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iwd/tools/test-runner

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auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
#!/usr/bin/python3
import argparse
import os
import shutil
import ctypes
import fcntl
import shlex
import sys
import subprocess
import atexit
import time
import unittest
import importlib
import signal
from unittest.result import TestResult
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
import pyroute2
import multiprocessing
import re
import traceback
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
from configparser import ConfigParser
from prettytable import PrettyTable
from termcolor import colored
from glob import glob
from collections import namedtuple
from time import sleep
import dbus.mainloop.glib
from gi.repository import GLib
libc = ctypes.cdll['libc.so.6']
libc.mount.argtypes = (ctypes.c_char_p, ctypes.c_char_p, ctypes.c_char_p, \
ctypes.c_ulong, ctypes.c_char_p)
# Using ctypes to load the libc library is somewhat low level. Because of this
# we need to define our own flags/options for use with mounting.
MS_NOSUID = 2
MS_NODEV = 4
MS_NOEXEC = 8
MS_STRICTATIME = 1 << 24
STDIN_FILENO = 0
TIOCSTTY = 0x540E
config = None
intf_id = 0
TEST_MAX_TIMEOUT = 120
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
dbus.mainloop.glib.DBusGMainLoop(set_as_default=True)
2021-08-13 01:07:15 +02:00
def dbg(*s, **kwargs):
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'''
Allows prints if stdout has been re-directed
'''
2021-08-13 01:07:15 +02:00
print(*s, **kwargs, file=sys.__stdout__)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def exit_vm():
if config:
for p in config.ctx.processes:
print("Process %s still running!" % p.name)
p.kill()
p = None
config.ctx.processes = []
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if config.ctx and config.ctx.results:
print_results(config.ctx.results)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
os.sync()
RB_AUTOBOOT = 0x01234567
#
# Calling 'reboot' or 'shutdown' from a shell (e.g. os.system('reboot'))
# is not the same the POSIX reboot() and will cause a kernel panic since
# we are the init process. The libc.reboot() allows the VM to exit
# gracefully.
#
libc.reboot(RB_AUTOBOOT)
def path_exists(path):
'''
Searches PATH as well as absolute paths.
'''
if shutil.which(path):
return True
try:
os.stat(path)
except:
return False
return True
def find_binary(list):
'''
Returns a binary from 'list' if its found in PATH or on a
valid absolute path.
'''
for path in list:
if path_exists(path):
return path
return None
def mount(source, target, fs, flags, options=''):
'''
Python wrapper for libc mount()
'''
ret = libc.mount(source.encode(), target.encode(), fs.encode(), flags,
options.encode())
if ret < 0:
errno = ctypes.get_errno()
raise Exception("Could not mount %s (%d)" % (target, errno))
MountInfo = namedtuple('MountInfo', 'fstype target options flags')
mount_table = [
MountInfo('sysfs', '/sys', '', MS_NOSUID|MS_NOEXEC|MS_NODEV),
MountInfo('proc', '/proc', '', MS_NOSUID|MS_NOEXEC|MS_NODEV),
MountInfo('devpts', '/dev/pts', 'mode=0620', MS_NOSUID|MS_NOEXEC),
MountInfo('tmpfs', '/dev/shm', 'mode=1777', MS_NOSUID|MS_NODEV|MS_STRICTATIME),
MountInfo('tmpfs', '/run', 'mode=0755', MS_NOSUID|MS_NODEV|MS_STRICTATIME),
MountInfo('tmpfs', '/tmp', '', 0),
MountInfo('tmpfs', '/usr/share/dbus-1', 'mode=0755', MS_NOSUID|MS_NOEXEC|MS_NODEV|MS_STRICTATIME),
MountInfo('debugfs', '/sys/kernel/debug', '', 0)
]
DevInfo = namedtuple('DevInfo', 'target linkpath')
dev_table = [
DevInfo('/proc/self/fd', '/dev/fd'),
DevInfo('/proc/self/fd/0', '/dev/stdin'),
DevInfo('/proc/self/fd/1', '/dev/stdout'),
DevInfo('/proc/self/fd/2', '/dev/stderr')
]
# Partial DBus config. The remainder (<listen>) will be filled in for each
# namespace that is created so each individual dbus-daemon has its own socket
# and address.
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
dbus_config = '''
<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC \
"-//freedesktop//DTD D-Bus Bus Configuration 1.0//EN" \
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/\
busconfig.dtd\">
<busconfig>
<type>system</type>
<limit name=\"reply_timeout\">2147483647</limit>
<auth>ANONYMOUS</auth>
<allow_anonymous/>
<policy context=\"default\">
<allow user=\"*\"/>
<allow own=\"*\"/>
<allow send_type=\"method_call\"/>
<allow send_type=\"signal\"/>
<allow send_type=\"method_return\"/>
<allow send_type=\"error\"/>
<allow receive_type=\"method_call\"/>
<allow receive_type=\"signal\"/>
<allow receive_type=\"method_return\"/>
<allow receive_type=\"error\"/>
<allow send_destination=\"*\" eavesdrop=\"true\"/>
<allow eavesdrop=\"true\"/>
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
</policy>
'''
class Process:
'''
Start a process. If 'wait' is True the constructor will start
the process and wait for it to exit. No PID is tracked in this
case.
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'''
def __init__(self, args, wait=False, env=None, ctx=None, check=False,
outfile=None, namespace=None, need_out=False, cleanup=None):
self.killed = False
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.args = args
self.wait = wait
self.name = args[0]
self.ret = None
self.ctx = ctx
self.write_fds = []
self.io_watch = None
self.cleanup = cleanup
self.verbose = False
self.out = ''
if namespace:
self.args = ['ip', 'netns', 'exec', namespace]
self.args.extend(args)
if ctx:
# Verbose requested, add stdout/stderr to write FD list.
# This will end up always returning true if logging is
# on which isn't desired so pass log=False as to only
# allow stdout to processes listed in --verbose.
if ctx.is_verbose(self.name, log=False):
self.verbose = True
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Add output file to FD list
if outfile:
try:
f = open(outfile, 'w')
except Exception as e:
dbg(e)
exit(0)
if ctx.args.log_uid:
os.fchown(f.fileno(), int(ctx.args.log_uid), int(ctx.args.log_gid))
self.write_fds.append(f)
# Add log file to FD list
if ctx.args.log:
test = os.path.basename(os.getcwd())
test_dir = '%s/%s' % (ctx.args.log, test)
if not path_exists(test_dir):
os.mkdir(test_dir)
os.chown(test_dir, int(ctx.args.log_uid),
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
int(ctx.args.log_gid))
f = open('%s/%s' % (test_dir, args[0]), 'a+')
os.fchown(f.fileno(), int(ctx.args.log_uid), int(ctx.args.log_gid))
self.write_fds.append(f)
self.pid = subprocess.Popen(self.args, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
env=env, cwd=os.getcwd())
# Set as non-blocking so read() in the IO callback doesn't block forever
fl = fcntl.fcntl(self.pid.stdout, fcntl.F_GETFL)
fcntl.fcntl(self.pid.stdout, fcntl.F_SETFL, fl | os.O_NONBLOCK)
if not wait and not check:
self.io_watch = GLib.io_add_watch(self.pid.stdout, GLib.IO_IN |
GLib.IO_HUP | GLib.IO_ERR, self.io_callback)
print("Starting process {}".format(self.pid.args))
if not wait and not check:
return
Namespace.non_block_wait(self.wait_for_process, 10, 1)
self.killed = True
self.ret = self.pid.returncode
self.process_io(self.pid.stdout)
self.write_fds = []
print("%s returned %d" % (args[0], self.ret))
if check and self.ret != 0:
raise subprocess.CalledProcessError(returncode=self.ret, cmd=self.args)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def wait_for_process(self, timeout):
try:
self.pid.wait(timeout)
return True
except:
return False
def process_io(self, source):
data = source.read()
if not data:
return True
data = data.decode('utf-8')
# Save data away in case the caller needs it (e.g. list_sta)
self.out += data
for f in self.write_fds:
f.write(data)
f.flush()
if self.verbose:
sys.__stdout__.write(data)
sys.__stdout__.flush()
return True
def io_callback(self, source, cb_condition):
return self.process_io(source)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def __del__(self):
print("Del process %s" % self.args)
if not self.killed:
self.kill()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def kill(self, force=False):
print("Killing process %s" % self.args)
if self.killed:
return
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if force:
self.pid.kill()
else:
self.pid.terminate()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
try:
self.pid.wait(timeout=15)
except:
dbg("Process %s did not complete in 15 seconds!" % self.name)
self.pid.kill()
if self.ctx and self in self.ctx.processes:
self.ctx.processes.remove(self)
if self.cleanup:
self.cleanup()
self.process_io(self.pid.stdout)
self.ctx = None
self.pid = None
self.write_fds = []
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if self.io_watch:
GLib.source_remove(self.io_watch)
self.io_watch = None
self.cleanup = None
self.killed = True
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def wait_for_socket(self, socket, wait):
Namespace.non_block_wait(os.path.exists, wait, socket)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def __str__(self):
return str(self.args) + '\n'
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
class Interface:
def __init__(self, name, config):
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.name = name
self.ctrl_interface = '/var/run/hostapd/' + name
self.config = config
def __del__(self):
Process(['iw', 'dev', self.name, 'del'], True)
def set_interface_state(self, state):
Process(['ifconfig', self.name, state], True)
class Radio:
def __init__(self, name):
self.name = name
# hostapd will reset this if this radio is used by it
self.use = 'iwd'
self.interface = None
def __del__(self):
print("Removing radio %s" % self.name)
self.interface = None
def create_interface(self, config, use):
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
global intf_id
ifname = 'wln%s' % intf_id
intf_id += 1
self.interface = Interface(ifname, config)
self.use = use
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
Process(['iw', 'phy', self.name, 'interface', 'add', ifname,
'type', 'managed'], True)
return self.interface
def __str__(self):
ret = self.name + ':\n'
ret += '\tUsed By: %s ' % self.use
if self.interface:
ret += '(%s)' % self.interface.name
ret += '\n'
return ret
class VirtualRadio(Radio):
'''
A subclass of 'Radio' specific to mac80211_hwsim radios.
TODO: Using D-Bus to create and destroy radios is more desireable
than the command line.
'''
def __init__(self, name, config=None):
self.disable_cipher = None
self.disable_iftype = None
hwsim = importlib.import_module('hwsim').Hwsim()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if config:
self.disable_iftype = config.get('iftype_disable', None)
self.disable_cipher = config.get('cipher_disable', None)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self._radio = hwsim.radios.create(name, p2p_device=True,
iftype_disable=self.disable_iftype,
cipher_disable=self.disable_cipher)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
super().__init__(self._radio.name)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def __del__(self):
super().__del__()
# If the radio was moved into a namespace this will fail
try:
self._radio.remove()
except:
pass
self._radio = None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def __str__(self):
ret = super().__str__()
if self.disable_iftype:
ret += '\tDisabled interface types: %s\n' % self.disable_iftype
if self.disable_cipher:
ret += '\tDisabled ciphers: %s\n' % self.disable_cipher
2021-02-05 19:09:09 +01:00
ret += '\tPath: %s' % self._radio.path
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
ret += '\n'
return ret
class HostapdInstance:
'''
A single instance of hostapd. In reality all hostapd instances
are started as a single process. This class just makes things
convenient for communicating with one of the hostapd APs.
'''
def __init__(self, config, radio):
self.radio = radio
self.config = config
self.cli = None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.intf = radio.create_interface(self.config, 'hostapd')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.intf.set_interface_state('up')
def __del__(self):
print("Removing HostapdInstance %s" % self.config)
self.intf.set_interface_state('down')
self.radio = None
self.intf = None
def __str__(self):
ret = 'Hostapd (%s)\n' % self.intf.name
ret += '\tConfig: %s\n' % self.config
return ret
class Hostapd:
'''
A set of running hostapd instances. This is really just a single
process since hostapd can be started with multiple config files.
'''
def __init__(self, ctx, radios, configs, radius):
self.ctx = ctx
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if len(configs) != len(radios):
raise Exception("Config (%d) and radio (%d) list length not equal" % \
(len(configs), len(radios)))
print("Initializing hostapd instances")
ctx.start_process(['ip', 'link', 'set', 'eth0', 'up'], wait=True)
ctx.start_process(['ip', 'link', 'set', 'eth1', 'up'], wait=True)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.global_ctrl_iface = '/var/run/hostapd/ctrl'
self.instances = [HostapdInstance(c, r) for c, r in zip(configs, radios)]
ifaces = [rad.interface.name for rad in radios]
ifaces = ','.join(ifaces)
args = ['hostapd', '-g', self.global_ctrl_iface]
if ifaces:
args.extend(['-i', ifaces])
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
#
# Config files should already be present in /tmp. This appends
# ctrl_interface and does any variable replacement. Currently
# this is just any $ifaceN occurrences.
#
for c in configs:
full_path = '/tmp/%s' % c
args.append(full_path)
self._rewrite_config(full_path)
if radius:
args.append(radius)
if ctx.is_verbose('hostapd'):
args.append('-d')
self.process = ctx.start_process(args)
self.process.wait_for_socket(self.global_ctrl_iface, 30)
for hapd in self.instances:
self.process.wait_for_socket(hapd.intf.ctrl_interface, 30)
def attach_cli(self):
for hapd in self.instances:
hapd.cli = importlib.import_module('hostapd').HostapdCLI(config=hapd.config)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def _rewrite_config(self, config):
'''
Replaces any $ifaceN values with the correct interface
names as well as appends the ctrl_interface path to
the config file.
'''
with open(config, 'r+') as f:
data = f.read()
to_replace = []
for match in re.finditer(r'\$iface[0-9]+', data):
tag = data[match.start():match.end()]
idx = tag.split('iface')[1]
to_replace.append((tag, self.instances[int(idx)].intf.name))
for r in to_replace:
data = data.replace(r[0], r[1], 1)
data += '\nctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd\n'
f.write(data)
def __getitem__(self, config):
if not config:
return self.instances[0]
for hapd in self.instances:
if hapd.config == config:
return hapd
return None
def __del__(self):
print("Removing Hostapd")
try:
os.remove(self.global_ctrl_iface)
except:
print("Failed to remove %s" % self.global_ctrl_iface)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
for hapd in self.instances:
if not hapd.cli:
continue
hapd.cli._instances[hapd.config] = None
hapd.cli = None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.instances = None
# Hostapd may have already been stopped
if self.process:
self.ctx.stop_process(self.process)
self.ctx = None
# Hostapd creates simdb sockets for EAP-SIM/AKA tests but does not
# clean them up.
for f in glob("/tmp/eap_sim_db*"):
os.remove(f)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
dbus_count = 0
class Namespace:
def __init__(self, args, name, radios):
self.dbus_address = None
self.processes = []
self.name = name
self.radios = radios
self.args = args
Process(['ip', 'netns', 'add', name], wait=True)
for r in radios:
Process(['iw', 'phy', r.name, 'set', 'netns', 'name', name], wait=True)
self.start_dbus()
def reset(self):
self._bus = None
for r in self.radios:
r._radio = None
self.radios = []
for p in list(self.processes):
print("Killing process %s" % p.name)
p.kill()
self.processes = []
2021-02-06 00:53:06 +01:00
def __del__(self):
print("Removing namespace %s" % self.name)
Process(['ip', 'netns', 'del', self.name], wait=True)
def get_bus(self):
return self._bus
def start_process(self, args, env=None, **kwargs):
# Special case for 'root' namespace (aka TestContext)
if self.name == "root":
ns = None
else:
ns = self.name
if not env:
env = os.environ.copy()
if hasattr(self, "dbus_address"):
# In case this process needs DBus...
env['DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS'] = self.dbus_address
p = Process(args, ctx=self, namespace=ns, env=env, **kwargs)
if not kwargs.get('wait', False):
self.processes.append(p)
return p
def stop_process(self, p, force=False):
p.kill(force)
def is_process_running(self, process):
for p in self.processes:
if p.name == process:
return True
return False
def _cleanup_dbus(self):
try:
os.remove(self.dbus_address.split('=')[1])
except:
pass
os.remove(self.dbus_cfg)
def start_dbus(self):
global dbus_count
self.dbus_address = 'unix:path=/tmp/dbus%d' % dbus_count
self.dbus_cfg = '/tmp/dbus%d.conf' % dbus_count
dbus_count += 1
with open(self.dbus_cfg, 'w+') as f:
f.write(dbus_config)
f.write('<listen>%s</listen>\n' % self.dbus_address)
f.write('</busconfig>\n')
p = self.start_process(['dbus-daemon', '--config-file=%s' % self.dbus_cfg],
wait=False, cleanup=self._cleanup_dbus)
p.wait_for_socket(self.dbus_address.split('=')[1], 5)
self._bus = dbus.bus.BusConnection(address_or_type=self.dbus_address)
def start_iwd(self, config_dir = '/tmp', storage_dir = '/tmp/iwd'):
args = []
iwd_radios = ','.join([r.name for r in self.radios if r.use == 'iwd'])
if self.args.valgrind:
args.extend(['valgrind', '--leak-check=full', '--track-origins=yes',
'--log-file=/tmp/valgrind.log.%p'])
args.extend(['iwd', '-p', iwd_radios, '-E'])
if self.is_verbose(args[0]):
args.append('-d')
env = os.environ.copy()
env['CONFIGURATION_DIRECTORY'] = config_dir
env['STATE_DIRECTORY'] = storage_dir
if self.is_verbose('iwd-dhcp'):
env['IWD_DHCP_DEBUG'] = '1'
if self.is_verbose('iwd-tls'):
env['IWD_TLS_DEBUG'] = '1'
if self.is_verbose('iwd-acd'):
env['IWD_ACD_DEBUG'] = '1'
pid = self.start_process(args, env=env)
return pid
def is_verbose(self, process, log=True):
process = os.path.basename(process)
if self.args is None:
return False
# every process is verbose when logging is enabled
if log and self.args.log:
return True
if process in self.args.verbose:
return True
# Special case here to enable verbose output with valgrind running
if process == 'valgrind' and 'iwd' in self.args.verbose:
return True
# Handle any glob matches
for item in self.args.verbose:
if process in glob(item):
return True
return False
@staticmethod
def non_block_wait(func, timeout, *args, exception=True):
'''
Convenience function for waiting in a non blocking
manor using GLibs context iteration i.e. does not block
the main loop while waiting.
'func' will be called at least once and repeatedly until
either it returns success, throws an exception, or the
'timeout' expires.
'timeout' is the ultimate timeout in seconds
'*args' will be passed to 'func'
If 'exception' is an Exception type it will be raised.
If 'exception' is True a generic TimeoutError will be raised.
Any other value will not result in an exception.
'''
# Simple class for signaling the wait timeout
class Bool:
def __init__(self, value):
self.value = value
def wait_timeout_cb(done):
done.value = True
return False
mainloop = GLib.MainLoop()
done = Bool(False)
timeout = GLib.timeout_add_seconds(timeout, wait_timeout_cb, done)
context = mainloop.get_context()
while True:
context.iteration(may_block=False)
try:
ret = func(*args)
if ret:
if not done.value:
GLib.source_remove(timeout)
return ret
except Exception as e:
if not done.value:
GLib.source_remove(timeout)
raise e
sleep(0.1)
if done.value == True:
if isinstance(exception, Exception):
raise exception
elif type(exception) == bool and exception:
raise TimeoutError("Timeout on non_block_wait")
else:
return
def __str__(self):
ret = 'Namespace: %s\n' % self.name
ret += 'Processes:\n'
for p in self.processes:
ret += '\t%s' % str(p)
ret += 'Radios:\n'
if len(self.radios) > 0:
for r in self.radios:
ret += '\t%s\n' % str(r)
else:
ret += '\tNo Radios\n'
ret += 'DBus Address: %s\n' % self.dbus_address
ret += '===================================================\n\n'
return ret
class TestContext(Namespace):
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'''
Contains all information for a given set of tests being run
such as processes, radios, interfaces and test results.
'''
def __init__(self, args):
self.name = "root"
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.processes = []
self.args = args
self.hw_config = None
self.hostapd = None
self.wpas_interfaces = None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.cur_radio_id = 0
self.cur_iface_id = 0
self.radios = []
self.loopback_started = False
self.results = {}
self.mainloop = GLib.MainLoop()
self.namespaces = []
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def start_dbus_monitor(self):
if not self.is_verbose('dbus-monitor'):
return
self.start_process(['dbus-monitor', '--address', self.dbus_address])
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def start_haveged(self):
self.start_process(['haveged', '-F'])
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def create_radios(self):
setup = self.hw_config['SETUP']
nradios = int(setup['num_radios'])
args = ['hwsim']
if self.hw_config['SETUP'].get('hwsim_medium', 'no') in ['no', '0', 'false']:
# register hwsim as medium
args.extend(['--no-register'])
self.start_process(args)
self.non_block_wait(self._bus.name_has_owner, 20, 'net.connman.hwsim',
exception=TimeoutError('net.connman.hwsim did not appear'))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
for i in range(nradios):
name = 'rad%u' % i
# Get any [radX] sections. These are for configuring
# any special radios. This no longer requires a
# radio_conf list, we just assume radios start rad0
# and increment.
rad_config = None
if self.hw_config.has_section(name):
rad_config = self.hw_config[name]
self.radios.append(VirtualRadio(name, rad_config))
self.cur_radio_id += 1
def discover_radios(self):
phys = []
iw = pyroute2.iwutil.IW()
attrs = [phy['attrs'] for phy in iw.list_wiphy()]
for attr in attrs:
for key, value in attr:
if key == 'NL80211_ATTR_WIPHY_NAME':
if value not in phys:
phys.append(value)
break
print('Discovered radios: %s' % str(phys))
self.radios = [Radio(name) for name in phys]
def start_radios(self):
reg_domain = self.hw_config['SETUP'].get('reg_domain', None)
if reg_domain:
Process(['iw', 'reg', 'set', reg_domain], True)
if self.args.hw:
self.discover_radios()
else:
self.create_radios()
def start_hostapd(self):
if not 'HOSTAPD' in self.hw_config:
return
settings = self.hw_config['HOSTAPD']
if self.args.hw:
# Just grab the first N radios. It gets rather
# complicated trying to map radX radios specified in
# hw.conf so any passed through physical adapters are
# just given to hostapd/IWD as they appear during
# discovery.
#
# TODO: It may be desireable to map PCI/USB adapters to
# specific radX radios specified in the config but
# there are really 2 separate use cases here.
# 1. You want to test a *specific* radio with IWD
# or hostapd. For this you would want radX
# to map to a specific radio
# 2. You have many adapters in use to run multiple
# tests. In this case you would not care what
# was using each radio, just that there was
# enough to run all tests.
nradios = 0
for k, _ in settings.items():
if k == 'radius_server':
continue
nradios += 1
hapd_radios = self.radios[:nradios]
else:
hapd_radios = [rad for rad in self.radios if rad.name in settings]
hapd_configs = [conf for rad, conf in settings.items() if rad != 'radius_server']
radius_config = settings.get('radius_server', None)
self.hostapd = Hostapd(self, hapd_radios, hapd_configs, radius_config)
self.hostapd.attach_cli()
def get_frequencies(self):
frequencies = []
for hapd in self.hostapd.instances:
frequencies.append(hapd.cli.frequency)
return frequencies
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def start_wpas_interfaces(self):
if 'WPA_SUPPLICANT' not in self.hw_config:
return
settings = self.hw_config['WPA_SUPPLICANT']
wpas_radios = [rad for rad in self.radios if rad.name in settings]
self.wpas_interfaces = [rad.create_interface(settings[rad.name], 'wpas') for rad in wpas_radios]
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def start_ofono(self):
sim_keys = self.hw_config['SETUP'].get('sim_keys', None)
if not sim_keys:
print("Ofono not requred")
return
elif sim_keys != 'ofono':
os.environ['IWD_SIM_KEYS'] = sim_keys
return
if not find_binary(['ofonod']) or not find_binary(['phonesim']):
print("Ofono or Phonesim not found, skipping test")
return
Process(['ifconfig', 'lo', 'up'], wait=True)
os.environ['OFONO_PHONESIM_CONFIG'] = '/tmp/phonesim.conf'
phonesim_args = ['phonesim', '-p', '12345', '/usr/share/phonesim/default.xml']
self.start_process(phonesim_args)
#
# TODO:
# Is there something to wait for? Without this phonesim rejects
# connections on all but the fist test.
#
time.sleep(3)
ofono_args = ['ofonod', '-n', '--plugin=atmodem,phonesim']
if self.is_verbose('ofonod'):
ofono_args.append('-d')
self.start_process(ofono_args)
print("Ofono started")
def create_namespaces(self):
if not self.hw_config.has_section('NameSpaces'):
return
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
for key, value in self.hw_config.items('NameSpaces'):
radio_names = value.split(',')
# Gather up radio objects for this namespace
radios = [rad for rad in self.radios if rad.name in radio_names]
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Remove radios from 'root' namespace
self.radios = list(set(self.radios) - set(radios))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.namespaces.append(Namespace(self.args, key, radios))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def get_namespace(self, ns):
for n in self.namespaces:
if n.name == ns:
return n
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
return None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def stop_test_processes(self):
for n in self.namespaces:
n.reset()
self.namespaces = []
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.hostapd = None
self.wpas_interfaces = None
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.reset()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def __str__(self):
ret = 'Arguments:\n'
for arg in vars(self.args):
ret += '\t --%s %s\n' % (arg, str(getattr(self.args, arg)))
ret += 'Hostapd:\n'
if self.hostapd:
for h in self.hostapd.instances:
ret += '\t%s\n' % str(h)
else:
ret += '\tNo Hostapd instances\n'
ret += super().__str__()
for n in self.namespaces:
ret += n.__str__()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
return ret
def prepare_sandbox():
print('Preparing sandbox')
for entry in mount_table:
try:
os.lstat(entry.target)
except:
os.mkdir(entry.target, 755)
mount(entry.fstype, entry.target, entry.fstype, entry.flags,
entry.options)
for entry in dev_table:
os.symlink(entry.target, entry.linkpath)
os.mkdir('/tmp/iwd')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
os.setsid()
fcntl.ioctl(STDIN_FILENO, TIOCSTTY, 1)
def build_unit_list(args):
'''
Build list of unit tests based on passed arguments. This first
checks for literal names provided in the arguments, then if
no matches were found, checks for a glob match.
'''
tests = []
test_root = args.testhome + '/unit'
for unit in args.unit_tests.split(','):
path = '%s/%s' % (test_root, unit)
if os.access(unit, os.X_OK):
tests.append(unit)
elif os.access(path, os.X_OK):
tests.append(path)
else:
# Full list or glob, first build up valid list of tests
matches = glob(path)
if matches == []:
raise Exception("Could not find test %s" % unit)
matches = [exe for exe in matches if os.access(exe, os.X_OK)]
tests.extend(matches)
return sorted(tests)
def build_test_list(args):
'''
Build list of auto test directories based on passed arguments.
First check for absolute paths, then look in <iwd>/autotests,
then glob match.
'''
tests = []
test_root = args.testhome + '/autotests'
full_list = sorted(os.listdir(test_root))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Run all tests
if not args.auto_tests:
# --shell with no tests implies 'shell' test
if args.shell:
return [test_root + '/shell']
# Pair down any non-tests and append full path
tests = [test_root + '/' + t for t in full_list if t.startswith('test')]
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
else:
print("Generating partial test list")
for t in args.auto_tests.split(','):
path = '%s/%s' % (test_root, t)
if t.endswith('+'):
t = t.split('+')[0]
i = full_list.index(t)
tests = [test_root + '/' + x for x in full_list[i:] \
if x.startswith('test')]
elif os.path.exists(t):
if t not in tests:
tests.append(t)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
elif os.path.exists(path):
if path not in tests:
tests.append(path)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
else:
matches = glob(path)
if matches == []:
raise Exception("Could not find test %s" % t)
tests.extend(list(set(matches) - set(tests)))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
return sorted(tests)
SimpleResult = namedtuple('SimpleResult', 'run failures errors skipped time')
def start_test(ctx, subtests, rqueue):
'''
Run an individual test. 'subtests' are parsed prior to calling
but these effectively make up a single test. 'rqueue' is the
results queue which is required since this is using
multiprocessing.
'''
run = 0
errors = 0
failures = 0
skipped = 0
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
start = time.time()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
#
# Iterate through each individual python test.
#
for s in subtests:
loader = unittest.TestLoader()
module = importlib.import_module(os.path.splitext(s)[0])
subtest = loader.loadTestsFromModule(module)
# The test suite is being (ab)used to get a bit more granularity
# with individual tests. The 'normal' way to use unittest is to
# just create a test suite and run them. The problem here is that
# test results are queued and printed at the very end so its
# difficult to know *where* a test failed (python gives a stack
# trace but printing the exception/failure immediately shows
# where in the debug logs something failed). Moreso if there are
# several test functions inside a single python file they run
# as a single test and it is difficult (again) to know where
# something failed.
# Iterating through each python test file
for test in subtest:
limit_funcs = []
if ctx.args.sub_tests:
for i in ctx.args.sub_tests:
if len(i.split('.')) == 2:
limit_funcs.append(i.split('.')[1])
# Iterating through individual test functions inside a
# Test() class. Due to the nature of unittest we have
# to jump through some hoops to set up the test class
# only once by turning the enumeration into a list, then
# enumerating (again) to keep track of the index (just
# enumerating the test class doesn't allow len() because
# it is not a list).
tlist = list(enumerate(test))
for index, t in enumerate(tlist):
# enumerate is returning a tuple, index 1 is our
# actual object.
t = t[1]
func, file = str(t).split(' ')
#
# TODO: There may be a better way of doing this
# but strigifying the test class gives us a string:
# <function> (<file>.<class>)
#
file = file.strip('()').split('.')[0] + '.py'
# Create an empty result here in case the test fails
result = TestResult()
try:
skip = len(limit_funcs) > 0 and func not in limit_funcs
# Set up class only on first test
if index == 0:
if not skip:
dbg("%s\n\t%s RUNNING" % (file, str(func)), end='')
t.setUpClass()
else:
if not skip:
dbg("\t%s RUNNING" % str(func), end='')
sys.__stdout__.flush()
if not skip:
# Run test (setUp/tearDown run automatically)
result = t()
# Tear down class only on last test
if index == len(tlist) - 1:
t.tearDownClass()
if skip:
continue
except unittest.SkipTest as e:
result.skipped.append(t)
except Exception as e:
dbg('\n%s threw an uncaught exception:' % func)
traceback.print_exc(file=sys.__stdout__)
run += result.testsRun
errors += len(result.errors)
failures += len(result.failures)
skipped += len(result.skipped)
if len(result.skipped) > 0:
dbg(colored(" SKIPPED", "cyan"))
elif run == 0 or len(result.errors) > 0 or len(result.failures) > 0:
dbg(colored(" FAILED", "red"))
for e in result.errors:
dbg(e[1])
for f in result.failures:
dbg(f[1])
else:
dbg(colored(" PASSED", "green"))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Prevents future test modules with the same name (e.g.
# connection_test.py) from being loaded from the cache
sys.modules.pop(module.__name__)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
#
# The multiprocessing queue is picky with what objects it will serialize
# and send between processes. Because of this we put the important bits
# of the result into our own 'SimpleResult' tuple.
#
sresult = SimpleResult(run=run, failures=failures, errors=errors,
skipped=skipped, time=time.time() - start)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
rqueue.put(sresult)
# This may not be required since we are manually popping sys.modules
importlib.invalidate_caches()
def pre_test(ctx, test, copied):
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'''
Copy test files, start processes, and any other pre test work.
'''
os.chdir(test)
dbg("\nStarting %s" % colored(os.path.basename(test), "white", attrs=['bold']))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if not os.path.exists(test + '/hw.conf'):
raise Exception("No hw.conf found for %s" % test)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
ctx.hw_config = ConfigParser()
ctx.hw_config.read(test + '/hw.conf')
#
# We have two types of test files: tests and everything else. Rather
# than require each test to specify the files needing to be copied to
# /tmp (previously 'tmpfs_extra_stuff'), we just copy everything which
# isn't a test. There is really no reason not to do this as any file
# present in a test directory should be needed by the test.
#
# All files
files = os.listdir(test)
# Tests (starts or ends with 'test')
subtests = [f for f in files if f.startswith('test') or \
os.path.splitext(f)[0].endswith('test')]
# Everything else (except .py files)
to_copy = [f for f in list(set(files) - set(subtests)) if not f.endswith('.py')]
for f in to_copy:
if os.path.isdir(f):
shutil.copytree(f, '/tmp/' + f)
else:
shutil.copy(f, '/tmp')
copied.append(f)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Prune down any subtests if needed
if ctx.args.sub_tests:
ctx.args.sub_tests = ctx.args.sub_tests.split(',')
to_run = [x.split('.')[0] for x in ctx.args.sub_tests]
pruned = []
for s in subtests:
no_ext = s
# Handle <file>.<test function> format
if '.' in s:
no_ext = s.split('.')[0]
if no_ext in to_run:
pruned.append(no_ext + '.py')
subtests = pruned
ctx.start_dbus()
ctx.start_haveged()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
ctx.start_dbus_monitor()
ctx.start_radios()
ctx.create_namespaces()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
ctx.start_hostapd()
ctx.start_wpas_interfaces()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
ctx.start_ofono()
if ctx.args.log:
2021-07-14 23:58:13 +02:00
ctx.start_process(['iwmon', '--nowiphy'])
elif ctx.args.monitor:
2021-07-14 23:58:13 +02:00
ctx.start_process(['iwmon', '--nowiphy'], outfile=ctx.args.monitor)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if ctx.hw_config.has_option('SETUP', 'start_iwd'):
start = ctx.hw_config.getboolean('SETUP', 'start_iwd')
else:
start = True
if start:
ctx.start_iwd()
else:
print("Not starting IWD from test-runner")
print(ctx)
sys.path.insert(1, test)
return sorted(subtests)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def post_test(ctx, to_copy):
'''
Remove copied files, and stop test processes.
'''
2020-11-16 23:25:12 +01:00
try:
for f in to_copy:
if os.path.isdir('/tmp/' + f):
shutil.rmtree('/tmp/' + f)
else:
os.remove('/tmp/' + f)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
2020-11-16 23:25:12 +01:00
Process(['ifconfig', 'lo', 'down'], wait=True)
except Exception as e:
print("Exception thrown in post_test")
finally:
ctx.stop_test_processes()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if ctx.args.valgrind:
for f in os.listdir('/tmp'):
if f.startswith("valgrind.log."):
dbg(f)
with open('/tmp/' + f, 'r') as v:
dbg(v.read())
dbg("\n")
os.remove('/tmp/' + f)
# Special case for when logging is enabled
if os.path.isfile('/tmp/iwd-tls-debug-server-cert.pem'):
os.remove('/tmp/iwd-tls-debug-server-cert.pem')
allowed = ['phonesim.conf', 'certs', 'secrets', 'iwd']
for f in [f for f in os.listdir('/tmp') if f not in allowed]:
dbg("File %s was not cleaned up!" % f)
os.remove('/tmp/' + f)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def print_results(results):
table = PrettyTable(['Test', colored('Passed', 'green'), colored('Failed', 'red'), \
colored('Skipped', 'cyan'), colored('Time', 'yellow')])
total_pass = 0
total_fail = 0
total_skip = 0
total_time = 0
for test, result in results.items():
if result.time == TEST_MAX_TIMEOUT:
failed = "Timed out"
passed = "Timed out"
elif result.time == 0:
failed = "Exception"
passed = "Exception"
else:
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
failed = result.failures + result.errors
passed = result.run - failed
total_pass += passed
total_fail += failed
total_skip += result.skipped
total_time += result.time
time = '%.2f' % result.time
table.add_row([test, colored(passed, 'green'), colored(failed, 'red'), \
colored(result.skipped, 'cyan'), colored(time, 'yellow')])
total_time = '%.2f' % total_time
table.add_row(['Total', colored(total_pass, 'green'), colored(total_fail, 'red'), \
colored(total_skip, 'cyan'), colored(total_time, 'yellow')])
dbg(table)
def run_auto_tests(ctx, args):
tests = build_test_list(args)
# Copy autotests/misc/{certs,secrets,phonesim} so any test can refer to them
shutil.copytree(args.testhome + '/autotests/misc/certs', '/tmp/certs')
shutil.copytree(args.testhome + '/autotests/misc/secrets', '/tmp/secrets')
shutil.copy(args.testhome + '/autotests/misc/phonesim/phonesim.conf', '/tmp')
for test in tests:
copied = []
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
try:
subtests = pre_test(ctx, test, copied)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if args.shell:
#
# Shell really isn't meant to be used with multiple tests. If
# a set of tests was passed in just start out in the first.
#
os.chdir(tests[0])
os.system('/bin/bash')
exit()
if len(subtests) < 1:
dbg("No tests to run")
exit()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
rqueue = multiprocessing.Queue()
p = multiprocessing.Process(target=start_test, args=(ctx, subtests, rqueue))
p.start()
# Rather than time each subtest we just time the total but
# mutiply the default time by the number of tests being run.
p.join(TEST_MAX_TIMEOUT * len(subtests))
if p.is_alive():
# Timeout
p.terminate()
ctx.results[os.path.basename(test)] = SimpleResult(run=0,
failures=0, errors=0,
skipped=0, time=TEST_MAX_TIMEOUT)
else:
ctx.results[os.path.basename(test)] = rqueue.get()
except Exception as ex:
dbg("%s threw an uncaught exception" % test)
traceback.print_exc(file=sys.__stdout__)
ctx.results[os.path.basename(test)] = SimpleResult(run=0, failures=0,
errors=0, skipped=0, time=0)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
finally:
post_test(ctx, copied)
shutil.rmtree('/tmp/iwd')
2021-02-06 00:53:06 +01:00
shutil.rmtree('/tmp/certs')
shutil.rmtree('/tmp/secrets')
os.remove('/tmp/phonesim.conf')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def run_unit_tests(ctx, args):
os.chdir(args.testhome + '/unit')
units = build_unit_list(args)
for u in units:
if ctx.start_process([u], wait=True).ret != 0:
dbg("Unit test %s failed" % os.path.basename(u))
else:
dbg("Unit test %s passed" % os.path.basename(u))
def run_tests():
global config
with open('/proc/cmdline', 'r') as f:
cmdline = f.read()
start = cmdline.find('--testhome')
options = shlex.split(cmdline[start:])
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--testhome')
parser.add_argument('--auto_tests')
parser.add_argument('--unit_tests')
parser.add_argument('--verbose', default=[])
parser.add_argument('--debug')
parser.add_argument('--path')
parser.add_argument('--valgrind')
parser.add_argument('--gdb')
parser.add_argument('--shell')
parser.add_argument('--log')
parser.add_argument('--log-gid')
parser.add_argument('--log-uid')
parser.add_argument('--hw')
parser.add_argument('--monitor')
parser.add_argument('--sub_tests')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
args = parser.parse_args(options)
#
# This prevents any print() calls in this script from printing unless
# --debug is passed. For an 'always print' option use dbg()
#
if not args.debug:
sys.stdout = open(os.devnull, 'w')
if args.verbose != []:
args.verbose = args.verbose.split(',')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
os.environ['PATH'] = '%s/src' % args.testhome
os.environ['PATH'] += ':%s/tools' % args.testhome
os.environ['PATH'] += ':%s/client' % args.testhome
2021-02-06 00:53:07 +01:00
os.environ['PATH'] += ':%s/monitor' % args.testhome
os.environ['PATH'] += ':%s/wired' % args.testhome
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
os.environ['PATH'] += ':' + args.path
sys.path.append(args.testhome + '/autotests/util')
#
# This allows all autotest utils (iwd/hostapd/etc) to access the
# TestContext. Any other module or script (in the same interpreter) can
# simply import config.ctx and access all live test information,
# start/stop processes, see active radios etc.
#
config = importlib.import_module('config')
config.ctx = TestContext(args)
if args.log:
mount('logdir', args.log, '9p', 0, 'trans=virtio,version=9p2000.L,msize=10240')
# Clear out any log files from other test runs
for f in glob('%s/*' % args.log):
print("removing %s" % f)
if os.path.isdir(f):
shutil.rmtree(f)
else:
os.remove(f)
# Start writing out kernel log
config.ctx.start_process(["dmesg", '--follow'])
elif args.monitor:
parent = os.path.abspath(os.path.join(args.monitor, os.pardir))
mount('mondir', parent, '9p', 0, 'trans=virtio,version=9p2000.L,msize=10240')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if config.ctx.args.unit_tests is None:
run_auto_tests(config.ctx, args)
else:
run_unit_tests(config.ctx, args)
class Main:
def __init__(self):
self.parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description='IWD Test Runner')
self.parser.add_argument('--qemu', '-q',
metavar='<QEMU binary>', type=str,
help='QEMU binary to use',
dest='qemu',
default=None)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.parser.add_argument('--kernel', '-k', metavar='<kernel>',
type=str,
help='Path to kernel image',
dest='kernel',
default=None)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
self.parser.add_argument('--verbose', '-v', metavar='<list>',
type=str,
help='Comma separated list of applications',
dest='verbose',
default=[])
self.parser.add_argument('--debug', '-d',
action='store_true',
help='Enable test-runner debugging',
dest='debug')
self.parser.add_argument('--shell', '-s', action='store_true',
help='Boot into shell', dest='shell')
self.parser.add_argument('--log', '-l', type=str,
help='Directory for log files')
self.parser.add_argument('--hw', '-w', type=str, nargs=1,
help='Use physical adapters for tests (passthrough)')
self.parser.add_argument('--monitor', '-m', type=str,
help='Enables iwmon output to file')
self.parser.add_argument('--sub-tests', '-S', metavar='<subtests>',
type=str, nargs=1, help='List of subtests to run',
default=None, dest='sub_tests')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
# Prevent --autotest/--unittest from being used together
auto_unit_group = self.parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
auto_unit_group.add_argument('--auto-tests', '-A',
metavar='<tests>', type=str, nargs=1,
help='List of tests to run',
default=None,
dest='auto_tests')
auto_unit_group.add_argument('--unit-tests', '-U',
metavar='<tests>', type=str, nargs='?',
const='*',
help='List of unit tests to run',
dest='unit_tests')
# Prevent --valgrind/--gdb from being used together
valgrind_gdb_group = self.parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
valgrind_gdb_group.add_argument('--gdb', '-g', metavar='<exec>',
type=str, nargs=1,
help='Run gdb on specified executable',
dest='gdb')
valgrind_gdb_group.add_argument('--valgrind', '-V', action='store_true',
help='Run valgrind on IWD', dest='valgrind')
self.args = self.parser.parse_args()
if self.args.auto_tests:
self.args.auto_tests = self.args.auto_tests[0].split(',')
if self.args.sub_tests:
self.args.sub_tests = self.args.sub_tests[0].split(',')
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if self.args.log and self.args.unit_tests:
dbg("Cannot use --log with --unit-tests")
quit()
if self.args.sub_tests:
if not self.args.auto_tests:
dbg("--sub-tests must be used with --auto-tests")
quit()
if len(self.args.auto_tests) > 1:
dbg("--sub-tests must be used with a single auto test")
quit()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
def start(self):
usb_adapters = None
qemu_table = [
'qemu-system-x86_64',
'/usr/bin/qemu-system-x86_64'
]
kernel_table = [
'bzImage',
'arch/x86/boot/bzImage',
'vmlinux',
'arch/x86/boot/vmlinux'
]
if self.args.qemu is None:
qemu_binary = find_binary(qemu_table)
if not qemu_binary:
print("Could not find qemu binary")
quit()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
else:
if path_exists(self.args.qemu):
qemu_binary = self.args.qemu
else:
print("QEMU binary %s does not exist" % \
self.args.qemu)
quit()
if self.args.kernel is None:
kernel_binary = find_binary(kernel_table)
if not kernel_binary:
print("Could not find kernel image")
quit()
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
else:
if path_exists(self.args.kernel):
kernel_binary = self.args.kernel
else:
print("Kernel image %s does not exist" % \
self.args.kernel)
quit()
if self.args.hw:
hw_conf = ConfigParser()
hw_conf.read(self.args.hw)
# TODO: Parse PCI adapters
if hw_conf.has_section('USBAdapters'):
# The actual key name of the adapter
# doesn't matter since all we need is the
# bus/address. This gets named by the kernel
# anyways once in the VM.
usb_adapters = [v for v in hw_conf['USBAdapters'].values()]
#
# Additional arguments not provided to test-runner which are
# needed once booted into the kernel.
#
options = 'init=%s' % os.path.realpath(sys.argv[0])
# Support running from top level as well as tools
if os.getcwd().endswith('tools'):
options += ' --testhome %s/../' % os.getcwd()
else:
options += ' --testhome %s' % os.getcwd()
options += ' --path "%s"' % os.environ['PATH']
if self.args.auto_tests:
options += ' --auto_tests %s' % ','.join(self.args.auto_tests)
if self.args.sub_tests:
options += ' --sub_tests %s' % ','.join(self.args.sub_tests)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if self.args.log:
if os.environ.get('SUDO_GID', None) is None:
print("--log can only be used as root user")
quit()
self.args.log = os.path.abspath(self.args.log)
uid = int(os.environ['SUDO_UID'])
gid = int(os.environ['SUDO_GID'])
if not path_exists(self.args.log):
os.mkdir(self.args.log)
os.chown(self.args.log, uid, gid)
options += ' --log-gid %u' % gid
options += ' --log-uid %u' % uid
if self.args.monitor:
if os.environ.get('SUDO_GID', None) is None:
print("--monitor can only be used as root user")
quit()
self.args.monitor = os.path.abspath(self.args.monitor)
mon_parent_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.join(self.args.monitor, os.pardir))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
denylist = [
'auto_tests',
'sub_tests',
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'qemu',
'kernel'
]
nproc = multiprocessing.cpu_count()
#
# Specially handle CPU systems with minimal cores, otherwise
# use half the host cores.
#
if nproc < 2:
smp = 1
else:
smp = int(nproc / 2)
#
# Increase RAM if valgrind is being used
#
if self.args.valgrind:
ram = 512
else:
ram = 384
print("Using %d cores, %d RAM for VM" % (smp, ram))
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
#
# This passes through most of the command line options to
# the kernel command line. Some are not relevant (e.g. qemu)
# so similar options are added in the denylist above. This excludes
# any unset options which are assumed to be None or False. This
# is done so default arguments can be filled once in the VM. If
# we pass and basic types (None, False etc.) they are turned into
# a string representation ('None', 'False', etc.) which is not
# desirable.
#
for arg in vars(self.args):
if arg in denylist or getattr(self.args, arg) in [None, False, []]:
continue
options += ' --%s %s' % (arg, str(getattr(self.args, arg)))
kern_log = "ignore_loglevel" if "kernel" in self.args.verbose else "quiet"
qemu_cmdline = [
qemu_binary,
'-machine', 'type=q35,accel=kvm:tcg',
'-nodefaults', '-no-user-config', '-monitor', 'none',
'-display', 'none', '-m', '%dM' % ram, '-nographic', '-vga',
'none', '-no-acpi', '-no-hpet',
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
'-no-reboot', '-fsdev',
'local,id=fsdev-root,path=/,readonly,security_model=none,multidevs=remap',
'-device',
'virtio-9p-pci,fsdev=fsdev-root,mount_tag=/dev/root',
'-chardev', 'stdio,id=chardev-serial0,signal=off',
'-device', 'pci-serial,chardev=chardev-serial0',
'-device', 'virtio-rng-pci',
'-kernel',
kernel_binary,
'-append',
'console=ttyS0,115200n8 earlyprintk=serial \
rootfstype=9p root=/dev/root \
rootflags=trans=virtio,msize=1048576,version=9p2000.u \
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
acpi=off pci=noacpi %s ro \
mac80211_hwsim.radios=0 %s' % (kern_log, options),
2021-07-14 23:58:13 +02:00
'-smp', str(smp)
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
]
# Add two ethernet devices for testing EAD
qemu_cmdline.extend([
'-net', 'nic,model=virtio',
'-net', 'nic,model=virtio',
'-net', 'user'
])
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
if usb_adapters:
for bus, addr in [s.split(',') for s in usb_adapters]:
qemu_cmdline.extend(['-usb',
'-device',
'usb-host,hostbus=%s,hostaddr=%s' % \
(bus, addr)])
if self.args.log:
#
# Creates a virtfs device that can be mounted. This mount
# will point back to the provided log directory and is
# writable unlike the rest of the mounted file system.
#
qemu_cmdline.extend([
'-virtfs',
'local,path=%s,mount_tag=logdir,security_model=passthrough,id=logdir' \
% self.args.log
])
if self.args.monitor:
qemu_cmdline.extend([
'-virtfs',
'local,path=%s,mount_tag=mondir,security_model=passthrough,id=mondir' \
% mon_parent_dir
])
auto-t: introduce pure python test-runner re-write This patch completely re-writes test-runner in Python. This was done because the existing C test-runner had some clunky work arounds and maintaining or adding new features was starting to become a huge pain. There were a few aspects of test-runner which continually had to be dealt with when adding any new functionality: * Argument parsing: Adding new arguments to test-runner wasn't so bad, but if you wanted those arguments passed into the VM it became a huge pain. Arguments needed to be parsed, then re-formatted into the qemu command line, then re-parsed in a special order (backwards) once in the VM. The burden for adding new arguments was quite high so it was avoided (at least by me) at all costs. * The separation between C and Python: The tests are all written in python, but the executables, radios, and interfaces were all created from C. The way we solved this was by encoding the require info as environment variables, then parsing those from Python. It worked, but it was, again, a huge pain. * Process management: It started with all processes being launched from C, but eventually tests required the ability to start IWD, or kill hostapd ungracefully in order to test certain functionality. Since the processes were tracked in C, Python had no way of signalling that it killed a process and when it started one C had no idea. This was mitigated (basically by killall), but it was no where close to an elegant solution. Re-writing test-runner in python solves all these problems and will be much easier to maintain. * Argument parsing: Now all arguments are forwarded automatically to the VM. The ArgParse library takes care of parsing and each argument is stored in a dictionary. * Separation between C and Python: No more C, so no more separation. * Process management: Python will now manage all processes. This allows a test to kill, restart, or start a new process and not have to remember the PID or to kill it after the test. There are a few more important aspects of the python implementation that should now be considered when writing new tests: * The IWD constructor now has different default arugments. IWD will always be started unless specified and the configuration directory will always be /tmp * Any non *.py file in the test directory will be copied to /tmp. This avoids the need for 'tmpfs_extra_stuff' completely. * ctrl_interface will automatically be appended to every hostapd config. There is no need to include this in a config file from now on. * Test cleanup is extremely important. All tests get run in the same interpreter now and the tests themselves are actually loaded as python modules. This means e.g. if you somehow kept a reference to IWD() any subsequent tests would not start since IWD is still running. * For debugging, the test context can be printed which shows running processes, radios, and interfaces. Three non-native python modules were used: PrettyTable, colored, and pyroute2 $ pip3 install prettytable $ pip3 install termcolor $ pip3 install pyroute2
2020-09-11 01:12:23 +02:00
os.execlp(qemu_cmdline[0], *qemu_cmdline)
if __name__ == '__main__':
if os.getpid() == 1 and os.getppid() == 0:
atexit.register(exit_vm)
prepare_sandbox()
run_tests()
exit()
main = Main()
main.start()