qemu-e2k/scripts/tap-driver.pl
Paolo Bonzini 9df43317b8 test: replace gtester with a TAP driver
gtester is deprecated by upstream glib (see for example the announcement
at https://blog.gtk.org/2018/07/11/news-from-glib-2-58/) and it does
not support tests that call g_test_skip in some glib stable releases.

glib suggests instead using Automake's TAP support, which gtest itself
supports since version 2.38 (QEMU's minimum requirement is 2.40).
We do not support Automake, but we can use Automake's code to beautify
the TAP output.  I chose to use the Perl copy rather than the shell/awk
one, with some changes so that it can accept TAP through stdin, in order
to reuse Perl's TAP parsing package.  This also avoids duplicating the
parser between tap-driver.pl and tap-merge.pl.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <1543513531-1151-3-git-send-email-pbonzini@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2019-01-11 15:46:52 +01:00

379 lines
9.7 KiB
Perl
Executable File

#! /usr/bin/env perl
# Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Copyright (C) 2018 Red Hat, Inc.
#
# 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, 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, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
# ---------------------------------- #
# Imports, static data, and setup. #
# ---------------------------------- #
use warnings FATAL => 'all';
use strict;
use Getopt::Long ();
use TAP::Parser;
use Term::ANSIColor qw(:constants);
my $ME = "tap-driver.pl";
my $VERSION = "2018-11-30";
my $USAGE = <<'END';
Usage:
tap-driver [--test-name=TEST] [--color={always|never|auto}]
[--verbose] [--show-failures-only]
END
my $HELP = "$ME: TAP-aware test driver for QEMU testsuite harness." .
"\n" . $USAGE;
# It's important that NO_PLAN evaluates "false" as a boolean.
use constant NO_PLAN => 0;
use constant EARLY_PLAN => 1;
use constant LATE_PLAN => 2;
use constant DIAG_STRING => "#";
# ------------------- #
# Global variables. #
# ------------------- #
my $testno = 0; # Number of test results seen so far.
my $bailed_out = 0; # Whether a "Bail out!" directive has been seen.
my $failed = 0; # Final exit code
# Whether the TAP plan has been seen or not, and if yes, which kind
# it is ("early" is seen before any test result, "late" otherwise).
my $plan_seen = NO_PLAN;
# ----------------- #
# Option parsing. #
# ----------------- #
my %cfg = (
"color" => 0,
"verbose" => 0,
"show-failures-only" => 0,
);
my $color = "auto";
my $test_name = undef;
# Perl's Getopt::Long allows options to take optional arguments after a space.
# Prevent --color by itself from consuming other arguments
foreach (@ARGV) {
if ($_ eq "--color" || $_ eq "-color") {
$_ = "--color=$color";
}
}
Getopt::Long::GetOptions
(
'help' => sub { print $HELP; exit 0; },
'version' => sub { print "$ME $VERSION\n"; exit 0; },
'test-name=s' => \$test_name,
'color=s' => \$color,
'show-failures-only' => sub { $cfg{"show-failures-only"} = 1; },
'verbose' => sub { $cfg{"verbose"} = 1; },
) or exit 1;
if ($color =~ /^always$/i) {
$cfg{'color'} = 1;
} elsif ($color =~ /^never$/i) {
$cfg{'color'} = 0;
} elsif ($color =~ /^auto$/i) {
$cfg{'color'} = (-t STDOUT);
} else {
die "Invalid color mode: $color\n";
}
# ------------- #
# Prototypes. #
# ------------- #
sub colored ($$);
sub decorate_result ($);
sub extract_tap_comment ($);
sub handle_tap_bailout ($);
sub handle_tap_plan ($);
sub handle_tap_result ($);
sub is_null_string ($);
sub main ();
sub report ($;$);
sub stringify_result_obj ($);
sub testsuite_error ($);
# -------------- #
# Subroutines. #
# -------------- #
# If the given string is undefined or empty, return true, otherwise
# return false. This function is useful to avoid pitfalls like:
# if ($message) { print "$message\n"; }
# which wouldn't print anything if $message is the literal "0".
sub is_null_string ($)
{
my $str = shift;
return ! (defined $str and length $str);
}
sub stringify_result_obj ($)
{
my $result_obj = shift;
if ($result_obj->is_unplanned || $result_obj->number != $testno)
{
return "ERROR";
}
elsif ($plan_seen == LATE_PLAN)
{
return "ERROR";
}
elsif (!$result_obj->directive)
{
return $result_obj->is_ok ? "PASS" : "FAIL";
}
elsif ($result_obj->has_todo)
{
return $result_obj->is_actual_ok ? "XPASS" : "XFAIL";
}
elsif ($result_obj->has_skip)
{
return $result_obj->is_ok ? "SKIP" : "FAIL";
}
die "$ME: INTERNAL ERROR"; # NOTREACHED
}
sub colored ($$)
{
my ($color_string, $text) = @_;
return $color_string . $text . RESET;
}
sub decorate_result ($)
{
my $result = shift;
return $result unless $cfg{"color"};
my %color_for_result =
(
"ERROR" => BOLD.MAGENTA,
"PASS" => GREEN,
"XPASS" => BOLD.YELLOW,
"FAIL" => BOLD.RED,
"XFAIL" => YELLOW,
"SKIP" => BLUE,
);
if (my $color = $color_for_result{$result})
{
return colored ($color, $result);
}
else
{
return $result; # Don't colorize unknown stuff.
}
}
sub report ($;$)
{
my ($msg, $result, $explanation) = (undef, @_);
if ($result =~ /^(?:X?(?:PASS|FAIL)|SKIP|ERROR)/)
{
# Output on console might be colorized.
$msg = decorate_result($result);
if ($result =~ /^(?:PASS|XFAIL|SKIP)/)
{
return if $cfg{"show-failures-only"};
}
else
{
$failed = 1;
}
}
elsif ($result eq "#")
{
$msg = " ";
}
else
{
die "$ME: INTERNAL ERROR"; # NOTREACHED
}
$msg .= " $explanation" if defined $explanation;
print $msg . "\n";
}
sub testsuite_error ($)
{
report "ERROR", "- $_[0]";
}
sub handle_tap_result ($)
{
$testno++;
my $result_obj = shift;
my $test_result = stringify_result_obj $result_obj;
my $string = $result_obj->number;
my $description = $result_obj->description;
$string .= " $test_name" unless is_null_string $test_name;
$string .= " $description" unless is_null_string $description;
if ($plan_seen == LATE_PLAN)
{
$string .= " # AFTER LATE PLAN";
}
elsif ($result_obj->is_unplanned)
{
$string .= " # UNPLANNED";
}
elsif ($result_obj->number != $testno)
{
$string .= " # OUT-OF-ORDER (expecting $testno)";
}
elsif (my $directive = $result_obj->directive)
{
$string .= " # $directive";
my $explanation = $result_obj->explanation;
$string .= " $explanation"
unless is_null_string $explanation;
}
report $test_result, $string;
}
sub handle_tap_plan ($)
{
my $plan = shift;
if ($plan_seen)
{
# Error, only one plan per stream is acceptable.
testsuite_error "multiple test plans";
return;
}
# The TAP plan can come before or after *all* the TAP results; we speak
# respectively of an "early" or a "late" plan. If we see the plan line
# after at least one TAP result has been seen, assume we have a late
# plan; in this case, any further test result seen after the plan will
# be flagged as an error.
$plan_seen = ($testno >= 1 ? LATE_PLAN : EARLY_PLAN);
# If $testno > 0, we have an error ("too many tests run") that will be
# automatically dealt with later, so don't worry about it here. If
# $plan_seen is true, we have an error due to a repeated plan, and that
# has already been dealt with above. Otherwise, we have a valid "plan
# with SKIP" specification, and should report it as a particular kind
# of SKIP result.
if ($plan->directive && $testno == 0)
{
my $explanation = is_null_string ($plan->explanation) ?
undef : "- " . $plan->explanation;
report "SKIP", $explanation;
}
}
sub handle_tap_bailout ($)
{
my ($bailout, $msg) = ($_[0], "Bail out!");
$bailed_out = 1;
$msg .= " " . $bailout->explanation
unless is_null_string $bailout->explanation;
testsuite_error $msg;
}
sub extract_tap_comment ($)
{
my $line = shift;
if (index ($line, DIAG_STRING) == 0)
{
# Strip leading `DIAG_STRING' from `$line'.
$line = substr ($line, length (DIAG_STRING));
# And strip any leading and trailing whitespace left.
$line =~ s/(?:^\s*|\s*$)//g;
# Return what is left (if any).
return $line;
}
return "";
}
sub main ()
{
my $iterator = TAP::Parser::Iterator::Stream->new(\*STDIN);
my $parser = TAP::Parser->new ({iterator => $iterator });
while (defined (my $cur = $parser->next))
{
# Parsing of TAP input should stop after a "Bail out!" directive.
next if $bailed_out;
if ($cur->is_plan)
{
handle_tap_plan ($cur);
}
elsif ($cur->is_test)
{
handle_tap_result ($cur);
}
elsif ($cur->is_bailout)
{
handle_tap_bailout ($cur);
}
elsif ($cfg{"verbose"})
{
my $comment = extract_tap_comment ($cur->raw);
report "#", "$comment" if length $comment;
}
}
# A "Bail out!" directive should cause us to ignore any following TAP
# error.
if (!$bailed_out)
{
if (!$plan_seen)
{
testsuite_error "missing test plan";
}
elsif ($parser->tests_planned != $parser->tests_run)
{
my ($planned, $run) = ($parser->tests_planned, $parser->tests_run);
my $bad_amount = $run > $planned ? "many" : "few";
testsuite_error (sprintf "too %s tests run (expected %d, got %d)",
$bad_amount, $planned, $run);
}
}
}
# ----------- #
# Main code. #
# ----------- #
main;
exit($failed);
# Local Variables:
# perl-indent-level: 2
# perl-continued-statement-offset: 2
# perl-continued-brace-offset: 0
# perl-brace-offset: 0
# perl-brace-imaginary-offset: 0
# perl-label-offset: -2
# cperl-indent-level: 2
# cperl-brace-offset: 0
# cperl-continued-brace-offset: 0
# cperl-label-offset: -2
# cperl-extra-newline-before-brace: t
# cperl-merge-trailing-else: nil
# cperl-continued-statement-offset: 2
# End: