Files
linux/tools/testing/selftests/net/lib/py/utils.py
Jakub Kicinski e02b52ecef selftests: net: py: support ksft ready without wait
There's a common synchronization problem when a script (Python test)
uses a C program to set up some state (usually start a receiving
process for traffic). The script needs to know when the process
has fully initialized. The inverse of the problem exists for shutting
the process down - we need a reliable way to tell the process to exit.

We added helpers to do this safely in
commit 7147713799 ("selftests: drv-net: add a way to wait for a local process")
unfortunately the two operations (wait for init, and shutdown) are
controlled by a single parameter (ksft_wait). Add support for using
ksft_ready without using the second fd for exit.

This is useful for programs which wait for a specific number of packets
to rx so exit_wait is a good match, but we still need to wait for init.

Reviewed-by: Petr Machata <petrm@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Reviewed-by: breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251120021024.2944527-7-kuba@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2025-11-20 18:19:29 -08:00

279 lines
8.6 KiB
Python

# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
import json as _json
import os
import re
import select
import socket
import subprocess
import time
class CmdExitFailure(Exception):
def __init__(self, msg, cmd_obj):
super().__init__(msg)
self.cmd = cmd_obj
def fd_read_timeout(fd, timeout):
rlist, _, _ = select.select([fd], [], [], timeout)
if rlist:
return os.read(fd, 1024)
raise TimeoutError("Timeout waiting for fd read")
class cmd:
"""
Execute a command on local or remote host.
@shell defaults to false, and class will try to split @comm into a list
if it's a string with spaces.
Use bkg() instead to run a command in the background.
"""
def __init__(self, comm, shell=None, fail=True, ns=None, background=False,
host=None, timeout=5, ksft_ready=None, ksft_wait=None):
if ns:
comm = f'ip netns exec {ns} ' + comm
self.stdout = None
self.stderr = None
self.ret = None
self.ksft_term_fd = None
self.comm = comm
if host:
self.proc = host.cmd(comm)
else:
# If user doesn't explicitly request shell try to avoid it.
if shell is None and isinstance(comm, str) and ' ' in comm:
comm = comm.split()
# ksft_wait lets us wait for the background process to fully start,
# we pass an FD to the child process, and wait for it to write back.
# Similarly term_fd tells child it's time to exit.
pass_fds = []
env = os.environ.copy()
if ksft_wait is not None:
wait_fd, self.ksft_term_fd = os.pipe()
pass_fds.append(wait_fd)
env["KSFT_WAIT_FD"] = str(wait_fd)
ksft_ready = True # ksft_wait implies ready
if ksft_ready is not None:
rfd, ready_fd = os.pipe()
pass_fds.append(ready_fd)
env["KSFT_READY_FD"] = str(ready_fd)
self.proc = subprocess.Popen(comm, shell=shell, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE, pass_fds=pass_fds,
env=env)
if ksft_wait is not None:
os.close(wait_fd)
if ksft_ready is not None:
os.close(ready_fd)
msg = fd_read_timeout(rfd, ksft_wait)
os.close(rfd)
if not msg:
raise Exception("Did not receive ready message")
if not background:
self.process(terminate=False, fail=fail, timeout=timeout)
def process(self, terminate=True, fail=None, timeout=5):
if fail is None:
fail = not terminate
if self.ksft_term_fd:
os.write(self.ksft_term_fd, b"1")
if terminate:
self.proc.terminate()
stdout, stderr = self.proc.communicate(timeout)
self.stdout = stdout.decode("utf-8")
self.stderr = stderr.decode("utf-8")
self.proc.stdout.close()
self.proc.stderr.close()
self.ret = self.proc.returncode
if self.proc.returncode != 0 and fail:
if len(stderr) > 0 and stderr[-1] == "\n":
stderr = stderr[:-1]
raise CmdExitFailure("Command failed: %s\nSTDOUT: %s\nSTDERR: %s" %
(self.proc.args, stdout, stderr), self)
class bkg(cmd):
"""
Run a command in the background.
Examples usage:
Run a command on remote host, and wait for it to finish.
This is usually paired with wait_port_listen() to make sure
the command has initialized:
with bkg("socat ...", exit_wait=True, host=cfg.remote) as nc:
...
Run a command and expect it to let us know that it's ready
by writing to a special file descriptor passed via KSFT_READY_FD.
Command will be terminated when we exit the context manager:
with bkg("my_binary", ksft_wait=5):
"""
def __init__(self, comm, shell=None, fail=None, ns=None, host=None,
exit_wait=False, ksft_ready=None, ksft_wait=None):
super().__init__(comm, background=True,
shell=shell, fail=fail, ns=ns, host=host,
ksft_ready=ksft_ready, ksft_wait=ksft_wait)
self.terminate = not exit_wait and not ksft_wait
self._exit_wait = exit_wait
self.check_fail = fail
if shell and self.terminate:
print("# Warning: combining shell and terminate is risky!")
print("# SIGTERM may not reach the child on zsh/ksh!")
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, ex_type, ex_value, ex_tb):
# Force termination on exception
terminate = self.terminate or (self._exit_wait and ex_type)
return self.process(terminate=terminate, fail=self.check_fail)
global_defer_queue = []
class defer:
def __init__(self, func, *args, **kwargs):
if not callable(func):
raise Exception("defer created with un-callable object, did you call the function instead of passing its name?")
self.func = func
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
self._queue = global_defer_queue
self._queue.append(self)
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, ex_type, ex_value, ex_tb):
return self.exec()
def exec_only(self):
self.func(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
def cancel(self):
self._queue.remove(self)
def exec(self):
self.cancel()
self.exec_only()
def tool(name, args, json=None, ns=None, host=None):
cmd_str = name + ' '
if json:
cmd_str += '--json '
cmd_str += args
cmd_obj = cmd(cmd_str, ns=ns, host=host)
if json:
return _json.loads(cmd_obj.stdout)
return cmd_obj
def bpftool(args, json=None, ns=None, host=None):
return tool('bpftool', args, json=json, ns=ns, host=host)
def ip(args, json=None, ns=None, host=None):
if ns:
args = f'-netns {ns} ' + args
return tool('ip', args, json=json, host=host)
def ethtool(args, json=None, ns=None, host=None):
return tool('ethtool', args, json=json, ns=ns, host=host)
def bpftrace(expr, json=None, ns=None, host=None, timeout=None):
"""
Run bpftrace and return map data (if json=True).
The output of bpftrace is inconvenient, so the helper converts
to a dict indexed by map name, e.g.:
{
"@": { ... },
"@map2": { ... },
}
"""
cmd_arr = ['bpftrace']
# Throw in --quiet if json, otherwise the output has two objects
if json:
cmd_arr += ['-f', 'json', '-q']
if timeout:
expr += ' interval:s:' + str(timeout) + ' { exit(); }'
cmd_arr += ['-e', expr]
cmd_obj = cmd(cmd_arr, ns=ns, host=host, shell=False)
if json:
# bpftrace prints objects as lines
ret = {}
for l in cmd_obj.stdout.split('\n'):
if not l.strip():
continue
one = _json.loads(l)
if one.get('type') != 'map':
continue
for k, v in one["data"].items():
if k.startswith('@'):
k = k.lstrip('@')
ret[k] = v
return ret
return cmd_obj
def rand_port(stype=socket.SOCK_STREAM):
"""
Get a random unprivileged port.
"""
with socket.socket(socket.AF_INET6, stype) as s:
s.bind(("", 0))
return s.getsockname()[1]
def wait_port_listen(port, proto="tcp", ns=None, host=None, sleep=0.005, deadline=5):
end = time.monotonic() + deadline
pattern = f":{port:04X} .* "
if proto == "tcp": # for tcp protocol additionally check the socket state
pattern += "0A"
pattern = re.compile(pattern)
while True:
data = cmd(f'cat /proc/net/{proto}*', ns=ns, host=host, shell=True).stdout
for row in data.split("\n"):
if pattern.search(row):
return
if time.monotonic() > end:
raise Exception("Waiting for port listen timed out")
time.sleep(sleep)
def wait_file(fname, test_fn, sleep=0.005, deadline=5, encoding='utf-8'):
"""
Wait for file contents on the local system to satisfy a condition.
test_fn() should take one argument (file contents) and return whether
condition is met.
"""
end = time.monotonic() + deadline
with open(fname, "r", encoding=encoding) as fp:
while True:
if test_fn(fp.read()):
break
fp.seek(0)
if time.monotonic() > end:
raise TimeoutError("Wait for file contents failed", fname)
time.sleep(sleep)