1# 2# Config file for ktest.pl 3# 4# Note, all paths must be absolute 5# 6 7# Options set in the beginning of the file are considered to be 8# default options. These options can be overriden by test specific 9# options, with the following exceptions: 10# 11# LOG_FILE 12# CLEAR_LOG 13# POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS 14# REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS 15# 16# Test specific options are set after the label: 17# 18# TEST_START 19# 20# The options after a TEST_START label are specific to that test. 21# Each TEST_START label will set up a new test. If you want to 22# perform a test more than once, you can add the ITERATE label 23# to it followed by the number of times you want that test 24# to iterate. If the ITERATE is left off, the test will only 25# be performed once. 26# 27# TEST_START ITERATE 10 28# 29# You can skip a test by adding SKIP (before or after the ITERATE 30# and number) 31# 32# TEST_START SKIP 33# 34# TEST_START SKIP ITERATE 10 35# 36# TEST_START ITERATE 10 SKIP 37# 38# The SKIP label causes the options and the test itself to be ignored. 39# This is useful to set up several different tests in one config file, and 40# only enabling the ones you want to use for a current test run. 41# 42# You can add default options anywhere in the file as well 43# with the DEFAULTS tag. This allows you to have default options 44# after the test options to keep the test options at the top 45# of the file. You can even place the DEFAULTS tag between 46# test cases (but not in the middle of a single test case) 47# 48# TEST_START 49# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-test1 50# 51# DEFAULTS 52# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-default 53# 54# TEST_START ITERATE 10 55# 56# The above will run the first test with MIN_CONFIG set to 57# /home/test/config-test-1. Then 10 tests will be executed 58# with MIN_CONFIG with /home/test/config-default. 59# 60# You can also disable defaults with the SKIP option 61# 62# DEFAULTS SKIP 63# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-use-sometimes 64# 65# DEFAULTS 66# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-most-times 67# 68# The above will ignore the first MIN_CONFIG. If you want to 69# use the first MIN_CONFIG, remove the SKIP from the first 70# DEFAULTS tag and add it to the second. Be careful, options 71# may only be declared once per test or default. If you have 72# the same option name under the same test or as default 73# ktest will fail to execute, and no tests will run. 74# 75 76 77#### Mandatory Default Options #### 78 79# These options must be in the default section, although most 80# may be overridden by test options. 81 82# The machine hostname that you will test 83#MACHINE = target 84 85# The box is expected to have ssh on normal bootup, provide the user 86# (most likely root, since you need privileged operations) 87#SSH_USER = root 88 89# The directory that contains the Linux source code 90#BUILD_DIR = /home/test/linux.git 91 92# The directory that the objects will be built 93# (can not be same as BUILD_DIR) 94#OUTPUT_DIR = /home/test/build/target 95 96# The location of the compiled file to copy to the target 97# (relative to OUTPUT_DIR) 98#BUILD_TARGET = arch/x86/boot/bzImage 99 100# The place to put your image on the test machine 101#TARGET_IMAGE = /boot/vmlinuz-test 102 103# A script or command to reboot the box 104# 105# Here is a digital loggers power switch example 106#POWER_CYCLE = wget --no-proxy -O /dev/null -q --auth-no-challenge 'http://admin:admin@power/outlet?5=CCL' 107# 108# Here is an example to reboot a virtual box on the current host 109# with the name "Guest". 110#POWER_CYCLE = virsh destroy Guest; sleep 5; virsh start Guest 111 112# The script or command that reads the console 113# 114# If you use ttywatch server, something like the following would work. 115#CONSOLE = nc -d localhost 3001 116# 117# For a virtual machine with guest name "Guest". 118#CONSOLE = virsh console Guest 119 120# Required version ending to differentiate the test 121# from other linux builds on the system. 122#LOCALVERSION = -test 123 124# The grub title name for the test kernel to boot 125# (Only mandatory if REBOOT_TYPE = grub) 126# 127# Note, ktest.pl will not update the grub menu.lst, you need to 128# manually add an option for the test. ktest.pl will search 129# the grub menu.lst for this option to find what kernel to 130# reboot into. 131# 132# For example, if in the /boot/grub/menu.lst the test kernel title has: 133# title Test Kernel 134# kernel vmlinuz-test 135#GRUB_MENU = Test Kernel 136 137# A script to reboot the target into the test kernel 138# (Only mandatory if REBOOT_TYPE = script) 139#REBOOT_SCRIPT = 140 141#### Optional Config Options (all have defaults) #### 142 143# Start a test setup. If you leave this off, all options 144# will be default and the test will run once. 145# This is a label and not really an option (it takes no value). 146# You can append ITERATE and a number after it to iterate the 147# test a number of times, or SKIP to ignore this test. 148# 149#TEST_START 150#TEST_START ITERATE 5 151#TEST_START SKIP 152 153# Have the following options as default again. Used after tests 154# have already been defined by TEST_START. Optionally, you can 155# just define all default options before the first TEST_START 156# and you do not need this option. 157# 158# This is a label and not really an option (it takes no value). 159# You can append SKIP to this label and the options within this 160# section will be ignored. 161# 162# DEFAULTS 163# DEFAULTS SKIP 164 165# The default test type (default test) 166# The test types may be: 167# build - only build the kernel, do nothing else 168# boot - build and boot the kernel 169# test - build, boot and if TEST is set, run the test script 170# (If TEST is not set, it defaults back to boot) 171# bisect - Perform a bisect on the kernel (see BISECT_TYPE below) 172# patchcheck - Do a test on a series of commits in git (see PATCHCHECK below) 173#TEST_TYPE = test 174 175# Test to run if there is a successful boot and TEST_TYPE is test. 176# Must exit with 0 on success and non zero on error 177# default (undefined) 178#TEST = ssh user@machine /root/run_test 179 180# The build type is any make config type or special command 181# (default randconfig) 182# nobuild - skip the clean and build step 183# useconfig:/path/to/config - use the given config and run 184# oldconfig on it. 185# This option is ignored if TEST_TYPE is patchcheck or bisect 186#BUILD_TYPE = randconfig 187 188# The make command (default make) 189# If you are building a 32bit x86 on a 64 bit host 190#MAKE_CMD = CC=i386-gcc AS=i386-as make ARCH=i386 191 192# Any build options for the make of the kernel (not for other makes, like configs) 193# (default "") 194#BUILD_OPTIONS = -j20 195 196# If you need an initrd, you can add a script or code here to install 197# it. The environment variable KERNEL_VERSION will be set to the 198# kernel version that is used. Remember to add the initrd line 199# to your grub menu.lst file. 200# 201# Here's a couple of examples to use: 202#POST_INSTALL = ssh user@target /sbin/mkinitrd --allow-missing -f /boot/initramfs-test.img $KERNEL_VERSION 203# 204# or on some systems: 205#POST_INSTALL = ssh user@target /sbin/dracut -f /boot/initramfs-test.img $KERNEL_VERSION 206 207# Way to reboot the box to the test kernel. 208# Only valid options so far are "grub" and "script" 209# (default grub) 210# If you specify grub, it will assume grub version 1 211# and will search in /boot/grub/menu.lst for the title $GRUB_MENU 212# and select that target to reboot to the kernel. If this is not 213# your setup, then specify "script" and have a command or script 214# specified in REBOOT_SCRIPT to boot to the target. 215# 216# The entry in /boot/grub/menu.lst must be entered in manually. 217# The test will not modify that file. 218#REBOOT_TYPE = grub 219 220# The min config that is needed to build for the machine 221# A nice way to create this is with the following: 222# 223# $ ssh target 224# $ lsmod > mymods 225# $ scp mymods host:/tmp 226# $ exit 227# $ cd linux.git 228# $ rm .config 229# $ make LSMOD=mymods localyesconfig 230# $ grep '^CONFIG' .config > /home/test/config-min 231# 232# If you want even less configs: 233# 234# log in directly to target (do not ssh) 235# 236# $ su 237# # lsmod | cut -d' ' -f1 | xargs rmmod 238# 239# repeat the above several times 240# 241# # lsmod > mymods 242# # reboot 243# 244# May need to reboot to get your network back to copy the mymods 245# to the host, and then remove the previous .config and run the 246# localyesconfig again. The CONFIG_MIN generated like this will 247# not guarantee network activity to the box so the TEST_TYPE of 248# test may fail. 249# 250# You might also want to set: 251# CONFIG_CMDLINE="<your options here>" 252# randconfig may set the above and override your real command 253# line options. 254# (default undefined) 255#MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-min 256 257# Sometimes there's options that just break the boot and 258# you do not care about. Here are a few: 259# # CONFIG_STAGING is not set 260# Staging drivers are horrible, and can break the build. 261# # CONFIG_SCSI_DEBUG is not set 262# SCSI_DEBUG may change your root partition 263# # CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE is not set 264# KGDB may cause oops waiting for a connection that's not there. 265# This option points to the file containing config options that will be prepended 266# to the MIN_CONFIG (or be the MIN_CONFIG if it is not set) 267# 268# Note, config options in MIN_CONFIG will override these options. 269# 270# (default undefined) 271#ADD_CONFIG = /home/test/config-broken 272 273# The location on the host where to write temp files 274# (default /tmp/ktest) 275#TMP_DIR = /tmp/ktest 276 277# Optional log file to write the status (recommended) 278# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. 279# (default undefined) 280#LOG_FILE = /home/test/logfiles/target.log 281 282# Remove old logfile if it exists before starting all tests. 283# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. 284# (default 0) 285#CLEAR_LOG = 0 286 287# Line to define a successful boot up in console output. 288# This is what the line contains, not the entire line. If you need 289# the entire line to match, then use regural expression syntax like: 290# (do not add any quotes around it) 291# 292# SUCCESS_LINE = ^MyBox Login:$ 293# 294# (default "login:") 295#SUCCESS_LINE = login: 296 297# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having 298# a specified time to stop the test after success is recommended. 299# (in seconds) 300# (default 10) 301#STOP_AFTER_SUCCESS = 10 302 303# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having 304# a specified time to stop the test after failure is recommended. 305# (in seconds) 306# (default 60) 307#STOP_AFTER_FAILURE = 60 308 309# In case the console constantly fills the screen, having 310# a specified time to stop the test if it never succeeds nor fails 311# is recommended. 312# Note: this is ignored if a success or failure is detected. 313# (in seconds) 314# (default 600, -1 is to never stop) 315#STOP_TEST_AFTER = 600 316 317# Stop testing if a build fails. If set, the script will end if 318# a failure is detected, otherwise it will save off the .config, 319# dmesg and bootlog in a directory called 320# MACHINE-TEST_TYPE_BUILD_TYPE-fail-yyyymmddhhmmss 321# if the STORE_FAILURES directory is set. 322# (default 1) 323# Note, even if this is set to zero, there are some errors that still 324# stop the tests. 325#DIE_ON_FAILURE = 1 326 327# Directory to store failure directories on failure. If this is not 328# set, DIE_ON_FAILURE=0 will not save off the .config, dmesg and 329# bootlog. This option is ignored if DIE_ON_FAILURE is not set. 330# (default undefined) 331#STORE_FAILURES = /home/test/failures 332 333# Build without doing a make mrproper, or removing .config 334# (default 0) 335#BUILD_NOCLEAN = 0 336 337# As the test reads the console, after it hits the SUCCESS_LINE 338# the time it waits for the monitor to settle down between reads 339# can usually be lowered. 340# (in seconds) (default 1) 341#BOOTED_TIMEOUT = 1 342 343# The timeout in seconds when we consider the box hung after 344# the console stop producing output. Be sure to leave enough 345# time here to get pass a reboot. Some machines may not produce 346# any console output for a long time during a reboot. You do 347# not want the test to fail just because the system was in 348# the process of rebooting to the test kernel. 349# (default 120) 350#TIMEOUT = 120 351 352# In between tests, a reboot of the box may occur, and this 353# is the time to wait for the console after it stops producing 354# output. Some machines may not produce a large lag on reboot 355# so this should accommodate it. 356# The difference between this and TIMEOUT, is that TIMEOUT happens 357# when rebooting to the test kernel. This sleep time happens 358# after a test has completed and we are about to start running 359# another test. If a reboot to the reliable kernel happens, 360# we wait SLEEP_TIME for the console to stop producing output 361# before starting the next test. 362# (default 60) 363#SLEEP_TIME = 60 364 365# The time in between bisects to sleep (in seconds) 366# (default 60) 367#BISECT_SLEEP_TIME = 60 368 369# Reboot the target box on error (default 0) 370#REBOOT_ON_ERROR = 0 371 372# Power off the target on error (ignored if REBOOT_ON_ERROR is set) 373# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. 374# (default 0) 375#POWEROFF_ON_ERROR = 0 376 377# Power off the target after all tests have completed successfully 378# Note, this is a DEFAULT section only option. 379# (default 0) 380#POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS = 0 381 382# Reboot the target after all test completed successfully (default 1) 383# (ignored if POWEROFF_ON_SUCCESS is set) 384#REBOOT_ON_SUCCESS = 1 385 386# In case there are isses with rebooting, you can specify this 387# to always powercycle after this amount of time after calling 388# reboot. 389# Note, POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT = 0 does NOT disable it. It just 390# makes it powercycle immediately after rebooting. Do not define 391# it if you do not want it. 392# (default undefined) 393#POWERCYCLE_AFTER_REBOOT = 5 394 395# In case there's isses with halting, you can specify this 396# to always poweroff after this amount of time after calling 397# halt. 398# Note, POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 0 does NOT disable it. It just 399# makes it poweroff immediately after halting. Do not define 400# it if you do not want it. 401# (default undefined) 402#POWEROFF_AFTER_HALT = 20 403 404# A script or command to power off the box (default undefined) 405# Needed for POWEROFF_ON_ERROR and SUCCESS 406# 407# Example for digital loggers power switch: 408#POWER_OFF = wget --no-proxy -O /dev/null -q --auth-no-challenge 'http://admin:admin@power/outlet?5=OFF' 409# 410# Example for a virtual guest call "Guest". 411#POWER_OFF = virsh destroy Guest 412 413# The way to execute a command on the target 414# (default ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE $SSH_COMMAND";) 415# The variables SSH_USER, MACHINE and SSH_COMMAND are defined 416#SSH_EXEC = ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE $SSH_COMMAND"; 417 418# The way to copy a file to the target 419# (default scp $SRC_FILE $SSH_USER@$MACHINE:$DST_FILE) 420# The variables SSH_USER, MACHINE, SRC_FILE and DST_FILE are defined. 421#SCP_TO_TARGET = scp $SRC_FILE $SSH_USER@$MACHINE:$DST_FILE 422 423# The nice way to reboot the target 424# (default ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE reboot) 425# The variables SSH_USER and MACHINE are defined. 426#REBOOT = ssh $SSH_USER@$MACHINE reboot 427 428#### Per test run options #### 429# The following options are only allowed in TEST_START sections. 430# They are ignored in the DEFAULTS sections. 431# 432# All of these are optional and undefined by default, although 433# some of these options are required for TEST_TYPE of patchcheck 434# and bisect. 435# 436# 437# CHECKOUT = branch 438# 439# If the BUILD_DIR is a git repository, then you can set this option 440# to checkout the given branch before running the TEST. If you 441# specify this for the first run, that branch will be used for 442# all preceding tests until a new CHECKOUT is set. 443# 444# 445# 446# For TEST_TYPE = patchcheck 447# 448# This expects the BUILD_DIR to be a git repository, and 449# will checkout the PATCHCHECK_START commit. 450# 451# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. 452# 453# The MIN_CONFIG will be used for all builds of the patchcheck. The build type 454# used for patchcheck is oldconfig. 455# 456# PATCHCHECK_START is required and is the first patch to 457# test (the SHA1 of the commit). You may also specify anything 458# that git checkout allows (branch name, tage, HEAD~3). 459# 460# PATCHCHECK_END is the last patch to check (default HEAD) 461# 462# PATCHCHECK_TYPE is required and is the type of test to run: 463# build, boot, test. 464# 465# Note, the build test will look for warnings, if a warning occurred 466# in a file that a commit touches, the build will fail. 467# 468# If BUILD_NOCLEAN is set, then make mrproper will not be run on 469# any of the builds, just like all other TEST_TYPE tests. But 470# what makes patchcheck different from the other tests, is if 471# BUILD_NOCLEAN is not set, only the first and last patch run 472# make mrproper. This helps speed up the test. 473# 474# Example: 475# TEST_START 476# TEST_TYPE = patchcheck 477# CHECKOUT = mybranch 478# PATCHCHECK_TYPE = boot 479# PATCHCHECK_START = 747e94ae3d1b4c9bf5380e569f614eb9040b79e7 480# PATCHCHECK_END = HEAD~2 481# 482# 483# 484# For TEST_TYPE = bisect 485# 486# You can specify a git bisect if the BUILD_DIR is a git repository. 487# The MIN_CONFIG will be used for all builds of the bisect. The build type 488# used for bisecting is oldconfig. 489# 490# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. 491# 492# BISECT_TYPE is the type of test to perform: 493# build - bad fails to build 494# boot - bad builds but fails to boot 495# test - bad boots but fails a test 496# 497# BISECT_GOOD is the commit (SHA1) to label as good (accepts all git good commit types) 498# BISECT_BAD is the commit to label as bad (accepts all git bad commit types) 499# 500# The above three options are required for a bisect operation. 501# 502# BISECT_REPLAY = /path/to/replay/file (optional, default undefined) 503# 504# If an operation failed in the bisect that was not expected to 505# fail. Then the test ends. The state of the BUILD_DIR will be 506# left off at where the failure occurred. You can examine the 507# reason for the failure, and perhaps even find a git commit 508# that would work to continue with. You can run: 509# 510# git bisect log > /path/to/replay/file 511# 512# The adding: 513# 514# BISECT_REPLAY= /path/to/replay/file 515# 516# And running the test again. The test will perform the initial 517# git bisect start, git bisect good, and git bisect bad, and 518# then it will run git bisect replay on this file, before 519# continuing with the bisect. 520# 521# BISECT_START = commit (optional, default undefined) 522# 523# As with BISECT_REPLAY, if the test failed on a commit that 524# just happen to have a bad commit in the middle of the bisect, 525# and you need to skip it. If BISECT_START is defined, it 526# will checkout that commit after doing the initial git bisect start, 527# git bisect good, git bisect bad, and running the git bisect replay 528# if the BISECT_REPLAY is set. 529# 530# BISECT_SKIP = 1 (optional, default 0) 531# 532# If BISECT_TYPE is set to test but the build fails, ktest will 533# simply fail the test and end their. You could use BISECT_REPLAY 534# and BISECT_START to resume after you found a new starting point, 535# or you could set BISECT_SKIP to 1. If BISECT_SKIP is set to 1, 536# when something other than the BISECT_TYPE fails, ktest.pl will 537# run "git bisect skip" and try again. 538# 539# BISECT_FILES = <path> (optional, default undefined) 540# 541# To just run the git bisect on a specific path, set BISECT_FILES. 542# For example: 543# 544# BISECT_FILES = arch/x86 kernel/time 545# 546# Will run the bisect with "git bisect start -- arch/x86 kernel/time" 547# 548# BISECT_REVERSE = 1 (optional, default 0) 549# 550# In those strange instances where it was broken forever 551# and you are trying to find where it started to work! 552# Set BISECT_GOOD to the commit that was last known to fail 553# Set BISECT_BAD to the commit that is known to start working. 554# With BISECT_REVERSE = 1, The test will consider failures as 555# good, and success as bad. 556# 557# BISECT_MANUAL = 1 (optional, default 0) 558# 559# In case there's a problem with automating the bisect for 560# whatever reason. (Can't reboot, want to inspect each iteration) 561# Doing a BISECT_MANUAL will have the test wait for you to 562# tell it if the test passed or failed after each iteration. 563# This is basicall the same as running git bisect yourself 564# but ktest will rebuild and install the kernel for you. 565# 566# BISECT_CHECK = 1 (optional, default 0) 567# 568# Just to be sure the good is good and bad is bad, setting 569# BISECT_CHECK to 1 will start the bisect by first checking 570# out BISECT_BAD and makes sure it fails, then it will check 571# out BISECT_GOOD and makes sure it succeeds before starting 572# the bisect (it works for BISECT_REVERSE too). 573# 574# You can limit the test to just check BISECT_GOOD or 575# BISECT_BAD with BISECT_CHECK = good or 576# BISECT_CHECK = bad, respectively. 577# 578# Example: 579# TEST_START 580# TEST_TYPE = bisect 581# BISECT_GOOD = v2.6.36 582# BISECT_BAD = b5153163ed580e00c67bdfecb02b2e3843817b3e 583# BISECT_TYPE = build 584# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-bisect 585# 586# 587# 588# For TEST_TYPE = config_bisect 589# 590# In those cases that you have two different configs. One of them 591# work, the other does not, and you do not know what config causes 592# the problem. 593# The TEST_TYPE config_bisect will bisect the bad config looking for 594# what config causes the failure. 595# 596# The way it works is this: 597# 598# First it finds a config to work with. Since a different version, or 599# MIN_CONFIG may cause different dependecies, it must run through this 600# preparation. 601# 602# Overwrites any config set in the bad config with a config set in 603# either the MIN_CONFIG or ADD_CONFIG. Thus, make sure these configs 604# are minimal and do not disable configs you want to test: 605# (ie. # CONFIG_FOO is not set). 606# 607# An oldconfig is run on the bad config and any new config that 608# appears will be added to the configs to test. 609# 610# Finally, it generates a config with the above result and runs it 611# again through make oldconfig to produce a config that should be 612# satisfied by kconfig. 613# 614# Then it starts the bisect. 615# 616# The configs to test are cut in half. If all the configs in this 617# half depend on a config in the other half, then the other half 618# is tested instead. If no configs are enabled by either half, then 619# this means a circular dependency exists and the test fails. 620# 621# A config is created with the test half, and the bisect test is run. 622# 623# If the bisect succeeds, then all configs in the generated config 624# are removed from the configs to test and added to the configs that 625# will be enabled for all builds (they will be enabled, but not be part 626# of the configs to examine). 627# 628# If the bisect fails, then all test configs that were not enabled by 629# the config file are removed from the test. These configs will not 630# be enabled in future tests. Since current config failed, we consider 631# this to be a subset of the config that we started with. 632# 633# When we are down to one config, it is considered the bad config. 634# 635# Note, the config chosen may not be the true bad config. Due to 636# dependencies and selections of the kbuild system, mulitple 637# configs may be needed to cause a failure. If you disable the 638# config that was found and restart the test, if the test fails 639# again, it is recommended to rerun the config_bisect with a new 640# bad config without the found config enabled. 641# 642# The option BUILD_TYPE will be ignored. 643# 644# CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE is the type of test to perform: 645# build - bad fails to build 646# boot - bad builds but fails to boot 647# test - bad boots but fails a test 648# 649# CONFIG_BISECT is the config that failed to boot 650# 651# If BISECT_MANUAL is set, it will pause between iterations. 652# This is useful to use just ktest.pl just for the config bisect. 653# If you set it to build, it will run the bisect and you can 654# control what happens in between iterations. It will ask you if 655# the test succeeded or not and continue the config bisect. 656# 657# Example: 658# TEST_START 659# TEST_TYPE = config_bisect 660# CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE = build 661# CONFIG_BISECT = /home/test/�onfig-bad 662# MIN_CONFIG = /home/test/config-min 663# BISECT_MANUAL = 1 664# 665