Replace strange $TEST_FUNCTIONS variable/expansion thing with
something more like what we use in nbdkit, a simple tests/functions.sh
script that gets sourced into each test script.
Update the common submodule to get:
commit 8137d47d0e654065391151eb275e3b64f230f6f5
Author: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Feb 13 11:13:55 2025 +0000
mlcustomize, mltools: Replace $TEST_FUNCTIONS
TEST_FUNCTIONS is being removed from libguestfs and guestfs-tools (it
was removed from virt-v2v a while back). Make the same adjustment in
the common submodule.
(and some other commits which are not relevant to libguestfs)
Run this command across the source:
perl -pi.bak -e 's/(20[012][0-9])-20[12][012]/$1-2023/g' `git ls-files`
and remove changes to po{,-docs}/*.po{,t} (these will be regenerated
later when we run 'make dist').
Create a new (fake) Fedora disk image with two partitions. /dev/sda1 is
the boot partition as usual, /dev/sda2 is used as an LVM PV. The VG has
four LVs, Root and LV1 through LV3.
Each LV holds a LUKS device (with a different key). Each decrypted LUKS
device holds an ext2 filesystem, with "/dev/mapper/Root-luks" holding the
root filesystem.
Each filesystem has a dedicated label (ROOT, LV1, LV2, LV3).
In the test case, run guestfish in inspector mode, twice.
In the first invocation, provide the LUKS passphrases by LV name. Also
specific to the first invocation, fetch the LUKS UUIDs by LV name.
In the second invocation, provide the LUKS passphrases by UUID.
In both invocations, after decryption, check the filesystem labels, the
/dev/mapper/* names generated for the decrypted LUKS block devices, and
the existence of "/etc/fedora-release" on the root filesystem.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1658126
Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20220223162120.16729-3-lersek@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
Before this change the tests ran in about 12m34 and afterwards in
about 6m20, although the real change is more dramatic if you only run
tests from the tests/ subdirectory (as language tests still run serially).
This breaks valgrinding for now, which I intend to fix properly later.
Apply this change across all the shell scripts containing tests.
Additionally this defines the environment variables $abs_srcdir,
$abs_builddir, $top_srcdir, $top_builddir, $abs_top_srcdir and
$abs_top_builddir which can now be used throughout test scripts.
Run the following command over the source:
perl -pi.bak -e 's/(20[01][0-9])-2016/$1-2017/g' `git ls-files`
(Thanks Rich for the perl snippet, as used in past years.)
All tests run under the ./run binary. For a long time the ./run
binary has set the $PATH environment variable to contain all of the
directories with binaries in them.
Therefore there is no reason to use ../fish/guestfish instead of just
plain guestfish (and the same applies to other built binaries).
Review every test(!) to ensure that it:
- Doesn't use a generic name (eg. "test1.img", "test.out") for any
temporary file it needs.
- Does instead use a unique name or a temporary name (eg. a name like
"name-of-the-test.img", or a scratch disk).
- Does not use 'rm -f' to clean up its temporary files (so we can
detect errors if the wrong temporary file is created or removed).
This allows tests to be run in parallel, so they don't stomp on each
other's temporary files.
MALLOC_PERTURB_ is a glibc feature which causes malloc to wipe memory
before and after it is used, allowing both use-after-free and
uninitialized reads to be detected with relatively little performance
penalty:
http://udrepper.livejournal.com/11429.html?nojs=1
Modify the ./run script so that it always sets this.
We were already using MALLOC_PERTURB_ in most tests. Since ./run is
now setting this, we can remove it from individual Makefiles. Most
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT will now simply look like this:
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = $(top_builddir)/run --test
This option, when added via
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = [...] $(top_builddir)/run --test
allows us to run the tests and only print the full output (including
debugging etc) when the test fails.