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|
/*
* Copyright © 2007, 2011, 2013, 2014 Intel Corporation
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
* copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
* to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
* the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
* and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
* Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
* paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
* Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
* THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
* FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
* IN THE SOFTWARE.
*
* Authors:
* Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
* Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
*
*/
#ifndef ANDROID
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#else
#include <libgen.h>
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <pciaccess.h>
#include <getopt.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <sys/utsname.h>
#include <termios.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include "drmtest.h"
#include "intel_chipset.h"
#include "intel_io.h"
#include "igt_debugfs.h"
#include "../version.h"
#include "config.h"
#include "igt_core.h"
#include "igt_aux.h"
/**
* SECTION:igt_core
* @short_description: Core i-g-t testing support
* @title: i-g-t core
* @include: igt_core.h
*
* This libary implements the core of the i-g-t test support infrastructure.
* Main features are the subtest enumeration, cmdline option parsing helpers for
* subtest handling and various helpers to structure testcases with subtests and
* handle subtest test results.
*
* Auxiliary code provides exit handlers, support for forked processes with test
* result propagation. Other generally useful functionality includes optional
* structure logging infrastructure and some support code for running reduced
* test set on in simulated hardware environments.
*
* When writing tests with subtests it is extremely important that nothing
* interferes with the subtest enumeration. In i-g-t subtests are enumerated at
* runtime, which allows powerful testcase enumeration. But it makes subtest
* enumeration a bit more tricky since the test code needs to be careful to
* never run any code which might fail (like trying to do privileged operations
* or opening device driver nodes).
*
* To allow this i-g-t provides #igt_fixture code blocks for setup code outside
* of subtests and automatically skips the subtest code blocks themselves. For
* special cases igt_only_list_subtests() is also provided.
*
* # Magic Control Blocks
*
* i-g-t makes heavy use of C macros which serve as magic control blocks. They
* work fairly well and transparently but since C doesn't have full-blown
* closures there are caveats:
*
* - Asynchronous blocks which are used to spawn children internally use fork().
* Which means that nonsensical control flow like jumping out of the control
* block is possible, but it will badly confuse the i-g-t library code. And of
* course all caveats of a real fork() call apply, namely that file
* descriptors are copied, but still point at the original file. This will
* terminally upset the libdrm buffer manager if both parent and child keep on
* using the same open instance of the drm device. Usually everything related
* to interacting with the kernel driver must be reinitialized to avoid such
* issues.
*
* - Code blocks with magic control flow are implemented with setjmp() and
* longjmp(). This applies to #igt_fixture and #igt_subtest blocks and all the
* three variants to finish test: igt_success(), igt_skip() and igt_fail().
* Mostly this is of no concern, except when such a control block changes
* stack variables defined in the same function as the control block resides.
* Any store/load behaviour after a longjmp() is ill-defined for these
* variables. Avoid such code.
*
* Quoting the man page for longjmp():
*
* "The values of automatic variables are unspecified after a call to
* longjmp() if they meet all the following criteria:"
* - "they are local to the function that made the corresponding setjmp() call;
* - "their values are changed between the calls to setjmp() and longjmp(); and
* - "they are not declared as volatile."
*
* # Best Practices for Test Helper Libraries Design
*
* Kernel tests itself tend to have fairly complex logic already. It is
* therefore paramount that helper code, both in libraries and test-private
* functions, add as little boilerplate code to the main test logic as possible.
* But then dense code is hard to understand without constantly consulting
* the documentation and implementation of all the helper functions if it
* doesn't follow some clear patterns. Hence follow these established best
* practices:
*
* - Make extensive use of the implicit control flow afforded by igt_skip(),
* igt_fail and igt_success(). When dealing with optional kernel features
* combine igt_skip() with igt_fail() to skip when the kernel support isn't
* available but fail when anything else goes awry. void should be the most
* common return type in all your functions, except object constructors of
* course.
*
* - The main test logic should have no explicit control flow for failure
* conditions, but instead such assumptions should be written in a declarative
* style. Use one of the many macros which encapsulate i-g-t's implicit
* control flow. Pick the most suitable one to have as much debug output as
* possible without polluting the code unecessarily. For example
* igt_assert_cmpint() for comparing integers or do_ioctl() for running ioctls
* and checking their results. Feel free to add new ones to the libary or
* wrap up a set of checks into a private function to further condense your
* test logic.
*
* - When adding a new feature test function which uses igt_skip() internally,
* use the <prefix>_require_<feature_name> naming scheme. When you
* instead add a feature test function which returns a boolean, because your
* main test logic must take different actions depending upon the feature's
* availability, then instead use the <prefix>_has_<feature_name>.
*
* - As already mentioned eschew explicit error handling logic as much as
* possible. If your test absolutely has to handle the error of some function
* the customary naming pattern is to prefix those variants with __. Try to
* restrict explicit error handling to leaf functions. For the main test flow
* simply pass the expected error condition down into your helper code, which
* results in tidy and declarative test logic.
*
* - Make your library functions as simple to use as possible. Automatically
* register cleanup handlers through igt_install_exit_handler(). Reduce the
* amount of setup boilerplate needed by using implicit singletons and lazy
* structure initialization and similar design patterns.
*
* - Don't shy away from refactoring common code, even when there are just 2-3
* users and even if it's not a net reduction in code. As long as it helps to
* remove boilerplate and makes the code more declarative the resulting
* clearer test flow is worth it. All i-g-t library code has been organically
* extracted from testcases in this fashion.
*
* - For general coding style issues please follow the kernel's rules laid out
* in
* [CodingStyle](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/CodingStyle).
*/
static unsigned int exit_handler_count;
/* subtests helpers */
static bool list_subtests = false;
static char *run_single_subtest = NULL;
static const char *in_subtest = NULL;
static bool in_fixture = false;
static bool test_with_subtests = false;
static enum {
CONT = 0, SKIP, FAIL
} skip_subtests_henceforth = CONT;
/* fork support state */
pid_t *test_children;
int num_test_children;
int test_children_sz;
bool test_child;
bool __igt_fixture(void)
{
assert(!in_fixture);
if (igt_only_list_subtests())
return false;
if (skip_subtests_henceforth)
return false;
in_fixture = true;
return true;
}
void __igt_fixture_complete(void)
{
assert(in_fixture);
in_fixture = false;
}
void __igt_fixture_end(void)
{
assert(in_fixture);
in_fixture = false;
longjmp(igt_subtest_jmpbuf, 1);
}
bool igt_exit_called;
static void check_igt_exit(int sig)
{
/* When not killed by a signal check that igt_exit() has been properly
* called. */
assert(sig != 0 || igt_exit_called);
}
static void print_version(void)
{
struct utsname uts;
if (list_subtests)
return;
uname(&uts);
fprintf(stdout, "IGT-Version: %s-%s (%s) (%s: %s %s)\n", PACKAGE_VERSION,
IGT_GIT_SHA1, TARGET_CPU_PLATFORM,
uts.sysname, uts.release, uts.machine);
}
static void print_usage(const char *command_str, const char *help_str,
bool output_on_stderr)
{
FILE *f = output_on_stderr ? stderr : stdout;
fprintf(f, "Usage: %s [OPTIONS]\n"
" --list-subtests\n"
" --run-subtest <pattern>\n", command_str);
if (help_str)
fprintf(f, "%s\n", help_str);
}
static void oom_adjust_for_doom(void)
{
int fd;
const char always_kill[] = "1000";
fd = open("/proc/self/oom_score_adj", O_WRONLY);
igt_assert(fd != -1);
igt_assert(write(fd, always_kill, sizeof(always_kill)) == sizeof(always_kill));
}
/**
* igt_subtest_init_parse_opts:
* @argc: argc from the test's main()
* @argv: argv from the test's main()
* @extra_short_opts: getopt_long() compliant list with additional short options
* @extra_long_opts: getopt_long() compliant list with additional long options
* @help_str: help string for the additional options
* @extra_opt_handler: handler for the additional options
*
* This function handles the subtest related cmdline options and allows an
* arbitrary set of additional options. This is useful for tests which have
* additional knobs to tune when run manually like the number of rounds execute
* or the size of the allocated buffer objects.
*
* Tests without special needs should just use igt_subtest_init() or use
* #igt_main directly instead of their own main() function.
*
* Returns: Forwards any option parsing errors from getopt_long.
*/
int igt_subtest_init_parse_opts(int argc, char **argv,
const char *extra_short_opts,
struct option *extra_long_opts,
const char *help_str,
igt_opt_handler_t extra_opt_handler)
{
int c, option_index = 0;
static struct option long_options[] = {
{"list-subtests", 0, 0, 'l'},
{"run-subtest", 1, 0, 'r'},
{"help", 0, 0, 'h'},
};
const char *command_str;
char *short_opts;
struct option *combined_opts;
int extra_opt_count;
int all_opt_count;
int ret = 0;
test_with_subtests = true;
command_str = argv[0];
if (strrchr(command_str, '/'))
command_str = strrchr(command_str, '/') + 1;
/* First calculate space for all passed-in extra long options */
all_opt_count = 0;
while (extra_long_opts && extra_long_opts[all_opt_count].name)
all_opt_count++;
extra_opt_count = all_opt_count;
all_opt_count += ARRAY_SIZE(long_options);
combined_opts = malloc(all_opt_count * sizeof(*combined_opts));
memcpy(combined_opts, extra_long_opts,
extra_opt_count * sizeof(*combined_opts));
/* Copy the subtest long options (and the final NULL entry) */
memcpy(&combined_opts[extra_opt_count], long_options,
ARRAY_SIZE(long_options) * sizeof(*combined_opts));
ret = asprintf(&short_opts, "%sh",
extra_short_opts ? extra_short_opts : "");
assert(ret >= 0);
while ((c = getopt_long(argc, argv, short_opts, combined_opts,
&option_index)) != -1) {
switch(c) {
case 'l':
if (!run_single_subtest)
list_subtests = true;
break;
case 'r':
if (!list_subtests)
run_single_subtest = strdup(optarg);
break;
case 'h':
print_usage(command_str, help_str, false);
ret = -1;
goto out;
case '?':
if (opterr) {
print_usage(command_str, help_str, true);
ret = -2;
goto out;
}
/*
* Just ignore the error, since the unknown argument
* can be something the caller understands and will
* parse by doing a second getopt scanning.
*/
break;
default:
ret = extra_opt_handler(c, option_index);
if (ret)
goto out;
}
}
igt_install_exit_handler(check_igt_exit);
oom_adjust_for_doom();
out:
free(short_opts);
free(combined_opts);
print_version();
return ret;
}
enum igt_log_level igt_log_level = IGT_LOG_INFO;
static void common_init(void)
{
char *env = getenv("IGT_LOG_LEVEL");
if (!env)
return;
if (strcmp(env, "debug") == 0)
igt_log_level = IGT_LOG_DEBUG;
else if (strcmp(env, "info") == 0)
igt_log_level = IGT_LOG_INFO;
else if (strcmp(env, "warn") == 0)
igt_log_level = IGT_LOG_WARN;
else if (strcmp(env, "none") == 0)
igt_log_level = IGT_LOG_NONE;
}
/**
* igt_subtest_init:
* @argc: argc from the test's main()
* @argv: argv from the test's main()
*
* This initializes the for tests with subtests without the need for additional
* cmdline options. It is just a simplified version of
* igt_subtest_init_parse_opts().
*
* If there's not a reason to the contrary it's less error prone to just use an
* #igt_main block instead of stitching the tests's main() function together
* manually.
*/
void igt_subtest_init(int argc, char **argv)
{
int ret;
/* supress getopt errors about unknown options */
opterr = 0;
ret = igt_subtest_init_parse_opts(argc, argv, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);
if (ret < 0)
/* exit with no error for -h/--help */
exit(ret == -1 ? 0 : ret);
/* reset opt parsing */
optind = 1;
common_init();
}
/**
* igt_simple_init:
*
* This initializes a simple test without any support for subtests.
*
* If there's not a reason to the contrary it's less error prone to just use an
* #igt_simple_main block instead of stitching the tests's main() function together
* manually.
*/
void igt_simple_init(void)
{
print_version();
oom_adjust_for_doom();
common_init();
}
/*
* Note: Testcases which use these helpers MUST NOT output anything to stdout
* outside of places protected by igt_run_subtest checks - the piglit
* runner adds every line to the subtest list.
*/
bool __igt_run_subtest(const char *subtest_name)
{
assert(!in_subtest);
assert(!in_fixture);
if (list_subtests) {
printf("%s\n", subtest_name);
return false;
}
if (run_single_subtest &&
strcmp(subtest_name, run_single_subtest) != 0)
return false;
if (skip_subtests_henceforth) {
printf("Subtest %s: %s\n", subtest_name,
skip_subtests_henceforth == SKIP ?
"SKIP" : "FAIL");
return false;
}
return (in_subtest = subtest_name);
}
/**
* igt_subtest_name:
*
* Returns: The name of the currently executed subtest or NULL if called from
* outside a subtest block.
*/
const char *igt_subtest_name(void)
{
return in_subtest;
}
/**
* igt_only_list_subtests:
*
* Returns: Returns true if only subtest should be listed and any setup code
* must be skipped, false otherwise.
*/
bool igt_only_list_subtests(void)
{
return list_subtests;
}
static bool skipped_one = false;
static bool succeeded_one = false;
static bool failed_one = false;
static int igt_exitcode;
static void exit_subtest(const char *) __attribute__((noreturn));
static void exit_subtest(const char *result)
{
printf("Subtest %s: %s\n", in_subtest, result);
in_subtest = NULL;
longjmp(igt_subtest_jmpbuf, 1);
}
/**
* igt_skip:
* @f: format string
* @...: optional arguments used in the format string
*
* Subtest aware test skipping. The format string is printed to stderr as the
* reason why the test skipped.
*
* For tests with subtests this will either bail out of the current subtest or
* mark all subsequent subtests as SKIP (presuming some global setup code
* failed).
*
* For normal tests without subtest it will directly exit.
*/
void igt_skip(const char *f, ...)
{
va_list args;
skipped_one = true;
assert(!test_child);
if (!igt_only_list_subtests()) {
va_start(args, f);
vprintf(f, args);
va_end(args);
}
if (in_subtest) {
exit_subtest("SKIP");
} else if (test_with_subtests) {
skip_subtests_henceforth = SKIP;
assert(in_fixture);
__igt_fixture_end();
} else {
exit(77);
}
}
void __igt_skip_check(const char *file, const int line,
const char *func, const char *check,
const char *f, ...)
{
va_list args;
int err = errno;
if (f) {
static char *buf;
/* igt_skip never returns, so try to not leak too badly. */
if (buf)
free(buf);
va_start(args, f);
vasprintf(&buf, f, args);
va_end(args);
igt_skip("Test requirement not met in function %s, file %s:%i:\n"
"Last errno: %i, %s\n"
"Test requirement: (%s)\n%s",
func, file, line, err, strerror(err), check, buf);
} else {
igt_skip("Test requirement not met in function %s, file %s:%i:\n"
"Last errno: %i, %s\n"
"Test requirement: (%s)\n",
func, file, line, err, strerror(err), check);
}
}
/**
* igt_success:
*
* Complete a (subtest) as successfull
*
* This bails out of a subtests and marks it as successful. For global tests it
* it won't bail out of anything.
*/
void igt_success(void)
{
succeeded_one = true;
if (in_subtest)
exit_subtest("SUCCESS");
}
/**
* igt_fail:
* @exitcode: exitcode
*
* Fail a testcase. The exitcode is used as the exit code of the test process.
* It may not be 0 (which indicates success) or 77 (which indicates a skipped
* test).
*
* For tests with subtests this will either bail out of the current subtest or
* mark all subsequent subtests as FAIL (presuming some global setup code
* failed).
*
* For normal tests without subtest it will directly exit with the given
* exitcode.
*/
void igt_fail(int exitcode)
{
assert(exitcode != 0 && exitcode != 77);
if (!failed_one)
igt_exitcode = exitcode;
failed_one = true;
/* Silent exit, parent will do the yelling. */
if (test_child)
exit(exitcode);
if (in_subtest)
exit_subtest("FAIL");
else {
assert(!test_with_subtests || in_fixture);
if (in_fixture) {
skip_subtests_henceforth = FAIL;
__igt_fixture_end();
}
exit(exitcode);
}
}
static bool run_under_gdb(void)
{
char buf[1024];
sprintf(buf, "/proc/%d/exe", getppid());
return (readlink (buf, buf, sizeof (buf)) != -1 &&
strncmp(basename(buf), "gdb", 3) == 0);
}
void __igt_fail_assert(int exitcode, const char *file,
const int line, const char *func, const char *assertion,
const char *f, ...)
{
va_list args;
int err = errno;
printf("Test assertion failure function %s, file %s:%i:\n"
"Last errno: %i, %s\n"
"Failed assertion: %s\n",
func, file, line, err, strerror(err), assertion);
if (f) {
va_start(args, f);
vprintf(f, args);
va_end(args);
}
if (run_under_gdb())
abort();
igt_fail(exitcode);
}
/**
* igt_exit:
*
* exit() for both types (simple and with subtests) of i-g-t tests.
*
* This will exit the test with the right exit code when subtests have been
* skipped. For normal tests it exits with a successful exit code, presuming
* everything has worked out. For subtests it also checks that at least one
* subtest has been run (save when only listing subtests.
*
* It is an error to normally exit a test with subtests without calling
* igt_exit() - without it the result reporting will be wrong. To avoid such
* issues it is highly recommended to use #igt_main instead of a hand-rolled
* main() function.
*/
void igt_exit(void)
{
igt_exit_called = true;
if (igt_only_list_subtests())
exit(0);
if (!test_with_subtests)
exit(0);
/* Calling this without calling one of the above is a failure */
assert(skipped_one || succeeded_one || failed_one);
if (failed_one)
exit(igt_exitcode);
else if (succeeded_one)
exit(0);
else
exit(77);
}
/* fork support code */
static int helper_process_count;
static pid_t helper_process_pids[] =
{ -1, -1, -1, -1};
static void reset_helper_process_list(void)
{
for (int i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(helper_process_pids); i++)
helper_process_pids[i] = -1;
helper_process_count = 0;
}
static void fork_helper_exit_handler(int sig)
{
for (int i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(helper_process_pids); i++) {
pid_t pid = helper_process_pids[i];
int status, ret;
if (pid != -1) {
/* Someone forgot to fill up the array? */
assert(pid != 0);
ret = kill(pid, SIGQUIT);
assert(ret == 0);
while (waitpid(pid, &status, 0) == -1 &&
errno == EINTR)
;
helper_process_count--;
}
}
assert(helper_process_count == 0);
}
bool __igt_fork_helper(struct igt_helper_process *proc)
{
pid_t pid;
int id;
assert(!proc->running);
assert(helper_process_count < ARRAY_SIZE(helper_process_pids));
for (id = 0; helper_process_pids[id] != -1; id++)
;
igt_install_exit_handler(fork_helper_exit_handler);
switch (pid = fork()) {
case -1:
igt_assert(0);
case 0:
exit_handler_count = 0;
reset_helper_process_list();
oom_adjust_for_doom();
return true;
default:
proc->running = true;
proc->pid = pid;
proc->id = id;
helper_process_pids[id] = pid;
helper_process_count++;
return false;
}
}
/**
* igt_stop_helper:
* @proc: #igt_helper_process structure
*
* Terminates a helper process. It is an error to call this on a helper process
* which hasn't been spawned yet.
*/
void igt_stop_helper(struct igt_helper_process *proc)
{
int status, ret;
assert(proc->running);
ret = kill(proc->pid,
proc->use_SIGKILL ? SIGKILL : SIGQUIT);
assert(ret == 0);
while (waitpid(proc->pid, &status, 0) == -1 &&
errno == EINTR)
;
igt_assert(WIFSIGNALED(status) &&
WTERMSIG(status) == (proc->use_SIGKILL ? SIGKILL : SIGQUIT));
proc->running = false;
helper_process_pids[proc->id] = -1;
helper_process_count--;
}
/**
* igt_wait_helper:
* @proc: #igt_helper_process structure
*
* Joins a helper process. It is an error to call this on a helper process which
* hasn't been spawned yet.
*/
void igt_wait_helper(struct igt_helper_process *proc)
{
int status;
assert(proc->running);
while (waitpid(proc->pid, &status, 0) == -1 &&
errno == EINTR)
;
igt_assert(WIFEXITED(status) && WEXITSTATUS(status) == 0);
proc->running = false;
helper_process_pids[proc->id] = -1;
helper_process_count--;
}
static void children_exit_handler(int sig)
{
int ret;
assert(!test_child);
for (int nc = 0; nc < num_test_children; nc++) {
int status = -1;
ret = kill(test_children[nc], SIGQUIT);
assert(ret == 0);
while (waitpid(test_children[nc], &status, 0) == -1 &&
errno == EINTR)
;
}
num_test_children = 0;
}
bool __igt_fork(void)
{
assert(!test_with_subtests || in_subtest);
assert(!test_child);
igt_install_exit_handler(children_exit_handler);
if (num_test_children >= test_children_sz) {
if (!test_children_sz)
test_children_sz = 4;
else
test_children_sz *= 2;
test_children = realloc(test_children,
sizeof(pid_t)*test_children_sz);
igt_assert(test_children);
}
switch (test_children[num_test_children++] = fork()) {
case -1:
igt_assert(0);
case 0:
test_child = true;
exit_handler_count = 0;
reset_helper_process_list();
oom_adjust_for_doom();
return true;
default:
return false;
}
}
/**
* igt_waitchildren:
*
* Wait for all children forked with igt_fork.
*
* The magic here is that exit codes from children will be correctly propagated
* to the main thread, including the relevant exitcode if a child thread failed.
* Of course if multiple children failed with differen exitcodes the resulting
* exitcode will be non-deterministic.
*
* Note that igt_skip() will not be forwarded, feature tests need to be done
* before spawning threads with igt_fork().
*/
void igt_waitchildren(void)
{
assert(!test_child);
for (int nc = 0; nc < num_test_children; nc++) {
int status = -1;
while (waitpid(test_children[nc], &status, 0) == -1 &&
errno == EINTR)
;
if (status != 0) {
if (WIFEXITED(status)) {
printf("child %i failed with exit status %i\n",
nc, WEXITSTATUS(status));
igt_fail(WEXITSTATUS(status));
} else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) {
printf("child %i died with signal %i, %s\n",
nc, WTERMSIG(status),
strsignal(WTERMSIG(status)));
igt_fail(99);
} else {
printf("Unhandled failure in child %i\n", nc);
abort();
}
}
}
num_test_children = 0;
}
/* exit handler code */
#define MAX_SIGNALS 32
#define MAX_EXIT_HANDLERS 5
static struct {
sighandler_t handler;
bool installed;
} orig_sig[MAX_SIGNALS];
static igt_exit_handler_t exit_handler_fn[MAX_EXIT_HANDLERS];
static bool exit_handler_disabled;
static sigset_t saved_sig_mask;
static const int handled_signals[] =
{ SIGINT, SIGHUP, SIGTERM, SIGQUIT, SIGPIPE, SIGABRT, SIGSEGV, SIGBUS };
static int install_sig_handler(int sig_num, sighandler_t handler)
{
orig_sig[sig_num].handler = signal(sig_num, handler);
if (orig_sig[sig_num].handler == SIG_ERR)
return -1;
orig_sig[sig_num].installed = true;
return 0;
}
static void restore_sig_handler(int sig_num)
{
/* Just restore the default so that we properly fall over. */
signal(sig_num, SIG_DFL);
}
static void restore_all_sig_handler(void)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(orig_sig); i++)
restore_sig_handler(i);
}
static void call_exit_handlers(int sig)
{
int i;
if (!exit_handler_count) {
return;
}
for (i = exit_handler_count - 1; i >= 0; i--)
exit_handler_fn[i](sig);
/* ensure we don't get called twice */
exit_handler_count = 0;
}
static void igt_atexit_handler(void)
{
restore_all_sig_handler();
if (!exit_handler_disabled)
call_exit_handlers(0);
}
static void fatal_sig_handler(int sig)
{
pid_t pid, tid;
restore_all_sig_handler();
/*
* exit_handler_disabled is always false here, since when we set it
* we also block signals.
*/
call_exit_handlers(sig);
/* Workaround cached PID and TID races on glibc and Bionic libc. */
pid = syscall(SYS_getpid);
tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);
syscall(SYS_tgkill, pid, tid, sig);
}
/**
* igt_install_exit_handler:
* @fn: exit handler function
*
* Set a handler that will be called either when the process calls exit() or
* returns from the main function, or one of the signals in 'handled_signals'
* is raised. MAX_EXIT_HANDLERS handlers can be installed, each of which will
* be called only once, even if a subsequent signal is raised. If the exit
* handlers are called due to a signal, the signal will be re-raised with the
* original signal disposition after all handlers returned.
*
* The handler will be passed the signal number if called due to a signal, or
* 0 otherwise. Exit handlers can also be used from test children spawned with
* igt_fork(), but not from within helper processes spawned with
* igt_fork_helper(). The list of exit handlers is reset when forking to
* avoid issues with children cleanup up the parent's state too early.
*/
void igt_install_exit_handler(igt_exit_handler_t fn)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < exit_handler_count; i++)
if (exit_handler_fn[i] == fn)
return;
igt_assert(exit_handler_count < MAX_EXIT_HANDLERS);
exit_handler_fn[exit_handler_count] = fn;
exit_handler_count++;
if (exit_handler_count > 1)
return;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(handled_signals); i++) {
if (install_sig_handler(handled_signals[i],
fatal_sig_handler))
goto err;
}
if (atexit(igt_atexit_handler))
goto err;
return;
err:
restore_all_sig_handler();
exit_handler_count--;
igt_assert_f(0, "failed to install the signal handler\n");
}
/**
* igt_disable_exit_handler:
*
* Temporarily disable all exit handlers. Useful for library code doing tricky
* things.
*/
void igt_disable_exit_handler(void)
{
sigset_t set;
int i;
if (exit_handler_disabled)
return;
sigemptyset(&set);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(handled_signals); i++)
sigaddset(&set, handled_signals[i]);
if (sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &set, &saved_sig_mask)) {
perror("sigprocmask");
return;
}
exit_handler_disabled = true;
}
/**
* igt_enable_exit_handler:
*
* Re-enable all exit handlers temporarily disabled with
* igt_disable_exit_handler().
*/
void igt_enable_exit_handler(void)
{
if (!exit_handler_disabled)
return;
if (sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &saved_sig_mask, NULL)) {
perror("sigprocmask");
return;
}
exit_handler_disabled = false;
}
/* simulation enviroment support */
/**
* igt_run_in_simulation:
*
* This function can be used to select a reduced test set when running in
* simulation enviroments. This i-g-t mode is selected by setting the
* INTEL_SIMULATION enviroment variable to 1.
*
* Returns: True when run in simulation mode, false otherwise.
*/
bool igt_run_in_simulation(void)
{
static int simulation = -1;
if (simulation == -1)
simulation = igt_check_boolean_env_var("INTEL_SIMULATION", false);
return simulation;
}
/**
* igt_skip_on_simulation:
*
* Skip tests when INTEL_SIMULATION environment variable is set. It uses
* igt_skip() internally and hence is fully subtest aware.
*
* Note that in contrast to all other functions which use igt_skip() internally
* it is allowed to use this outside of an #igt_fixture block in a test with
* subtests. This is because in contrast to most other test requirements,
* checking for simulation mode doesn't depend upon the present hardware and it
* so makes a lot of sense to have this check in the outermost #igt_main block.
*/
void igt_skip_on_simulation(void)
{
if (igt_only_list_subtests())
return;
if (!in_fixture) {
igt_fixture
igt_require(!igt_run_in_simulation());
} else
igt_require(!igt_run_in_simulation());
}
/* structured logging */
/**
* igt_log:
* @level: #igt_log_level
* @format: format string
* @...: optional arguments used in the format string
*
* This is the generic structure logging helper function. i-g-t testcase should
* output all normal message to stdout. Warning level message should be printed
* to stderr and the test runner should treat this as an intermediate result
* between SUCESS and FAILURE.
*
* The log level can be set through the IGT_LOG_LEVEL enviroment variable with
* values "debug", "info", "warn" and "none". By default verbose debug message
* are disabled. "none" completely disables all output and is not recommended
* since crucial issues only reported at the IGT_LOG_WARN level are ignored.
*/
void igt_log(enum igt_log_level level, const char *format, ...)
{
va_list args;
assert(format);
if (igt_log_level > level)
return;
va_start(args, format);
if (level == IGT_LOG_WARN) {
fflush(stdout);
vfprintf(stderr, format, args);
} else
vprintf(format, args);
va_end(args);
}
/**
* igt_vlog:
* @level: #igt_log_level
* @format: format string
* @args: variable arguments lists
*
* This is the generic logging helper function using an explicit varargs
* structure and hence useful to implement domain-specific logging
* functions.
*
* If there is no need to wrap up a vararg list in the caller it is simpler to
* just use igt_log().
*/
void igt_vlog(enum igt_log_level level, const char *format, va_list args)
{
assert(format);
if (igt_log_level > level)
return;
if (level == IGT_LOG_WARN) {
fflush(stdout);
vfprintf(stderr, format, args);
} else
vprintf(format, args);
}
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