[PATCH 3/1] xfstests: generic/062: Do not run on newer kernels

Dave Chinner david at fromorbit.com
Fri Sep 3 04:55:21 UTC 2021


On Thu, Sep 02, 2021 at 11:47:31AM -0400, Vivek Goyal wrote:
> 
> xfstests: generic/062: Do not run on newer kernels
> 
> This test has been written with assumption that setting user.* xattrs will
> fail on symlink and special files. When newer kernels support setting
> user.* xattrs on symlink and special files, this test starts failing.
> 
> Found it hard to change test in such a way that it works on both type of
> kernels. Primary problem is 062.out file which hardcodes the output and
> output will be different on old and new kernels.
> 
> So instead, do not run this test if kernel is new and is expected to
> exhibit new behavior. Next patch will create a new test and run that
> test on new kernel.
> 
> IOW, on old kernels run 062 and on new kernels run new test.
> 
> This is a proposed patch. Will need to be fixed if corresponding
> kernel changes are merged upstream.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal at redhat.com>
> ---
>  tests/generic/062 |   20 ++++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 20 insertions(+)
> 
> Index: xfstests-dev/tests/generic/062
> ===================================================================
> --- xfstests-dev.orig/tests/generic/062	2021-08-31 15:51:08.160307982 -0400
> +++ xfstests-dev/tests/generic/062	2021-08-31 16:27:41.678307982 -0400
> @@ -55,6 +55,26 @@ _require_attrs
>  _require_symlinks
>  _require_mknod
>  
> +user_xattr_allowed()
> +{
> +	local kernel_version kernel_patchlevel
> +
> +	kernel_version=`uname -r | awk -F. '{print $1}'`
> +	kernel_patchlevel=`uname -r | awk -F. '{print $2}'`
> +
> +	# Kernel version 5.14 onwards allow user xattr on symlink/special files.
> +	[ $kernel_version -lt 5 ] && return 1
> +	[ $kernel_patchlevel -lt 14 ] && return 1
> +	return 0;
> +}

We don't do this because code changes get backported to random
kernels and so the kernel release is not a reliable indicator of
feature support.

Probing the functionality is the only way to reliably detect what a
kernel supports. That's what we don in all the _requires*()
functions, which is what this should all be wrapped in.

> +# Kernel version 5.14 onwards allow user xattr on symlink/special files.
> +# Do not run this test on newer kernels. Instead run the new test
> +# which has been written with the assumption that user.* xattr
> +# will succeed on symlink and special files.
> +user_xattr_allowed && _notrun "Kernel allows user.* xattrs on symlinks and special files. Skipping this test. Run newer test instead."

"run a newer test instead" is not a useful error message. Nor do you
need "skipping this test" - that's exactly what "notrun" means.

Cheers,

Dave.
-- 
Dave Chinner
david at fromorbit.com



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