linux/tools/testing/selftests/rcutorture/bin/kvm-get-cpus-script.sh
Paul E. McKenney cdeef67d8f torture: Make kvm.sh select per-scenario affinity masks
This commit causes kvm.sh to use the new kvm-assign-cpus.sh and
kvm-get-cpus-script.sh scripts to create a TORTURE_AFFINITY environment
variable containing either an empty string (for no affinity) or a list
of CPUs to pin the scenario's vCPUs to.  A later commit will make
use of this information to actually pin the vCPUs.

Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org>
2021-07-27 11:40:30 -07:00

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#!/bin/sh
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
#
# Create an awk script that takes as input numbers of CPUs and outputs
# lists of CPUs, one per line in both cases.
#
# Usage: kvm-get-cpus-script.sh /path/to/cpu/arrays /path/to/put/script [ /path/to/state ]
#
# The CPU arrays are output by kvm-assign-cpus.sh, and are valid awk
# statements initializing the variables describing the system's topology.
#
# The optional state is input by this script (if the file exists and is
# non-empty), and can also be output by this script.
cpuarrays="${1-/sys/devices/system/node}"
scriptfile="${2}"
statefile="${3}"
if ! test -f "$cpuarrays"
then
echo "File not found: $cpuarrays" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
scriptdir="`dirname "$scriptfile"`"
if ! test -d "$scriptdir" || ! test -x "$scriptdir" || ! test -w "$scriptdir"
then
echo "Directory not usable for script output: $scriptdir"
exit 1
fi
cat << '___EOF___' > "$scriptfile"
BEGIN {
___EOF___
cat "$cpuarrays" >> "$scriptfile"
if test -r "$statefile"
then
cat "$statefile" >> "$scriptfile"
fi
cat << '___EOF___' >> "$scriptfile"
}
# Do we have the system architecture to guide CPU affinity?
function gotcpus()
{
return numnodes != "";
}
# Return a comma-separated list of the next n CPUs.
function nextcpus(n, i, s)
{
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
if (nodecpus[curnode] == "")
curnode = 0;
if (cpu[curnode][curcpu[curnode]] == "")
curcpu[curnode] = 0;
if (s != "")
s = s ",";
s = s cpu[curnode][curcpu[curnode]];
curcpu[curnode]++;
curnode++
}
return s;
}
# Dump out the current node/CPU state so that a later invocation of this
# script can continue where this one left off. Of course, this only works
# when a state file was specified and where there was valid sysfs state.
# Returns 1 if the state was dumped, 0 otherwise.
#
# Dumping the state for one system configuration and loading it into
# another isn't likely to do what you want, whatever that might be.
function dumpcpustate( i, fn)
{
___EOF___
echo ' fn = "'"$statefile"'";' >> $scriptfile
cat << '___EOF___' >> "$scriptfile"
if (fn != "" && gotcpus()) {
print "curnode = " curnode ";" > fn;
for (i = 0; i < numnodes; i++)
if (curcpu[i] != "")
print "curcpu[" i "] = " curcpu[i] ";" >> fn;
return 1;
}
if (fn != "")
print "# No CPU state to dump." > fn;
return 0;
}
___EOF___