#!/bin/bash
# Script to run all U-Boot tests that use sandbox.
+# $1: tests to run (empty for all, 'quick' for quick ones only)
# Runs a test and checks the exit code to decide if it passed
# $1: Test name
[ $? -ne 0 ] && failures=$((failures+1))
}
+# SKip slow tests if requested
+[ "$1" == "quick" ] && mark_expr="not slow"
+[ "$1" == "quick" ] && skip=--skip-net-tests
+[ "$1" == "tools" ] && tools_only=y
+
failures=0
-# Run all tests that the standard sandbox build can support
-run_test "sandbox" ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build
+if [ -z "$tools_only" ]; then
+ # Run all tests that the standard sandbox build can support
+ run_test "sandbox" ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build \
+ -m "${mark_expr}"
+fi
# Run tests which require sandbox_spl
run_test "sandbox_spl" ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox_spl --build \
- -k 'test_ofplatdata or test_handoff'
+ -k 'test_ofplatdata or test_handoff'
-# Run tests for the flat-device-tree version of sandbox. This is a special
-# build which does not enable CONFIG_OF_LIVE for the live device tree, so we can
-# check that functionality is the same. The standard sandbox build (above) uses
-# CONFIG_OF_LIVE.
-run_test "sandbox_flattree" ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox_flattree --build \
- -k test_ut
+if [ -z "$tools_only" ]; then
+ # Run tests for the flat-device-tree version of sandbox. This is a special
+ # build which does not enable CONFIG_OF_LIVE for the live device tree, so we can
+ # check that functionality is the same. The standard sandbox build (above) uses
+ # CONFIG_OF_LIVE.
+ run_test "sandbox_flattree" ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox_flattree \
+ --build -k test_ut
+fi
# Set up a path to dtc (device-tree compiler) and libfdt.py, a library it
-# provides and which is built by the sandbox_spl config.
+# provides and which is built by the sandbox_spl config. Also set up the path
+# to tools build by the build.
DTC_DIR=build-sandbox_spl/scripts/dtc
export PYTHONPATH=${DTC_DIR}/pylibfdt
export DTC=${DTC_DIR}/dtc
+TOOLS_DIR=build-sandbox_spl/tools
-run_test "binman" ./tools/binman/binman -t
+run_test "binman" ./tools/binman/binman --toolpath ${TOOLS_DIR} test
run_test "patman" ./tools/patman/patman --test
-run_test "buildman" ./tools/buildman/buildman -t
+
+run_test "buildman" ./tools/buildman/buildman -t ${skip}
run_test "fdt" ./tools/dtoc/test_fdt -t
run_test "dtoc" ./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
-run_test "binman code coverage" ./tools/binman/binman -T
+export PATH=$PATH:${TOOLS_DIR}
+run_test "binman code coverage" ./tools/binman/binman test -T
run_test "dtoc code coverage" ./tools/dtoc/dtoc -T
run_test "fdt code coverage" ./tools/dtoc/test_fdt -T