| #!/bin/sh |
| # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| # |
| # This reads tests.txt for the list of LKDTM tests to invoke. Any marked |
| # with a leading "#" are skipped. The rest of the line after the |
| # test name is either the text to look for in dmesg for a "success", |
| # or the rationale for why a test is marked to be skipped. |
| # |
| set -e |
| TRIGGER=/sys/kernel/debug/provoke-crash/DIRECT |
| CLEAR_ONCE=/sys/kernel/debug/clear_warn_once |
| KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST=4 |
| |
| # Verify we have LKDTM available in the kernel. |
| if [ ! -r $TRIGGER ] ; then |
| /sbin/modprobe -q lkdtm || true |
| if [ ! -r $TRIGGER ] ; then |
| echo "Cannot find $TRIGGER (missing CONFIG_LKDTM?)" |
| else |
| echo "Cannot write $TRIGGER (need to run as root?)" |
| fi |
| # Skip this test |
| exit $KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST |
| fi |
| |
| # Figure out which test to run from our script name. |
| test=$(basename $0 .sh) |
| # Look up details about the test from master list of LKDTM tests. |
| line=$(grep -E '^#?'"$test"'\b' tests.txt) |
| if [ -z "$line" ]; then |
| echo "Skipped: missing test '$test' in tests.txt" |
| exit $KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST |
| fi |
| # Check that the test is known to LKDTM. |
| if ! grep -E -q '^'"$test"'$' "$TRIGGER" ; then |
| echo "Skipped: test '$test' missing in $TRIGGER!" |
| exit $KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST |
| fi |
| |
| # Extract notes/expected output from test list. |
| test=$(echo "$line" | cut -d" " -f1) |
| if echo "$line" | grep -q ' ' ; then |
| expect=$(echo "$line" | cut -d" " -f2-) |
| else |
| expect="" |
| fi |
| |
| # If the test is commented out, report a skip |
| if echo "$test" | grep -q '^#' ; then |
| test=$(echo "$test" | cut -c2-) |
| if [ -z "$expect" ]; then |
| expect="crashes entire system" |
| fi |
| echo "Skipping $test: $expect" |
| exit $KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST |
| fi |
| |
| # If no expected output given, assume an Oops with back trace is success. |
| repeat=1 |
| if [ -z "$expect" ]; then |
| expect="call trace:" |
| else |
| if echo "$expect" | grep -q '^repeat:' ; then |
| repeat=$(echo "$expect" | cut -d' ' -f1 | cut -d: -f2) |
| expect=$(echo "$expect" | cut -d' ' -f2-) |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| # Prepare log for report checking |
| LOG=$(mktemp --tmpdir -t lkdtm-log-XXXXXX) |
| DMESG=$(mktemp --tmpdir -t lkdtm-dmesg-XXXXXX) |
| cleanup() { |
| rm -f "$LOG" "$DMESG" |
| } |
| trap cleanup EXIT |
| |
| # Reset WARN_ONCE counters so we trip it each time this runs. |
| if [ -w $CLEAR_ONCE ] ; then |
| echo 1 > $CLEAR_ONCE |
| fi |
| |
| # Save existing dmesg so we can detect new content below |
| dmesg > "$DMESG" |
| |
| # Since the kernel is likely killing the process writing to the trigger |
| # file, it must not be the script's shell itself. i.e. we cannot do: |
| # echo "$test" >"$TRIGGER" |
| # Instead, use "cat" to take the signal. Since the shell will yell about |
| # the signal that killed the subprocess, we must ignore the failure and |
| # continue. However we don't silence stderr since there might be other |
| # useful details reported there in the case of other unexpected conditions. |
| for i in $(seq 1 $repeat); do |
| echo "$test" | cat >"$TRIGGER" || true |
| done |
| |
| # Record and dump the results |
| dmesg | comm --nocheck-order -13 "$DMESG" - > "$LOG" || true |
| |
| cat "$LOG" |
| # Check for expected output |
| if grep -E -qi "$expect" "$LOG" ; then |
| echo "$test: saw '$expect': ok" |
| exit 0 |
| else |
| if grep -E -qi XFAIL: "$LOG" ; then |
| echo "$test: saw 'XFAIL': [SKIP]" |
| exit $KSELFTEST_SKIP_TEST |
| else |
| echo "$test: missing '$expect': [FAIL]" |
| exit 1 |
| fi |
| fi |