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#! @PERL@
##--------------------------------------------------------------------##
##--- Valgrind regression testing script vg_regtest ---##
##--------------------------------------------------------------------##
# This file is part of Valgrind, a dynamic binary instrumentation
# framework.
#
# Copyright (C) 2003 Nicholas Nethercote
# njn@valgrind.org
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
# published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
# License, or (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA
# 02111-1307, USA.
#
# The GNU General Public License is contained in the file COPYING.
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# usage: vg_regtest [options] <dirs | files>
#
# Options:
# --all: run tests in all subdirs
# --valgrind: valgrind launcher to use. Default is ./coregrind/valgrind.
# (This option should probably only be used in conjunction with
# --valgrind-lib.)
# --valgrind-lib: valgrind libraries to use. Default is $tests_dir/.in_place.
# (This option should probably only be used in conjunction with
# --valgrind.)
#
# The easiest way is to run all tests in valgrind/ with (assuming you installed
# in $PREFIX):
#
# $PREFIX/bin/vg_regtest --all
#
# You can specify individual files to test, or whole directories, or both.
# Directories are traversed recursively, except for ones named, for example,
# CVS/ or docs/.
#
# Each test is defined in a file <test>.vgtest, containing one or more of the
# following lines, in any order:
# - prog: <prog to run> (compulsory)
# - args: <args for prog> (default: none)
# - vgopts: <Valgrind options> (default: none;
# multiple are allowed)
# - stdout_filter: <filter to run stdout through> (default: none)
# - stderr_filter: <filter to run stderr through> (default: ./filter_stderr)
# - prereq: <prerequisite command> (default: none)
# - post: <post-test check command> (default: none)
# - cleanup: <post-test cleanup cmd> (default: none)
#
# Note that filters are necessary for stderr results to filter out things that
# always change, eg. process id numbers.
#
# Expected stdout (filtered) is kept in <test>.stdout.exp* (can be more
# than one expected output). It can be missing if it would be empty. Expected
# stderr (filtered) is kept in <test>.stderr.exp*. There must be at least
# one stderr.exp* file. Any .exp* file that ends in '~' or '#' is ignored;
# this is because Emacs creates temporary files of these names.
#
# If results don't match, the output can be found in <test>.std<strm>.out,
# and the diff between expected and actual in <test>.std<strm>.diff*.
#
# The prerequisite command, if present, works like this:
# - if it returns 0 the test is run
# - if it returns 1 the test is skipped
# - if it returns anything else the script aborts.
# The idea here is results other than 0 or 1 are likely to be due to
# problems with the commands, and you don't want to conflate them with the 1
# case, which would happen if you just tested for zero or non-zero.
#
# The post-test command, if present, must return 0 and its stdout must match
# the expected stdout which is kept in <test>.post.exp*.
#
# Sometimes it is useful to run all the tests at a high sanity check
# level or with arbitrary other flags. To make this simple, extra
# options, applied to all tests run, are read from $EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS,
# and handed to valgrind prior to any other flags specified by the
# .vgtest file.
#
# Some more notes on adding regression tests for a new tool are in
# docs/xml/manual-writing-tools.xml.
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
use warnings;
use strict;
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Global vars
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
my $usage="\n"
. "Usage:\n"
. " vg_regtest [--all, --valgrind, --valgrind-lib]\n"
. " Use EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS to supply extra args for all tests\n"
. "\n";
my $tmp="vg_regtest.tmp.$$";
# Test variables
my $vgopts; # valgrind options
my $prog; # test prog
my $args; # test prog args
my $stdout_filter; # filter program to run stdout results file through
my $stderr_filter; # filter program to run stderr results file through
my $prereq; # prerequisite test to satisfy before running test
my $post; # check command after running test
my $cleanup; # cleanup command to run
my @failures; # List of failed tests
my $num_tests_done = 0;
my %num_failures = (stderr => 0, stdout => 0, post => 0);
# Default valgrind to use is this build tree's (uninstalled) one
my $valgrind = "./coregrind/valgrind";
chomp(my $tests_dir = `pwd`);
my $valgrind_lib = "$tests_dir/.in_place";
# default filter is the one named "filter_stderr" in the test's directory
my $default_stderr_filter = "filter_stderr";
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Process command line, setup
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# If $prog is a relative path, it prepends $dir to it. Useful for two reasons:
#
# 1. Can prepend "." onto programs to avoid trouble with users who don't have
# "." in their path (by making $dir = ".")
# 2. Can prepend the current dir to make the command absolute to avoid
# subsequent trouble when we change directories.
#
# Also checks the program exists and is executable.
sub validate_program ($$$$)
{
my ($dir, $prog, $must_exist, $must_be_executable) = @_;
# If absolute path, leave it alone. If relative, make it
# absolute -- by prepending current dir -- so we can change
# dirs and still use it.
$prog = "$dir/$prog" if ($prog !~ /^\//);
if ($must_exist) {
(-f $prog) or die "vg_regtest: `$prog' not found or not a file ($dir)\n";
}
if ($must_be_executable) {
(-x $prog) or die "vg_regtest: `$prog' not executable ($dir)\n";
}
return $prog;
}
sub process_command_line()
{
my $alldirs = 0;
my @fs;
for my $arg (@ARGV) {
if ($arg =~ /^-/) {
if ($arg =~ /^--all$/) {
$alldirs = 1;
} elsif ($arg =~ /^--valgrind=(.*)$/) {
$valgrind = $1;
} elsif ($arg =~ /^--valgrind-lib=(.*)$/) {
$valgrind_lib = $1;
} else {
die $usage;
}
} else {
push(@fs, $arg);
}
}
$valgrind = validate_program($tests_dir, $valgrind, 1, 0);
if ($alldirs) {
@fs = ();
foreach my $f (glob "*") {
push(@fs, $f) if (-d $f);
}
}
(0 != @fs) or die "No test files or directories specified\n";
return @fs;
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Read a .vgtest file
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub read_vgtest_file($)
{
my ($f) = @_;
# Defaults.
($vgopts, $prog, $args) = ("", undef, "");
($stdout_filter, $stderr_filter) = (undef, undef);
($prereq, $post, $cleanup) = (undef, undef, undef);
# Every test directory must have a "filter_stderr"
$stderr_filter = validate_program(".", $default_stderr_filter, 1, 1);
open(INPUTFILE, "< $f") || die "File $f not openable\n";
while (my $line = <INPUTFILE>) {
if ($line =~ /^\s*#/ || $line =~ /^\s*$/) {
next;
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*vgopts:\s*(.*)$/) {
$vgopts = $vgopts . " " . $1; # Nb: Make sure there's a space!
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*prog:\s*(.*)$/) {
$prog = validate_program(".", $1, 0, 0);
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*args:\s*(.*)$/) {
$args = $1;
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*stdout_filter:\s*(.*)$/) {
$stdout_filter = validate_program(".", $1, 1, 1);
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*stderr_filter:\s*(.*)$/) {
$stderr_filter = validate_program(".", $1, 1, 1);
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*prereq:\s*(.*)$/) {
$prereq = $1;
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*post:\s*(.*)$/) {
$post = $1;
} elsif ($line =~ /^\s*cleanup:\s*(.*)$/) {
$cleanup = $1;
} else {
die "Bad line in $f: $line\n";
}
}
close(INPUTFILE);
if (!defined $prog) {
$prog = ""; # allow no prog for testing error and --help cases
}
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Do one test
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Since most of the program time is spent in system() calls, need this to
# propagate a Ctrl-C enabling us to quit.
sub mysystem($)
{
my $exit_code = system($_[0]);
($exit_code == 2) and exit 1; # 2 is SIGINT
return $exit_code;
}
# from a directory name like "/foo/cachesim/tests/" determine the tool name
sub determine_tool()
{
my $dir = `pwd`;
$dir =~ /.*\/([^\/]+)\/tests.*/; # foo/tool_name/tests/foo
return $1;
}
# Compare output against expected output; it should match at least one of
# them.
sub do_diffs($$$$)
{
my ($fullname, $name, $mid, $f_exps) = @_;
for my $f_exp (@$f_exps) {
(-r $f_exp) or die "Could not read `$f_exp'\n";
# Emacs produces temporary files that end in '~' and '#'. We ignore
# these.
if ($f_exp !~ /[~#]$/) {
# $n is the (optional) suffix after the ".exp"; we tack it onto
# the ".diff" file.
my $n = "";
if ($f_exp =~ /.*\.exp(.*)$/) {
$n = $1;
} else {
$n = "";
($f_exp eq "/dev/null") or die "Unexpected .exp file: $f_exp\n";
}
mysystem("@DIFF@ $f_exp $name.$mid.out > $name.$mid.diff$n");
if (not -s "$name.$mid.diff$n") {
# A match; remove .out and any previously created .diff files.
unlink("$name.$mid.out");
unlink(<$name.$mid.diff*>);
return;
}
}
}
# If we reach here, none of the .exp files matched.
print "*** $name failed ($mid) ***\n";
push(@failures, sprintf("%-40s ($mid)", "$fullname"));
$num_failures{$mid}++;
}
sub do_one_test($$)
{
my ($dir, $vgtest) = @_;
$vgtest =~ /^(.*)\.vgtest/;
my $name = $1;
my $fullname = "$dir/$name";
# Pull any extra options (for example, --sanity-level=4)
# from $EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS.
my $maybe_extraopts = $ENV{"EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS"};
my $extraopts = $maybe_extraopts ? $maybe_extraopts : "";
read_vgtest_file($vgtest);
if (defined $prereq) {
my $prereq_res = system("$prereq");
if (0 == $prereq_res) {
# Do nothing (ie. continue with the test)
} elsif (256 == $prereq_res) {
# Nb: weird Perl-ism -- exit code of '1' is seen by Perl as 256...
# Prereq failed, skip.
printf("%-16s (skipping, prereq failed: $prereq)\n", "$name:");
return;
} else {
# Bad prereq; abort.
$prereq_res /= 256;
die "prereq returned $prereq_res: $prereq\n";
}
}
printf("%-16s valgrind $extraopts $vgopts $prog $args\n", "$name:");
# Pass the appropriate --tool option for the directory (can be overridden
# by an "args:" line, though). Set both VALGRIND_LIB and
# VALGRIND_LIB_INNER in case this Valgrind was configured with
# --enable-inner.
my $tool=determine_tool();
mysystem("VALGRIND_LIB=$valgrind_lib VALGRIND_LIB_INNER=$valgrind_lib "
. "$valgrind --command-line-only=yes --memcheck:leak-check=no "
. "--tool=$tool $extraopts $vgopts "
. "$prog $args > $name.stdout.out 2> $name.stderr.out");
# Filter stdout
if (defined $stdout_filter) {
mysystem("$stdout_filter < $name.stdout.out > $tmp");
rename($tmp, "$name.stdout.out");
}
# Find all the .stdout.exp files. If none, use /dev/null.
my @stdout_exps = <$name.stdout.exp*>;
@stdout_exps = ( "/dev/null" ) if (0 == scalar @stdout_exps);
do_diffs($fullname, $name, "stdout", \@stdout_exps);
# Filter stderr
mysystem("$stderr_filter < $name.stderr.out > $tmp");
rename($tmp, "$name.stderr.out");
# Find all the .stderr.exp files. At least one must exist.
my @stderr_exps = <$name.stderr.exp*>;
(0 != scalar @stderr_exps) or die "Could not find `$name.stderr.exp*'\n";
do_diffs($fullname, $name, "stderr", \@stderr_exps);
# Maybe do post-test check
if (defined $post) {
if (mysystem("$post > $name.post.out") != 0) {
print("post check failed: $post\n");
$num_failures{"post"}++;
} else {
# Find all the .post.exp files. If none, use /dev/null.
my @post_exps = <$name.post.exp*>;
@post_exps = ( "/dev/null" ) if (0 == scalar @post_exps);
do_diffs($fullname, $name, "post", \@post_exps);
}
}
if (defined $cleanup) {
(system("$cleanup") == 0) or
print("(cleanup operation failed: $cleanup)\n");
}
$num_tests_done++;
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test one directory (and any subdirs)
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub test_one_dir($$); # forward declaration
sub test_one_dir($$)
{
my ($dir, $prev_dirs) = @_;
$dir =~ s/\/$//; # trim a trailing '/'
# Ignore dirs into which we should not recurse.
if ($dir =~ /^(BitKeeper|CVS|SCCS|docs|doc)$/) { return; }
(-x "$tests_dir/tests/arch_test") or die
"vg_regtest: 'arch_test' is missing. Did you forget to 'make check'?\n";
# Ignore any dir whose name matches that of an architecture which is not
# the architecture we are running on. Eg. when running on x86, ignore
# ppc/ directories ('arch_test' returns 1 for this case). Likewise for
# the OS and platform.
# Nb: weird Perl-ism -- exit code of '1' is seen by Perl as 256...
if (256 == system("$tests_dir/tests/arch_test $dir")) { return; }
if (256 == system("$tests_dir/tests/os_test $dir")) { return; }
if ($dir =~ /(\w+)-(\w+)/ &&
256 == system("sh $tests_dir/tests/platform_test $1 $2")) { return; }
chdir($dir) or die "Could not change into $dir\n";
# Nb: Don't prepend a '/' to the base directory
my $full_dir = $prev_dirs . ($prev_dirs eq "" ? "" : "/") . $dir;
my $dashes = "-" x (50 - length $full_dir);
my @fs = glob "*";
my $found_tests = (0 != (grep { $_ =~ /\.vgtest$/ } @fs));
if ($found_tests) {
print "-- Running tests in $full_dir $dashes\n";
}
foreach my $f (@fs) {
if (-d $f) {
test_one_dir($f, $full_dir);
} elsif ($f =~ /\.vgtest$/) {
do_one_test($full_dir, $f);
}
}
if ($found_tests) {
print "-- Finished tests in $full_dir $dashes\n";
}
chdir("..");
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Summarise results
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub plural($)
{
return ( $_[0] == 1 ? "" : "s" );
}
sub summarise_results
{
my $x = ( $num_tests_done == 1 ? "test" : "tests" );
printf("\n== %d test%s, %d stderr failure%s, %d stdout failure%s, "
. "%d post failure%s ==\n",
$num_tests_done, plural($num_tests_done),
$num_failures{"stderr"}, plural($num_failures{"stderr"}),
$num_failures{"stdout"}, plural($num_failures{"stdout"}),
$num_failures{"post"}, plural($num_failures{"post"}));
foreach my $failure (@failures) {
print "$failure\n";
}
print "\n";
}
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# main(), sort of
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub warn_about_EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS()
{
print "WARNING: \$EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS is set. You probably don't want\n";
print "to run the regression tests with it set, unless you are doing some\n";
print "strange experiment, and/or you really know what you are doing.\n";
print "\n";
}
# nuke VALGRIND_OPTS
$ENV{"VALGRIND_OPTS"} = "";
if ($ENV{"EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS"}) {
print "\n";
warn_about_EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS();
}
my @fs = process_command_line();
foreach my $f (@fs) {
if (-d $f) {
test_one_dir($f, "");
} else {
# Allow the .vgtest suffix to be given or omitted
if ($f =~ /.vgtest$/ && -r $f) {
# do nothing
} elsif (-r "$f.vgtest") {
$f = "$f.vgtest";
} else {
die "`$f' neither a directory nor a readable test file/name\n"
}
my $dir = `dirname $f`; chomp $dir;
my $file = `basename $f`; chomp $file;
chdir($dir) or die "Could not change into $dir\n";
do_one_test($dir, $file);
chdir($tests_dir);
}
}
summarise_results();
if ($ENV{"EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS"}) {
warn_about_EXTRA_REGTEST_OPTS();
}
if (0 == $num_failures{"stdout"} &&
0 == $num_failures{"stderr"} &&
0 == $num_failures{"post"}) {
exit 0;
} else {
exit 1;
}
##--------------------------------------------------------------------##
##--- end vg_regtest ---##
##--------------------------------------------------------------------##