iotests: Restore stty settings on completion

Executing qemu with a terminal as stdin will temporarily alter stty
settings on that terminal (for example, disabling echo), because of
how we run both the monitor and any multiplexing with guest input.
Normally, qemu restores the original settings on exit; but if an
iotest triggers qemu to abort in the middle, we can be left with
the altered terminal setup.  This can make life very annoying when
debugging an iotest failure (not everyone remembers the trick of
blind-typing 'stty sane' without echo, and some people prefer
terminal settings that are slightly different than the defaults
picked by 'stty sane').

It is possible to avoid qemu corrupting the terminal by not passing
a terminal to qemu's stdin in the first place (as in, use
'./check ... </dev/null'), but that's extra typing to have to
remember.  But running 'exec </dev/null' in the harness seems like
it might be too heavy of a hammer.  So I instead went the the
solution of saving and restoring the stty settings, only when the
harness detects that it is run interactively.

I tested this patch by forcing an allocation failure (I can't
guarantee that this particular limit will work on all setups, but
it shows the idea):
 $ (ulimit -S -v 500000; ./check -qcow2 1)

Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Eric Blake 2017-10-05 14:02:45 -05:00 committed by Kevin Wolf
parent 9cdcfd9f7a
commit 8803714b53
1 changed files with 10 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -134,6 +134,13 @@ export VALGRIND_QEMU=
export IMGKEYSECRET=
export IMGOPTSSYNTAX=false
# Save current tty settings, since an aborting qemu call may leave things
# screwed up
STTY_RESTORE=
if test -t 0; then
STTY_RESTORE=$(stty -g)
fi
for r
do
@ -664,6 +671,9 @@ END { if (NR > 0) {
needwrap=false
fi
if test -n "$STTY_RESTORE"; then
stty $STTY_RESTORE
fi
rm -f "${TEST_DIR}"/*.out "${TEST_DIR}"/*.err "${TEST_DIR}"/*.time
rm -f "${TEST_DIR}"/check.pid "${TEST_DIR}"/check.sts
rm -f $tmp.*