When run on ext4 with sufficiently fast x86_64 hardware, generic/130 sometimes fails because xfs_io can report rate values as -nan: 0.000000 bytes, 0 ops; 0.0000 sec (-nan bytes/sec and -nan ops/sec) _filter_xfs_io matches the strings 'inf' or 'nan', but not '-nan'. In that case it fails to convert the actual output to a normalized form matching generic/130's golden output. Extend the regular expression used to match xfs_io's output to fix this. Signed-off-by: Eric Whitney <enwlinux@xxxxxxxxx> --- common/filter | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/common/filter b/common/filter index 5fe86756..5b20e848 100644 --- a/common/filter +++ b/common/filter @@ -168,9 +168,9 @@ common_line_filter() _filter_xfs_io() { - # Apart from standard numeric values, we also filter out 'inf' and 'nan' - # which can result from division in some cases - sed -e "s/[0-9/.]* [GMKiBbytes]*, [0-9]* ops\; [0-9/:. sec]* ([infa0-9/.]* [EPGMKiBbytes]*\/sec and [infa0-9/.]* ops\/sec)/XXX Bytes, X ops\; XX:XX:XX.X (XXX YYY\/sec and XXX ops\/sec)/" + # Apart from standard numeric values, we also filter out 'inf', 'nan', and + # '-nan' which can result from division in some cases + sed -e "s/[0-9/.]* [GMKiBbytes]*, [0-9]* ops\; [0-9/:. sec]* ([infa0-9/.-]* [EPGMKiBbytes]*\/sec and [infa0-9/.-]* ops\/sec)/XXX Bytes, X ops\; XX:XX:XX.X (XXX YYY\/sec and XXX ops\/sec)/" } # Also filter out the offset part of xfs_io output -- 2.30.2