linux/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py

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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
#
# Parses test results from a kernel dmesg log.
#
# Copyright (C) 2019, Google LLC.
# Author: Felix Guo <felixguoxiuping@gmail.com>
# Author: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com>
import re
from collections import namedtuple
from datetime import datetime
from enum import Enum, auto
from functools import reduce
from typing import Iterable, Iterator, List, Optional, Tuple
TestResult = namedtuple('TestResult', ['status','suites','log'])
class TestSuite(object):
def __init__(self) -> None:
self.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS
self.name = ''
self.cases = [] # type: List[TestCase]
def __str__(self) -> str:
return 'TestSuite(' + str(self.status) + ',' + self.name + ',' + str(self.cases) + ')'
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return str(self)
class TestCase(object):
def __init__(self) -> None:
self.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS
self.name = ''
self.log = [] # type: List[str]
def __str__(self) -> str:
return 'TestCase(' + str(self.status) + ',' + self.name + ',' + str(self.log) + ')'
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return str(self)
class TestStatus(Enum):
SUCCESS = auto()
FAILURE = auto()
TEST_CRASHED = auto()
NO_TESTS = auto()
FAILURE_TO_PARSE_TESTS = auto()
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
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class LineStream:
"""Provides a peek()/pop() interface over an iterator of (line#, text)."""
_lines: Iterator[Tuple[int, str]]
_next: Tuple[int, str]
_done: bool
def __init__(self, lines: Iterator[Tuple[int, str]]):
self._lines = lines
self._done = False
self._next = (0, '')
self._get_next()
def _get_next(self) -> None:
try:
self._next = next(self._lines)
except StopIteration:
self._done = True
def peek(self) -> str:
return self._next[1]
def pop(self) -> str:
n = self._next
self._get_next()
return n[1]
def __bool__(self) -> bool:
return not self._done
# Only used by kunit_tool_test.py.
def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[str]:
while bool(self):
yield self.pop()
def line_number(self) -> int:
return self._next[0]
kunit_start_re = re.compile(r'TAP version [0-9]+$')
kunit_end_re = re.compile('(List of all partitions:|'
'Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS:|reboot: System halted)')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def extract_tap_lines(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) -> LineStream:
def isolate_kunit_output(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) -> Iterator[Tuple[int, str]]:
line_num = 0
started = False
for line in kernel_output:
line_num += 1
line = line.rstrip() # line always has a trailing \n
if kunit_start_re.search(line):
prefix_len = len(line.split('TAP version')[0])
started = True
yield line_num, line[prefix_len:]
elif kunit_end_re.search(line):
break
elif started:
yield line_num, line[prefix_len:]
return LineStream(lines=isolate_kunit_output(kernel_output))
def raw_output(kernel_output) -> None:
for line in kernel_output:
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print(line.rstrip())
DIVIDER = '=' * 60
RESET = '\033[0;0m'
def red(text) -> str:
return '\033[1;31m' + text + RESET
def yellow(text) -> str:
return '\033[1;33m' + text + RESET
def green(text) -> str:
return '\033[1;32m' + text + RESET
def print_with_timestamp(message) -> None:
print('[%s] %s' % (datetime.now().strftime('%H:%M:%S'), message))
def format_suite_divider(message) -> str:
return '======== ' + message + ' ========'
def print_suite_divider(message) -> None:
print_with_timestamp(DIVIDER)
print_with_timestamp(format_suite_divider(message))
def print_log(log) -> None:
for m in log:
print_with_timestamp(m)
TAP_ENTRIES = re.compile(r'^(TAP|[\s]*ok|[\s]*not ok|[\s]*[0-9]+\.\.[0-9]+|[\s]*#).*$')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def consume_non_diagnostic(lines: LineStream) -> None:
while lines and not TAP_ENTRIES.match(lines.peek()):
lines.pop()
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def save_non_diagnostic(lines: LineStream, test_case: TestCase) -> None:
while lines and not TAP_ENTRIES.match(lines.peek()):
test_case.log.append(lines.peek())
lines.pop()
OkNotOkResult = namedtuple('OkNotOkResult', ['is_ok','description', 'text'])
OK_NOT_OK_SUBTEST = re.compile(r'^[\s]+(ok|not ok) [0-9]+ - (.*)$')
OK_NOT_OK_MODULE = re.compile(r'^(ok|not ok) ([0-9]+) - (.*)$')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_ok_not_ok_test_case(lines: LineStream, test_case: TestCase) -> bool:
save_non_diagnostic(lines, test_case)
if not lines:
test_case.status = TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED
return True
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
line = lines.peek()
match = OK_NOT_OK_SUBTEST.match(line)
while not match and lines:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
line = lines.pop()
match = OK_NOT_OK_SUBTEST.match(line)
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
test_case.log.append(lines.pop())
test_case.name = match.group(2)
if test_case.status == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED:
return True
if match.group(1) == 'ok':
test_case.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS
else:
test_case.status = TestStatus.FAILURE
return True
else:
return False
SUBTEST_DIAGNOSTIC = re.compile(r'^[\s]+# (.*)$')
DIAGNOSTIC_CRASH_MESSAGE = re.compile(r'^[\s]+# .*?: kunit test case crashed!$')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_diagnostic(lines: LineStream, test_case: TestCase) -> bool:
save_non_diagnostic(lines, test_case)
if not lines:
return False
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
line = lines.peek()
match = SUBTEST_DIAGNOSTIC.match(line)
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
test_case.log.append(lines.pop())
crash_match = DIAGNOSTIC_CRASH_MESSAGE.match(line)
if crash_match:
test_case.status = TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED
return True
else:
return False
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_test_case(lines: LineStream) -> Optional[TestCase]:
test_case = TestCase()
save_non_diagnostic(lines, test_case)
while parse_diagnostic(lines, test_case):
pass
if parse_ok_not_ok_test_case(lines, test_case):
return test_case
else:
return None
SUBTEST_HEADER = re.compile(r'^[\s]+# Subtest: (.*)$')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_subtest_header(lines: LineStream) -> Optional[str]:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
if not lines:
return None
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
match = SUBTEST_HEADER.match(lines.peek())
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
lines.pop()
return match.group(1)
else:
return None
SUBTEST_PLAN = re.compile(r'[\s]+[0-9]+\.\.([0-9]+)')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_subtest_plan(lines: LineStream) -> Optional[int]:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
match = SUBTEST_PLAN.match(lines.peek())
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
lines.pop()
return int(match.group(1))
else:
return None
def max_status(left: TestStatus, right: TestStatus) -> TestStatus:
if left == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED or right == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED:
return TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED
elif left == TestStatus.FAILURE or right == TestStatus.FAILURE:
return TestStatus.FAILURE
elif left != TestStatus.SUCCESS:
return left
elif right != TestStatus.SUCCESS:
return right
else:
return TestStatus.SUCCESS
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite(lines: LineStream,
test_suite: TestSuite,
expected_suite_index: int) -> bool:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
if not lines:
test_suite.status = TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED
return False
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
line = lines.peek()
match = OK_NOT_OK_MODULE.match(line)
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
lines.pop()
if match.group(1) == 'ok':
test_suite.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS
else:
test_suite.status = TestStatus.FAILURE
suite_index = int(match.group(2))
if suite_index != expected_suite_index:
print_with_timestamp(
red('[ERROR] ') + 'expected_suite_index ' +
str(expected_suite_index) + ', but got ' +
str(suite_index))
return True
else:
return False
def bubble_up_errors(statuses: Iterable[TestStatus]) -> TestStatus:
return reduce(max_status, statuses, TestStatus.SUCCESS)
def bubble_up_test_case_errors(test_suite: TestSuite) -> TestStatus:
max_test_case_status = bubble_up_errors(x.status for x in test_suite.cases)
return max_status(max_test_case_status, test_suite.status)
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_test_suite(lines: LineStream, expected_suite_index: int) -> Optional[TestSuite]:
if not lines:
return None
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
test_suite = TestSuite()
test_suite.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS
name = parse_subtest_header(lines)
if not name:
return None
test_suite.name = name
expected_test_case_num = parse_subtest_plan(lines)
if expected_test_case_num is None:
return None
while expected_test_case_num > 0:
test_case = parse_test_case(lines)
if not test_case:
break
test_suite.cases.append(test_case)
expected_test_case_num -= 1
if parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite(lines, test_suite, expected_suite_index):
test_suite.status = bubble_up_test_case_errors(test_suite)
return test_suite
elif not lines:
print_with_timestamp(red('[ERROR] ') + 'ran out of lines before end token')
return test_suite
else:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
print(f'failed to parse end of suite "{name}", at line {lines.line_number()}: {lines.peek()}')
return None
TAP_HEADER = re.compile(r'^TAP version 14$')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_tap_header(lines: LineStream) -> bool:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
if TAP_HEADER.match(lines.peek()):
lines.pop()
return True
else:
return False
TEST_PLAN = re.compile(r'[0-9]+\.\.([0-9]+)')
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_test_plan(lines: LineStream) -> Optional[int]:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
match = TEST_PLAN.match(lines.peek())
if match:
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
lines.pop()
return int(match.group(1))
else:
return None
def bubble_up_suite_errors(test_suites: Iterable[TestSuite]) -> TestStatus:
return bubble_up_errors(x.status for x in test_suites)
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_test_result(lines: LineStream) -> TestResult:
consume_non_diagnostic(lines)
if not lines or not parse_tap_header(lines):
return TestResult(TestStatus.NO_TESTS, [], lines)
expected_test_suite_num = parse_test_plan(lines)
if not expected_test_suite_num:
return TestResult(TestStatus.FAILURE_TO_PARSE_TESTS, [], lines)
test_suites = []
for i in range(1, expected_test_suite_num + 1):
test_suite = parse_test_suite(lines, i)
if test_suite:
test_suites.append(test_suite)
else:
print_with_timestamp(
red('[ERROR] ') + ' expected ' +
str(expected_test_suite_num) +
' test suites, but got ' + str(i - 2))
break
test_suite = parse_test_suite(lines, -1)
if test_suite:
print_with_timestamp(red('[ERROR] ') +
'got unexpected test suite: ' + test_suite.name)
if test_suites:
return TestResult(bubble_up_suite_errors(test_suites), test_suites, lines)
else:
return TestResult(TestStatus.NO_TESTS, [], lines)
def print_and_count_results(test_result: TestResult) -> Tuple[int, int, int]:
total_tests = 0
failed_tests = 0
crashed_tests = 0
for test_suite in test_result.suites:
if test_suite.status == TestStatus.SUCCESS:
print_suite_divider(green('[PASSED] ') + test_suite.name)
elif test_suite.status == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED:
print_suite_divider(red('[CRASHED] ' + test_suite.name))
else:
print_suite_divider(red('[FAILED] ') + test_suite.name)
for test_case in test_suite.cases:
total_tests += 1
if test_case.status == TestStatus.SUCCESS:
print_with_timestamp(green('[PASSED] ') + test_case.name)
elif test_case.status == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED:
crashed_tests += 1
print_with_timestamp(red('[CRASHED] ' + test_case.name))
print_log(map(yellow, test_case.log))
print_with_timestamp('')
else:
failed_tests += 1
print_with_timestamp(red('[FAILED] ') + test_case.name)
print_log(map(yellow, test_case.log))
print_with_timestamp('')
return total_tests, failed_tests, crashed_tests
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
def parse_run_tests(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) -> TestResult:
total_tests = 0
failed_tests = 0
crashed_tests = 0
kunit: tool: internal refactor of parser input handling Note: this does not change the parser behavior at all (except for making one error message more useful). This is just an internal refactor. The TAP output parser currently operates over a List[str]. This works, but we only ever need to be able to "peek" at the current line and the ability to "pop" it off. Also, using a List means we need to wait for all the output before we can start parsing. While this is not an issue for most tests which are really lightweight, we do have some longer (~5 minutes) tests. This patch introduces an LineStream wrapper class that * Exposes a peek()/pop() interface instead of manipulating an array * this allows us to more easily add debugging code [1] * Can consume an input from a generator * we can now parse results as tests are running (the parser code currently doesn't print until the end, so no impact yet). * Tracks the current line number to print better error messages * Would allow us to add additional features more easily, e.g. storing N previous lines so we can print out invalid lines in context, etc. [1] The parsing logic is currently quite fragile. E.g. it'll often say the kernel "CRASHED" if there's something slightly wrong with the output format. When debugging a test that had some memory corruption issues, it resulted in very misleading errors from the parser. Now we could easily add this to trace all the lines consumed and why +import inspect ... def pop(self) -> str: n = self._next + print(f'popping {n[0]}: {n[1].ljust(40, " ")}| caller={inspect.stack()[1].function}') Example output: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_suite If we introduce an invalid line, we can see the parser go down the wrong path: popping 77: TAP version 14 | caller=parse_tap_header popping 78: 1..1 | caller=parse_test_plan popping 79: # Subtest: kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_subtest_header popping 80: 1..2 | caller=parse_subtest_plan popping 81: 1..2 # this is invalid! | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 82: ok 1 - parse_filter_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 83: ok 2 - filter_subsuite_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case popping 84: ok 1 - kunit_executor_test | caller=parse_ok_not_ok_test_case [ERROR] ran out of lines before end token Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Acked-by: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2021-05-26 01:22:17 -07:00
lines = extract_tap_lines(kernel_output)
test_result = parse_test_result(lines)
if test_result.status == TestStatus.NO_TESTS:
print(red('[ERROR] ') + yellow('no tests run!'))
elif test_result.status == TestStatus.FAILURE_TO_PARSE_TESTS:
print(red('[ERROR] ') + yellow('could not parse test results!'))
else:
(total_tests,
failed_tests,
crashed_tests) = print_and_count_results(test_result)
print_with_timestamp(DIVIDER)
fmt = green if test_result.status == TestStatus.SUCCESS else red
print_with_timestamp(
fmt('Testing complete. %d tests run. %d failed. %d crashed.' %
(total_tests, failed_tests, crashed_tests)))
return test_result