Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fam Zheng 794d00f71d qemu-iotests: fix 017 018 for vmdk
017 and 018 use /bin/mv to move base img from t.IMGFMG to t.IMGFMT.base
after filling data, this is not enough for vmdk, when t.IMGFMT is only a
description text file who points to t-{flat,s001,f001,...}.IMGFMT as
data extent, so testing such subformats alway fails on them.

This patch use the trick of temprorily changing TEST_IMG to avoid using
/bin/mv.

Signed-off-by: Fam Zheng <famz@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Cody <jcody@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
2013-05-08 15:28:50 +02:00
Paolo Bonzini 8655d2de0a qemu-io: correctly print non-integer values as decimals
qemu-io's cvtstr function sometimes will incorrectly omit the
decimal part of the number, and sometimes will incorrectly include
it.  This patch fixes both.  The former is more serious, and can
be seen in the patches to 027.out and 033.out.

The changes to all other files were scripted with sed, so there were
no "surprises" beyond 027.out and 033.out.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
2012-05-10 10:32:12 +02:00
Stefan Hajnoczi dd0c35d69b qemu-iotests: Use zero-based offsets for IO patterns
The io_pattern style functions have the following loop:

  for i in `seq 1 $count`; do
      echo ... $(( start + i * step )) ...
  done

Offsets are 1-based so start=1024, step=512, count=4 yields:
1536, 2048, 2560, 3072

Normally we expect:
1024, 1536, 2048, 2560

Most tests ignore this detail, which means that they perform I/O to a
slightly different range than expected by the test author.

Later on things got less innocent and tests started trying to compensate
for the 1-based indexing.  This included negative start values in test
024 and my own attempt with count-1 in test 028!

The end result is that tests that use io_pattern are hard to reason
about and don't work the way you'd expect.  It's time to clean this mess
up.

This patch switches io_pattern to 0-based offsets.  This requires
adjusting the golden outputs since I/O ranges are now shifted and output
differs.

Verifying these output diffs is easy, however.  Each diff hunk moves one
I/O from beyond the end of the pattern range to the beginning.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2012-02-23 10:29:46 +01:00
Kevin Wolf 2557d8655d qemu-iotests: simple backing file test
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2012-02-22 16:17:02 +01:00