# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 # # Parses KTAP test results from a kernel dmesg log and incrementally prints # results with reader-friendly format. Stores and returns test results in a # Test object. # # Copyright (C) 2019, Google LLC. # Author: Felix Guo <felixguoxiuping@gmail.com> # Author: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> # Author: Rae Moar <rmoar@google.com> from __future__ import annotations from dataclasses import dataclass import re import textwrap from enum import Enum, auto from typing import Iterable, Iterator, List, Optional, Tuple from kunit_printer import stdout class Test: """ A class to represent a test parsed from KTAP results. All KTAP results within a test log are stored in a main Test object as subtests. Attributes: status : TestStatus - status of the test name : str - name of the test expected_count : int - expected number of subtests (0 if single test case and None if unknown expected number of subtests) subtests : List[Test] - list of subtests log : List[str] - log of KTAP lines that correspond to the test counts : TestCounts - counts of the test statuses and errors of subtests or of the test itself if the test is a single test case. """ def __init__(self) -> None: """Creates Test object with default attributes.""" self.status = TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED self.name = '' self.expected_count = 0 # type: Optional[int] self.subtests = [] # type: List[Test] self.log = [] # type: List[str] self.counts = TestCounts() def __str__(self) -> str: """Returns string representation of a Test class object.""" return (f'Test({self.status}, {self.name}, {self.expected_count}, ' f'{self.subtests}, {self.log}, {self.counts})') def __repr__(self) -> str: """Returns string representation of a Test class object.""" return str(self) def add_error(self, error_message: str) -> None: """Records an error that occurred while parsing this test.""" self.counts.errors += 1 stdout.print_with_timestamp(stdout.red('[ERROR]') + f' Test: {self.name}: {error_message}') def ok_status(self) -> bool: """Returns true if the status was ok, i.e. passed or skipped.""" return self.status in (TestStatus.SUCCESS, TestStatus.SKIPPED) class TestStatus(Enum): """An enumeration class to represent the status of a test.""" SUCCESS = auto() FAILURE = auto() SKIPPED = auto() TEST_CRASHED = auto() NO_TESTS = auto() FAILURE_TO_PARSE_TESTS = auto() @dataclass class TestCounts: """ Tracks the counts of statuses of all test cases and any errors within a Test. """ passed: int = 0 failed: int = 0 crashed: int = 0 skipped: int = 0 errors: int = 0 def __str__(self) -> str: """Returns the string representation of a TestCounts object.""" statuses = [('passed', self.passed), ('failed', self.failed), ('crashed', self.crashed), ('skipped', self.skipped), ('errors', self.errors)] return f'Ran {self.total()} tests: ' + \ ', '.join(f'{s}: {n}' for s, n in statuses if n > 0) def total(self) -> int: """Returns the total number of test cases within a test object, where a test case is a test with no subtests. """ return (self.passed + self.failed + self.crashed + self.skipped) def add_subtest_counts(self, counts: TestCounts) -> None: """ Adds the counts of another TestCounts object to the current TestCounts object. Used to add the counts of a subtest to the parent test. Parameters: counts - a different TestCounts object whose counts will be added to the counts of the TestCounts object """ self.passed += counts.passed self.failed += counts.failed self.crashed += counts.crashed self.skipped += counts.skipped self.errors += counts.errors def get_status(self) -> TestStatus: """Returns the aggregated status of a Test using test counts. """ if self.total() == 0: return TestStatus.NO_TESTS if self.crashed: # Crashes should take priority. return TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED if self.failed: return TestStatus.FAILURE if self.passed: # No failures or crashes, looks good! return TestStatus.SUCCESS # We have only skipped tests. return TestStatus.SKIPPED def add_status(self, status: TestStatus) -> None: """Increments the count for `status`.""" if status == TestStatus.SUCCESS: self.passed += 1 elif status == TestStatus.FAILURE: self.failed += 1 elif status == TestStatus.SKIPPED: self.skipped += 1 elif status != TestStatus.NO_TESTS: self.crashed += 1 class LineStream: """ A class to represent the lines of kernel output. Provides a lazy peek()/pop() interface over an iterator of (line#, text). """ _lines: Iterator[Tuple[int, str]] _next: Tuple[int, str] _need_next: bool _done: bool def __init__(self, lines: Iterator[Tuple[int, str]]): """Creates a new LineStream that wraps the given iterator.""" self._lines = lines self._done = False self._need_next = True self._next = (0, '') def _get_next(self) -> None: """Advances the LineSteam to the next line, if necessary.""" if not self._need_next: return try: self._next = next(self._lines) except StopIteration: self._done = True finally: self._need_next = False def peek(self) -> str: """Returns the current line, without advancing the LineStream. """ self._get_next() return self._next[1] def pop(self) -> str: """Returns the current line and advances the LineStream to the next line. """ s = self.peek() if self._done: raise ValueError(f'LineStream: going past EOF, last line was {s}') self._need_next = True return s def __bool__(self) -> bool: """Returns True if stream has more lines.""" self._get_next() return not self._done # Only used by kunit_tool_test.py. def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[str]: """Empties all lines stored in LineStream object into Iterator object and returns the Iterator object. """ while bool(self): yield self.pop() def line_number(self) -> int: """Returns the line number of the current line.""" self._get_next() return self._next[0] # Parsing helper methods: KTAP_START = re.compile(r'\s*KTAP version ([0-9]+)$') TAP_START = re.compile(r'\s*TAP version ([0-9]+)$') KTAP_END = re.compile(r'\s*(List of all partitions:|' 'Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS:|reboot: System halted)') EXECUTOR_ERROR = re.compile(r'\s*kunit executor: (.*)$') def extract_tap_lines(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) -> LineStream: """Extracts KTAP lines from the kernel output.""" def isolate_ktap_output(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) \ -> Iterator[Tuple[int, str]]: line_num = 0 started = False for line in kernel_output: line_num += 1 line = line.rstrip() # remove trailing \n if not started and KTAP_START.search(line): # start extracting KTAP lines and set prefix # to number of characters before version line prefix_len = len( line.split('KTAP version')[0]) started = True yield line_num, line[prefix_len:] elif not started and TAP_START.search(line): # start extracting KTAP lines and set prefix # to number of characters before version line prefix_len = len(line.split('TAP version')[0]) started = True yield line_num, line[prefix_len:] elif started and KTAP_END.search(line): # stop extracting KTAP lines break elif started: # remove the prefix, if any. line = line[prefix_len:] yield line_num, line elif EXECUTOR_ERROR.search(line): yield line_num, line return LineStream(lines=isolate_ktap_output(kernel_output)) KTAP_VERSIONS = [1] TAP_VERSIONS = [13, 14] def check_version(version_num: int, accepted_versions: List[int], version_type: str, test: Test) -> None: """ Adds error to test object if version number is too high or too low. Parameters: version_num - The inputted version number from the parsed KTAP or TAP header line accepted_version - List of accepted KTAP or TAP versions version_type - 'KTAP' or 'TAP' depending on the type of version line. test - Test object for current test being parsed """ if version_num < min(accepted_versions): test.add_error(f'{version_type} version lower than expected!') elif version_num > max(accepted_versions): test.add_error(f'{version_type} version higer than expected!') def parse_ktap_header(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: """ Parses KTAP/TAP header line and checks version number. Returns False if fails to parse KTAP/TAP header line. Accepted formats: - 'KTAP version [version number]' - 'TAP version [version number]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse test - Test object for current test being parsed Return: True if successfully parsed KTAP/TAP header line """ ktap_match = KTAP_START.match(lines.peek()) tap_match = TAP_START.match(lines.peek()) if ktap_match: version_num = int(ktap_match.group(1)) check_version(version_num, KTAP_VERSIONS, 'KTAP', test) elif tap_match: version_num = int(tap_match.group(1)) check_version(version_num, TAP_VERSIONS, 'TAP', test) else: return False lines.pop() return True TEST_HEADER = re.compile(r'^\s*# Subtest: (.*)$') def parse_test_header(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: """ Parses test header and stores test name in test object. Returns False if fails to parse test header line. Accepted format: - '# Subtest: [test name]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse test - Test object for current test being parsed Return: True if successfully parsed test header line """ match = TEST_HEADER.match(lines.peek()) if not match: return False test.name = match.group(1) lines.pop() return True TEST_PLAN = re.compile(r'^\s*1\.\.([0-9]+)') def parse_test_plan(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: """ Parses test plan line and stores the expected number of subtests in test object. Reports an error if expected count is 0. Returns False and sets expected_count to None if there is no valid test plan. Accepted format: - '1..[number of subtests]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse test - Test object for current test being parsed Return: True if successfully parsed test plan line """ match = TEST_PLAN.match(lines.peek()) if not match: test.expected_count = None return False expected_count = int(match.group(1)) test.expected_count = expected_count lines.pop() return True TEST_RESULT = re.compile(r'^\s*(ok|not ok) ([0-9]+) (- )?([^#]*)( # .*)?$') TEST_RESULT_SKIP = re.compile(r'^\s*(ok|not ok) ([0-9]+) (- )?(.*) # SKIP(.*)$') def peek_test_name_match(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: """ Matches current line with the format of a test result line and checks if the name matches the name of the current test. Returns False if fails to match format or name. Accepted format: - '[ok|not ok] [test number] [-] [test name] [optional skip directive]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse test - Test object for current test being parsed Return: True if matched a test result line and the name matching the expected test name """ line = lines.peek() match = TEST_RESULT.match(line) if not match: return False name = match.group(4) return name == test.name def parse_test_result(lines: LineStream, test: Test, expected_num: int) -> bool: """ Parses test result line and stores the status and name in the test object. Reports an error if the test number does not match expected test number. Returns False if fails to parse test result line. Note that the SKIP directive is the only direction that causes a change in status. Accepted format: - '[ok|not ok] [test number] [-] [test name] [optional skip directive]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse test - Test object for current test being parsed expected_num - expected test number for current test Return: True if successfully parsed a test result line. """ line = lines.peek() match = TEST_RESULT.match(line) skip_match = TEST_RESULT_SKIP.match(line) # Check if line matches test result line format if not match: return False lines.pop() # Set name of test object if skip_match: test.name = skip_match.group(4) else: test.name = match.group(4) # Check test num num = int(match.group(2)) if num != expected_num: test.add_error(f'Expected test number {expected_num} but found {num}') # Set status of test object status = match.group(1) if skip_match: test.status = TestStatus.SKIPPED elif status == 'ok': test.status = TestStatus.SUCCESS else: test.status = TestStatus.FAILURE return True def parse_diagnostic(lines: LineStream) -> List[str]: """ Parse lines that do not match the format of a test result line or test header line and returns them in list. Line formats that are not parsed: - '# Subtest: [test name]' - '[ok|not ok] [test number] [-] [test name] [optional skip directive]' - 'KTAP version [version number]' Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse Return: Log of diagnostic lines """ log = [] # type: List[str] non_diagnostic_lines = [TEST_RESULT, TEST_HEADER, KTAP_START, TAP_START] while lines and not any(re.match(lines.peek()) for re in non_diagnostic_lines): log.append(lines.pop()) return log # Printing helper methods: DIVIDER = '=' * 60 def format_test_divider(message: str, len_message: int) -> str: """ Returns string with message centered in fixed width divider. Example: '===================== message example =====================' Parameters: message - message to be centered in divider line len_message - length of the message to be printed such that any characters of the color codes are not counted Return: String containing message centered in fixed width divider """ default_count = 3 # default number of dashes len_1 = default_count len_2 = default_count difference = len(DIVIDER) - len_message - 2 # 2 spaces added if difference > 0: # calculate number of dashes for each side of the divider len_1 = int(difference / 2) len_2 = difference - len_1 return ('=' * len_1) + f' {message} ' + ('=' * len_2) def print_test_header(test: Test) -> None: """ Prints test header with test name and optionally the expected number of subtests. Example: '=================== example (2 subtests) ===================' Parameters: test - Test object representing current test being printed """ message = test.name if message != "": # Add a leading space before the subtest counts only if a test name # is provided using a "# Subtest" header line. message += " " if test.expected_count: if test.expected_count == 1: message += '(1 subtest)' else: message += f'({test.expected_count} subtests)' stdout.print_with_timestamp(format_test_divider(message, len(message))) def print_log(log: Iterable[str]) -> None: """Prints all strings in saved log for test in yellow.""" formatted = textwrap.dedent('\n'.join(log)) for line in formatted.splitlines(): stdout.print_with_timestamp(stdout.yellow(line)) def format_test_result(test: Test) -> str: """ Returns string with formatted test result with colored status and test name. Example: '[PASSED] example' Parameters: test - Test object representing current test being printed Return: String containing formatted test result """ if test.status == TestStatus.SUCCESS: return stdout.green('[PASSED] ') + test.name if test.status == TestStatus.SKIPPED: return stdout.yellow('[SKIPPED] ') + test.name if test.status == TestStatus.NO_TESTS: return stdout.yellow('[NO TESTS RUN] ') + test.name if test.status == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED: print_log(test.log) return stdout.red('[CRASHED] ') + test.name print_log(test.log) return stdout.red('[FAILED] ') + test.name def print_test_result(test: Test) -> None: """ Prints result line with status of test. Example: '[PASSED] example' Parameters: test - Test object representing current test being printed """ stdout.print_with_timestamp(format_test_result(test)) def print_test_footer(test: Test) -> None: """ Prints test footer with status of test. Example: '===================== [PASSED] example =====================' Parameters: test - Test object representing current test being printed """ message = format_test_result(test) stdout.print_with_timestamp(format_test_divider(message, len(message) - stdout.color_len())) def _summarize_failed_tests(test: Test) -> str: """Tries to summarize all the failing subtests in `test`.""" def failed_names(test: Test, parent_name: str) -> List[str]: # Note: we use 'main' internally for the top-level test. if not parent_name or parent_name == 'main': full_name = test.name else: full_name = parent_name + '.' + test.name if not test.subtests: # this is a leaf node return [full_name] # If all the children failed, just say this subtest failed. # Don't summarize it down "the top-level test failed", though. failed_subtests = [sub for sub in test.subtests if not sub.ok_status()] if parent_name and len(failed_subtests) == len(test.subtests): return [full_name] all_failures = [] # type: List[str] for t in failed_subtests: all_failures.extend(failed_names(t, full_name)) return all_failures failures = failed_names(test, '') # If there are too many failures, printing them out will just be noisy. if len(failures) > 10: # this is an arbitrary limit return '' return 'Failures: ' + ', '.join(failures) def print_summary_line(test: Test) -> None: """ Prints summary line of test object. Color of line is dependent on status of test. Color is green if test passes, yellow if test is skipped, and red if the test fails or crashes. Summary line contains counts of the statuses of the tests subtests or the test itself if it has no subtests. Example: "Testing complete. Passed: 2, Failed: 0, Crashed: 0, Skipped: 0, Errors: 0" test - Test object representing current test being printed """ if test.status == TestStatus.SUCCESS: color = stdout.green elif test.status in (TestStatus.SKIPPED, TestStatus.NO_TESTS): color = stdout.yellow else: color = stdout.red stdout.print_with_timestamp(color(f'Testing complete. {test.counts}')) # Summarize failures that might have gone off-screen since we had a lot # of tests (arbitrarily defined as >=100 for now). if test.ok_status() or test.counts.total() < 100: return summarized = _summarize_failed_tests(test) if not summarized: return stdout.print_with_timestamp(color(summarized)) # Other methods: def bubble_up_test_results(test: Test) -> None: """ If the test has subtests, add the test counts of the subtests to the test and check if any of the tests crashed and if so set the test status to crashed. Otherwise if the test has no subtests add the status of the test to the test counts. Parameters: test - Test object for current test being parsed """ subtests = test.subtests counts = test.counts status = test.status for t in subtests: counts.add_subtest_counts(t.counts) if counts.total() == 0: counts.add_status(status) elif test.counts.get_status() == TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED: test.status = TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED def parse_test(lines: LineStream, expected_num: int, log: List[str], is_subtest: bool) -> Test: """ Finds next test to parse in LineStream, creates new Test object, parses any subtests of the test, populates Test object with all information (status, name) about the test and the Test objects for any subtests, and then returns the Test object. The method accepts three formats of tests: Accepted test formats: - Main KTAP/TAP header Example: KTAP version 1 1..4 [subtests] - Subtest header (must include either the KTAP version line or "# Subtest" header line) Example (preferred format with both KTAP version line and "# Subtest" line): KTAP version 1 # Subtest: name 1..3 [subtests] ok 1 name Example (only "# Subtest" line): # Subtest: name 1..3 [subtests] ok 1 name Example (only KTAP version line, compliant with KTAP v1 spec): KTAP version 1 1..3 [subtests] ok 1 name - Test result line Example: ok 1 - test Parameters: lines - LineStream of KTAP output to parse expected_num - expected test number for test to be parsed log - list of strings containing any preceding diagnostic lines corresponding to the current test is_subtest - boolean indicating whether test is a subtest Return: Test object populated with characteristics and any subtests """ test = Test() test.log.extend(log) # Parse any errors prior to parsing tests err_log = parse_diagnostic(lines) test.log.extend(err_log) if not is_subtest: # If parsing the main/top-level test, parse KTAP version line and # test plan test.name = "main" ktap_line = parse_ktap_header(lines, test) parse_test_plan(lines, test) parent_test = True else: # If not the main test, attempt to parse a test header containing # the KTAP version line and/or subtest header line ktap_line = parse_ktap_header(lines, test) subtest_line = parse_test_header(lines, test) parent_test = (ktap_line or subtest_line) if parent_test: # If KTAP version line and/or subtest header is found, attempt # to parse test plan and print test header parse_test_plan(lines, test) print_test_header(test) expected_count = test.expected_count subtests = [] test_num = 1 while parent_test and (expected_count is None or test_num <= expected_count): # Loop to parse any subtests. # Break after parsing expected number of tests or # if expected number of tests is unknown break when test # result line with matching name to subtest header is found # or no more lines in stream. sub_log = parse_diagnostic(lines) sub_test = Test() if not lines or (peek_test_name_match(lines, test) and is_subtest): if expected_count and test_num <= expected_count: # If parser reaches end of test before # parsing expected number of subtests, print # crashed subtest and record error test.add_error('missing expected subtest!') sub_test.log.extend(sub_log) test.counts.add_status( TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED) print_test_result(sub_test) else: test.log.extend(sub_log) break else: sub_test = parse_test(lines, test_num, sub_log, True) subtests.append(sub_test) test_num += 1 test.subtests = subtests if is_subtest: # If not main test, look for test result line test.log.extend(parse_diagnostic(lines)) if test.name != "" and not peek_test_name_match(lines, test): test.add_error('missing subtest result line!') else: parse_test_result(lines, test, expected_num) # Check for there being no subtests within parent test if parent_test and len(subtests) == 0: # Don't override a bad status if this test had one reported. # Assumption: no subtests means CRASHED is from Test.__init__() if test.status in (TestStatus.TEST_CRASHED, TestStatus.SUCCESS): print_log(test.log) test.status = TestStatus.NO_TESTS test.add_error('0 tests run!') # Add statuses to TestCounts attribute in Test object bubble_up_test_results(test) if parent_test and is_subtest: # If test has subtests and is not the main test object, print # footer. print_test_footer(test) elif is_subtest: print_test_result(test) return test def parse_run_tests(kernel_output: Iterable[str]) -> Test: """ Using kernel output, extract KTAP lines, parse the lines for test results and print condensed test results and summary line. Parameters: kernel_output - Iterable object contains lines of kernel output Return: Test - the main test object with all subtests. """ stdout.print_with_timestamp(DIVIDER) lines = extract_tap_lines(kernel_output) test = Test() if not lines: test.name = '<missing>' test.add_error('Could not find any KTAP output. Did any KUnit tests run?') test.status = TestStatus.FAILURE_TO_PARSE_TESTS else: test = parse_test(lines, 0, [], False) if test.status != TestStatus.NO_TESTS: test.status = test.counts.get_status() stdout.print_with_timestamp(DIVIDER) print_summary_line(test) return test