[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2010, 2011, 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] [[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] [[!tag open_issue_documentation]] freenode, #hurd channel, 2011-03-05: what about testing though? like sort of "what's missing? lets write tests for it so that when someone gets to implementing it, he knows what to do. Repeat" project you mean creating an automated testing framework? this is actually a task I want to add for this year, if I get around to it :-) yeah I'd very much want to apply for that one cuz I've never done Kernel hacking before, but I know that with the right tasks like "test VM functionality", I would be able to write up the automated tests and hopefully learn more about what breaks/makes the kernel (and it would make implementing the feature much less hand-wavy and more correct) antrik, I believe the framework(CUnit right?) exists, but we just need to write the tests. do you have prior experience implementing automated tests? lots of tests! yes, in Java mostly, but I've played around with CUnit ah, great :-) here's what I know from experience: 1) write basic tests. 2) write ones that test multiple features 3) stress test [option 4) benchmark and record to DB] well, what we'd rather need is to fix the issues we already know from the existing testsuites :) [[GSoC project propsal|community/gsoc/project_ideas/testsuites]]. youpi, true, and I think I should check what's available in way of tests, but if the tests are "all or nothing" then it becomes really hard to fix your mistakes they're not all or nothing youpi: the existing testsuites don't test specific system features libc ones do we could also check posixtestsuite which does too [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/open_posix_test_suite]]. AFAIK libc has very few failing tests [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc]]. err, like twenty? € grep -v '^#' expected-results-i486-gnu-libc | wc -l 67 nope, even more oh, sorry, I confused it with coreutils plus the binutils ones, i guess yes [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/binutils#weak]]. anyways, I don't think relying on external testsuites for regression testing is a good plan also, that doesn't cover unit testing at all why ? sure there can be unit testing at the translator etc. level if we want to implement test-driven development, and/or do serious refactoring without too much risk, we need a test harness where we can add specific tests as needed but more than often, the issues are at the libc / etc. level because of a combination o fthings at the translator level, which unit testing won't find out * nixness yewzzz! sure unit testing can find them out. if they're good "unit" tests the problem is that you don't necessarily know what "good" means e.g. for posix correctness since it's not posix but if they're composite clever tests, then you lose that granularity youpi, is that a blackbox test intended to be run at the very end to check if you're posix compliant? also, if we have our own test harness, we can run tests automatically as part of the build process, which is a great plus IMHO nixness: "that" = ? oh nvm, I thought there was a test stuie called "posix correctness" there's the posixtestsuite yes it's an external one however antrik: being external doesn't mean we can't invoke it automatically as part of the build process when it's available youpi, but being internal means it can test the inner workings of certain modules that you are unsure of, and not just the interface sure, that's why I said it'd be useful too but as I said too, most bugs I've seen were not easy to find out at the unit level but rather at the libc level of course we can integrate external tests if they exist and are suitable. but that that doesn't preclude adding our own ones too. in either case, that integration work has to be done too again, I've never said I was against internal testsuite also, the major purpose of a test suite is checking known behaviour. a low-level test won't directly point to a POSIX violation; but it will catch any changes in behaviour that would lead to one what I said is that it will be hard to write them tight enough to find bugs again, the problem is knowing what will lead to a POSIX violation it's long work while libc / posixtestsuite / etc. already do that *any* unexpected change in behaviour is likely to cause bugs somewher but WHAT is "expected" ? THAT is the issue and libc/posixtessuite do know that at the translator level we don't really see the recent post about link() [link(dir,name) should fail with EPERM](http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-hurd/2011-03/msg00007.html) in my memory jkoenig pointed it out for a lot of such calls and that issue is clearly not known at the translator level so you're saying that the tests have to be really really low-level, and work our way up? I'm saying that the translator level tests will be difficult to write why isn't it known at the translator level? if it's a translator (not libc) bug, than obviously the translator must return something wrong at some point, and that's something we can check because you'll have to know all the details of the combinations used in libc, to know whether they'll lead to posix issues antrik: sure, but how did we detect that that was unexpected behavior? because of a glib test at the translator level we didn't know it was an unexpected behavior gnulib actually and if you had asked me, I wouldn't have known again, we do *not* write a test suite to find existing bugs right, took one for the other doesn't really matter actually antrik: ok, I don't care then we write a test suite to prevent future bugs, or track status of known bugs (don't care *enough* for now, I mean) hmm, so write something up antrik for GSoC :) and I'll be sure to apply now that we know some translators return a wrong error status in a particular situation, we can write a test that checks exactly this error status. that way we know when it is fixed, and also when it breaks again nixness: great :-) sweet. that kind of thing would also need a db backend nixness: BTW, if you have a good idea, you can send an application for it even if it's not listed among the proposed tasks... so you don't strictly need a writeup from me to apply for this :-) antrik, I'll keep that in mind, but I'll also be checking your draft page oh cool :) (and it's a well known fact that those projects which students proposed themselfs tend to be the most successful ones :-) ) * nixness draft initiated youpi: BTW, I'm surprised that you didn't mention libc testsuite before... working up from there is probably a more effective plan than starting with high-level test suites like Python etc... wasn't it already in the gsoc proposal? bummer nope freenode, #hurd channel, 2011-03-06: how's the hurd coding workflow, typically? *nixness* -> *foocraft*. we're discussing how TDD can work with Hurd (or general kernel development) on #osdev so what I wanted to know, since I haven't dealt much with GNU Hurd, is how do you guys go about coding, in this case Our current workflow scheme is... well... is... Someone wants to work on something, or spots a bug, then works on it, submits a patch, and 0 to 10 years later it is applied. Roughly. hmm so there's no indicator of whether things broke with that patch and how low do you think we can get with tests? A friend of mine was telling me that with kernel dev, you really don't know whether, for instance, the stack even exists, and a lot of things that I, as a programmer, can assume while writing code break when it comes to writing kernel code Autotest seems promising See autotest link given above. but in any case, coming up with the testing framework that doesn't break when the OS itself breaks is hard, it seems not sure if autotest isolates the mistakes in the os from finding their way in the validity of the tests themselves it could be interesting to have scripts that automatically start a sub-hurd to do the tests [[hurd/subhurd#unit_testing]]. foocraft: To answer one of your earlier questions: you can do really low-level testing. Like testing Mach's message passing. A million times. The questions is whether that makes sense. And / or if it makes sense to do that as part of a unit testing framework. Or rather do such things manually once you suspect an error somewhere. The reason for the latter may be that Mach IPC is already heavily tested during normal system operation. And yet, there still may be (there are, surely) bugs. But I guess that you have to stop at some (arbitrary?) level. so we'd assume it works, and test from there Otherwise you'd be implementing the exact counter-part of what you're testing. Which may be what you want, or may be not. Or it may just not be feasible. maybe the testing framework should have dependencies which we can automate using make, and phony targets that run tests so everyone writes a test suite and says that it depends on A and B working correctly then it'd go try to run the tests for A etc. Hmm, isn't that -- on a high level -- have you have by different packages? For example, the perl testsuite depends (inherently) on glibc working properly. A perl program's testsuite depends on perl working properly. yeah, but afaik, the ordering is done by hand freenode, #hurd channel, 2011-03-07: actually, I think for most tests it would be better not to use a subhurd... that leads precisely to the problem that if something is broken, you might have a hard time running the tests at all :-) foocraft: most of the Hurd code isn't really low-level. you can use normal debugging and testing methods gnumach of course *does* have some low-level stuff, so if you add unit tests to gnumach too, you might run into issues :-) tschwinge: I think testing IPC is a good thing. as I already said, automated testing is *not* to discover existing but unknown bugs, but to prevent new ones creeping in, and tracking progress on known bugs tschwinge: I think you are confusing unit testing and regression testing. http://www.bddebian.com/~hurd-web/open_issues/unit_testing/ talks about unit testing, but a lot (most?) of it is actually about regression tests... [[/service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/unit_testing]]. antrik: That may certainly be -- I'm not at all an expert in this, and just generally though that some sort of automated testing is needed, and thus started collecting ideas. antrik: You're of course invited to fix that. IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-03-08 (After discussing the [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/anatomy_of_a_hurd_system]].) so that's what your question is actually about? so what I would imagine is a set of only-this-server tests for each server, and then we can have fun adding composite tests thus making debugging the composite scenarios a bit less tricky indeed and if you were trying to pass a composite test, it would also help knowing that you still didn't break the server-only test there are so many different things that can be tested... the summer will only suffice to dip into this really :-) yeah, I'm designing my proposal to focus on 1) make/use a testing framework that fits the Hurd case very well 2) write some tests and docs on how to write good tests well, doesn't have to be *one* framework... unit testing and regression testing are quite different things, which can be covered by different frameworks