Message ID | 20211108144905.11515-1-lhenriques@suse.de (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | generic/528: take fs timestamps granularity into account in tolerance interval | expand |
On Mon, Nov 08, 2021 at 02:49:05PM +0000, Luís Henriques wrote: > Filesystems timestamps granularity can cause spurious test failures: > > QA output created by 528 > btime has value of 1635818936 > btime is NOT in range 1635818937 .. 1635818942 > > This test output makes it looks like $testfile was created *before* the > 'date' command was executed. What really happen was that btime was > truncated according to the granularity defined by filesystem (I've seen > this with both ext4 and xfs, but I guess others are also affected). > > Since granularity can't be worse than a second, simply adjust the test > tolerance interval by 1 second. /me wonders if that's still going to trip over vfat/ntfs, but as far as modern xfs/ext4/btrfs go, this should be sufficient. Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> --D > Signed-off-by: Luís Henriques <lhenriques@suse.de> > --- > tests/generic/528 | 2 +- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/tests/generic/528 b/tests/generic/528 > index 24d1ee0e5ec7..a63827b1139b 100755 > --- a/tests/generic/528 > +++ b/tests/generic/528 > @@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ btime=$(date +%s -d "$($XFS_IO_PROG -c "statx -v -m $STATX_BTIME" $testfile | \ > grep 'stat.btime =' | cut -d '=' -f 2)") > test -n "$btime" || echo "error: did not see btime in output??" > > -_within_tolerance "btime" "$btime" "$now" 0 5 -v > +_within_tolerance "btime" "$btime" "$now" 1 5 -v > > status=0 > exit
diff --git a/tests/generic/528 b/tests/generic/528 index 24d1ee0e5ec7..a63827b1139b 100755 --- a/tests/generic/528 +++ b/tests/generic/528 @@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ btime=$(date +%s -d "$($XFS_IO_PROG -c "statx -v -m $STATX_BTIME" $testfile | \ grep 'stat.btime =' | cut -d '=' -f 2)") test -n "$btime" || echo "error: did not see btime in output??" -_within_tolerance "btime" "$btime" "$now" 0 5 -v +_within_tolerance "btime" "$btime" "$now" 1 5 -v status=0 exit
Filesystems timestamps granularity can cause spurious test failures: QA output created by 528 btime has value of 1635818936 btime is NOT in range 1635818937 .. 1635818942 This test output makes it looks like $testfile was created *before* the 'date' command was executed. What really happen was that btime was truncated according to the granularity defined by filesystem (I've seen this with both ext4 and xfs, but I guess others are also affected). Since granularity can't be worse than a second, simply adjust the test tolerance interval by 1 second. Signed-off-by: Luís Henriques <lhenriques@suse.de> --- tests/generic/528 | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)