The gnulib testsuite is relatively stable - the only times it is
likely to have a test change from pass to fail is on a gnulib
submodule update or a major system change (such as moving from
Fedora 18 to 19, or other large change to libc). While it is an
important test for end users on arbitrary machines (to make sure
that the portability glue works for their machine), it mostly
wastes time for development testing (as most developers aren't
making any of the major changes that would cause gnulib tests
to alter behavior). Thus, it pays to make the tests optional
at configure time, defaulting to off for development, on for
tarballs, with autobuilders requesting it to be on. It also
helps to allow a make-time override, via VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE=[01]
(much the way automake sets up V=[01] for overriding the configure
time default of how verbose to be).
Automake has some pretty hard-coded magic with regards to the
TESTS variable; I had quite a job figuring out how to keep
'make distcheck' passing regardless of the configure option
setting in use, while still disabling the tests at runtime
when I did not configure them on and did not use the override
variable. Thankfully, we require GNU make, which lets me
hide some information from Automake's magic handling of TESTS.
* bootstrap.conf (bootstrap_epilogue): Munge gnulib test variable.
* configure.ac (--enable-expensive-tests): Add new enable switch.
(VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE_DEFAULT, WITH_EXPENSIVE_TESTS): Set new
witnesses.
* gnulib/tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Make tests conditional on
configure settings and the VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE variable.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Expose VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE
to all tests.
* autobuild.sh: Enable all tests during autobuilds.
* libvirt.spec.in (%configure): Likewise.
* mingw-libvirt.spec.in (%mingw_configure): Likewise.
* docs/hacking.html.in: Document the option.
* HACKING: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit f1088c8 weakened a test, by not passing a value larger
than INT_MAX through an int slot. Make the fix in a different
way, using an explicit negative value. Suggested by Dan Berrange.
* tests/virdbustest.c (testMessageArray): Adjust previous fix.
(testMessageStruct): Use a negative number.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Compiling with gcc 4.1.2 (RHEL 5) on a 32-bit platform complains:
virdbustest.c: In function 'testMessageSimple':
virdbustest.c:61: warning: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
virdbustest.c:62: warning: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
virdbustest.c: In function 'testMessageArray':
virdbustest.c:183: warning: this decimal constant is unsigned only in ISO C90
virdbustest.c: In function 'testMessageStruct':
virdbustest.c:239: warning: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
virdbustest.c:240: warning: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
* tests/virdbustest.c (testMessageSiple, testMessageArray)
(testMessageStruct): Don't violate C89 constant constraints.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Use a separate keyfile name for the two TLS test suites so that
they don't clash when running tests in parallel
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
On RHEL 5, with dbus 1.1.2, compilation failed with:
virsystemdmock.c: In function 'dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block':
virsystemdmock.c:68: warning: implicit declaration of function 'dbus_message_set_serial'
Fix this by instead bypassing all attempts to use a dbus serial.
* tests/virsystemdmock.c (dbus_message_set_reply_serial): Add new
override.
(dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block): No longer bother with
the serial.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The code added to validate CA certificates did not take into
account the possibility that the cacert.pem file can contain
multiple (concatenated) cert data blocks. Extend the code for
loading CA certs to use the gnutls APIs for loading cert lists.
Add test cases to check that multi-level trees of certs will
validate correctly.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently a 'struct testTLSCertReq' instance is passed into
the TLS test cases. This is not flexible enough to cope with
certificate chains, where one file now corresponds to multiple
certificates. Change the test cases so that we pass in filenames
instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently every test case in the TLS test suite generates the
certs fresh. This is a waste of time, since its parameters
don't change across test cases. Create certs once in main
method.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virnettlscontexttest.c tests both virNetTLSContext
and virNetTLSSession functionality. Split into two
separate tests, to make the code size more manageable
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
q35 machines have an implicit ahci (sata) controller at 00:1F.2 which
has no "id" associated with it. For this reason, we can't refer to it
as "ahci0". Instead, we don't give an id on the commandline, which
qemu interprets as "use the first ahci controller". We then need to
specify the unit with "unit=%d" rather than adding it onto the bus
arg.
We had been setting the device alias in the devinceinfo for pci
controllers to "pci%u", but then hardcoding "pci.%u" when creating the
device address for other devices using that pci bus. This all worked
just fine until we encountered the built-in "pcie.0" bus (the PCIe
root complex) in Q35 machines.
In order to create the correct commandline for this one case, this
patch:
1) sets the alias for PCI controllers correctly, to "pci.%u" (or
"pcie.%u" for the pcie-root controller)
2) eliminates the hardcoded "pci.%u" for pci controllers when
generatuing device address strings, and instead uses the controller's
alias.
3) plumbs a pointer to the virDomainDef all the way down to
qemuBuildDeviceAddressStr. This was necessary in order to make the
aliase of the controller *used by a device* available (previously
qemuBuildDeviceAddressStr only had the deviceinfo of the device
itself, *not* of the controller it was connecting to). This made for a
larger than desired diff, but at least in the future we won't have to
do it again, since all the information we could possibly ever need for
future enhancements is in the virDomainDef. (right?)
This should be done for *all* controllers, but for now we just do it
in the case of PCI controllers, to reduce the likelyhood of
regression.
This patch adds in special handling for a few devices that need to be
treated differently for q35 domains:
usb - there is no implicit/default usb controller for the q35
machinetype. This is done because normally the default usb controller
is added to a domain by just adding "-usb" to the qemu commandline,
and it's assumed that this will add a single piix3 usb1 controller at
slot 1 function 2. That's not what happens when the machinetype is
q35, though. Instead, adding -usb to the commandline adds 3 usb
(version 2) controllers to the domain at slot 0x1D.{1,2,7}. Rather
than having
<controller type='usb' index='0'/>
translate into 3 separate devices on the PCI bus, it's cleaner to not
automatically add a default usb device; one can always be added
explicitly if desired. Or we may decide that on q35 machines, 3 usb
controllers will be automatically added when none is given. But for
this initial commit, at least we aren't locking ourselves into
something we later won't want.
video - qemu always initializes the primary video device immediately
after any integrated devices for the machinetype. Unless instructed
otherwise (by using "-device vga..." instead of "-vga" which libvirt
uses in many cases to work around deficiencies and bugs in various
qemu versions) qemu will always pick the first unused slot. In the
case of the "pc" machinetype and its derivatives, this is always slot
2, but on q35 machinetypes, the first free slot is slot 1 (since the
q35's integrated peripheral devices are placed in other slots,
e.g. slot 0x1f). In order to make the PCI address of the video device
predictable, that slot (1 or 2, depending on machinetype) is reserved
even when no video device has been specified.
sata - a q35 machine always has a sata controller implicitly added at
slot 0x1F, function 2. There is no way to avoid this controller, so we
always add it. Note that the xml2xml tests for the pcie-root and q35
cases were changed to use DO_TEST_DIFFERENT() so that we can check for
the sata controller being automatically added. This is especially
important because we can't check for it in the xml2argv output (it has
no effect on that output since it's an implicit device).
ide - q35 has no ide controllers.
isa and smbus controllers - these two are always present in a q35 (at
slot 0x1F functions 0 and 3) but we have no way of modelling them in
our config. We do need to reserve those functions so that the user
doesn't attempt to put anything else there though. (note that the "pc"
machine type also has an ISA controller, which we also ignore).
This PCI controller, named "dmi-to-pci-bridge" in the libvirt config,
and implemented with qemu's "i82801b11-bridge" device, connects to a
PCI Express slot (e.g. one of the slots provided by the pcie-root
controller, aka "pcie.0" on the qemu commandline), and provides 31
*non-hot-pluggable* PCI (*not* PCIe) slots, numbered 1-31.
Any time a machine is defined which has a pcie-root controller
(i.e. any q35-based machinetype), libvirt will automatically add a
dmi-to-pci-bridge controller if one doesn't exist, and also add a
pci-bridge controller. The reasoning here is that any useful domain
will have either an immediate (startup time) or eventual (subsequent
hot-plug) need for a standard PCI slot; since the pcie-root controller
only provides PCIe slots, we need to connect a dmi-to-pci-bridge
controller to it in order to get a non-hot-plug PCI slot that we can
then use to connect a pci-bridge - the slots provided by the
pci-bridge will be both standard PCI and hot-pluggable.
Since pci-bridge devices themselves can not be hot-plugged into a
running system (although you can hot-plug other devices into a
pci-bridge's slots), any new pci-bridge controller that is added can
(and will) be plugged into the dmi-to-pci-bridge as long as it has
empty slots available.
This patch is also changing the qemuxml2xml-pcie test from a "DO_TEST"
to a "DO_DIFFERENT_TEST". This is so that the "before" xml can omit
the automatically added dmi-to-pci-bridge and pci-bridge devices, and
the "after" xml can include it - this way we are testing if libvirt is
properly adding these devices.
This controller is implicit on q35 machinetypes. It provides 31 PCIe
(*not* PCI) slots as controller 0.
Currently there are no devices that can connect to pcie-root, and no
implicit pci controller on a q35 machine, so q35 is still
unusable. For a usable q35 system, we need to add a
"dmi-to-pci-bridge" pci controller, which can connect to pcie-root,
and provides standard pci slots that can be used to connect other
devices.
The shutdown test utilizes waiting for condition to exit the test. This
addition will return an error for the shutdown command to see if the
condition waiting code will not hang.
Coverity complained about unused variable that contains the shutdown
mode. The original intention was to check it against the requested mode.
Also the fixed check revealed a mistake in the expected shutdown mode.
Reported by John Ferlan.
When building libvirt with -O0 flag in fedora 19, it will fail to
generate qemuagenttest, a link error occurs like:
./.libs/libqemumonitortestutils.a(qemumonitortestutils.o): In function `qemuMonitorTestFree':
libvirt/tests/qemumonitortestutils.c:346: undefined reference to `qemuMonitorClose'
./.libs/libqemumonitortestutils.a(qemumonitortestutils.o): In function `qemuMonitorTestNew':
libvirt/tests/qemumonitortestutils.c:870: undefined reference to `qemuMonitorOpen'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Fix it by listing libraries in the correct order to avoid lazy linkage.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Systemd uses a named cgroup mount for tracking processes. Add
it as another type of controller, albeit one which we have to
special case in a number of places. In particular we must
never create/delete directories there, nor add tasks. Essentially
the systemd mount is to be considered read-only for libvirt.
With this change both the virCgroupDetectPlacement and
virCgroupCopyPlacement methods must be invoked. The copy
placement method will copy setup for resource controllers
only. The detect placement method will probe for any
named controllers, or resource controllers not already
setup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are some interesting escaping rules to consider when dealing
with systemd slice/scope names. Thus it is helpful to have APIs
for formatting names
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use the JSON error messages to report errors back to the caller in
addition to erroring out. The error reported from the event loop from
the mock function of the monitor was later overwritten by the call to
the monitor/agent interaction API. This will also allow testing of error
reporting.
The normal monitor uses windows line endings, where the agent monitor
uses only newlines. Change this to tolerate both approaches and allow to
use the utilities for guest agent tests.
Refactor the test helpers to allow adding callbacks to verify the
monitor responses instead of simple command name checking and clean up
various parts to prepare for adding guest agent tests.
The instrumentation for the monitor test can be hacked for qemu agent
testing. Split out the monitor specific stuff to allow using the code in
guest agent tests in the future.
The qemumonitorjsontest crashed when one of the initialization steps
done before starting the worker thread failed. This patch fixes this by
trying to pthread_join() the thread only after it was created.
Commit 93ec384 was tested on mingw, but broke the build on Linux:
CCLD shunloadtest
shunloadtest.o: In function `main':
/home/eblake/libvirt/tests/shunloadtest.c:106: undefined reference to `virFilePrintf'
...
ssh.o: In function `main':
/home/eblake/libvirt/tests/ssh.c:43: undefined reference to `virFilePrintf'
/home/eblake/libvirt/tests/ssh.c:49: undefined reference to `virFilePrintf'
* tests/testutils.h (fprintf): Provide escape hatch.
* tests/shunloadtest.c: Use it.
* tests/ssh.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit a2619962 introduced virFilePrintf to work around the fact
that gnulib doesn't (yet) provide guarantees about fprintf() vs.
%z, which in turn causes all sorts of mingw compilation errors:
../../tests/testutils.c: In function 'virtTestResult':
../../tests/testutils.c:101:9: error: unknown conversion type character 'z' in format [-Werror=format=]
fprintf(stderr, "%3zu) %-60s ", testCounter, name);
^
Rather than s/fprintf/virFilePrintf/ (and reformatting loads of
lines) across multiple files, it's easier to just hack the entire
testsuite to take advantage of our helper function.
* tests/testutils.c: s/fprintf/virFilePrintf/ for mingw.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A cross-compile to mingw failed:
CC virsystemdmock_la-virsystemdmock.lo
../../tests/virsystemdmock.c:29:6: error: 'dbus_connection_set_change_sigpipe' redeclared without dllimport attribute: previous dllimport ignored [-Werror=attributes]
void dbus_connection_set_change_sigpipe(dbus_bool_t will_modify_sigpipe ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED)
^
But when you think about it, systemd is Linux-only, and even our
use of LD_PRELOAD to provide mock syscalls is Linux-only.
* tests/virsystemdmock.c: Avoid compilation outside Linux.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The way we were casting small (<32bit) integers was broken
on big endian hosts, causing stack smashing. This was detected
in the test suite either by test failures due to incorrect
results, or by libc/gcc abort'ing with its stack canary
triggered.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=981094
The commit 0ad9025ef introduce qemu flag QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VIDEO_PRIMARY
for using -device VGA, -device cirrus-vga, -device vmware-svga and
-device qxl-vga. In use, for -device qxl-vga, mouse doesn't display
in guest window like the desciption in above bug.
This patch try to use -device for primary video when qemu >=1.6 which
contains the bug fix patch
Ignore NULL pool in testSetVolumeType to silence Coverity,
even though we only call it with NULL pool when vol is also NULL.
(13) Event var_deref_model: Passing null pointer "inputpool" to
function "testSetVolumeType(virStorageVolDefPtr, virStoragePoolDefPtr)",
which dereferences it. [details]
Also see events: [assign_zero]
95 testSetVolumeType(inputvol, inputpool);
since sizeof(int) != sizeof(long long) on 32bit archs.
This unbreaks virdbustest which otherwise fails like:
(gdb) bt
#0 __strlen_sse2_bsf () at ../sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/strlen-sse2-bsf.S:50
#1 0x405907d2 in ?? () from /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libdbus-1.so.3
#2 0x4057c140 in ?? () from /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libdbus-1.so.3
#3 0x4057e7ec in dbus_message_iter_append_basic () from /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libdbus-1.so.3
#4 0x400742ec in virDBusMessageIterEncode (args=0xbfd4b8f0 "k\321\004\b.", types=0x804d260 "",
rootiter=0xbfd4b844) at util/virdbus.c:560
#5 virDBusMessageEncodeArgs (msg=msg@entry=0x893c278, types=types@entry=0x804d25c "sais",
args=args@entry=0xbfd4b8d8 "r\320\004\b\003") at util/virdbus.c:921
#6 0x40075917 in virDBusMessageEncode (msg=0x893c278, types=0x804d25c "sais") at util/virdbus.c:959
#7 0x0804a4a1 in testMessageArray (args=0x0) at virdbustest.c:195
#8 0x0804c404 in virtTestRun (title=title@entry=0x804cfcb "Test message array ",
nloops=nloops@entry=1, body=body@entry=0x804a3f0 <testMessageArray>, data=data@entry=0x0)
at testutils.c:168
#9 0x08049346 in mymain () at virdbustest.c:384
#10 0x0804cb2e in virtTestMain (argc=argc@entry=1, argv=argv@entry=0xbfd4bb24,
func=func@entry=0x80492c0 <mymain>) at testutils.c:764
#11 0x080491af in main (argc=1, argv=0xbfd4bb24) at virdbustest.c:393
Reuse the XML files in storagevolxml2xmlin.
(This requires changing a few backing files to /dev/null,
since virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgCmd checks for its
presence)