Although the rcutorture scripting now deals correctly with full-up security-induced pointer obfuscation, it is still counter-productive for kernel hackers who are analyzing console output. This commit therefore sets the debug_boot_weak_hash kernel boot parameter, which enables printing of weak-hashed pointers for torture-test runs. Please note that this change applies only to runs initiated by the kvm.sh scripting. If you are instead using modprobe and rmmod, it is your responsibility to build and boot the underlying kernel to your taste. Please note further that this change does not result in a security hole in normal use. The rcutorture testing runs with a negligible userspace, no networking, and no user interaction. Besides which, there is no data of value that can be extracted from an rcutorture guest OS that could not also be extracted from the host that this guest is running on. Suggested-by: Anna-Maria Gleixner <anna-maria@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org>
294 lines
6.7 KiB
Bash
294 lines
6.7 KiB
Bash
#!/bin/bash
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
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#
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# Shell functions for the rest of the scripts.
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#
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# Copyright (C) IBM Corporation, 2013
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#
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# Authors: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.ibm.com>
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# bootparam_hotplug_cpu bootparam-string
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#
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# Returns 1 if the specified boot-parameter string tells rcutorture to
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# test CPU-hotplug operations.
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bootparam_hotplug_cpu () {
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echo "$1" | grep -q "torture\.onoff_"
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}
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# checkarg --argname argtype $# arg mustmatch cannotmatch
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#
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# Checks the specified argument "arg" against the mustmatch and cannotmatch
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# patterns.
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checkarg () {
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if test $3 -le 1
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then
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echo $1 needs argument $2 matching \"$5\"
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usage
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fi
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if echo "$4" | grep -q -e "$5"
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then
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:
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else
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echo $1 $2 \"$4\" must match \"$5\"
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usage
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fi
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if echo "$4" | grep -q -e "$6"
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then
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echo $1 $2 \"$4\" must not match \"$6\"
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usage
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fi
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}
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# configfrag_boot_params bootparam-string config-fragment-file
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#
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# Adds boot parameters from the .boot file, if any.
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configfrag_boot_params () {
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if test -r "$2.boot"
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then
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echo $1 `grep -v '^#' "$2.boot" | tr '\012' ' '`
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else
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echo $1
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fi
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}
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# configfrag_boot_cpus bootparam-string config-fragment-file config-cpus
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#
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# Decreases number of CPUs based on any nr_cpus= boot parameters specified.
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configfrag_boot_cpus () {
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local bootargs="`configfrag_boot_params "$1" "$2"`"
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local nr_cpus
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if echo "${bootargs}" | grep -q 'nr_cpus=[0-9]'
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then
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nr_cpus="`echo "${bootargs}" | sed -e 's/^.*nr_cpus=\([0-9]*\).*$/\1/'`"
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if test "$3" -gt "$nr_cpus"
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then
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echo $nr_cpus
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else
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echo $3
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fi
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else
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echo $3
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fi
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}
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# configfrag_boot_maxcpus bootparam-string config-fragment-file config-cpus
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#
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# Decreases number of CPUs based on any maxcpus= boot parameters specified.
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# This allows tests where additional CPUs come online later during the
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# test run. However, the torture parameters will be set based on the
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# number of CPUs initially present, so the scripting should schedule
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# test runs based on the maxcpus= boot parameter controlling the initial
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# number of CPUs instead of on the ultimate number of CPUs.
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configfrag_boot_maxcpus () {
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local bootargs="`configfrag_boot_params "$1" "$2"`"
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local maxcpus
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if echo "${bootargs}" | grep -q 'maxcpus=[0-9]'
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then
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maxcpus="`echo "${bootargs}" | sed -e 's/^.*maxcpus=\([0-9]*\).*$/\1/'`"
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if test "$3" -gt "$maxcpus"
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then
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echo $maxcpus
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else
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echo $3
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fi
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else
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echo $3
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fi
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}
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# configfrag_hotplug_cpu config-fragment-file
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#
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# Returns 1 if the config fragment specifies hotplug CPU.
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configfrag_hotplug_cpu () {
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if test ! -r "$1"
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then
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echo Unreadable config fragment "$1" 1>&2
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exit -1
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fi
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grep -q '^CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU=y$' "$1"
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}
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# identify_boot_image qemu-cmd
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#
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# Returns the relative path to the kernel build image. This will be
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# arch/<arch>/boot/bzImage or vmlinux if bzImage is not a target for the
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# architecture, unless overridden with the TORTURE_BOOT_IMAGE environment
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# variable.
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identify_boot_image () {
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if test -n "$TORTURE_BOOT_IMAGE"
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then
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echo $TORTURE_BOOT_IMAGE
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else
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case "$1" in
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qemu-system-x86_64|qemu-system-i386)
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echo arch/x86/boot/bzImage
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;;
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qemu-system-aarch64)
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echo arch/arm64/boot/Image
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;;
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*)
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echo vmlinux
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;;
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esac
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fi
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}
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# identify_qemu builddir
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#
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# Returns our best guess as to which qemu command is appropriate for
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# the kernel at hand. Override with the TORTURE_QEMU_CMD environment variable.
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identify_qemu () {
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local u="`file "$1"`"
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if test -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_CMD"
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then
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echo $TORTURE_QEMU_CMD
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elif echo $u | grep -q x86-64
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then
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echo qemu-system-x86_64
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elif echo $u | grep -q "Intel 80386"
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then
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echo qemu-system-i386
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elif echo $u | grep -q aarch64
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then
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echo qemu-system-aarch64
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elif uname -a | grep -q ppc64
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then
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echo qemu-system-ppc64
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else
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echo Cannot figure out what qemu command to use! 1>&2
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echo file $1 output: $u
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# Usually this will be one of /usr/bin/qemu-system-*
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# Use TORTURE_QEMU_CMD environment variable or appropriate
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# argument to top-level script.
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exit 1
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fi
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}
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# identify_qemu_append qemu-cmd
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#
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# Output arguments for the qemu "-append" string based on CPU type
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# and the TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE environment variable.
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identify_qemu_append () {
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echo debug_boot_weak_hash
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local console=ttyS0
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case "$1" in
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qemu-system-x86_64|qemu-system-i386)
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echo selinux=0 initcall_debug debug
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;;
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qemu-system-aarch64)
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console=ttyAMA0
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;;
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esac
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if test -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE"
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then
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echo root=/dev/sda
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else
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echo console=$console
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fi
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}
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# identify_qemu_args qemu-cmd serial-file
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#
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# Output arguments for qemu arguments based on the TORTURE_QEMU_MAC
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# and TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE environment variables.
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identify_qemu_args () {
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local KVM_CPU=""
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case "$1" in
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qemu-system-x86_64)
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KVM_CPU=kvm64
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;;
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qemu-system-i386)
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KVM_CPU=kvm32
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;;
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esac
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case "$1" in
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qemu-system-x86_64|qemu-system-i386)
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echo -machine q35,accel=kvm
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echo -cpu ${KVM_CPU}
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;;
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qemu-system-aarch64)
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echo -machine virt,gic-version=host -cpu host
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;;
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qemu-system-ppc64)
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echo -enable-kvm -M pseries -nodefaults
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echo -device spapr-vscsi
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if test -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE" -a -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_MAC"
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then
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echo -device spapr-vlan,netdev=net0,mac=$TORTURE_QEMU_MAC
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echo -netdev bridge,br=br0,id=net0
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fi
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;;
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esac
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if test -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE"
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then
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echo -monitor stdio -serial pty -S
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else
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echo -serial file:$2
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fi
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}
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# identify_qemu_vcpus
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#
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# Returns the number of virtual CPUs available to the aggregate of the
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# guest OSes.
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identify_qemu_vcpus () {
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lscpu | grep '^CPU(s):' | sed -e 's/CPU(s)://' -e 's/[ ]*//g'
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}
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# print_bug
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#
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# Prints "BUG: " in red followed by remaining arguments
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print_bug () {
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printf '\033[031mBUG: \033[m'
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echo $*
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}
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# print_warning
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#
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# Prints "WARNING: " in yellow followed by remaining arguments
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print_warning () {
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printf '\033[033mWARNING: \033[m'
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echo $*
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}
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# specify_qemu_cpus qemu-cmd qemu-args #cpus
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#
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# Appends a string containing "-smp XXX" to qemu-args, unless the incoming
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# qemu-args already contains "-smp".
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specify_qemu_cpus () {
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local nt;
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if echo $2 | grep -q -e -smp
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then
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echo $2
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else
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case "$1" in
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qemu-system-x86_64|qemu-system-i386|qemu-system-aarch64)
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echo $2 -smp $3
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;;
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qemu-system-ppc64)
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nt="`lscpu | grep '^NUMA node0' | sed -e 's/^[^,]*,\([0-9]*\),.*$/\1/'`"
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echo $2 -smp cores=`expr \( $3 + $nt - 1 \) / $nt`,threads=$nt
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;;
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esac
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fi
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}
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# specify_qemu_net qemu-args
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#
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# Appends a string containing "-net none" to qemu-args, unless the incoming
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# qemu-args already contains "-smp" or unless the TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE
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# environment variable is set, in which case the string that is be added is
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# instead "-net nic -net user".
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specify_qemu_net () {
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if echo $1 | grep -q -e -net
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then
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echo $1
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elif test -n "$TORTURE_QEMU_INTERACTIVE"
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then
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echo $1 -net nic -net user
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else
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echo $1 -net none
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fi
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}
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