/var/lib/pcp/testsuite/README is in pcp-testsuite 3.8.12ubuntu1.
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Preliminaries
-------------
PCP needs to be installed on the local host, with pmcd operational.
The sample PMDA needs to be installed.
Basic getting started
---------------------
There is some local configuration needed ... check the file
"common.config" ... this script uses heuristics to set a number of
interesting variables, specifically:
$PCPQA_CLOSE_X_SERVER
The $DISPLAY setting for an X server that is willing to accept
connections from X clients running on the local machine.
$PCPQA_FAR_PMCD
The hostname for a host running pmcd, but the host is preferably a
long way away (over a WAN) for timing test.
$PCPQA_HYPHEN_HOST
The hostname for a host running pmcd, with a hyphen (-) in the
hostname.
Next, mk.qa_hosts is a script that includes heuristics for selecting and
sorting the list of potential remote PCP QA hosts (qa_hosts.master).
Refer to the comments in qa_hosts.master, and make appropriate changes.
For each of the potential remote PCP QA hosts, the following must be
set up:
(a) PCP installed,
(b) pmcd(1) running,
(c) a login for the user "pcpqa" needs to be created, and then set
up in such a way that ssh/scp will work without the need for any
password, i.e. these sorts of commands
$ ssh pcpqa@pcp-qa-host some-command
$ scp some-file pcpqa@pcp-qa-host:some-dir
must work correctly when run from the local host.
The "pcpqa" user's environment must also be initialized
so that their shell's path includes all of the PCP binary
directories, so that all PCP commands are executable without
full pathnames. Of most concern would be auxilliary directory
(usually /usr/pcp/bin, /usr/share/pcp/bin or /usr/libexec/pcp/bin)
where commands like pmlogger(1), pmhostname(1), mkaf(1), etc.) are
installed.
Once you've modified common.config and qa_hosts.master, then run
"chk.setup" to validate the settings.
For test 051 we need five local hostnames that are valid, although
PCP does not need to be installed there, nor pmcd(1) running. The
five hosts listed in 051.hosts (the comments at the start of this
file explain what is required) should suffice for most installations.
The PCP QA tests are designed to be run by a non-root user. Where
root privileges are needed, e.g. to stop or start pmcd, install/remove
PMDAs, etc. the "sudo" application is used. When using sudo for QA,
your local or pcpqa user needs to be able to execute commands as root
without being prompted for a password. This can be achieved by adding
the following line to the /etc/sudoers file (or in more recent versions
of sudo, a /etc/sudoers.d/pcpqa file):
pcpqa ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
Some tests are graphical, and wish to make use of your display.
For authentication to success, you may find you need to perform
some access list updates, e.g. "xhost +local:" for such tests to
pass (e.g. test 325).
You can now verify your QA setup, by running:
./check 000
The first time you run "check" (see below) it will descend into the
src directory (see below) and make all of the QA test programs and
dynamic PCP archives, so some patience may be required.
If test 000 fails, it may be that you have locally developed PMDAs or
optional PMDAs installed. Edit common.filter, and modify the
_filter_top_pmns() procedure to strip the top-level name components for
any new metric names (there are lots of examples already there) ... if
these are distributed PMDAs, you should send patches back to
pcp@oss.sgi.com.
Doing the Real Work
-------------------
check ...
This script runs tests and verifies the output. In general,
test NNN is expected to terminate with an exit status of 0,
no core file and produce output that matches that in the file
NNN.out ... failures leave the current output in NNN.out.bad,
and may leave a more verbose trace that is useful for diagnosing
failures in NNN.full.
The command line options to check are:
NNN run test NNN (leading zeros will be added as necessary
to the test sequence number, so 00N and N are equivalent)
NNN- all tests >= NNN
NNN-MMM all tests in the range NNN ... MMM
-l diffs in line mode (the default is to use xdiff or similar)
-n show me, do not run any tests
-q quick mode, by-pass the initial setup integrity checks
(recommended that you do not use this the first time, nor
if the last run test failed)
-g xxx include tests from a named group (xxx) ... refer to the
"groups" file
-x xxx exclude tests from a named group (xxx) ... refer to the
"groups" file
If none of the NNN variants or -g is specified, then the default
is to run all tests.
Each of the NNN scripts that may be run by check follows the
same basic scheme:
- include some optional shell procedures and set variables to
define the local configuration options
- optionally, check the run-time environment to see if it makes
sense to run the test at all, and if not echo the reason to the
file NNN.notrun and exit ... check will notice the NNN.notrun
file and skip any testing of the exit status or comparison
of output
- define $tmp as a prefix to be used for all temporary files, and
install a trap handler to remove temporary files when the scipt
exits
- optionally, check the run-time environment to choose one of
a number of expected output formats, and link the selected
file to NNN.out ... if the same output is expected in all
environments, the NNN.out file will already exist as part of
the PCP QA distribution
- run the test
- optionally save all the output in the file NNN.full ... this
is only useful for debugging test failures
- filter the output to produce deterministic output that will
match NNN.out if the test has been successful
remake NNN
This script creates a new NNN.out file. Since the NNN.out files
are precious, and reflect the state of the qualified and expected
output, they should typically not be changed unless some change
has been made to the NNN script or the filters it uses.
new
Make sure "group" is writeable, then run "new" to
create the skeletal framework of a new test.
It is strongly suggested that you base your test on an existing test
... pay particular attention to making the output deterministic so
the test uses the "not run" protocols (see 009 and check for
examples) to avoid running the test (and hence failing) if an
optional application, feature or platform is not available, and uses
appropriate filters (see common.filter for lots of useful filters
already packaged as shell procedures).
show-me ...
Report differences between the NNN.out and NNN.out.bad files.
By default, uses all of the NNN.out.bad files in the current
directory, but can also specify test numbers or ranges of test
numbers on the command line.
Other options may be used to fetch good and bad output files from
various exotic remote locations (refer to the script).
Make in the src Directory
-----------------------------
The src directory contains a number of test applications that are
designed to exercise some of the more exotic corners of the PCP
functionality.
In making these applications, you may see this ...
Error: trace_dev.h and ../../src/include/trace_dev.h are different!
make: [trace_dev.h] Error 1 (ignored)
this is caused by the source for the pcp_trace library being out of sync
with the src applications. If this happens, please ...
1. cd src
2. diff -u trace_dev.h ../../src/include/trace_dev.h
and mail the differences to pcp@oss.sgi.com so we can refine the
Makefiles to avoid cosmetic differences
3. mv trace_dev.h trace_dev.h.orig
cp ../../src/include/trace_dev.h trace_dev.h
4. make
008 Issues
----------
Test 008 depends on the local disk configuration, so you need to make
your own 008.out file (or rather a variant that 008 will link to 008.out
when the test is run). Refer to the 008 script, but here is the basic
recipe:
$ touch touch 008.out.`hostname`
$ remake 008
$ mv 008.out 008.out.`hostname`
Be aware that it can be adversely influenced by temporary disks like USB
sticks, mobile phones, or other transient storage that may come and go in
your test systems.
Fixes
-----
If you find something that does not work, and fix it, or create
additional QA tests, please send the details to pcp@oss.sgi.com.
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