AT_TESTED([ovs-vswitchd]) AT_TESTED([ovs-vsctl]) m4_include([m4/compat.m4]) dnl Make AT_SETUP automatically run the ovs_init() shell function dnl as the first step in every test. m4_rename([AT_SETUP], [OVS_AT_SETUP]) m4_define([AT_SETUP], [OVS_AT_SETUP($@) ovs_init ]) dnl Make AT_CLEANUP check for Address Sanitizer errors as the last step dnl in every test. m4_rename([AT_CLEANUP], [OVS_AT_CLEANUP]) m4_define([AT_CLEANUP], [ovs_cleanup OVS_AT_CLEANUP($@) ]) dnl OVS_START_SHELL_HELPERS...OVS_END_SHELL_HELPERS may bracket shell dnl function definitions that invoke AT_CHECK and other Autotest macros dnl that can ordinarily be run only within AT_SETUP...AT_CLEANUP. m4_define([OVS_START_SHELL_HELPERS], [m4_ifdef([AT_ingroup], [m4_fatal([$0: AT_SETUP and OVS_DEFINE_SHELL_HELPERS may not nest])]) m4_define([AT_ingroup]) m4_divert_push([PREPARE_TESTS])]) m4_define([OVS_END_SHELL_HELPERS], [ m4_divert_pop([PREPARE_TESTS]) m4_undefine([AT_ingroup])]) m4_divert_push([PREPARE_TESTS]) [ # Set ovs_base to the base directory in which the test is running and # initialize the OVS_*DIR environment variables to point to this # directory. ovs_init() { ovs_base=`pwd` trap ovs_on_exit 0 : > cleanup ovs_setenv } # Catch testsuite error condition and cleanup test environment by tearing down # all interfaces and processes spawned. # User has an option to leave the test environment in error state so that system # can be poked around to get more information. User can enable this option by setting # environment variable OVS_PAUSE_TEST=1. User needs to press CTRL-D to resume the # cleanup operation. ovs_pause() { echo "=====================================================" echo "Set following environment variable to use various ovs utilities" echo "export OVS_RUNDIR=$ovs_base" echo "Press ENTER to continue: " read } ovs_on_exit () { if [ ! -z "${OVS_PAUSE_TEST}" ] && [ -z $at_verbose ]; then trap '' INT ovs_pause fi . "$ovs_base/cleanup" } # With no parameter or an empty parameter, sets the OVS_*DIR # environment variables to point to $ovs_base, the base directory in # which the test is running. # # With a parameter, sets them to $ovs_base/$1. ovs_setenv() { sandbox=$1 ovs_dir=$ovs_base${1:+/$1} OVS_RUNDIR=$ovs_dir; export OVS_RUNDIR OVS_LOGDIR=$ovs_dir; export OVS_LOGDIR OVS_DBDIR=$ovs_dir; export OVS_DBDIR OVS_SYSCONFDIR=$ovs_dir; export OVS_SYSCONFDIR OVS_PKGDATADIR=$ovs_dir; export OVS_PKGDATADIR } # Prints the integers from $1 to $2, increasing by $3 (default 1) on stdout. seq () { if test $# = 1; then set 1 $1 fi while test $1 -le $2; do echo $1 set `expr $1 + ${3-1}` $2 $3 done } if test "$IS_WIN32" = "yes"; then pwd () { command pwd -W "$@" } diff () { command diff --strip-trailing-cr "$@" } # tskill is more effective than taskkill but it isn't always installed. if (tskill //?) >/dev/null 2>&1; then :; else tskill () { taskkill //F //PID $1 >/dev/null; } fi kill () { signal= retval=0 for arg; do arg=$(echo $arg | tr -d '\n\r') case $arg in -*) signal=$arg ;; [1-9][0-9]*) # tasklist always returns 0. # If pid does exist, there will be a line with the pid. if tasklist //fi "PID eq $arg" | grep $arg >/dev/null; then if test "X$signal" != "X-0"; then tskill $arg fi else retval=1 fi ;; esac done return $retval } fi # parent_pid PID # # Prints the PID of the parent of process PID. parent_pid () { # Using "ps" is portable to any POSIX system, but busybox "ps" (used in # e.g. Alpine Linux) is noncompliant, so we use a Linux-specific approach # when it's available. We check the format of the status file to avoid # the NetBSD file with the same name but different contents. if grep -E '^PPid:[[:space:]]*[0-9]*$' /proc/$1/status > /dev/null 2>&1; then sed -n 's/^PPid: \([0-9]*\)/\1/p' /proc/$1/status else ps -o ppid= -p $1 fi } # kill_ovs_vswitchd [PID] # # Signal the ovs-vswitchd daemon to exit gracefully and wait for it to # terminate or kill it if that takes too long. # # It is used to cleanup all sorts of tests and results. It can't assume # any state, including the availability of PID file which can be provided. kill_ovs_vswitchd () { # Use provided PID or save the current PID if available. TMPPID=$1 if test -z "$TMPPID"; then TMPPID=$(cat $OVS_RUNDIR/ovs-vswitchd.pid 2>/dev/null) fi # Tell the daemon to terminate gracefully ovs-appctl -t ovs-vswitchd exit --cleanup 2>/dev/null # Nothing else to be done if there is no PID test -z "$TMPPID" && return for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9; do # Check if the daemon is alive. kill -0 $TMPPID 2>/dev/null || return # Fallback to whole number since POSIX doesn't require # fractional times to work. sleep 0.1 || sleep 1 done # Make sure it is terminated. kill $TMPPID } # Normalize the output of 'wc' to match POSIX. # POSIX says 'wc' should print "%d %d %d", but GNU prints "%7d %7d %7d". # POSIX says 'wc -l' should print "%d %s", but BSD prints "%8d". # # This fixes all of those (it will screw up filenames that contain # multiple sequential spaces, but that doesn't really matter). wc () { command wc "$@" | tr -s ' ' ' ' | sed 's/^ *//' } uuidfilt () { $PYTHON3 "$top_srcdir"/tests/uuidfilt.py "$@" } # run_as PROGRAM_NAME COMMAND [ARG...] # # Runs a command with argv[0] set to PROGRAM_NAME, if possible, in a # subshell. Most utilities print argc[0] as part of their messages, # so this makes it easier to figure out which particular utility # prints a message if a bunch of identical processes are running. # # Not all shells support "exec -a NAME", so test for it. if (exec -a myname true 2>/dev/null); then run_as () { (exec -a "$@") } else run_as () { shift (exec "$@") } fi ] m4_divert_pop([PREPARE_TESTS]) OVS_START_SHELL_HELPERS ovs_cleanup() { if test "$(echo asan.*)" != 'asan.*'; then echo "Address Sanitizer reported errors in:" asan.* cat asan.* AT_FAIL_IF([:]) fi if test "$(echo ubsan.*)" != 'ubsan.*'; then echo "Undefined Behavior Sanitizer reported errors in:" ubsan.* cat ubsan.* AT_FAIL_IF([:]) fi } ovs_wait () { echo "$1: waiting $2..." >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD # First try the condition without waiting. if ovs_wait_cond; then echo "$1: wait succeeded immediately" >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD; return 0; fi # Try a quick sleep, so that the test completes very quickly # in the normal case. POSIX doesn't require fractional times to # work, so this might not work. sleep 0.1 if ovs_wait_cond; then echo "$1: wait succeeded quickly" >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD; return 0; fi # Then wait up to OVS_CTL_TIMEOUT seconds. local d for d in `seq 1 "$OVS_CTL_TIMEOUT"`; do sleep 1 if ovs_wait_cond; then echo "$1: wait succeeded after $d seconds" >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD; return 0; fi done echo "$1: wait failed after $d seconds" >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD ovs_wait_failed AT_FAIL_IF([:]) } OVS_END_SHELL_HELPERS m4_define([OVS_WAIT], [dnl ovs_wait_cond () { $1 } ovs_wait_failed () { : $2 } ovs_wait "AS_ESCAPE([$3])" "AS_ESCAPE([$4])" ]) dnl OVS_WAIT_UNTIL(COMMAND, [IF-FAILED]) dnl dnl Executes shell COMMAND in a loop until it returns zero. If COMMAND does dnl not return zero within a reasonable time limit, executes the commands dnl in IF-FAILED (if provided) and fails the test. m4_define([OVS_WAIT_UNTIL], [AT_FAIL_IF([test "$#" -ge 3]) dnl The second argument should not be a number (confused with AT_CHECK ?). AT_FAIL_IF([test "$#" -eq 2 && test "$2" -eq "$2" 2>/dev/null]) OVS_WAIT([$1], [$2], [AT_LINE], [until $1])]) dnl OVS_WAIT_UNTIL_EQUAL(COMMAND, OUTPUT) dnl dnl Executes shell COMMAND in a loop until it returns zero and the output dnl equals OUTPUT. If COMMAND does not return zero or a desired output within dnl a reasonable time limit, fails the test. m4_define([OVS_WAIT_UNTIL_EQUAL], [AT_FAIL_IF([test "$#" -ge 3]) echo "$2" > wait_until_expected OVS_WAIT_UNTIL([$1 | diff -u wait_until_expected - ])]) dnl OVS_WAIT_WHILE(COMMAND, [IF-FAILED]) dnl dnl Executes shell COMMAND in a loop until it returns nonzero. If COMMAND does dnl not return nonzero within a reasonable time limit, executes the commands dnl in IF-FAILED (if provided) and fails the test. m4_define([OVS_WAIT_WHILE], [AT_FAIL_IF([test "$#" -ge 3]) dnl The second argument should not be a number (confused with AT_CHECK ?). AT_FAIL_IF([test "$#" -eq 2 && test "$2" -eq "$2" 2>/dev/null]) OVS_WAIT([if $1; then return 1; else return 0; fi], [$2], [AT_LINE], [while $1])]) dnl OVS_APP_EXIT_AND_WAIT(DAEMON) dnl dnl Ask the daemon named DAEMON to exit, via ovs-appctl, and then wait for it dnl to exit. m4_define([OVS_APP_EXIT_AND_WAIT], [AT_CHECK([test -e $OVS_RUNDIR/$1.pid]) TMPPID=$(cat $OVS_RUNDIR/$1.pid) AT_CHECK(m4_if([$1],[ovs-vswitchd], [ovs-appctl -t $1 exit --cleanup], [ovs-appctl -t $1 exit])) OVS_WAIT_WHILE([kill -0 $TMPPID 2>/dev/null])]) dnl OVS_APP_EXIT_AND_WAIT_BY_TARGET(TARGET, PIDFILE) dnl dnl Ask the daemon identified by TARGET to exit, via ovs-appctl (using the target dnl argument), and then wait for it to exit. m4_define([OVS_APP_EXIT_AND_WAIT_BY_TARGET], [AT_CHECK([test -e $2]) TMPPID=$(cat $2) AT_CHECK([ovs-appctl --target=$1 exit]) OVS_WAIT_WHILE([kill -0 $TMPPID 2>/dev/null])]) dnl OVS_DAEMONIZE([command], [pidfile]) dnl dnl Run 'command' as a background process and record its pid to 'pidfile' to dnl allow cleanup on exit. m4_define([OVS_DAEMONIZE], [$1 & echo $! > $2 on_exit "kill `cat $2`" ]) dnl on_exit "COMMAND" dnl dnl Add the shell COMMAND to a collection executed when the current test dnl completes, as a cleanup action. (The most common use is to kill a dnl daemon started by the test. This is important to prevent tests that dnl start daemons from hanging at exit.) dnl dnl Cleanup commands are executed in the reverse order of calls to this dnl function. m4_divert_text([PREPARE_TESTS], [dnl on_exit () { (echo "$1"; cat cleanup) > cleanup.tmp mv cleanup.tmp cleanup } ]) dnl Autoconf 2.63 compatibility verison of macro introduced in Autoconf 2.64: m4_ifndef([AS_VAR_APPEND], [m4_divert_text([PREPARE_TESTS], [as_var_append () { eval $1=\$$1\$2 } ]) m4_define([AS_VAR_APPEND], [as_var_append $1 $2])]) dnl Autoconf 2.63 compatibility verison of macro introduced in Autoconf 2.64: m4_ifndef([AT_CHECK_UNQUOTED], [m4_define([AT_CHECK_UNQUOTED], [_AT_CHECK([$1], [$2], AS_ESCAPE(m4_dquote(m4_expand([$3])), [""]), AS_ESCAPE(m4_dquote(m4_expand([$4])),[""]), [$5], [$6])])]) dnl Autoconf 2.63 compatibility verison of macro introduced in Autoconf 2.64: m4_ifndef([AT_SKIP_IF], [m4_define([AT_SKIP_IF], [AT_CHECK([($1) \ && exit 77 || exit 0], [0], [ignore], [ignore])])]) dnl Autoconf 2.63 compatibility verison of macro introduced in Autoconf 2.64: m4_ifndef([AT_FAIL_IF], [m4_define([AT_FAIL_IF], [AT_CHECK([($1) \ && exit 99 || exit 0], [0], [ignore], [ignore])])]) dnl Certain Linux distributions, like CentOS, have default iptable rules dnl to reject input traffic from bridges such as br-underlay. dnl Add a rule to always accept the traffic. m4_define([IPTABLES_ACCEPT], [AT_CHECK([iptables -I INPUT 1 -i $1 -j ACCEPT]) on_exit 'iptables -D INPUT 1 -i $1'])