btrfs-progs/tests/README.md

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# Btrfs-progs tests
A testsuite covering functionality of btrfs-progs, i.e. the checker, image, mkfs
and similar tools. There are no additional requirements on kernel features
(other than `CONFIG_BTRFS_FS` built-in or module), the
tests build on top of the core functionality like snapshots and device
management. In some cases optional features are turned on by mkfs and the
filesystem image could be mounted, such tests might fail if there's lack of
support.
## Quick start
Run the tests from the top directory:
```shell
$ make test
$ make test-fsck
$ make test-convert
```
or selectively from the `tests/` directory:
```shell
$ ./fsck-tests.sh
$ ./misc-tests.sh
```
The verbose output of the tests is logged into a file named after the test
category, e.g. `fsck-tests-results.txt`.
## Selective testing
The tests are prefixed by a number for ordering and uniqueness. To run a
particular test use:
```shell
$ make TEST=MASK test
```
where `MASK` is a glob expression that will execute only tests
that match the MASK. Here the test number comes handy:
```shell
$ make TEST=001\* test-fsck # in tests/
$ TEST=001\* ./fsck-tests.sh # in the top directory
```
will run the first test in fsck-tests subdirectory. If the test directories
follow a good naming scheme, it's possible to select a subset e.g. like the
convert tests for ext[234] filesystems using mask 'TEST='\*ext[234]\*'.
When running tests in a sequence and one fails, testing can be started from
that test skipping all the ones that are supposed to pass, like:
```shell
$ make TEST_FROM=004\* test-fsck
```
This will skip any tests found in the directory that precede *004*, assuming
that there is such test.
## Test directory structure
*tests/fsck-tests/*
* tests targeted at bugs that are fixable by fsck, the test directory can
contain images that will get fixed, or a custom script `./test.sh` that
will be run if present
*tests/convert-tests/*
* coverage tests of ext2/3/4 or reiserfs and btrfs-convert options
*tests/fuzz-tests/*
* collection of fuzzed or crafted images
* tests that are supposed to run various utilities on the images and not
crash
*tests/cli-tests/*
* tests for command line interface, option coverage, weird option combinations that should not work
* not necessary to do any functional testing, could be rather lightweight
* functional tests should go to other test directories
* the driver script will only execute `./test.sh` in the test directory
*tests/misc-tests/*
* anything that does not fit to the above, the test driver script will only
execute `./test.sh` in the test directory
*tests/common, tests/common.convert*
* scripts with shell helpers, separated by functionality
*tests/test.img*
* default testing image, available as `TEST_DEV` variable, the file is never
deleted by the scripts but truncated to 0 bytes, so it keeps it's
permissions. It's e.g. possible to host it on NFS, make it `chmod a+w` for
root.
## Other tuning, environment variables
### Instrumentation
It's possible to wrap the tested commands to utilities that might do more
checking or catch failures at runtime. This can be done by setting the
`INSTRUMENT` environment variable:
```shell
make INSTRUMENT=valgrind test-fuzz # in the top directory
INSTRUMENT=valgrind ./fuzz-tests.sh # in tests/
```
The variable is prepended to the command *unquoted*, all sorts of shell tricks
are possible.
Note: instrumentation is not applied to privileged commands (anything that uses
the root helper), with exception of all commands built from git that will
be instrumented even if run with the sudo helper.
```shell
run_check $SUDO_HELPER mount /dev/sdx /mnt # no instrumentation
run_check $SUDO_HELPER "$TOP/btrfs" check /dev/sdx # with instrumentation
```
Instrumented commands: btrfs, btrfs-image, btrfs-convert, btrfs-tune, mkfs.btrfs,
btrfs-select-super, btrfs-find-root, btrfs-corrupt-block.
As mentioned above, instrumentation tools are like `valgrind` or potentially
`gdb` with some init script that will let the commands run until an exception
occurs, possibly allowing to continue interactively debugging.
### Verbosity, test tuning
* `TEST_FROM=glob` -- start testing from the first test that matches the *glob*
expression and skip anything before that, this can be combined with the
`TEST` variable that takes precedence
* `TEST_LOG=tty` -- setting the variable will print all commands executed by
some of the wrappers (`run_check` etc), other commands are not printed to the
terminal (but the full output is in the log)
* `TEST_LOG=dump` -- dump the entire testing log when a test fails
* `TEST_FLAVOR` -- run binaries of specified flavor, which is dynamic build by
default, or *static* using all the build binaries with *.static* suffix
* `TEST_ENABLE_OVERRIDE` -- defined either as make arguments or via
`tests/common.local` to enable additional arguments to some commands, using
the variable(s) below (default: false, enable by setting to 'true')
* `TEST_ARGS_CHECK` -- user-defined arguments to `btrfs check`, before the
test-specific arguments
* `TEST_ARGS_MKFS` -- user-defined arguments to `mkfs.btrfs`, before the
test-specific arguments
* `TEST_ARGS_CONVERT` -- user-defined arguments to `btrfs-convert`, before the
test-specific arguments
Multiple values can be separated by `,`.
For example, running all fsck tests with the `--mode=lowmem` option can be done
as
```shell
$ make TEST_ENABLE_OVERRIDE=true TEST_ARGS_CHECK=--mode=lowmem test-check
```
Specifically, fsck-tests that are known to be able to repair images in the
lowmem mode should be marked using a file `.lowmem_repairable` in the test
directory. Then the fsck-tests with the 'mode=lowmem' will continue when image
repair is requested.
### Permissions
Some commands require root privileges (to mount/umount, access loop devices or
call privileged ioctls). It is assumed that `sudo` will work in some way (no
password, password asked and cached). Note that instrumentation is not applied
in this case, for safety reasons or because the tools refuse to run under root.
You need to modify the test script instead.
### Cleanup
The tests are supposed to cleanup after themselves if they pass. In case of
failure, the rest of the tests are skipped and intermediate files, mounts and
loop devices are kept. This should help to investigate the test failure but at
least the mounts and loop devices need to be cleaned before the next run.
This is partially done by the script `clean-tests.sh`, you may want to check
the loop devices as they are managed on a per-test basis, see the output of
command `losetup` and eventually delete all existing loop devices with `losetup
-D`.
### Prototyping tests, quick tests
There's a script `test-console.sh` that will run shell commands in a loop and
logs the output with the testing environment set up. It sources the common
helper scripts so the shell functions are available.
### Runtime dependencies
The tests use some common system utilities like `find`, `rm`, `dd`. Additionally,
specific tests need the following packages installed: `acl`, `attr`,
`e2fsprogs`, `reiserfsprogs`.
## New test
1. Pick the category for the new test or fallback to `misc-tests` if not sure. For
an easy start copy an existing `test.sh` script from some test that might be
close to the purpose of your new test. The environment setup includes the
common scripts and/or prepares the test devices. Other scripts contain examples
how to do mkfs, mount, unmount, check, loop device management etc.
2. Use the highest unused number in the sequence, write a short descriptive title
and join by dashes `-`. This will become the directory name, e.g. `012-subvolume-sync-must-wait`.
3. Write a short description of the bug and how it's tested to the comment at the
beginning of `test.sh`. You don't need to add the file to git yet. Don't forget
to make the file executable, otherwise it's not going to be executed by the
infrastructure.
4. Write the test commands, comment anything that's not obvious.
5. **Test your test.** Use the `TEST` variable to jump right to your test:
```shell
$ make TEST=012\* tests-misc # from top directory
$ TEST=012\* ./misc-tests.sh # from tests/
```
6. The commit changelog should reference a commit that either introduced or
fixed the bug (or both). Subject line of the shall mention the name of the
new directory for ease of search, e.g. `btrfs-progs: tests: add 012-subvolume-sync-must-wait`
7. A commit that fixes a bug should be applied before the test that verifies
the fix. This is to keep the git history bisectable.
### Test images
Most tests should be able to create the test images from scratch, using regular
commands and file operation. The commands also document the test case and use
the test code and kernel of the environment.
In other cases, a pre-created image may be the right way if the above does not
work (e.g. comparing output, requesting an exact layout or some intermediate
state that would be hard to achieve otherwise).
* images that don't need data and valid checksums can be created by
`btrfs-image`, the image can be compressed by the tool itself (file extension
`.img`) or compressed externally (recognized is `.img.xz`)
* raw images that are binary dump of an existing image, created e.g. from a
sparse file (`.raw` or `.raw.xz`)
Use `xz --best` and try to get the smallest size as the file is stored in git.
### Crafted/fuzzed images
Images that are created by fuzzing or specially crafted to trigger some error
conditions should be added to the directory *fuzz-tests/images*, accompanied by
a textual description of the source (bugzilla, mail), the reporter, brief
description of the problem or the stack trace.
If you have a fix for the problem, please submit it prior to the test image, so
the fuzz tests always succeed when run on random checked out. This helps
bisectability.
# Exported testsuite
The tests are typically run from git on binaries built from the git sources. It
is possible to extract only the testsuite files and run it independently. Use
```shell
$ make testsuite
```
This will gather scripts and generate `tests/btrfs-progs-tests.tar.gz`. The
files inside the tar are in the top level directory, make sure you extract
the contents to an empty directory. From there you can start the tests as
described above (the non-make variant).
By default the binaries found in `$PATH` are used, this will normally mean the
system binaries. You can also override the `$TOP` shell variable and this
path will be used as prefix for all btrfs binaries inside the tests.
There are some utilities that are not distributed but are necessary for the
tests. They are in the top level directory of the testsuite and their path
cannot be set.
The tests assume write access to their directories.
# Coding style, best practices
## do
* quote all variables by default, any path, even the TOP could need that, and
we use it everywhere
* even if the variable is safe, use quotes for consistency and to ease
reading the code
* there are exceptions:
* `$SUDO_HELPER` as it might be intentionally unset
* use `#!/bin/bash` explicitly
* check for all external dependencies (`check_global_prereq`)
* check for internal dependencies (`check_prereq`), though the basic set is
always built when the tests are started through make
* use functions instead of repeating code
* generic helpers could be factored to the `common` script
* cleanup files an intermediate state (mount, loop devices, device mapper
devices) a after successful test
* use common helpers and variables where possible
## do not
* pull external dependencies if we can find a way to replace them: example is
`xfs_io` that's conveniently used in fstests but we'd require `xfsprogs`,
so use `dd` instead
* throw away (redirect to */dev/null*) output of commands unless it's justified
(i.e. really too much text, unnecessary slowdown) -- the test output log is
regenerated all the time and we need to be able to analyze test failures or
just observe how the tests progress
* cleanup after failed test -- the testsuite stops on first failure and the
developer can e.g. access the environment that the test created and do further
debugging
* this might change in the future so the tests cover as much as possible, but
this would require to enhance all tests with a cleanup phase
## Simple test template
The file `tests/common` provides shell functions to ease writing common things
like setting up the test devices, making or mounting a filesystem, setting up
loop devices.
```shell
#!/bin/bash
# Simple test to create a new filesystem and test that it can be mounted
source "$TEST_TOP/common"
setup_root_helper
prepare_test_dev
run_check_mkfs_test_dev
run_check_mount_test_dev
run_check $SUDO_HELPER dd if=/dev/zero of="$TEST_MNT"/file bs=1M count=1
run_check_umount_test_dev
```
Each test should be briefly described, source the helpers like `run_check`. The
root helper is the `sudo` wrapper that can be used as `$SUDO_HELPER` variable.
The implicit variables for testing device is `$TEST_DEV` mounted at `$TEST_MNT`.
The mkfs and mount helpers take arguments that are then injected into the right
place in the respective command.
Besides the setup and cleanup code, the main test in this example is `dd` that
writes 1MiB to a file in the newly created filesystem.
## Multiple device test template
Tests that need more devices can utilize the loop devices, an example test of
the above:
```shell
# Create a new multi-device filesystem and test that it can be mounted
source "$TEST_TOP/common"
setup_root_helper
setup_loopdevs 4
prepare_loopdevs
TEST_DEV=${loopdevs[1]}
run_check $SUDO_HELPER "$TOP/mkfs.btrfs" -f -d raid1 -m raid1 "${loopdevs[@]}"
run_check_mount_test_dev
run_check $SUDO_HELPER dd if=/dev/zero of="$TEST_MNT"/file bs=1M count=1
run_check_umount_test_dev
cleanup_loopdevs
```
## A 'btrfs check' test template
The easiest way to test an image is to put it to the test directory, without
the `test.sh` script. All images found are simply processed by the shell
function `check_image` with default parameters.
Any tweaks to the 'check' subcommand can be done by redefining the function:
```shell
source "$TEST_TOP/common"
check_image() {
run_check "$TOP/btrfs" check --readonly "$1"
}
check_all_images
```
The images can be stored in various formats, see section 'Test images'.
## Misc hints
There are several helpers in `tests/common`, it's recommended to read through
that file or other tests to get the idea how easy writing a test really is.
* result
* `_fail` - a failure condition has been found
* `_not_run` - some prerequisite condition is not met, e.g. missing kernel functionality
* messages
* `_log` - message printed to the result file (e.g.
`tests/mkfs-tests-results.txt`), and not printed to the terminal
* `_log_stdout` - ditto but it is printed to the terminal
* execution helpers
* `run_check` - should be used for basically all commands, the command and arguments
are stored to the results log for debugging and the return value is checked so there
are no silent failures even for the "unimportant" commands
* `run_check_stdout` - like the above but the output can be processed further, e.g. filtering
out some data or looking for some specific string
* `run_mayfail` - the command is allowed to fail in a non-fatal way (e.g. no segfault),
there's also the `run_mayfail_stdout` variant
* `run_mustfail` - expected failure, note that the first argument is mandatory message describing unexpected pass condition