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https://github.com/AsahiLinux/u-boot
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11ae93eef4
At present the tests run one after the other using a single CPU. This is not very efficient. Bring in the concurrencytest module and run the tests concurrently, using one process for each CPU by default. A -P option allows this to be overridden, which is necessary for code-coverage to function correctly. This requires fixing a few tests which are currently not fully independent. At some point we might consider doing this across all pytests in U-Boot. There is a pytest version that supports specifying the number of processes to use, but it did not work for me. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
144 lines
4.9 KiB
Python
144 lines
4.9 KiB
Python
#!/usr/bin/env python
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
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#
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# Modified by: Corey Goldberg, 2013
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#
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# Original code from:
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# Bazaar (bzrlib.tests.__init__.py, v2.6, copied Jun 01 2013)
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# Copyright (C) 2005-2011 Canonical Ltd
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"""Python testtools extension for running unittest suites concurrently.
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The `testtools` project provides a ConcurrentTestSuite class, but does
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not provide a `make_tests` implementation needed to use it.
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This allows you to parallelize a test run across a configurable number
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of worker processes. While this can speed up CPU-bound test runs, it is
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mainly useful for IO-bound tests that spend most of their time waiting for
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data to arrive from someplace else and can benefit from cocncurrency.
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Unix only.
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"""
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import os
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import sys
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import traceback
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import unittest
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from itertools import cycle
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from multiprocessing import cpu_count
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from subunit import ProtocolTestCase, TestProtocolClient
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from subunit.test_results import AutoTimingTestResultDecorator
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from testtools import ConcurrentTestSuite, iterate_tests
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_all__ = [
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'ConcurrentTestSuite',
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'fork_for_tests',
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'partition_tests',
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]
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CPU_COUNT = cpu_count()
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def fork_for_tests(concurrency_num=CPU_COUNT):
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"""Implementation of `make_tests` used to construct `ConcurrentTestSuite`.
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:param concurrency_num: number of processes to use.
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"""
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def do_fork(suite):
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"""Take suite and start up multiple runners by forking (Unix only).
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:param suite: TestSuite object.
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:return: An iterable of TestCase-like objects which can each have
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run(result) called on them to feed tests to result.
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"""
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result = []
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test_blocks = partition_tests(suite, concurrency_num)
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# Clear the tests from the original suite so it doesn't keep them alive
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suite._tests[:] = []
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for process_tests in test_blocks:
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process_suite = unittest.TestSuite(process_tests)
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# Also clear each split list so new suite has only reference
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process_tests[:] = []
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c2pread, c2pwrite = os.pipe()
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pid = os.fork()
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if pid == 0:
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try:
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stream = os.fdopen(c2pwrite, 'wb', 1)
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os.close(c2pread)
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# Leave stderr and stdout open so we can see test noise
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# Close stdin so that the child goes away if it decides to
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# read from stdin (otherwise its a roulette to see what
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# child actually gets keystrokes for pdb etc).
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sys.stdin.close()
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subunit_result = AutoTimingTestResultDecorator(
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TestProtocolClient(stream)
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)
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process_suite.run(subunit_result)
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except:
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# Try and report traceback on stream, but exit with error
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# even if stream couldn't be created or something else
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# goes wrong. The traceback is formatted to a string and
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# written in one go to avoid interleaving lines from
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# multiple failing children.
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try:
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stream.write(traceback.format_exc())
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finally:
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os._exit(1)
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os._exit(0)
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else:
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os.close(c2pwrite)
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stream = os.fdopen(c2pread, 'rb', 1)
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test = ProtocolTestCase(stream)
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result.append(test)
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return result
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return do_fork
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def partition_tests(suite, count):
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"""Partition suite into count lists of tests."""
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# This just assigns tests in a round-robin fashion. On one hand this
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# splits up blocks of related tests that might run faster if they shared
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# resources, but on the other it avoids assigning blocks of slow tests to
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# just one partition. So the slowest partition shouldn't be much slower
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# than the fastest.
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partitions = [list() for _ in range(count)]
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tests = iterate_tests(suite)
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for partition, test in zip(cycle(partitions), tests):
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partition.append(test)
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return partitions
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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import time
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class SampleTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
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"""Dummy tests that sleep for demo."""
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def test_me_1(self):
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time.sleep(0.5)
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def test_me_2(self):
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time.sleep(0.5)
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def test_me_3(self):
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time.sleep(0.5)
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def test_me_4(self):
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time.sleep(0.5)
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# Load tests from SampleTestCase defined above
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suite = unittest.TestLoader().loadTestsFromTestCase(SampleTestCase)
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runner = unittest.TextTestRunner()
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# Run tests sequentially
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runner.run(suite)
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# Run same tests across 4 processes
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suite = unittest.TestLoader().loadTestsFromTestCase(SampleTestCase)
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concurrent_suite = ConcurrentTestSuite(suite, fork_for_tests(4))
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runner.run(concurrent_suite)
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