Often times one is running a new test baseline we want to continue to start testing where we left off if the last test was a crash. To do this the first thing that occurred to me was to use the check.time file as an expunge file but that doesn't work so well if you crashed as the file turns out empty. So instead add super simple argument --start-after which let's you skip all tests until the test infrastructure has "seen" the test you want to skip. This does obviously work best if you are not using a random order, but that is rather implied. Signed-off-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> --- check | 17 +++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+) diff --git a/check b/check index 71b9fbd07522..1ecf07c1cb37 100755 --- a/check +++ b/check @@ -18,6 +18,8 @@ showme=false have_test_arg=false randomize=false exact_order=false +start_after=false +start_after_test="" export here=`pwd` xfile="" subdir_xfile="" @@ -80,6 +82,7 @@ check options -b brief test summary -R fmt[,fmt] generate report in formats specified. Supported formats: xunit, xunit-quiet --large-fs optimise scratch device for large filesystems + --start-after only start testing after the test specified -s section run only specified section from config file -S section exclude the specified section from the config file -L <n> loop tests <n> times following a failure, measuring aggregate pass/fail metrics @@ -313,6 +316,11 @@ while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do <(sed "s/#.*$//" $xfile) fi ;; + --start-after) + start_after=true + start_after_test="$2" + shift + ;; -s) RUN_SECTION="$RUN_SECTION $2"; shift ;; -S) EXCLUDE_SECTION="$EXCLUDE_SECTION $2"; shift ;; -l) diff="diff" ;; @@ -591,6 +599,15 @@ _expunge_test() { local TEST_ID="$1" + if $start_after; then + if [[ "$start_after_test" == ${TEST_ID}* ]]; then + start_after=false + fi + echo " [skipped]" + return 0 + + fi + for f in "${exclude_tests[@]}"; do # $f may contain traling spaces and comments local id_regex="^${TEST_ID}\b" -- 2.39.2