| U-Boot pytest suite |
| =================== |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| This tool aims to test U-Boot by executing U-Boot shell commands using the |
| console interface. A single top-level script exists to execute or attach to the |
| U-Boot console, run the entire script of tests against it, and summarize the |
| results. Advantages of this approach are: |
| |
| - Testing is performed in the same way a user or script would interact with |
| U-Boot; there can be no disconnect. |
| - There is no need to write or embed test-related code into U-Boot itself. |
| It is asserted that writing test-related code in Python is simpler and more |
| flexible than writing it all in C. |
| - It is reasonably simple to interact with U-Boot in this way. |
| |
| Requirements |
| ------------ |
| |
| The test suite is implemented using pytest. Interaction with the U-Boot console |
| involves executing some binary and interacting with its stdin/stdout. You will |
| need to implement various "hook" scripts that are called by the test suite at |
| the appropriate time. |
| |
| In order to run the test suite at a minimum we require that both Python 3 and |
| pip for Python 3 are installed. All of the required python modules are |
| described in the requirements.txt file in the /test/py/ directory and can be |
| installed via the command |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| pip install -r requirements.txt |
| |
| In order to execute certain tests on their supported platforms other tools |
| will be required. The following is an incomplete list: |
| |
| * gdisk |
| * dfu-util |
| * dtc |
| * openssl |
| * sudo OR guestmount |
| * e2fsprogs |
| * util-linux |
| * coreutils |
| * dosfstools |
| * efitools |
| * mount |
| * mtools |
| * sbsigntool |
| * udisks2 |
| |
| Please use the appropriate commands for your distribution to match these tools |
| up with the package that provides them. |
| |
| The test script supports either: |
| |
| - Executing a sandbox port of U-Boot on the local machine as a sub-process, |
| and interacting with it over stdin/stdout. |
| - Executing an external "hook" scripts to flash a U-Boot binary onto a |
| physical board, attach to the board's console stream, and reset the board. |
| Further details are described later. |
| |
| Using `virtualenv` to provide requirements |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The recommended way to run the test suite, in order to ensure reproducibility |
| is to use `virtualenv` to set up the necessary environment. This can be done |
| via the following commands: |
| |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| $ cd /path/to/u-boot |
| $ sudo apt-get install python3 python3-virtualenv |
| $ virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 venv |
| $ . ./venv/bin/activate |
| $ pip install -r test/py/requirements.txt |
| |
| Testing sandbox |
| --------------- |
| |
| To run the test suite on the sandbox port (U-Boot built as a native user-space |
| application), simply execute: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build |
| |
| The `--bd` option tells the test suite which board type is being tested. This |
| lets the test suite know which features the board has, and hence exactly what |
| can be tested. |
| |
| The `--build` option tells U-Boot to compile U-Boot. Alternatively, you may |
| omit this option and build U-Boot yourself, in whatever way you choose, before |
| running the test script. |
| |
| The test script will attach to U-Boot, execute all valid tests for the board, |
| then print a summary of the test process. A complete log of the test session |
| will be written to `${build_dir}/test-log.html`. This is best viewed in a web |
| browser, but may be read directly as plain text, perhaps with the aid of the |
| `html2text` utility. |
| |
| Testing under a debugger |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If you need to run sandbox under a debugger, you may pass the command-line |
| option `--gdbserver COMM`. This causes two things to happens: |
| |
| - Instead of running U-Boot directly, it will be run under gdbserver, with |
| debug communication via the channel `COMM`. You can attach a debugger to the |
| sandbox process in order to debug it. See `man gdbserver` and the example |
| below for details of valid values for `COMM`. |
| - All timeouts in tests are disabled, allowing U-Boot an arbitrary amount of |
| time to execute commands. This is useful if U-Boot is stopped at a breakpoint |
| during debugging. |
| |
| A usage example is: |
| |
| Window 1: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --gdbserver localhost:1234 |
| |
| Window 2: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| gdb ./build-sandbox/u-boot -ex 'target remote localhost:1234' |
| |
| Alternatively, you could leave off the `-ex` option and type the command |
| manually into gdb once it starts. |
| |
| You can use any debugger you wish, as long as it speaks the gdb remote |
| protocol, or any graphical wrapper around gdb. |
| |
| Some tests deliberately cause the sandbox process to exit, e.g. to test the |
| reset command, or sandbox's CTRL-C handling. When this happens, you will need |
| to attach the debugger to the new sandbox instance. If these tests are not |
| relevant to your debugging session, you can skip them using pytest's -k |
| command-line option; see the next section. |
| |
| Command-line options |
| -------------------- |
| |
| --board-type, --bd, -B |
| set the type of the board to be tested. For example, `sandbox` or `seaboard`. |
| |
| --board-identity`, --id |
| sets the identity of the board to be tested. This allows differentiation |
| between multiple instances of the same type of physical board that are |
| attached to the same host machine. This parameter is not interpreted by th |
| test script in any way, but rather is simply passed to the hook scripts |
| described below, and may be used in any site-specific way deemed necessary. |
| |
| --build |
| indicates that the test script should compile U-Boot itself before running |
| the tests. If using this option, make sure that any environment variables |
| required by the build process are already set, such as `$CROSS_COMPILE`. |
| |
| --buildman |
| indicates that `--build` should use buildman to build U-Boot. There is no need |
| to set $CROSS_COMPILE` in this case since buildman handles it. |
| |
| --build-dir |
| sets the directory containing the compiled U-Boot binaries. If omitted, this |
| is `${source_dir}/build-${board_type}`. |
| |
| --result-dir |
| sets the directory to write results, such as log files, into. |
| If omitted, the build directory is used. |
| |
| --persistent-data-dir |
| sets the directory used to store persistent test data. This is test data that |
| may be re-used across test runs, such as file-system images. |
| |
| `pytest` also implements a number of its own command-line options. Commonly used |
| options are mentioned below. Please see `pytest` documentation for complete |
| details. Execute `py.test --version` for a brief summary. Note that U-Boot's |
| test.py script passes all command-line arguments directly to `pytest` for |
| processing. |
| |
| -k |
| selects which tests to run. The default is to run all known tests. This |
| option takes a single argument which is used to filter test names. Simple |
| logical operators are supported. For example: |
| |
| - `'-k ums'` runs only tests with "ums" in their name. |
| - `'-k ut_dm'` runs only tests with "ut_dm" in their name. Note that in this |
| case, "ut_dm" is a parameter to a test rather than the test name. The full |
| test name is e.g. "test_ut[ut_dm_leak]". |
| - `'-k not reset'` runs everything except tests with "reset" in their name. |
| - `'-k ut or hush'` runs only tests with "ut" or "hush" in their name. |
| - `'-k not (ut or hush)'` runs everything except tests with "ut" or "hush" in |
| their name. |
| |
| -s |
| prevents pytest from hiding a test's stdout. This allows you to see |
| U-Boot's console log in real time on pytest's stdout. |
| |
| Testing real hardware |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The tools and techniques used to interact with real hardware will vary |
| radically between different host and target systems, and the whims of the user. |
| For this reason, the test suite does not attempt to directly interact with real |
| hardware in any way. Rather, it executes a standardized set of "hook" scripts |
| via `$PATH`. These scripts implement certain actions on behalf of the test |
| suite. This keeps the test suite simple and isolated from system variances |
| unrelated to U-Boot features. |
| |
| Hook scripts |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Environment variables |
| ''''''''''''''''''''' |
| |
| The following environment variables are set when running hook scripts: |
| |
| - `UBOOT_BOARD_TYPE` the board type being tested. |
| - `UBOOT_BOARD_IDENTITY` the board identity being tested, or `na` if none was |
| specified. |
| - `UBOOT_SOURCE_DIR` the U-Boot source directory. |
| - `UBOOT_TEST_PY_DIR` the full path to `test/py/` in the source directory. |
| - `UBOOT_BUILD_DIR` the U-Boot build directory. |
| - `UBOOT_RESULT_DIR` the test result directory. |
| - `UBOOT_PERSISTENT_DATA_DIR` the test persistent data directory. |
| |
| u-boot-test-console |
| ''''''''''''''''''' |
| |
| This script provides access to the U-Boot console. The script's stdin/stdout |
| should be connected to the board's console. This process should continue to run |
| indefinitely, until killed. The test suite will run this script in parallel |
| with all other hooks. |
| |
| This script may be implemented e.g. by executing `cu`, `kermit`, `conmux`, etc. |
| via exec(). |
| |
| If you are able to run U-Boot under a hardware simulator such as QEMU, then |
| you would likely spawn that simulator from this script. However, note that |
| `u-boot-test-reset` may be called multiple times per test script run, and must |
| cause U-Boot to start execution from scratch each time. Hopefully your |
| simulator includes a virtual reset button! If not, you can launch the |
| simulator from `u-boot-test-reset` instead, while arranging for this console |
| process to always communicate with the current simulator instance. |
| |
| u-boot-test-flash |
| ''''''''''''''''' |
| |
| Prior to running the test suite against a board, some arrangement must be made |
| so that the board executes the particular U-Boot binary to be tested. Often |
| this involves writing the U-Boot binary to the board's flash ROM. The test |
| suite calls this hook script for that purpose. |
| |
| This script should perform the entire flashing process synchronously; the |
| script should only exit once flashing is complete, and a board reset will |
| cause the newly flashed U-Boot binary to be executed. |
| |
| It is conceivable that this script will do nothing. This might be useful in |
| the following cases: |
| |
| - Some other process has already written the desired U-Boot binary into the |
| board's flash prior to running the test suite. |
| - The board allows U-Boot to be downloaded directly into RAM, and executed |
| from there. Use of this feature will reduce wear on the board's flash, so |
| may be preferable if available, and if cold boot testing of U-Boot is not |
| required. If this feature is used, the `u-boot-test-reset` script should |
| perform this download, since the board could conceivably be reset multiple |
| times in a single test run. |
| |
| It is up to the user to determine if those situations exist, and to code this |
| hook script appropriately. |
| |
| This script will typically be implemented by calling out to some SoC- or |
| board-specific vendor flashing utility. |
| |
| u-boot-test-reset |
| ''''''''''''''''' |
| |
| Whenever the test suite needs to reset the target board, this script is |
| executed. This is guaranteed to happen at least once, prior to executing the |
| first test function. If any test fails, the test infra-structure will execute |
| this script again to restore U-Boot to an operational state before running the |
| next test function. |
| |
| This script will likely be implemented by communicating with some form of |
| relay or electronic switch attached to the board's reset signal. |
| |
| The semantics of this script require that when it is executed, U-Boot will |
| start running from scratch. If the U-Boot binary to be tested has been written |
| to flash, pulsing the board's reset signal is likely all this script needs to |
| do. However, in some scenarios, this script may perform other actions. For |
| example, it may call out to some SoC- or board-specific vendor utility in order |
| to download the U-Boot binary directly into RAM and execute it. This would |
| avoid the need for `u-boot-test-flash` to actually write U-Boot to flash, thus |
| saving wear on the flash chip(s). |
| |
| Examples |
| '''''''' |
| |
| https://source.denx.de/u-boot/u-boot-test-hooks contains some working example hook |
| scripts, and may be useful as a reference when implementing hook scripts for |
| your platform. These scripts are not considered part of U-Boot itself. |
| |
| Board-type-specific configuration |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Each board has a different configuration and behaviour. Many of these |
| differences can be automatically detected by parsing the `.config` file in the |
| build directory. However, some differences can't yet be handled automatically. |
| |
| For each board, an optional Python module `u_boot_board_${board_type}` may exist |
| to provide board-specific information to the test script. Any global value |
| defined in these modules is available for use by any test function. The data |
| contained in these scripts must be purely derived from U-Boot source code. |
| Hence, these configuration files are part of the U-Boot source tree too. |
| |
| Execution environment configuration |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Each user's hardware setup may enable testing different subsets of the features |
| implemented by a particular board's configuration of U-Boot. For example, a |
| U-Boot configuration may support USB device mode and USB Mass Storage, but this |
| can only be tested if a USB cable is connected between the board and the host |
| machine running the test script. |
| |
| For each board, optional Python modules `u_boot_boardenv_${board_type}` and |
| `u_boot_boardenv_${board_type}_${board_identity}` may exist to provide |
| board-specific and board-identity-specific information to the test script. Any |
| global value defined in these modules is available for use by any test |
| function. The data contained in these is specific to a particular user's |
| hardware configuration. Hence, these configuration files are not part of the |
| U-Boot source tree, and should be installed outside of the source tree. Users |
| should set `$PYTHONPATH` prior to running the test script to allow these |
| modules to be loaded. |
| |
| Board module parameter usage |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The test scripts rely on the following variables being defined by the board |
| module: |
| |
| - none at present |
| |
| U-Boot `.config` feature usage |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The test scripts rely on various U-Boot `.config` features, either directly in |
| order to test those features, or indirectly in order to query information from |
| the running U-Boot instance in order to test other features. |
| |
| One example is that testing of the `md` command requires knowledge of a RAM |
| address to use for the test. This data is parsed from the output of the |
| `bdinfo` command, and hence relies on CONFIG_CMD_BDI being enabled. |
| |
| For a complete list of dependencies, please search the test scripts for |
| instances of: |
| |
| - `buildconfig.get(...` |
| - `@pytest.mark.buildconfigspec(...` |
| - `@pytest.mark.notbuildconfigspec(...` |
| |
| Complete invocation example |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Assuming that you have installed the hook scripts into $HOME/ubtest/bin, and |
| any required environment configuration Python modules into $HOME/ubtest/py, |
| then you would likely invoke the test script as follows: |
| |
| If U-Boot has already been built: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ |
| PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard |
| |
| If you want the test script to compile U-Boot for you too, then you likely |
| need to set `$CROSS_COMPILE` to allow this, and invoke the test script as |
| follows: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| CROSS_COMPILE=arm-none-eabi- \ |
| PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ |
| PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard --build |
| |
| or, using buildman to handle it: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ |
| PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ |
| ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard --build --buildman |
| |
| Writing tests |
| ------------- |
| |
| Please refer to the pytest documentation for details of writing pytest tests. |
| Details specific to the U-Boot test suite are described below. |
| |
| A test fixture named `u_boot_console` should be used by each test function. This |
| provides the means to interact with the U-Boot console, and retrieve board and |
| environment configuration information. |
| |
| The function `u_boot_console.run_command()` executes a shell command on the |
| U-Boot console, and returns all output from that command. This allows |
| validation or interpretation of the command output. This function validates |
| that certain strings are not seen on the U-Boot console. These include shell |
| error messages and the U-Boot sign-on message (in order to detect unexpected |
| board resets). See the source of `u_boot_console_base.py` for a complete list of |
| "bad" strings. Some test scenarios are expected to trigger these strings. Use |
| `u_boot_console.disable_check()` to temporarily disable checking for specific |
| strings. See `test_unknown_cmd.py` for an example. |
| |
| Board- and board-environment configuration values may be accessed as sub-fields |
| of the `u_boot_console.config` object, for example |
| `u_boot_console.config.ram_base`. |
| |
| Build configuration values (from `.config`) may be accessed via the dictionary |
| `u_boot_console.config.buildconfig`, with keys equal to the Kconfig variable |
| names. |