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2014-06-06Don't require test wrappers to preserve environment variables, use more ↵Joseph Myers
consistent environment. One wart in the original support for test wrappers for cross testing, as noted in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-10/msg00722.html>, is the requirement for test wrappers to pass a poorly-defined set of environment variables from the build system to the system running the glibc under test. Although some variables are passed explicitly via $(test-wrapper-env), including LD_* variables that simply can't be passed implicitly because of the side effects they'd have on the build system's dynamic linker, others are passed implicitly, including variables such as GCONV_PATH and LOCPATH that could potentially affect the build system's libc (so effectively relying on any such effects not breaking the wrappers). In addition, the code in cross-test-ssh.sh for preserving environment variables is fragile (it depends on how bash formats a list of exported variables, and could well break for multi-line variable definitions where the contents contain things looking like other variable definitions). This patch moves to explicitly passing environment variables via $(test-wrapper-env). Makefile variables that previously used $(test-wrapper) are split up into -before-env and -after-env parts that can be passed separately to the various .sh files used in testing, so those files can then insert environment settings between the two parts. The common default environment settings in make-test-out are made into a separate makefile variable that can also be passed to scripts, rather than many scripts duplicating those settings (for testing an installed glibc, it is desirable to have the GCONV_PATH setting on just one place, so just that one place needs to support it pointing to an installed sysroot instead of the build tree). The default settings are included in the variables such as $(test-program-prefix), so that if tests do not need any non-default settings they can continue to use single variables rather than the split-up variables. Although this patch cleans up LC_ALL=C settings (that being part of the common defaults), various LANG=C and LANGUAGE=C settings remain. Those are generally unnecessary and I propose a subsequent cleanup to remove them. LC_ALL takes precedence over LANG, and while LANGUAGE takes precedence over LC_ALL, it only does so for settings other than LC_ALL=C. So LC_ALL=C on its own is sufficient to ensure the C locale, and anything that gets LC_ALL=C does not need the other settings. While preparing this patch I noticed some tests with .sh files that appeared to do nothing beyond what the generic makefile support for tests can do (localedata/tst-wctype.sh - the makefiles support -ENV variables and .input files - and localedata/tst-mbswcs.sh - just runs five tests that could be run individually from the makefile). So I propose another subsequent cleanup to move those to using the generic support instead of special .sh files. Tested x86_64 (native) and powerpc32 (cross). * Makeconfig (run-program-env): New variable. (run-program-prefix-before-env): Likewise. (run-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise. (run-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables. (built-program-cmd-before-env): New variable. (built-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise. (built-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables. (test-program-prefix-before-env): New variable. (test-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise. (test-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables. (test-program-cmd-before-env): New variable. (test-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise. (test-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables. * Rules (make-test-out): Use $(run-program-env). * scripts/cross-test-ssh.sh (env_blacklist): Remove variable. (help): Do not mention environment variables. Mention --timeoutfactor option. (timeoutfactor): New variable. (blacklist_exports): Remove function. (exports): Remove variable. (command): Do not include ${exports}. * manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Do not mention test wrappers preserving environment variables. Mention that last assignment to a variable must take precedence. * INSTALL: Regenerated. * benchtests/Makefile (run-bench): Use $(run-program-env). * catgets/Makefile ($(objpfx)test1.cat): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)test2.cat): Do not specify environment variables explicitly. ($(objpfx)de/libc.cat): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)test-gencat.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)sample.SJIS.cat): Do not specify environment variables explicitly. * catgets/test-gencat.sh: Use test_program_cmd_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_cmd_after_env arguments. * elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-pathopt.out): Use $(run-program-env). * elf/tst-pathopt.sh: Use run_program_env argument. * iconvdata/Makefile ($(objpfx)iconv-test.out): Use $(test-wrapper-env) and $(run-program-env). * iconvdata/run-iconv-test.sh: Use test_wrapper_env and run_program_env arguments. * iconvdata/tst-table.sh: Do not set GCONV_PATH explicitly. * intl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-gettext.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-gettext2.out): Likewise. * intl/tst-gettext.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * intl/tst-gettext2.sh: Likewise. * intl/tst-gettext4.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * intl/tst-gettext6.sh: Likewise. * intl/tst-translit.sh: Likewise. * malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-mtrace.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * malloc/tst-mtrace.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * math/Makefile (run-regen-ulps): Use $(run-program-env). * nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tls6.out): Use $(run-program-env). * nptl/tst-tls6.sh: Use run_program_env argument. Set LANG=C explicitly with each use of ${test_wrapper_env}. * posix/Makefile ($(objpfx)wordexp-tst.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * posix/tst-getconf.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * posix/wordexp-tst.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * stdio-common/tst-printf.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * stdlib/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-fmtmsg.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * stdlib/tst-fmtmsg.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. Split $test calls into $test_pre and $test. * timezone/Makefile (build-testdata): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). localedata/ChangeLog: * Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(CTYPE_FILES))): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)sort-test.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-fmon.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(run-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-locale.out): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-trans.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env), $(run-program-prefix-after-env), $(test-program-prefix-before-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-ctype.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-wctype.out): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-langinfo.out): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-langinfo-static.out): Likewise. * gen-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and localedef_after_env arguments. * sort-test.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-ctype.sh: Use tst_ctype_before_env, run_program_env and tst_ctype_after_env arguments. * tst-fmon.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and run_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-langinfo.sh: Use tst_langinfo_before_env, run_program_env and tst_langinfo_after_env arguments. * tst-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and localedef_after_env arguments. * tst-mbswcs.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * tst-numeric.sh: Likewise. * tst-rpmatch.sh: Likewise. * tst-trans.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env, run_program_prefix_after_env, test_program_prefix_before_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-wctype.sh: Use tst_wctype_before_env, run_program_env and tst_wctype_after_env arguments.
2014-03-25Kludge fix for Versions.def regressionRoland McGrath
2014-03-25Fix localplt check for GNU_IFUNCAdhemerval Zanella
GNU_IFUNC are shown by readelf in 'Relocation section' value as "symbol()" instead of expected hexadecimal value. This causes the check-localplt script to ignore potential PLT stub begin generated by wrong IFUNC usage. This patch changes the localplt script to emit such PLT cases.
2014-03-24benchtests: Move bench.py to benchtests/scripts/Siddhesh Poyarekar
It makes much more sense to have all benchmarking-related scripts in a single place away from everything else.
2014-03-21Implement benchmarking script in pythonSiddhesh Poyarekar
Implemented the benchmark script in python since it is much cleaner and simpler to maintain.
2014-03-18Work around binutils bugs in 2.23 and olderRoland McGrath
binutils versions up through at least 2.23 have some bugs that cause STV_HIDDEN symbols to appear in .dynsyms.
2014-03-14Do not terminate default test runs on test failure.Joseph Myers
This patch is an updated version of <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00198.html> and <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-03/msg00180.html>. Normal practice for software testsuites is that rather than terminating immediately when a test fails, they continue running and report at the end on how many tests passed or failed. The principle behind the glibc testsuite stopping on failure was probably that the expected state is no failures and so any failure indicates a problem such as miscompilation. In practice, while this is fairly close to true for native testing on x86_64 and x86 (kernel bugs and race conditions can still cause intermittent failures), it's less likely to be the case on other platforms, and so people testing glibc run the testsuite with "make -k" and then examine the logs to determine whether the failures are what they expect to fail on that platform, possibly with some automation for the comparison. This patch switches the glibc testsuite to the normal convention of not stopping on failure - unless you use stop-on-test-failure=y, in which case it behaves essentially as it did before (and does not generate overall test summaries on failure). Instead, the summary tests.sum may contain tests that FAILed. At the end of the test run, any FAIL or ERROR lines from tests.sum are printed, and then it exits with error status if there were any such lines. In addition, build failures will also cause the test run to stop - this has the justification that those *do* indicate serious problems that should be promptly fixed and aren't generally hard to fix (but apart from that, avoiding the build stopping on those failures seems harder). Note that unlike the previous patches in this series, this *does* require people with automation around testing glibc to change their processes - either to start using tests.sum / xtests.sum to track failures and compare them with expectations (with or without also using "make -k" and examining "make" logs to identify build failures), or else to use stop-on-test-failure=y and ignore the new tests.sum / xtests.sum mechanism. (If all you check is the exit status from "make check", no changes are needed unless you want to avoid test runs continuing after the first failure.) Tested x86_64. * scripts/evaluate-test.sh: Handle fourth argument to determine whether test run should stop on failure. * Makeconfig (stop-on-test-failure): New variable. (evaluate-test): Pass fourth argument to evaluate-test.sh based on $(stop-on-test-failure). * Makefile (tests): Give a summary of results from testing and exit with failure status if they include an ERROR or FAIL. (xtests): Likewise. * manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Mention stop-on-test-failure=y. * INSTALL: Regenerated.
2014-03-14Get rid of Versions.def source fileRoland McGrath
2014-03-07Generate overall summary of test results.Joseph Myers
This patch, an updated version of <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00197.html>, makes testsuite runs generate an overall summary of test results. A new script merge-test-results.sh deals both with collecting results within a directory to a file with all the results from that directory, and collecting the results from subdirectories into a single overall file (there's not much in common between the two modes of operation of the script, but it seemed silly to have two separate scripts for this). Within a directory, missing results produce UNRESOLVED lines; at top level, missing results for a whole directory produce an ERROR line (since toplevel can't identify what the specific missing tests are in this case). Note that this does not change the rules for when "make" considers there has been an error, or terminates, so unexpected failures will still cause make to terminate, or, with -k, mean the commands for "tests" don't get run because of failure of a dependency. Tested x86_64, including that the summary does in fact reflect all the tests with .test-result files. * scripts/merge-test-results.sh: New file. * Makefile (tests-special-notdir): New variable. (tests): Run merge-test-results.sh. (xtests): Likewise. * Rules (tests-special-notdir): New variable. (xtests-special-notdir): Likewise. (tests): Run merge-test-results.sh (xtests): Likewise.
2014-02-27Support expected failures in .test-result files.Joseph Myers
This patch, an updated version of <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00195.html>, makes it possible for .test-result files for individual tests to contain XPASS and XFAIL rather than PASS and FAIL in cases where failure is expected. This replaces the marking of two individual tests with "-" to cause them to be expected at makefile level to fail; evaluate-test.sh will ensure it exits with status 0 for an expected failure. Tested x86_64. * scripts/evaluate-test.sh: Take new argument indicating whether failure is expected. * Makeconfig (evaluate-test): Pass argument to evaluate-test.sh indicating whether failure is expected. * conform/Makefile (test-xfail-run-conformtest): New variable. ($(objpfx)run-conformtest.out): Don't expect to fail at makefile level. * posix/Makefile (test-xfail-annexc): New variable. ($(objpfx)annexc.out): Don't expect to fail at makefile level.
2014-02-15Generate .test-result files for ordinary tests.Tomas Dohnalek
This patch, an updated version of <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00193.html>, starts the process of generating explicit PASS or FAIL status for individual glibc tests. It's based on Tomas Dohnalek's patch <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-10/msg00278.html>, but is deliberately more minimal: it doesn't try to cover any tests outside of $(tests) / $(xtests) (that's for a later patch), nor does it put the result together in an overall summary file (again, a later patch): it just generates the .test-result files. Thus, this patch keeps the overall logic for when a testsuite run finishes completely unchanged: a test failing will terminate the run. I think we *should* move to a more conventional approach where plain "make check" does not terminate for an individual test failure, unless e.g. you say "make stop-on-test-failure=y check", but that sort of policy change is best done as a separate patch once the infrastructure is in place to generate summary files for completed test runs (which will entirely consist of PASS and XFAIL lines if the testsuite run reaches the point of generating them, until such a policy change is made). Tested x86_64. 2014-02-14 Tomas Dohnalek <tdohnale@redhat.com> Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com> * Makeconfig (test-name): New variable. (evaluate-test): Likewise. * Makerules (do-test-clean): Remove .test-result files. (common-mostlyclean): Likewise. * Rules ($(objpfx)%.out): Use $(evaluate-test) in both rules. * scripts/evaluate-test.sh: New file.
2014-01-01scripts/update-copyrights: adjust configure input file suffixAllan McRae
2014-01-01Update remaining copyright datesAllan McRae
Update copyright years that are not handled by scripts/update-copyright.
2014-01-01Update copyright notices with scripts/update-copyrightsAllan McRae
2013-12-19Update texinfo.tex, config.guess, config.sub from upstream.Joseph Myers
This patch updates various miscellaneous files we take from upstream GNU sources (texinfo.texi, config.guess, config.sub - various others haven't changed upstream since we last updated them) to their current upstream versions. Tested x86_64. * manual/texinfo.tex: Update to version 2013-11-26.10 with trailing whitespace removed. * scripts/config.guess: Update to version 2013-11-29. * scripts/config.sub: Update to version 2013-10-01.
2013-12-06benchtests: Append volatile keyword to type instead of prependingSiddhesh Poyarekar
`volatile int` means the same as 'int volatile', but that's not the case for 'volatile char *' and 'char * volatile'. We won't need a 'char volatile *' or other complicated semantics for now.
2013-12-05Accept output arguments to benchmark functionsSiddhesh Poyarekar
This patch adds the ability to accept output arguments to functions being benchmarked, by nesting the argument type in <> in the args directive. It includes the sincos implementation as an example, where the function would have the following args directive: ## args: double:<double *>:<double *> This simply adds a definition for a static variable whose pointer gets passed into the function, so it's not yet possible to pass something more complicated like a pre-allocated string or array. That would be a good feature to add if a function needs it. The values in the input file will map only to the input arguments. So if I had a directive like this for a function foo: ## args: int:<int *>:int:<int *> and I have a value list like this: 1, 2 3, 4 5, 6 then the function calls generated would be: foo (1, &out1, 2, &out2); foo (3, &out1, 4, &out2); foo (5, &out1, 6, &out2);
2013-12-04benchtests: skip over blank lines in benchmark input filesSiddhesh Poyarekar
2013-10-10benchtests: Add include-sources directive.Torvald Riegel
This adds the "include-sources" directive to scripts/bench.pl. This allows for including source code (vs including headers, which might get a different search path) after the inclusion of any headers.
2013-10-07Add more directives to benchmark input filesSiddhesh Poyarekar
This patch adds some more directives to the benchmark inputs file, moving functionality from the Makefile and making the code generation script a bit cleaner. The function argument and return types that were earlier added as variables in the makefile and passed to the script via command line arguments are now the 'args' and 'ret' directive respectively. 'args' should be a colon separated list of argument types (skipped if the function doesn't accept any arguments) and 'ret' should be the return type. Additionally, an 'includes' directive may have a comma separated list of headers to include in the source. For example, the pow input file now looks like this: 42.0, 42.0 1.0000000000000020, 1.5 I did this to unclutter the benchtests Makefile a bit and eventually eliminate dependency of the tests on the Makefile and have tests depend on their respective include files only.
2013-06-17Sort sysd-rules-patterns by descending pattern length.Roland McGrath
2013-06-17Rewrite sysd-rules generation using an awk script.Roland McGrath
2013-06-06Update miscellaneous scripts from upstream.Joseph Myers
2013-05-17Prevent optimizing out of benchmark function callSiddhesh Poyarekar
Resolves: #15424 The compiler would optimize the benchmark function call out of the loop and call it only once, resulting in blazingly fast times for some benchmarks (notably atan, sin and cos). Mark the inputs as volatile so that the code is forced to read again from the input for each iteration.
2013-04-30Allow multiple input domains to be run in the same benchmark programSiddhesh Poyarekar
Some math functions have distinct performance characteristics in specific domains of inputs, where some inputs return via a fast path while other inputs require multiple precision calculations, that too at different precision levels. The way to implement different domains was to have a separate source file and benchmark definition, resulting in separate programs. This clutters up the benchmark, so this change allows these domains to be consolidated into the same input file. To do this, the input file format is now enhanced to allow comments with a preceding # and directives with two # at the begining of a line. A directive that looks like: tells the benchmark generation script that what follows is a different domain of inputs. The value of the 'name' directive (in this case, foo) is used in the output. The two input domains are then executed sequentially and their results collated separately. with the above directive, there would be two lines in the result that look like: func(): .... func(foo): ...
2013-04-30Maintain runtime of each benchmark at ~10 secondsSiddhesh Poyarekar
The idea to run benchmarks for a constant number of iterations is problematic. While the benchmarks may run for 10 seconds on x86_64, they could run for about 30 seconds on powerpc and worse, over 3 minutes on arm. Besides that, adding a new benchmark is cumbersome since one needs to find out the number of iterations needed for a sufficient runtime. A better idea would be to run each benchmark for a specific amount of time. This patch does just that. The run time defaults to 10 seconds and it is configurable at command line: make BENCH_DURATION=5 bench
2013-03-19Add support for rtld directory different from slib directoryAndreas Schwab
2013-03-15Framework for performance benchmarking of functionsSiddhesh Poyarekar
See benchtests/Makefile to know how to use it.
2013-02-27Fix file modesRichard Henderson
2013-02-27Sync config.guess and config.sub with upstreamRichard Henderson
2013-01-02Update miscellaneous copyright dates.Joseph Myers
2013-01-02Update copyright notices with scripts/update-copyrights.Joseph Myers
2013-01-01Add script to update copyright notices and reformat some to facilitate its use.Joseph Myers
2012-11-28Properly handle indirect functions in ABI check on powerpc64Andreas Schwab
2012-11-16check-local-headers: ignore Mach kernel headersPino Toscano
2012-11-03Make cross-test-ssh.sh compatible with a remote POSIX shAndreas Schwab
2012-11-01check-local-headers: ignore c++ headersAndreas Schwab
2012-10-30check-local-headers: Ignore <arch> headersChris Metcalf
The tile architecture's Linux port installs headers in an <arch> directory; these headers are in part shared with glibc. Ignore these headers for check-local-headers like we ignore all the other Linux headers.
2012-10-25Add cross-test-ssh.sh.Joseph Myers
2012-10-05Update config.guess and config.sub.Joseph Myers
2012-10-02* scripts/check-local-headers.sh: Exclude sys/sdt.h andAlexandre Oliva
sys/sdt-config.h.
2012-09-07Add "shopt -s nullglob" to check-local-headers.shH.J. Lu
2012-08-29Use LD_SO to set $ld_so_name/$ld_so_versionH.J. Lu
2012-07-20Move localplt baselines to sysdeps directories.Joseph Myers
2012-07-17Move c++-types baselines to sysdeps directories.Joseph Myers
2012-06-21Regenerate libc.pot.Carlos O'Donell
Enhance scripts/list-sources.sh to search glibc-ports for translatable strings.
2012-05-30alpha: Handle ST_OTHER in objdump outputRichard Henderson
* scripts/abilist.awk: Accept 8 fields. Handle Alpha functions marked to avoid plt entry.
2012-05-30Convert WORDSIZE[32|64]/ld entries to abi-variantsH.J. Lu
2012-05-24Add x32 C++ type dataH.J. Lu
2012-05-06Adjust sparc localplt entries.David S. Miller
* scripts/data/localplt-sparc-linux-gnu.data: Add '?' markers to quad soft-float symbols whose references are compiler generated. * scripts/data/localplt-sparc64-linux-gnu.data: Likewise.