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Diffstat (limited to 'contrib/reghunt/bin/reg-hunt')
-rwxr-xr-x | contrib/reghunt/bin/reg-hunt | 363 |
1 files changed, 363 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/reghunt/bin/reg-hunt b/contrib/reghunt/bin/reg-hunt new file mode 100755 index 000000000..aa0ea61ee --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/reghunt/bin/reg-hunt @@ -0,0 +1,363 @@ +#! /bin/bash + +#set -x + +######################################################################## +# +# File: reg-hunt +# Author: Janis Johnson <janis187@us.ibm.com> +# Date: 2003/08/19 +# +# Search for the patch identifier for which results for a test changed, +# using a binary search. The functionality for getting sources, +# building the component to test, and running the test are in other +# scripts that are run from here. Before the search begins, we verify +# that we get the expected behavior for the first and last patch +# identifiers. +# +# Define these in a file whose name is the argument to this script: +# LOW_PATCH: Patch identifier. +# HIGH_PATCH: Patch identifier. +# REG_UPDATE: Pathname of script to update your source tree; returns +# zero for success, nonzero for failure. +# REG_BUILD: Pathname of script to build enough of the product to run +# the test; returns zero for success, nonzero for failure. +# REG_TEST: Pathname of script to run the test; returns 1 if we +# should search later patches, 0 if we should search +# earlier patches, and something else if there was an +# unexpected failure. +# Optional: +# REG_REPORT Pathname of script to call at the end with the id of the +# patch that caused the change in behavior. +# REG_FINISH Pathname of script to call at the end with the two final +# patch identifiers as arguments. +# REG_NEWMID Pathname of script to call when a build has failed, with +# arguments of the failed id and the current low and high +# SKIP_LOW If 1, skip verifying the low patch identifier of the +# range; define this only if you're restarting and have +# already tested the low patch. +# SKIP_HIGH If 1, skip verifying the high patch identifier of the +# range; define this only if you're restarting and have +# already tested the high patch. +# FIRST_MID Use this as the first midpoint, to avoid a midpoint that +# is known not to build. +# VERBOSITY Default is 0, to print only errors and final message. +# DATE_IN_MSG If set to anything but 0, include the time and date in +# messages. +# +# +# +# Copyright (c) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +# +# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or +# (at your option) any later version. +# +# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +# GNU General Public License for more details. +# +# For a copy of the GNU General Public License, write the the +# Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, +# Boston, MA 02111-1301, USA. +# +######################################################################## + +######################################################################## +# Functions +######################################################################## + +# Issue a message if its verbosity level is high enough. + +msg() { + test ${1} -gt ${VERBOSITY} && return + + if [ "x${DATE_IN_MSG}" = "x" ]; then + echo "${2}" + else + echo "`date` ${2}" + fi +} + +# Issue an error message and exit with a non-zero status. If there +# is a valid current range whose end points have been tested, report +# it so the user can start again from there. + +error() { + msg 0 "error: ${1}" + test ${VALID_RANGE} -eq 1 && \ + echo "current range:" + echo "LOW_PATCH=${LATER_THAN}" + echo "HIGH_PATCH=${EARLIER_THAN}" + exit 1 +} + +# Build the components to test using sources as of a particular patch +# and run a test case. Pass each of the scripts the patch identifier +# that we're testing; the first one needs it, the others can ignore it +# if they want. + +process_patch () { + TEST_ID=${1} + + # If we're keeping track of known failures, see if TEST_ID is one and + # if so, don't bother updating sources and trying to build. + + FAILS=0 + SKIP=0 + if [ ${SKIP_FAILURES} -eq 1 ]; then + ${REG_CHECKFAIL} ${TEST_ID} + if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then + msg 1 "skipping ${TEST_ID}; it is a known build failure" + FAILS=1 + SKIP=1 + fi + fi + + if [ ${FAILS} -eq 0 ]; then + ${REG_UPDATE} ${TEST_ID} || error "source update failed for ${TEST_ID}" + ${REG_BUILD} ${TEST_ID} + if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then + FAILS=1 + msg 1 "build failed for ${TEST_ID}" + if [ ${SKIP_FAILURES} -eq 1 ]; then + ${REG_RECORDFAIL} ${TEST_ID} + fi + fi + fi + + if [ ${FAILS} -eq 0 ]; then + ${REG_TEST} ${TEST_ID} + LATER=$? + if [ $LATER -ne 0 -a $LATER -ne 1 ]; then + msg 0 "unexpected test failure for ${TEST_ID}" + exit 1 + fi + else + + # The build failed, or this patch is already known to fail to build. + # If it's an endpoint, or if we don't have a way to recover from + # build failures, quit now. + + if [ ${SKIP} -eq 0 ]; then + if [ "x${REG_NEWMID}" == "x" \ + -o ${TEST_ID} -eq ${LATER_THAN} \ + -o ${TEST_ID} -eq ${EARLIER_THAN} ]; then + error "build failed for ${TEST_ID}" + fi + fi + + # Try to find a new patch to try within the current range. + + FIRST_MID=`${REG_NEWMID} ${LATER_THAN} ${EARLIER_THAN}` + if [ ${FIRST_MID} -eq 0 ]; then + + # The heuristics in the tool ran out of patches to try next; + # let the user handle it from here.+ + error "build failed for ${TEST_ID}, could not find new candidate" + fi + msg 1 "using ${FIRST_MID}, between ${LATER_THAN} and ${EARLIER_THAN}" + fi + + # Return with a valid LATER value or a new ID to try in FIRST_MID. +} + +# Get the number of a patch within the range. It's not actually the +# middle one, but the one that might minimize the number of checks. + +get_mid_special() { + LOW=$1 + HIGH=$2 + + let DIFF=HIGH-LOW + M=1 + POWER2=1 + while + [ $POWER2 -lt $DIFF ] + do + let M=POWER2 + let POWER2=POWER2*2 + done + let MID=LOW+M +} + +# Get the number of the patch in the middle of the range. + +get_mid () { + LOW=$1 + HIGH=$2 + + let DIFF=HIGH-LOW + let M=DIFF/2 + let MID=LOW+M +} + +# Perform a binary search on patch identifiers within the range +# specified by the arguments. + +search_patches () { + LOW=$1 + HIGH=$2 + + # Get an identifier within the range. The user can override the + # initial mid patch if it is known to have problems, e.g., if a + # build fails for that patch. + + if [ ${FIRST_MID} -ne 0 ]; then + MID=${FIRST_MID} + FIRST_MID=0 + let DIFF=HIGH-LOW + else + get_mid $LOW $HIGH + fi + + while [ ${DIFF} -gt 1 ]; do + TEST_ID="${MID}" + + # Test it. + + process_patch ${TEST_ID} + + # FIRST_MID being set is a signal that the build failed and we + # should start over again. + + test ${FIRST_MID} -ne 0 && return + + # Narrow the search based on the outcome of testing TEST_ID. + + if [ ${LATER} -eq 1 ]; then + msg 1 "search patches later than ${TEST_ID}" + LATER_THAN=${TEST_ID} + let LOW=MID + else + msg 1 "search patches earlier than ${TEST_ID}" + EARLIER_THAN=${TEST_ID} + let HIGH=MID + fi + + get_mid $LOW $HIGH + done +} + +######################################################################## +# Main program (so to speak) +######################################################################## + +# The error function uses this. + +VALID_RANGE=0 + +# Process the configuration file. + +if [ $# != 1 ]; then + echo Usage: $0 config_file + exit 1 +fi + +CONFIG=${1} +if [ ! -f ${CONFIG} ]; then + error "configuration file ${CONFIG} does not exist" +fi + +# OK, the config file exists. Source it, make sure required parameters +# are defined and their files exist, and give default values to optional +# parameters. + +. ${CONFIG} + +test "x${REG_UPDATE}" = "x" && error "REG_UPDATE is not defined" +test "x${REG_BUILD}" = "x" && error "REG_BUILD is not defined" +test "x${REG_TEST}" = "x" && error "REG_TEST is not defined" +test -x ${REG_TEST} || error "REG_TEST is not an executable file" +test "x${SKIP_LOW}" = "x" && SKIP_LOW=0 +test "x${SKIP_HIGH}" = "x" && SKIP_HIGH=0 +test "x${VERBOSITY}" = "x" && VERBOSITY=0 +test "x${REG_FINISH}" = "x" && REG_FINISH=true +test "x${REG_REPORT}" = "x" && REG_REPORT=true + +msg 2 "LOW_PATCH = ${LOW_PATCH}" +msg 2 "HIGH_PATCH = ${HIGH_PATCH}" +msg 2 "REG_UPDATE = ${REG_UPDATE}" +msg 2 "REG_BUILD = ${REG_BUILD}" +msg 2 "REG_TEST = ${REG_TEST}" +msg 2 "REG_NEWMID = ${REG_NEWMID}" +msg 2 "SKIP_LOW = ${SKIP_LOW}" +msg 2 "SKIP_HIGH = ${SKIP_HIGH}" +msg 2 "FIRST_MID = ${FIRST_MID}" +msg 2 "VERBOSITY = ${VERBOSITY}" + +# If REG_NEWMID was defined, assume that we're skipping known failures +# and adding to the list for new failures. If the list of failures +# doesn't exist, create it. We use a different flag, SKIP_FAILURES, +# to make it easier to separate the flag from REG_NEWMID if we want +# to change the usage later. + +if [ "x${REG_NEWMID}" != "x" ]; then + touch ${REG_FAILLIST} + SKIP_FAILURES=1 +else + SKIP_FAILURES=0 +fi + +# If FIRST_MID was defined, make sure it's in the range. + +if [ "x${FIRST_MID}" != "x" ]; then + test ${FIRST_MID} -le ${LOW_PATCH} && \ + error "FIRST_MID id is lower than LOW_PATCH" + test ${FIRST_MID} -ge ${HIGH_PATCH} && \ + error "FIRST_MID is higher than HIGH_PATCH" +else + FIRST_MID=0 +fi + +# Keep track of the bounds of the range where the test behavior changes. + +LATER_THAN=${LOW_PATCH} +EARLIER_THAN=${HIGH_PATCH} +LATER=1 + +msg 1 "LATER_THAN = ${LATER_THAN}" +msg 1 "EARLIER_THAN = ${EARLIER_THAN}" + +# Verify that the range isn't backwards. + +test ${LOW_PATCH} -lt ${HIGH_PATCH} || \ + error "patch identifier range is backwards" + +# Verify that the first and last patches in the range get the results we +# expect. If not, quit, because any of several things could be wrong. + +if [ ${SKIP_HIGH} -eq 0 ]; then + process_patch ${EARLIER_THAN} + test ${LATER} -ne 0 && \ + error "unexpected result for high patch ${EARLIER_THAN}" + msg 1 "result for high patch ${EARLIER_THAN} is as expected" +fi + +if [ ${SKIP_LOW} -eq 0 ]; then + process_patch ${LATER_THAN} + test ${LATER} -ne 1 && \ + error "unexpected result for low patch ${LATER_THAN}" + msg 1 "result for low patch ${LATER_THAN} is as expected" +fi + +# Search within the range, now that we know that the end points are valid. +# If the build failed then FIRST_MID is set to a new patch to try. + +VALID_RANGE=1 +while true; do + search_patches ${LATER_THAN} ${EARLIER_THAN} + test ${FIRST_MID} -eq 0 && break +done + +# Report where the test behavior changes. + +echo "Test result changes with id ${EARLIER_THAN}" +${REG_REPORT} ${EARLIER_THAN} + +# Invoke the optional script to verify the result and report additional +# information about changes between the two patches. + +${REG_FINISH} ${LATER_THAN} ${EARLIER_THAN} |