In a constrained CI environment, where it is intentional that attempts
to write outside the current directory will fail, virsh-snapshot was
failing:
@@ -1,2 +1,3 @@
error: invalid argument: parent s3 for snapshot s2 not found
error: marker
+error: Failed to create '/home/travis/.cache/libvirt/virsh': Permission denied
FAIL virsh-snapshot (exit status: 1)
But we've already solved the problem in virsh-uriprecedence: tell
virsh to use XDG locations pointing to somewhere we can write rather
than its default of falling back to $HOME with the test being at risk
of breaking due to the user's environment and/or unacceptably altering
the user's normal cache. Hoist that solution into test-lib.sh, so
that all scripts can use it as needed. While at it, fix a latent typo
where XDG_RUNTIME_HOME was set to a literal relative directory name
"XDG_CACHE_HOME" (the typo did not affect virsh-uriprecedence, but
could matter to other clients).
Fixes: 280a2b41
Fixes: 398de147
Reported-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The man page says: "(Re)-Connect to the hypervisor. When the shell is
first started, this is automatically run with the URI parameter
requested by the "-c" option on the command line." However, if you run:
virsh -c 'test://default' 'connect; uri'
the output will not be 'test://default'. That's because the 'connect'
command does not care about any virsh-only related settings and if it is
run without parameters, it connects with @uri == NULL. Not only that
doesn't comply to what the man page describes, but it also doesn't make
sense. It also means you aren't able to reconnect to whatever you are
connected currently.
So let's fix that in both virsh and virt-admin add a test case for it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Ever since commit ace4aecd, running 'make check' on RHEL 6 produces:
./test-lib.sh: line 21: realpath: command not found
for every shell script test, because 'realpath' was not part of
coreutils back then.
* tests/test-lib.sh (_scriptdir): Compute with only portable shell.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
It should redirect stdout to /dev/null first,
then redirect stderr to whatever stdout currently points at.
Signed-off-by: Wei Jiangang <weijg.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
The logic set up in previous patch for exposing VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE
to individual tests is as follows:
make check VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE=0 => getenv("VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE") sees "0"
make check VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE=1 => getenv("VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE") sees "1"
make check => getenv("VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE") sees
either "0" or "1", based on configure options
cd tests; ./FOOtest => getenv("VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE") sees
whatever is in your environment (usually NULL, but possibly garbage)
Merely checking if VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE is set in the environment
does the wrong thing; likewise, it is unsafe to assume the
variable will always contain a valid number.
As such, it helps to have helper functions, instead of making each
expensive test repeat the probe of the environment.
* tests/testutils.h (virTestGetExpensive): New prototype.
* tests/testutils.c (virTestGetExpensive): Implement it.
* tests/test-lib.sh (very_expensive_): Rename...
(test_expensive): ...and tweak to use VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The shell version would output 40 extra spaces for a test with
a multiple of 40 sub-tests, and the C version can use the same
printf optimization for avoiding a loop over single space output
as the shell version.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestMain): Avoid loop for alignment.
* tests/test-lib.sh: Fix formatting when counter is multiple of 40.
The current logic tries to count from 1 to 40 and ignores paddings
of 0 and 1 to 40. This doesn't work for counter + 1 mod 40 == 0
like here for counter value 159
TEST: virsh-all
........................................ 40
........................................ 80
........................................ 120
....................................... 159 OK
PASS: virsh-all
Also seq isn't portable. Therefore, calculate the correct padding
length directly and use printf to output it at once.
* tests/test-lib.sh: "echo -n" is not portable. Use printf instead.
Remove unnecessary uses of "eval-in-subshell" (subshell is sufficient).
Remove uses of tests' -a operator; it is not portable.
Instead, use "test cond && test cond2".
* tests/schematestutils.sh: Replace use of test's -a.
This change only affects the output of tests that have an exact
multiple of 40 test cases. For example the domainschematest currently:
TEST: domainschematest
........................................ 40
........................................ 80
........................................ 120
........................................ 160
........................................ 200 OK
PASS: domainschematest
It outputs additional 40 spaces on the last line.
The domainschematest output is fixed by the change in test-lib.sh. The
change in testutils.c fixes this for tests written in C. Currently no
C test has an exact multiple of 40 test cases, but I checked it and
the same problem exists there.
This patch stops that in both cases.
Only print out '.' for each test case, full test output can be
re-enabled with VIR_TEST_VERBOSE=1, or VIR_TEST_DEBUG=XXXX
Sample output now looks like
TEST: statstest
........................................ 40
................................... 75 OK
PASS: statstest
TEST: qparamtest
................................ 32 OK
PASS: qparamtest
TEST:
............ 12 OK
* src/util.c (fread_file_lim): New function.
(__virFileReadAll): Use fread_file_lim, rather than requiring
that stat.st_size provide a usable file size.
* tests/read-non-seekable: New test, for the above.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_scripts): Add read-non-seekable.
* tests/test-lib.sh (mkfifo_or_skip_): New helper function.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_scripts): Add vcpupin.
(EXTRA_DIST): Add test-lib.sh.
* tests/test-lib.sh: Testing framework, from coreutils.
* tests/vcpupin: New file.
* build-aux/mktempd: New file, from gnulib.
* bootstrap: Add posix-shell and mktempd to the list of imported modules.
* gnulib/m4/posix-shell.m4: New file, from gnulib.