It tries to find a suitable QEMU binary and will use KVM if present.
We can now configure QEMU from outside with 4 variables :
- $QEMU_BIN : path to QEMU's binary
- $KERNEL_APPEND : arguments appended to kernel cmdline
- $KERNEL_BIN : path to a kernel
Default /boot/vmlinuz-$KERNEL_VER
- $INITRD : path to an initramfs
Default /boot/initramfs-${KERNEL_VER}.img
- $QEMU_SMP : number of CPU simulated by QEMU.
Default 1
(from Alexander Graf's script: http://www.spinics.net/lists/kvm/msg72389.html)
- fix typo
- use compiled systemd-nspawn
- drop --capability=... from systemd-nspawn invocation, is is the default now
- simplify sudo make invocations
Add a test case for job merging with --ignore-dependencies.
test.sh is copied from TEST-01-*, only lightly modified (this
should be refactored better in the future).
test-jobs.sh is the core of this test.
Tests can use the same testsuite.target.
Add end.service to call poweroff instead of doing it from ExecStopPost
where it may be skipped on failure of ExecStart.
A service that only sets the scheduling policy to round-robin
fails to be started. This is because the cpu_sched_priority is
initialized to 0 and is not adjusted when the policy is changed.
Clamp the cpu_sched_priority when the scheduler policy is set. Use
the current policy to validate the new priority.
Change the manual page to state that the given range only applies
to the real-time scheduling policies.
Add a testcase that verifies this change:
$ make test-sched-prio; ./test-sched-prio
[test/sched_idle_bad.service:6] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 1
[test/sched_rr_bad.service:7] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 0
[test/sched_rr_bad.service:8] CPU scheduling priority is out of range, ignoring: 100
$ cd test
$ sudo make check
will run all tests in the TEST-* subdirectories
$ cd test/TEST-01-BASIC
$ sudo make clean setup run
will run the different stages of the test for debugging purposes