if not cmd.execute():
print('For a HOW TO on debugging, see the top of syscall.py',
file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
sys.exit(0)
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