On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 04:30:47PM +0800, Liu Bo wrote:
> This is a regression test of
> 'commit fcebe4562dec ("Btrfs: rework qgroup accounting")'
>
> It can produce qgroup related warnings.
>
> The fix is https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/5499981/
> "Btrfs: fix a warning of qgroup account on shared extents"
....
> +#! /bin/bash
> +# FS QA Test No. 017
> +#
> +# Regression of 'commit fcebe4562dec ("Btrfs: rework qgroup accounting")',
> +# this will throw a warning into dmesg.
> +#
> +# For more details, the fix is https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/5499981/
> +# "Btrfs: fix a warning of qgroup account on shared extents"
Please describe the test directly.
> +
> +_need_to_be_root
> +_supported_fs btrfs
> +_supported_os Linux
> +_require_scratch
> +_require_cloner
> +
> +run_check _scratch_mkfs "--nodesize 4096"
> +run_check _scratch_mount
No, please don't use run_check like this.
Errors will end up in the output file, and that will cause the test
to fail.
> +run_check $XFS_IO_PROG -f -d -c "pwrite 0 8K" $SCRATCH_MNT/foo
Same - filter the output, and errors will be verbose and cause a
failure.
> +
> +_run_btrfs_util_prog subvolume snapshot $SCRATCH_MNT $SCRATCH_MNT/snap
> +
> +run_check $CLONER_PROG -s 0 -d 0 -l 8192 $SCRATCH_MNT/foo
> $SCRATCH_MNT/foo-reflink
> +run_check $CLONER_PROG -s 0 -d 0 -l 8192 $SCRATCH_MNT/foo
> $SCRATCH_MNT/snap/foo-reflink
> +run_check $CLONER_PROG -s 0 -d 0 -l 8192 $SCRATCH_MNT/foo
> $SCRATCH_MNT/snap/foo-reflink2
Filter the output, not "run_check".
If CLONER_PROG is silent when it fails, then it is broken and needs
fixing because users need to know that something failed and they
don't check exit codes.
> +_run_btrfs_util_prog quota enable $SCRATCH_MNT
> +_run_btrfs_util_prog quota rescan -w $SCRATCH_MNT
> +
> +rm -fr $SCRATCH_MNT/* >/dev/null 2>&1
Don't redirect the output. If an unlink fails, we want to know about
it.
> +_run_btrfs_util_prog filesystem sync $SCRATCH_MNT
What's wrong with "sync"?
> +$BTRFS_UTIL_PROG qgroup show $SCRATCH_MNT | $SED_PROG -n '/[0-9]/p' |
> $AWK_PROG '{print $2" "$3}'
You can do regex matches with awk.
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
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