u-boot/test/run
Tom Rini 16d836cd6f binman: Switch to 'python-coverage'
The most portable way to get access to coverage is to invoke it as
'python-coverage'.

Cc: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
2018-07-09 09:11:00 -06:00

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#!/bin/bash
run_test() {
$@
[ $? -ne 0 ] && result=$((result+1))
}
result=0
# Run all tests that the standard sandbox build can support
run_test ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build
# Run tests which require sandbox_spl
run_test ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox_spl --build -k test_ofplatdata.py
# Run tests for the flat DT version of sandbox
./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox_flattree --build
DTC_DIR=build-sandbox_spl/scripts/dtc
PYTHONPATH=${DTC_DIR}/pylibfdt DTC=${DTC_DIR}/dtc run_test \
./tools/binman/binman -t
run_test ./tools/patman/patman --test
run_test ./tools/buildman/buildman -t
PYTHONPATH=${DTC_DIR}/pylibfdt DTC=${DTC_DIR}/dtc run_test ./tools/dtoc/dtoc -t
# This needs you to set up Python test coverage tools.
# To enable Python test coverage on Debian-type distributions (e.g. Ubuntu):
# $ sudo apt-get install python-pytest python-coverage
PYTHONPATH=${DTC_DIR}/pylibfdt DTC=${DTC_DIR}/dtc run_test \
./tools/binman/binman -T
if [ $result == 0 ]; then
echo "Tests passed!"
else
echo "Tests FAILED"
exit 1
fi