1U-Boot pytest suite 2=================== 3 4Introduction 5------------ 6 7This tool aims to test U-Boot by executing U-Boot shell commands using the 8console interface. A single top-level script exists to execute or attach to the 9U-Boot console, run the entire script of tests against it, and summarize the 10results. Advantages of this approach are: 11 12- Testing is performed in the same way a user or script would interact with 13 U-Boot; there can be no disconnect. 14- There is no need to write or embed test-related code into U-Boot itself. 15 It is asserted that writing test-related code in Python is simpler and more 16 flexible than writing it all in C. 17- It is reasonably simple to interact with U-Boot in this way. 18 19Requirements 20------------ 21 22The test suite is implemented using pytest. Interaction with the U-Boot console 23involves executing some binary and interacting with its stdin/stdout. You will 24need to implement various "hook" scripts that are called by the test suite at 25the appropriate time. 26 27In order to run the test suite at a minimum we require that both Python 3 and 28pip for Python 3 are installed. All of the required python modules are 29described in the requirements.txt file in the /test/py/ directory and can be 30installed via the command 31 32.. code-block:: bash 33 34 pip install -r requirements.txt 35 36In order to execute certain tests on their supported platforms other tools 37will be required. The following is an incomplete list: 38 39* gdisk 40* dfu-util 41* dtc 42* openssl 43* sudo OR guestmount 44* e2fsprogs 45* util-linux 46* coreutils 47* dosfstools 48* efitools 49* mount 50* mtools 51* sbsigntool 52* udisks2 53 54Please use the appropriate commands for your distribution to match these tools 55up with the package that provides them. 56 57The test script supports either: 58 59- Executing a sandbox port of U-Boot on the local machine as a sub-process, 60 and interacting with it over stdin/stdout. 61- Executing an external "hook" scripts to flash a U-Boot binary onto a 62 physical board, attach to the board's console stream, and reset the board. 63 Further details are described later. 64 65Using `virtualenv` to provide requirements 66~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 67 68The recommended way to run the test suite, in order to ensure reproducibility 69is to use `virtualenv` to set up the necessary environment. This can be done 70via the following commands: 71 72 73.. code-block:: console 74 75 $ cd /path/to/u-boot 76 $ sudo apt-get install python3 python3-virtualenv 77 $ virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 venv 78 $ . ./venv/bin/activate 79 $ pip install -r test/py/requirements.txt 80 81Testing sandbox 82--------------- 83 84To run the test suite on the sandbox port (U-Boot built as a native user-space 85application), simply execute: 86 87.. code-block:: bash 88 89 ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build 90 91The `--bd` option tells the test suite which board type is being tested. This 92lets the test suite know which features the board has, and hence exactly what 93can be tested. 94 95The `--build` option tells U-Boot to compile U-Boot. Alternatively, you may 96omit this option and build U-Boot yourself, in whatever way you choose, before 97running the test script. 98 99The test script will attach to U-Boot, execute all valid tests for the board, 100then print a summary of the test process. A complete log of the test session 101will be written to `${build_dir}/test-log.html`. This is best viewed in a web 102browser, but may be read directly as plain text, perhaps with the aid of the 103`html2text` utility. 104 105Testing under a debugger 106~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 107 108If you need to run sandbox under a debugger, you may pass the command-line 109option `--gdbserver COMM`. This causes two things to happens: 110 111- Instead of running U-Boot directly, it will be run under gdbserver, with 112 debug communication via the channel `COMM`. You can attach a debugger to the 113 sandbox process in order to debug it. See `man gdbserver` and the example 114 below for details of valid values for `COMM`. 115- All timeouts in tests are disabled, allowing U-Boot an arbitrary amount of 116 time to execute commands. This is useful if U-Boot is stopped at a breakpoint 117 during debugging. 118 119A usage example is: 120 121Window 1: 122 123.. code-block:: bash 124 125 ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --gdbserver localhost:1234 126 127Window 2: 128 129.. code-block:: bash 130 131 gdb ./build-sandbox/u-boot -ex 'target remote localhost:1234' 132 133Alternatively, you could leave off the `-ex` option and type the command 134manually into gdb once it starts. 135 136You can use any debugger you wish, as long as it speaks the gdb remote 137protocol, or any graphical wrapper around gdb. 138 139Some tests deliberately cause the sandbox process to exit, e.g. to test the 140reset command, or sandbox's CTRL-C handling. When this happens, you will need 141to attach the debugger to the new sandbox instance. If these tests are not 142relevant to your debugging session, you can skip them using pytest's -k 143command-line option; see the next section. 144 145Command-line options 146-------------------- 147 148--board-type, --bd, -B 149 set the type of the board to be tested. For example, `sandbox` or `seaboard`. 150 151--board-identity`, --id 152 sets the identity of the board to be tested. This allows differentiation 153 between multiple instances of the same type of physical board that are 154 attached to the same host machine. This parameter is not interpreted by th 155 test script in any way, but rather is simply passed to the hook scripts 156 described below, and may be used in any site-specific way deemed necessary. 157 158--build 159 indicates that the test script should compile U-Boot itself before running 160 the tests. If using this option, make sure that any environment variables 161 required by the build process are already set, such as `$CROSS_COMPILE`. 162 163--buildman 164 indicates that `--build` should use buildman to build U-Boot. There is no need 165 to set $CROSS_COMPILE` in this case since buildman handles it. 166 167--build-dir 168 sets the directory containing the compiled U-Boot binaries. If omitted, this 169 is `${source_dir}/build-${board_type}`. 170 171--result-dir 172 sets the directory to write results, such as log files, into. 173 If omitted, the build directory is used. 174 175--persistent-data-dir 176 sets the directory used to store persistent test data. This is test data that 177 may be re-used across test runs, such as file-system images. 178 179`pytest` also implements a number of its own command-line options. Commonly used 180options are mentioned below. Please see `pytest` documentation for complete 181details. Execute `py.test --version` for a brief summary. Note that U-Boot's 182test.py script passes all command-line arguments directly to `pytest` for 183processing. 184 185-k 186 selects which tests to run. The default is to run all known tests. This 187 option takes a single argument which is used to filter test names. Simple 188 logical operators are supported. For example: 189 190 - `'-k ums'` runs only tests with "ums" in their name. 191 - `'-k ut_dm'` runs only tests with "ut_dm" in their name. Note that in this 192 case, "ut_dm" is a parameter to a test rather than the test name. The full 193 test name is e.g. "test_ut[ut_dm_leak]". 194 - `'-k not reset'` runs everything except tests with "reset" in their name. 195 - `'-k ut or hush'` runs only tests with "ut" or "hush" in their name. 196 - `'-k not (ut or hush)'` runs everything except tests with "ut" or "hush" in 197 their name. 198 199-s 200 prevents pytest from hiding a test's stdout. This allows you to see 201 U-Boot's console log in real time on pytest's stdout. 202 203Testing real hardware 204--------------------- 205 206The tools and techniques used to interact with real hardware will vary 207radically between different host and target systems, and the whims of the user. 208For this reason, the test suite does not attempt to directly interact with real 209hardware in any way. Rather, it executes a standardized set of "hook" scripts 210via `$PATH`. These scripts implement certain actions on behalf of the test 211suite. This keeps the test suite simple and isolated from system variances 212unrelated to U-Boot features. 213 214Hook scripts 215~~~~~~~~~~~~ 216 217Environment variables 218''''''''''''''''''''' 219 220The following environment variables are set when running hook scripts: 221 222- `UBOOT_BOARD_TYPE` the board type being tested. 223- `UBOOT_BOARD_IDENTITY` the board identity being tested, or `na` if none was 224 specified. 225- `UBOOT_SOURCE_DIR` the U-Boot source directory. 226- `UBOOT_TEST_PY_DIR` the full path to `test/py/` in the source directory. 227- `UBOOT_BUILD_DIR` the U-Boot build directory. 228- `UBOOT_RESULT_DIR` the test result directory. 229- `UBOOT_PERSISTENT_DATA_DIR` the test persistent data directory. 230 231u-boot-test-console 232''''''''''''''''''' 233 234This script provides access to the U-Boot console. The script's stdin/stdout 235should be connected to the board's console. This process should continue to run 236indefinitely, until killed. The test suite will run this script in parallel 237with all other hooks. 238 239This script may be implemented e.g. by executing `cu`, `kermit`, `conmux`, etc. 240via exec(). 241 242If you are able to run U-Boot under a hardware simulator such as QEMU, then 243you would likely spawn that simulator from this script. However, note that 244`u-boot-test-reset` may be called multiple times per test script run, and must 245cause U-Boot to start execution from scratch each time. Hopefully your 246simulator includes a virtual reset button! If not, you can launch the 247simulator from `u-boot-test-reset` instead, while arranging for this console 248process to always communicate with the current simulator instance. 249 250u-boot-test-flash 251''''''''''''''''' 252 253Prior to running the test suite against a board, some arrangement must be made 254so that the board executes the particular U-Boot binary to be tested. Often 255this involves writing the U-Boot binary to the board's flash ROM. The test 256suite calls this hook script for that purpose. 257 258This script should perform the entire flashing process synchronously; the 259script should only exit once flashing is complete, and a board reset will 260cause the newly flashed U-Boot binary to be executed. 261 262It is conceivable that this script will do nothing. This might be useful in 263the following cases: 264 265- Some other process has already written the desired U-Boot binary into the 266 board's flash prior to running the test suite. 267- The board allows U-Boot to be downloaded directly into RAM, and executed 268 from there. Use of this feature will reduce wear on the board's flash, so 269 may be preferable if available, and if cold boot testing of U-Boot is not 270 required. If this feature is used, the `u-boot-test-reset` script should 271 perform this download, since the board could conceivably be reset multiple 272 times in a single test run. 273 274It is up to the user to determine if those situations exist, and to code this 275hook script appropriately. 276 277This script will typically be implemented by calling out to some SoC- or 278board-specific vendor flashing utility. 279 280u-boot-test-reset 281''''''''''''''''' 282 283Whenever the test suite needs to reset the target board, this script is 284executed. This is guaranteed to happen at least once, prior to executing the 285first test function. If any test fails, the test infra-structure will execute 286this script again to restore U-Boot to an operational state before running the 287next test function. 288 289This script will likely be implemented by communicating with some form of 290relay or electronic switch attached to the board's reset signal. 291 292The semantics of this script require that when it is executed, U-Boot will 293start running from scratch. If the U-Boot binary to be tested has been written 294to flash, pulsing the board's reset signal is likely all this script needs to 295do. However, in some scenarios, this script may perform other actions. For 296example, it may call out to some SoC- or board-specific vendor utility in order 297to download the U-Boot binary directly into RAM and execute it. This would 298avoid the need for `u-boot-test-flash` to actually write U-Boot to flash, thus 299saving wear on the flash chip(s). 300 301Examples 302'''''''' 303 304https://source.denx.de/u-boot/u-boot-test-hooks contains some working example hook 305scripts, and may be useful as a reference when implementing hook scripts for 306your platform. These scripts are not considered part of U-Boot itself. 307 308Board-type-specific configuration 309~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 310 311Each board has a different configuration and behaviour. Many of these 312differences can be automatically detected by parsing the `.config` file in the 313build directory. However, some differences can't yet be handled automatically. 314 315For each board, an optional Python module `u_boot_board_${board_type}` may exist 316to provide board-specific information to the test script. Any global value 317defined in these modules is available for use by any test function. The data 318contained in these scripts must be purely derived from U-Boot source code. 319Hence, these configuration files are part of the U-Boot source tree too. 320 321Execution environment configuration 322~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 323 324Each user's hardware setup may enable testing different subsets of the features 325implemented by a particular board's configuration of U-Boot. For example, a 326U-Boot configuration may support USB device mode and USB Mass Storage, but this 327can only be tested if a USB cable is connected between the board and the host 328machine running the test script. 329 330For each board, optional Python modules `u_boot_boardenv_${board_type}` and 331`u_boot_boardenv_${board_type}_${board_identity}` may exist to provide 332board-specific and board-identity-specific information to the test script. Any 333global value defined in these modules is available for use by any test 334function. The data contained in these is specific to a particular user's 335hardware configuration. Hence, these configuration files are not part of the 336U-Boot source tree, and should be installed outside of the source tree. Users 337should set `$PYTHONPATH` prior to running the test script to allow these 338modules to be loaded. 339 340Board module parameter usage 341~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 342 343The test scripts rely on the following variables being defined by the board 344module: 345 346- none at present 347 348U-Boot `.config` feature usage 349~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 350 351The test scripts rely on various U-Boot `.config` features, either directly in 352order to test those features, or indirectly in order to query information from 353the running U-Boot instance in order to test other features. 354 355One example is that testing of the `md` command requires knowledge of a RAM 356address to use for the test. This data is parsed from the output of the 357`bdinfo` command, and hence relies on CONFIG_CMD_BDI being enabled. 358 359For a complete list of dependencies, please search the test scripts for 360instances of: 361 362- `buildconfig.get(...` 363- `@pytest.mark.buildconfigspec(...` 364- `@pytest.mark.notbuildconfigspec(...` 365 366Complete invocation example 367~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 368 369Assuming that you have installed the hook scripts into $HOME/ubtest/bin, and 370any required environment configuration Python modules into $HOME/ubtest/py, 371then you would likely invoke the test script as follows: 372 373If U-Boot has already been built: 374 375.. code-block:: bash 376 377 PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ 378 PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ 379 ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard 380 381If you want the test script to compile U-Boot for you too, then you likely 382need to set `$CROSS_COMPILE` to allow this, and invoke the test script as 383follows: 384 385.. code-block:: bash 386 387 CROSS_COMPILE=arm-none-eabi- \ 388 PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ 389 PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ 390 ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard --build 391 392or, using buildman to handle it: 393 394.. code-block:: bash 395 396 PATH=$HOME/ubtest/bin:$PATH \ 397 PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/ubtest/py/${HOSTNAME}:${PYTHONPATH} \ 398 ./test/py/test.py --bd seaboard --build --buildman 399 400Writing tests 401------------- 402 403Please refer to the pytest documentation for details of writing pytest tests. 404Details specific to the U-Boot test suite are described below. 405 406A test fixture named `u_boot_console` should be used by each test function. This 407provides the means to interact with the U-Boot console, and retrieve board and 408environment configuration information. 409 410The function `u_boot_console.run_command()` executes a shell command on the 411U-Boot console, and returns all output from that command. This allows 412validation or interpretation of the command output. This function validates 413that certain strings are not seen on the U-Boot console. These include shell 414error messages and the U-Boot sign-on message (in order to detect unexpected 415board resets). See the source of `u_boot_console_base.py` for a complete list of 416"bad" strings. Some test scenarios are expected to trigger these strings. Use 417`u_boot_console.disable_check()` to temporarily disable checking for specific 418strings. See `test_unknown_cmd.py` for an example. 419 420Board- and board-environment configuration values may be accessed as sub-fields 421of the `u_boot_console.config` object, for example 422`u_boot_console.config.ram_base`. 423 424Build configuration values (from `.config`) may be accessed via the dictionary 425`u_boot_console.config.buildconfig`, with keys equal to the Kconfig variable 426names. 427