Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jouni Malinen
4472aafbe0 tests: Generate a combined code coverage report
This combines coverage from all three separate reports into a single
report.

Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2013-12-28 16:32:54 +02:00
Jouni Malinen
3f33b3ad8c tests: Collect code coverage separately from each component in vm
Use a more robust design for collecting the gcov logs from the case
where test cases are run within a virtual machine. This generates a
writable-from-vm build tree for each component separately so that the
lcov and gcov can easily find the matching source code and data files.
In addition, prepare the reports automatically at the end of the
vm-run.sh --codecov execution.

Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2013-12-27 18:11:07 +02:00
Jouni Malinen
f4bfa2d27f tests: Allow gcov to be used when running test cases within vm
Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2013-12-26 13:37:06 +02:00
Johannes Berg
4ecf11c559 hwsim tests: Make channel configuration for VM tests easier
Add a CHANNELS configuration to the script running the VM
that can be added to the vm-config file to allow running
the tests with hwsim devices supporting more than a single
channel.

Eventually, with the (hopefully) upcoming dynamic work in
mac80211_hwsim, this might go away entirely, but for now
this allows testing more code paths.

Signed-hostap: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
2013-11-07 14:01:06 +02:00
Johannes Berg
1cd3eae362 hwsim tests: Allow setting KERNEL and KVMARGS
Rather than just having KERNELDIR, allow setting KERNEL directly.
Also remove the -s option that prevents running multiple machines
at the same time, but add a KVMARGS= variable that can be used to
restore that if needed.

Signed-hostap: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
2013-11-02 10:01:09 +02:00
Johannes Berg
970d3b096f hwsim tests: Add scripts to run in a VM
Instead of running on the host, it can be useful to run in a
VM, particularly to test kernel rather than userspace changes,
so add a few scripts that allow doing so easily.

The basic idea is that the VM kernel is the same architecture
as the host kernel, so the host's root filesystem can be used
(in read-only mode) to run everything. Only a log filesystem
is mounted read-write and will get all the test output.

The kernel console output is collected to a special 'console'
file in the logs directory and kernel crashes are detected.

Signed-hostap: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
2013-10-31 11:08:16 +02:00