Skip to content

PaideiaDilemma/Tortillas

Repository files navigation

đź«“ Tortillas - A test runner for IAIK/sweb đź«“

Demo Internal tests

This program might be useful for students doing the operating systems course at TU Graz.

Tortillas is here to help with testing your sweb code.
It takes your test cases and runs them in individual Qemu instances, while logging the output and monitoring for errors.

Features

  • Parallel test execution
  • Test summary with errors from all test runs
  • Configure how debug logs get parsed and interpreted
  • Fancy progress bar
  • Uses qemu snapshots to avoid booting multiple times
  • Individual test configuration via test headers (timeout, expected exit codes)
  • Detection of bootup, test completion and kernel panics

Dependencies

  • python >= 3.8
  • pyyaml
  • enligthen (Optional) for a progress bar

Demo

In this animation, Tortillas runs tests from the example.
Note: After it ran, grip was used to display tortillas_summary.md

Example repo

The example submodule in this repository points to tortillas-sweb.
Notable branches in this repo:

  • main contains a minimal example
  • panic demonstrates different test failures

CI

The demo workflow in this repository runs tortillas on the example repo. (Github requires you to be logged in to see the workflow output).

Installation

git clone https://github.com/PaideiaDilemma/Tortillas
cd Tortillas
python -m venv venv              # Create a virtual environment
source venv/bin/activate
python -m pip install .\[fancy\] # Include progress bar dependency (recommended)
python -m pip install .          # No progress bar

Manual setup

Setup sweb

1. Grub boot menu

You will need to set the grub boot timeout to 0, if you haven't already.

Example diff
diff --git a/utils/images/menu.lst b/utils/images/menu.lst
index cf7fd93d..25e6f493 100644
--- a/utils/images/menu.lst
+++ b/utils/images/menu.lst
@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@

 default 0
+timeout 0
+hiddenmenu

 title = Sweb
 root (hd0,0)

2. Meta syscalls

Add two syscalls to your sweb and note their syscall numbers.
One will signal bootup and the other one test completion. They don't need to do anything. You could name them sc_tortillas_bootup and sc_tortillas_finished.

Call those syscalls in userspace/tests/shell.c:main.
The one for bootup should be called just before while(running) and the one for test completion inside the loop, after handleCommand.

Example diff
diff --git a/common/include/kernel/syscall-definitions.h b/common/include/kernel/syscall-definitions.h
index dd99d197..a3c6aadc 100644
--- a/common/include/kernel/syscall-definitions.h
+++ b/common/include/kernel/syscall-definitions.h
@@ -17,3 +17,5 @@
 #define sc_createprocess 191
 #define sc_trace 252

+#define sc_tortillas_bootup 1337
+#define sc_tortillas_finished 1338
diff --git a/common/source/kernel/Syscall.cpp b/common/source/kernel/Syscall.cpp
index 964cd5b4..e565a730 100644
--- a/common/source/kernel/Syscall.cpp
+++ b/common/source/kernel/Syscall.cpp
@@ -49,6 +49,10 @@ size_t Syscall::syscallException(size_t syscall_number, size_t arg1, size_t arg2
     case sc_pseudols:
       pseudols((const char*) arg1, (char*) arg2, arg3);
       break;
+    case sc_tortillas_bootup:
+      break;
+    case sc_tortillas_finished:
+      break;
     default:
       return_value = -1;
       kprintf("Syscall::syscallException: Unimplemented Syscall Number %zd\n", syscall_number);
diff --git a/userspace/tests/shell.c b/userspace/tests/shell.c
index a798ad27..88e27c0c 100644
--- a/userspace/tests/shell.c
+++ b/userspace/tests/shell.c
@@ -348,9 +348,11 @@ int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
   printAvailableCommands();
   __syscall(sc_pseudols, (size_t)SHELL_EXECUTABLE_PREFIX,
             (size_t)dir_content, sizeof(dir_content), 0, 0);
+  __syscall(sc_tortillas_bootup, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
   while(running) {
     readCommand();
     handleCommand();
+    __syscall(sc_tortillas_finished, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
   }
   return exit_code;
 }
Why do I need to add syscalls to sweb?

In short, because it makes detection of bootup and test completion easier and more reliable. For a better answer see Interrupt/Syscall detection.

3. Add tortillas_config.yml

Copy tortillas_config.yml from this repository to your sweb. Replace the numbers at sc_tortillas_bootup and sc_tortillas_finished with your syscall numbers.

See Tortillas config

Adding test specifications

Tortillas requires all tests to have a header in yaml format. For now, you can add this to the top of userspace/tests/mult.c (included in base-sweb).

/*
--- # Test specification
category: base
description: |
    Multiplies two matrices containing pseudo random numbers
    and returns the sum of the resulting matrix.

expect_exit_codes: [1237619379]
*/

Verify the setup, by running tortillas.
mult should run and complete with SUCCESS.

You can now check out Test specifications and add test specifications to your tests.

CI (Optional)

If you want a CI pipeline, you have the following possibilities:

1. Set up a gitlab runner

This requires a publicly accessible server. If you have your own runner, you can add it to your repository.

You can use a workflow similar to gitlab-ci-example.yml This might be the best solution, but has the caveats of you needing a server and not being able to upload artifacts (I think it is disabled on IAIK gitlab).

2. Set up a repository mirror

It is possible to mirror your gitlab sweb repo to github, where you can run a workflow with Github Actions, similar to the one from tortillas-sweb. Make sure you use a private repo though.

Of course, this way, your pipeline will not be visible within gitlab.

If you have another way of running a CI pipeline, add it here!

Cli Usage

See tortillas --help

Note: You do not necessarily have to install tortillas. You can also run it from the Tortillas source directory, like this:

python -m tortillas -S <path_to_your_sweb_repo>

Examples

Running tortillas
# If your are at <path_to_your_sweb_repo>
tortillas
# From any other directory:
tortillas -S <path_to_your_sweb_repo>
Run a test selection

Tortillas supports running tests selected by tag, category or glob pattern.

tortillas --tag pthread         # Run all tests tagged with 'pthread'
tortillas --category malloc,brk # Run all tests in the 'malloc' and 'brk' categories
tortillas --glob test*          # Run all tests, that match 'userspace/tests/test*.c'

Tortillas config

The tortillas-config.yml file configures tortillas to fit your sweb.

Per default it is expected to be at <path_to_your_sweb_repo>/tortillas-config.yml.
You can specify the config path with tortillas -C <path_to_tortillas_config>

Configure log handling (You might need this)

You can define how logs of your sweb are handled.

Best understood by looking at an example.

analyze:
  - name: lock_logs
    scope: 'LOCK'
    pattern: '(.*)'
    mode: add_as_error
  ...

This does the following:

  • Every log from debug(LOCK, ...) that matches (.*) (which means everything) will be parsed into a container.
  • All logs in that container will be added to error summaries (add_as_error).

Pattern

The pattern field must contain a regex pattern, that matches the desired string in group 1 (usually denoted by the first set of parenthesis).

Why you might need this

Base-sweb logs exit codes like this:

debug(SYSCALL, "Syscall::EXIT: called, exit_code: %zd\n", exit_code);

Tortillas captures them with this config entry:

# Exit codes
  - name: exit_codes # Unique identifier
    scope: SYSCALL # as in `debug(SYSCALL, ...)`
    pattern: 'Syscall::EXIT: called, exit_code: (\d+)' # match exit code
    mode: exit_codes # special mode that checks exit codes
    set_status: FAILED # set status FAILED, if unexpected exit codes

If you change this debug call for example to:

debug(SYSCALL, "Bye I am out! Code: %zd\n", exit_code)

The pattern for the config entry for exit_codes has to be changed as well:

    pattern: 'Bye I am out! Code: (\d+)'

More use cases

  • If you are having problems with a specific component of your sweb, you can temporarily add logs from this component to error summaries. For example if you want to debug USERTHREAD logs, you could add the following entry to your config:

      - name: userthread_logs
        scope: 'USERTHREAD'
        pattern: '(.*)'
        mode: add_as_error
    
  • tortillas_expect is a sweb userspace function, which allows you to assert stuff to be printed via Syscall::write at runtime. You probably won't need that, but it is something we used.

    For example:

    #define NUM 100
    int main()
    {
      // Declare something to be expected at runtime
      tortillas_expect("%d\n", NUM);
    
      printf("%d\n", NUM)
    }
    Implementation and config entry

    Introduce tortillas_expect

    diff --git a/userspace/libc/include/assert.h b/userspace/libc/include/assert.h
    index 20e488f4..50e93c6b 100644
    --- a/userspace/libc/include/assert.h
    +++ b/userspace/libc/include/assert.h
    @@ -7,3 +7,8 @@
         printf("Assertion failed: '%s', file %s, function %s, line %d\n", #X, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__); \
      exit(-1); } } while (0)
    
    +/*
    +* Wrapper around printf. Everything, that gets printed with this gets
    +* prefixed with 'TORTILLAS EXPECT: '.
    +**/
    +#define tortillas_expect(FMT, ...) printf("TORTILLAS EXPECT: " FMT, __VA_ARGS__);

    Config entry

    # Tortillas expect
      - name: expect_stdout
        scope: SYSCALL
        pattern: 'Syscall::write: (.*)'
        mode: expect_stdout
        set_status: FAILED

Supported fields in tortillas-config.yml:

  • threads: int - Number of tests to run in parallel
  • bootup_timeout_secs: int - Seconds until bootup timeout
  • default_test_timeout_secs: int - Seconds until test timeout (default)
  • sc_tortillas_bootup: int - A syscall number signaling bootup
  • sc_tortillas_finished: int - A syscall number signaling test completion
  • analyze - List of analyze config entries

Analyze config entry

  • name: str - Unique identifier for matching logs.
  • scope: str - Debug log identifier (e.g. SYSCALL, THREAD,... as used in debug(SYSCALL, ...);) or 'ALL'
  • pattern: str - Regex pattern to match.
  • mode: str - Options:
    • add_as_error - Each match will be added to the error summary
    • add_as_error_join - Matches will be joined and added to the error summary as a code block.
    • add_as_error_last - Add the last occurrence of the pattern to the error_summary (Can be used to print the last pagefault)
    • retry - Retry the test, if matched. (Only recommended for debugging shenanigans)
    • exit_codes - Special: entry needs to parse exit codes.
    • expect_stdout - Special: specifically for tortillas_expect, entry needs to parse stdout (Syscall::write: (.*) in base-sweb).
Optional
  • set_status: str - If the entry matches something in the logs, apply this status to the test. Options:
    • PANIC
    • FAILED

Test specifications

/*
---
category: pthread
description: "Create a single thread, then exit"
*/

Tortillas requires a test header in yaml format, that contains information about the test and configurations of the test, if needed. Reason for making it required is to force you to describe your tests.

A nice side effect of this is, that you can compile all your specifications into a summary of all your tests at the end of an assignment. Currently this is done by salsa.py, but it would be cool to integrate it into tortillas.

We can also directly specify test behavior in test specifications. For example:

  • expect_exit_codes: [1237619379] will make the test fail, if it does not exit with 1237619379. (This supports multiple values for situations with fork and multiple exit codes)
  • timeout: 240 will overwrite the default timeout to be 4 minutes (default is set in tortillas_config.yml).

Supported fields:

Required
  • category: str - category of the test
  • description: str - test description
Optional
  • tags: list[str] - tags of the test
  • timeout: int - test run timeout (in seconds)
  • expect_timeout: bool - don't fail, if a timeout occurs
  • expect_exit_codes: list[int] - what exit codes are expected (default: [0])
  • disabled: bool - disable the test by setting this to true

Header format

Tortillas tries to parse a test header under the following conditions:

  • first line contains /*
  • first or seconds line contains ---

If those conditions are not met, tortillas will skip the file. If they are met, lines until */ will be parsed as yaml and it will complain about missing fields.

How Tortillas works under the hood

Interrupt/Syscall detection

Tortillas does not rely on the log output to determine bootup, test completion and kernel panics. Instead it uses qemu interrupt logging to detect certain interrupts. This is why you have to add syscalls to your sweb.

Using this approach has the following advantages:

  • Detection does not rely on the KprintfFlushingThread
  • Reliable detection of kernel panics (no more interrupts are coming)
  • Also works, when there are multiple processes (due to fork)

Why not use sc_write to detect bootup and sc_exit to detect test completion?

This was the original solution. In fact, setting sc_tortillas_bootup: 4 and sc_tortillas_finished: 1 will probably work fine, until adding new features breaks it. That can occur, when sc_write is being called too far ahead of the shell being ready, or if multiple processes are involved.

Procedure of running tests

  1. Bootup sweb (wait until the tortillas bootup syscall)
  2. Create a qemu snapshot and do savevm
  3. Run all tests, by starting from the snapshot
  4. Wait for test completion (wait until the tortillas finished syscall)

Troubleshooting

Tortillas fails to detect an error

You probably changed a debug() call somewhere, or disabled a scope tortillas needs in common/include/console/debug.h. Check your analyze entries in tortillas_config.yml and figure out what is not being detected. See Configure log handling (You might need this)

Multiple processes (Known issue, pls fix)

Once your sweb involves fork, an obvious problem arises: The shell needs to block until the last process finished, otherwise tortillas will kill the test too early.

When you switch your shell to fork+exec and you do not have waitpid to block, detection of test completion will break.

Possible workarounds
  • Implement a mode in tortillas, that keeps a count of running processes by counting fork and sc_exit syscalls and determine test completion that way.
  • Add a test specification option to wait additional time after the shell signaled test completion.

Contribute

If you encounter any bugs or have ideas for useful features, please consider contributing. This project will only survive if students contribute and maintain it.

License

See LICENSE (GPLv3)

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages