Having these named differently than the test itself mostly creates
unecessary confusion and makes writing logic against the tests harder
so let's rename the testsuite-xx units and scripts to just use the
test name itself.
Let's make this behave more like all the rest of the meson stuff.
This also is the first step to making it a bit more flexible so we
can define integration tests in different ways as will be seen in
the next commits.
Specifying the test number manually is tedious and prone to errors (as
recently proven). Since we have all the necessary data to work out the
test number, let's do it automagically.
As in 2a5fcfae02
and in 3e67e5c992
using /usr/bin/env allows bash to be looked up in PATH
rather than being hard-coded.
As with the previous changes the same arguments apply
- distributions have scripts to rewrite shebangs on installation and
they know what locations to rely on.
- For tests/compilation we should rather rely on the user to have setup
there PATH correctly.
In particular this makes testing from git easier on NixOS where do not provide
/bin/bash to improve compose-ability.
Many tests were also masking systemd-machined.service. But machined
should only start when activated, so having it not masked shouldn't be
noticable. TEST-25-IMPORT needs it.
Almost all tests were manually mounting/unmounting $TESTDIR/root
from the loopback image; this moves all that into test-functions
so the test setup functions are simplier.
Also add test_setup_cleanup() function, to cleanup what is mounted
by create_empty_image_rootdir()
The `set -e` option is incompatible with a subshell/compound command,
which is followed by || <EXPR>. In such case, the -e option is ignored
in all affected subshells/functions (see man bash(1) for command `set`).
The main testsuite service timeouts sporadically when waiting for
other testsuite-* units. As the test timeout is handled by
the "test executor" (test.sh), let's disable it for the service.
This should (hopefully) fix the test flakiness.
We had all kinds of indentation: 2 sp, 3 sp, 4 sp, 8 sp, and mixed.
4 sp was the most common, in particular the majority of scripts under test/
used that. Let's standarize on 4 sp, because many commandlines are long and
there's a lot of nesting, and with 8sp indentation less stuff fits. 4 sp
also seems to be the default indentation, so this will make it less likely
that people will mess up if they don't load the editor config. (I think people
often use vi, and vi has no support to load project-wide configuration
automatically. We distribute a .vimrc file, but it is not loaded by default,
and even the instructions in it seem to discourage its use for security
reasons.)
Also remove the few vim config lines that were left. We should either have them
on all files, or none.
Also remove some strange stuff like '#!/bin/env bash', yikes.
The test is heavily dependent on timeouts, and if we are run in
potentially very slow QEMU instances there's a good chance we'll miss
some which we normally wouldn't miss. Hence, let's test this one in
nspawn only. Given that the test is purely in service management it
shouldn't matter whether it runs in nspawn or qemu, hence keep running
it in nspawn, but don't bother with qemu.
Similar, do this for TEST-03-JOBS, too, which operates with relatively
short sleep times internally.
Fixes: #9123
With Type=notify services, EXTEND_TIMEOUT_USEC= messages will delay any startup/
runtime/shutdown timeouts.
A service that hasn't timed out, i.e, start time < TimeStartSec,
runtime < RuntimeMaxSec and stop time < TimeoutStopSec, may by sending
EXTEND_TIMEOUT_USEC=, allow the service to continue beyond the limit for
the execution phase (i.e TimeStartSec, RunTimeMaxSec and TimeoutStopSec).
EXTEND_TIMEOUT_USEC= must continue to be sent (in the same way as
WATCHDOG=1) within the time interval specified to continue to reprevent
the timeout from occuring.
Watchdog timeouts are also extended if a EXTEND_TIMEOUT_USEC is greater
than the remaining time on the watchdog counter.
Fixes#5868.