mirror of https://gitee.com/openkylin/linux.git
91 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
#
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# This example shows the bisect tests (git bisect and config bisect)
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#
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# The config that includes this file may define a RUN_TEST
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# variable that will tell this config what test to run.
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# (what to set the TEST option to).
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#
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DEFAULTS IF NOT DEFINED RUN_TEST
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# Requires that hackbench is in the PATH
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RUN_TEST := ${SSH} hackbench 50
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# Set TEST to 'bisect' to do a normal git bisect. You need
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# to modify the options below to make it bisect the exact
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# commits you are interested in.
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#
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TEST_START IF ${TEST} == bisect
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TEST_TYPE = bisect
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# You must set the commit that was considered good (git bisect good)
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BISECT_GOOD = v3.3
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# You must set the commit that was considered bad (git bisect bad)
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BISECT_BAD = HEAD
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# It's best to specify the branch to checkout before starting the bisect.
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CHECKOUT = origin/master
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# This can be build, boot, or test. Here we are doing a bisect
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# that requires to run a test to know if the bisect was good or bad.
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# The test should exit with 0 on good, non-zero for bad. But see
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# the BISECT_RET_* options in samples.conf to override this.
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BISECT_TYPE = test
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TEST = ${RUN_TEST}
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# It is usually a good idea to confirm that the GOOD and the BAD
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# commits are truly good and bad respectively. Having BISECT_CHECK
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# set to 1 will check both that the good commit works and the bad
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# commit fails. If you only want to check one or the other,
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# set BISECT_CHECK to 'good' or to 'bad'.
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BISECT_CHECK = 1
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#BISECT_CHECK = good
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#BISECT_CHECK = bad
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# Usually it's a good idea to specify the exact config you
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# want to use throughout the entire bisect. Here we placed
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# it in the directory we called ktest.pl from and named it
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# 'config-bisect'.
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MIN_CONFIG = ${THIS_DIR}/config-bisect
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# By default, if we are doing a BISECT_TYPE = test run but the
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# build or boot fails, ktest.pl will do a 'git bisect skip'.
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# Uncomment the below option to make ktest stop testing on such
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# an error.
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#BISECT_SKIP = 0
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# Now if you had BISECT_SKIP = 0 and the test fails, you can
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# examine what happened and then do 'git bisect log > /tmp/replay'
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# Set BISECT_REPLAY to /tmp/replay and ktest.pl will run the
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# 'git bisect replay /tmp/replay' before continuing the bisect test.
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#BISECT_REPLAY = /tmp/replay
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# If you used BISECT_REPLAY after the bisect test failed, you may
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# not want to continue the bisect on that commit that failed.
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# By setting BISECT_START to a new commit. ktest.pl will checkout
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# that commit after it has performed the 'git bisect replay' but
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# before it continues running the bisect test.
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#BISECT_START = 2545eb6198e7e1ec50daa0cfc64a4cdfecf24ec9
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# Now if you don't trust ktest.pl to make the decisions for you, then
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# set BISECT_MANUAL to 1. This will cause ktest.pl not to decide
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# if the commit was good or bad. Instead, it will ask you to tell
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# it if the current commit was good. In the mean time, you could
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# take the result, load it on any machine you want. Run several tests,
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# or whatever you feel like. Then, when you are happy, you can tell
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# ktest if you think it was good or not and ktest.pl will continue
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# the git bisect. You can even change what commit it is currently at.
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#BISECT_MANUAL = 1
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# One of the unique tests that ktest does is the config bisect.
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# Currently (which hopefully will be fixed soon), the bad config
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# must be a superset of the good config. This is because it only
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# searches for a config that causes the target to fail. If the
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# good config is not a subset of the bad config, or if the target
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# fails because of a lack of a config, then it will not find
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# the config for you.
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TEST_START IF ${TEST} == config-bisect
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TEST_TYPE = config_bisect
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# set to build, boot, test
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CONFIG_BISECT_TYPE = boot
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# Set the config that is considered bad.
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CONFIG_BISECT = ${THIS_DIR}/config-bad
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# This config is optional. By default it uses the
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# MIN_CONFIG as the good config.
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CONFIG_BISECT_GOOD = ${THIS_DIR}/config-good
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