Hi, On Fri, 29 Oct 2021 14:48:18 +0800 kernel test robot <oliver.sang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Greeting, > > FYI, we noticed the following commit (built with gcc-9): > > commit: cfece71411dbca5dc5e1fa2d9ce5a3f38e55d4fe ("[PATCH v4 7/8] tracing/selftests: Add tests for hist trigger expression parsing") > url: https://github.com/0day-ci/linux/commits/Kalesh-Singh/tracing-Extend-histogram-triggers-expression-parsing/20211026-042529 > > > in testcase: kernel-selftests > version: kernel-selftests-x86_64-c8c9111a-1_20210929 > with following parameters: > > group: ftrace > ucode: 0xe2 > > test-description: The kernel contains a set of "self tests" under the tools/testing/selftests/ directory. These are intended to be small unit tests to exercise individual code paths in the kernel. > test-url: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/kselftest.txt Thanks! This issue has been found and will be fixed next version. BTW, I have some questions about this bot; > > > on test machine: 4 threads Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-6500 CPU @ 3.20GHz with 32G memory > > caused below changes (please refer to attached dmesg/kmsg for entire log/backtrace): > > > > If you fix the issue, kindly add following tag > Reported-by: kernel test robot <oliver.sang@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > TAP version 13 > 1..1 > # selftests: ftrace: ftracetest > # === Ftrace unit tests === > # [1] Basic trace file check [PASS] > ... > <<< [1] - [67] have same results as parent, i.e. both PASS or both FAIL >>> At first, I guess the robot just checks the "[number]" instead of the test description, but the ftracetest doesn't fix the "[number]" for each test, Thus, it can be different when updated it. So if you compare the result, please check the descriptions too. > ... > # [67] event trigger - test multiple actions on hist trigger [PASS] > > >>> [68] - [72] can PASS on parent > # [68] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger onchange action [FAIL] > # [69] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger onmatch action [FAIL] > # [70] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger onmatch-onmax action [FAIL] > # [71] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger onmax action [FAIL] > # [72] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger snapshot action [FAIL] > > >>> [73] fail on parent, too > # [73] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger eprobe on synthetic event [FAIL] > > >>> [74] - [92] can PASS on parent > # [74] event trigger - test synthetic event create remove [FAIL] > # [75] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger trace action with dynamic string param [FAIL] > # [76] event trigger - test synthetic_events syntax parser [FAIL] > # [77] event trigger - test synthetic_events syntax parser errors [FAIL] > # [78] event trigger - test inter-event histogram trigger trace action [FAIL] > # [79] event trigger - test event enable/disable trigger [FAIL] > # [80] event trigger - test trigger filter [FAIL] > # [81] event trigger - test histogram expression parsing [FAIL] > # [82] event trigger - test histogram modifiers [FAIL] > # [83] event trigger - test histogram parser errors [FAIL] > # [84] event trigger - test histogram trigger [FAIL] > # [85] event trigger - test multiple histogram triggers [FAIL] > # [86] event trigger - test snapshot-trigger [FAIL] > # [87] event trigger - test stacktrace-trigger [FAIL] > # [88] trace_marker trigger - test histogram trigger [FAIL] > # [89] trace_marker trigger - test snapshot trigger [FAIL] > # [90] trace_marker trigger - test histogram with synthetic event against kernel event [FAIL] > # [91] trace_marker trigger - test histogram with synthetic event [FAIL] > # [92] event trigger - test traceon/off trigger [FAIL] > # [93] (instance) Basic test for tracers [PASS] > ... > <<< [93] - [112] have same results as parent, all PASS >>> > ... > # [112] (instance) trace_marker trigger - test histogram trigger [PASS] > > >>> parent has no [113] > # [113] (instance) trace_marker trigger - test snapshot trigger [PASS] And next, some patch series may *ADD* new testcases if the series add a new feature, so if you find the difference which is not in the parent commit but it is passed, please ignore that. > # tac: failed to create temporary file in '/tmp/ftracetest-dir.o54lNh': No such file or directory > # tac: failed to create temporary file in '/tmp/ftracetest-dir.o54lNh': No such file or directory > # tac: failed to create temporary file in '/tmp/ftracetest-dir.o54lNh': No such file or directory > # tac: failed to create temporary file in '/tmp/ftracetest-dir.o54lNh': No such file or directory And if you find this kind of new error message like above, please report it. This is more important for us. > # > # > # # of passed: 85 > # # of failed: 26 > # # of unresolved: 1 > # # of untested: 0 > # # of unsupported: 0 > # # of xfailed: 1 > # # of undefined(test bug): 0 > not ok 1 selftests: ftrace: ftracetest # exit=1 Also, please configure your running environment correctly so that all ftracetest passes. If you unsure how to do, please ask me. Thank you, > > > > To reproduce: > > git clone https://github.com/intel/lkp-tests.git > cd lkp-tests > sudo bin/lkp install job.yaml # job file is attached in this email > bin/lkp split-job --compatible job.yaml # generate the yaml file for lkp run > sudo bin/lkp run generated-yaml-file > > # if come across any failure that blocks the test, > # please remove ~/.lkp and /lkp dir to run from a clean state. > > > > --- > 0DAY/LKP+ Test Infrastructure Open Source Technology Center > https://lists.01.org/hyperkitty/list/lkp@xxxxxxxxxxxx Intel Corporation > > Thanks, > Oliver Sang > -- Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@xxxxxxxxxx>