diff mbox

[v9,6/6] tests/guest-debug: introduce basic gdbstub tests

Message ID 1447345251-22625-7-git-send-email-alex.bennee@linaro.org (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show

Commit Message

Alex Bennée Nov. 12, 2015, 4:20 p.m. UTC
From: Alex Bennée <alex@bennee.com>

The aim of these tests is to combine with an appropriate kernel
image (with symbol-file vmlinux) and check it behaves as it should.
Given a kernel it checks:

  - single step
  - software breakpoint
  - hardware breakpoint
  - access, read and write watchpoints

On success it returns 0 to the calling process.

I've not plumbed this into the "make check" logic though as we need a
solution for providing non-host binaries to the tests. However the test
is structured to work with pretty much any Linux kernel image as it
uses the basic kernel_init code which is common across architectures.

Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
---
 tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py | 171 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 171 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py

Comments

Peter Maydell Nov. 20, 2015, 4:17 p.m. UTC | #1
On 12 November 2015 at 16:20, Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> wrote:
> From: Alex Bennée <alex@bennee.com>
>
> The aim of these tests is to combine with an appropriate kernel
> image (with symbol-file vmlinux) and check it behaves as it should.
> Given a kernel it checks:
>
>   - single step
>   - software breakpoint
>   - hardware breakpoint
>   - access, read and write watchpoints
>
> On success it returns 0 to the calling process.
>
> I've not plumbed this into the "make check" logic though as we need a
> solution for providing non-host binaries to the tests. However the test
> is structured to work with pretty much any Linux kernel image as it
> uses the basic kernel_init code which is common across architectures.

Do these tests pass if you run them on the TCG QEMU, just out
of interest?

I'm not a great fan of tests that aren't in 'make check'
because IME they just bitrot, but as you say we have no
sensible approach for handling tests that need to run real
guest code :-(

thanks
-- PMM
Alex Bennée Dec. 8, 2015, 12:02 p.m. UTC | #2
Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> writes:

> On 12 November 2015 at 16:20, Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> wrote:
>> From: Alex Bennée <alex@bennee.com>
>>
>> The aim of these tests is to combine with an appropriate kernel
>> image (with symbol-file vmlinux) and check it behaves as it should.
>> Given a kernel it checks:
>>
>>   - single step
>>   - software breakpoint
>>   - hardware breakpoint
>>   - access, read and write watchpoints
>>
>> On success it returns 0 to the calling process.
>>
>> I've not plumbed this into the "make check" logic though as we need a
>> solution for providing non-host binaries to the tests. However the test
>> is structured to work with pretty much any Linux kernel image as it
>> uses the basic kernel_init code which is common across architectures.
>
> Do these tests pass if you run them on the TCG QEMU, just out
> of interest?

You'll be glad to know they do.

> I'm not a great fan of tests that aren't in 'make check'
> because IME they just bitrot, but as you say we have no
> sensible approach for handling tests that need to run real
> guest code :-(

I was pondering if a git sub-project with large file support would work.
We could add pre-built binaries to the tree with appropriate meta-data
(src tree, version, config) to rebuild if required.

There would be some degree of trust implied in the original builder
though. Maybe a signed commit?

>
> thanks
> -- PMM


--
Alex Bennée
diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py b/tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aa53567
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py
@@ -0,0 +1,171 @@ 
+#
+# This script needs to be run on startup
+# qemu -kernel ${KERNEL} -s -S
+# and then:
+# gdb ${KERNEL}.vmlinux -x ${QEMU_SRC}/tests/guest-debug/test-gdbstub.py
+
+import gdb
+
+failcount = 0
+
+def report(cond, msg):
+    "Report success/fail of test"
+    if cond:
+        print "PASS: %s" % (msg)
+    else:
+        print "FAIL: %s" % (msg)
+        failcount += 1
+
+def check_step():
+    "Step an instruction, check it moved."
+    start_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval('$pc')
+    gdb.execute("si")
+    end_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval('$pc')
+
+    return not (start_pc == end_pc)
+
+
+def check_break(sym_name):
+    "Setup breakpoint, continue and check we stopped."
+    sym, ok = gdb.lookup_symbol(sym_name)
+    bp = gdb.Breakpoint(sym_name)
+
+    gdb.execute("c")
+
+    # hopefully we came back
+    end_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval('$pc')
+    print "%s == %s %d" % (end_pc, sym.value(), bp.hit_count)
+    bp.delete()
+
+    # can we test we hit bp?
+    return end_pc == sym.value()
+
+
+# We need to do hbreak manually as the python interface doesn't export it
+def check_hbreak(sym_name):
+    "Setup hardware breakpoint, continue and check we stopped."
+    sym, ok = gdb.lookup_symbol(sym_name)
+    gdb.execute("hbreak %s" % (sym_name))
+    gdb.execute("c")
+
+    # hopefully we came back
+    end_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval('$pc')
+    print "%s == %s" % (end_pc, sym.value())
+
+    if end_pc == sym.value():
+        gdb.execute("d 1")
+        return True
+    else:
+        return False
+
+
+class WatchPoint(gdb.Breakpoint):
+
+    def get_wpstr(self, sym_name):
+        "Setup sym and wp_str for given symbol."
+        self.sym, ok = gdb.lookup_symbol(sym_name)
+        wp_addr = gdb.parse_and_eval(sym_name).address
+        self.wp_str = '*(%(type)s)(&%(address)s)' % dict(
+            type = wp_addr.type, address = sym_name)
+
+        return(self.wp_str)
+
+    def __init__(self, sym_name, type):
+        wp_str = self.get_wpstr(sym_name)
+        super(WatchPoint, self).__init__(wp_str, gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT, type)
+
+    def stop(self):
+        end_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval('$pc')
+        print "HIT WP @ %s" % (end_pc)
+        return True
+
+
+def do_one_watch(sym, wtype, text):
+
+    wp = WatchPoint(sym, wtype)
+    gdb.execute("c")
+    report_str = "%s for %s (%s)" % (text, sym, wp.sym.value())
+
+    if wp.hit_count > 0:
+        report(True, report_str)
+        wp.delete()
+    else:
+        report(False, report_str)
+
+
+def check_watches(sym_name):
+    "Watch a symbol for any access."
+
+    # Should hit for any read
+    do_one_watch(sym_name, gdb.WP_ACCESS, "awatch")
+
+    # Again should hit for reads
+    do_one_watch(sym_name, gdb.WP_READ, "rwatch")
+
+    # Finally when it is written
+    do_one_watch(sym_name, gdb.WP_WRITE, "watch")
+
+
+class CatchBreakpoint(gdb.Breakpoint):
+    def __init__(self, sym_name):
+        super(CatchBreakpoint, self).__init__(sym_name)
+        self.sym, ok = gdb.lookup_symbol(sym_name)
+
+    def stop(self):
+        end_pc = gdb.parse_and_eval ('$pc')
+        print "CB: %s == %s" % (end_pc, self.sym.value())
+        if end_pc == sym.value():
+            report(False, "Hit final catchpoint")
+
+
+def run_test():
+    "Run throught the tests one by one"
+
+    print "Checking we can step the first few instructions"
+    step_ok = 0
+    for i in xrange(3):
+        if check_step():
+            step_ok += 1
+
+    report(step_ok == 3, "single step in boot code")
+
+    print "Checking HW breakpoint works"
+    break_ok = check_hbreak("kernel_init")
+    report(break_ok, "hbreak @ kernel_init")
+
+    # Can't set this up until we are in the kernel proper
+    # if we make it to run_init_process we've over-run and
+    # one of the tests failed
+    print "Setup catch-all for run_init_process"
+    cbp = CatchBreakpoint("run_init_process")
+    cpb2 = CatchBreakpoint("try_to_run_init_process")
+
+    print "Checking Normal breakpoint works"
+    break_ok = check_break("wait_for_completion")
+    report(break_ok, "break @ wait_for_completion")
+
+    print "Checking watchpoint works"
+    check_watches("system_state")
+
+#
+# This runs as the script it sourced (via -x)
+#
+
+try:
+    print "Connecting to remote"
+    gdb.execute("target remote localhost:1234")
+
+    # These are not very useful in scripts
+    gdb.execute("set pagination off")
+    gdb.execute("set confirm off")
+
+    # Run the actual tests
+    run_test()
+
+except:
+    print "GDB Exception while running test"
+    failcount += 1
+
+# Finally kill the inferior and exit gdb with a count of failures
+gdb.execute("kill")
+exit(failcount)