fc34dfba8e
When reading compressed blocks from the L2ARC, with compressed ARC disabled, arc_hdr_size() returns LSIZE rather than PSIZE, but the actual read is PSIZE. This causes l2arc_read_done() to compare the checksum against the wrong size, resulting in checksum failure. This manifests as an increase in the kstat l2_cksum_bad and the read being retried from the main pool, making the L2ARC ineffective. Add new L2ARC tests with Compressed ARC enabled/disabled Blocks are handled differently depending on the state of the zfs_compressed_arc_enabled tunable. If a block is compressed on-disk, and compressed_arc is enabled: - the block is read from disk - It is NOT decompressed - It is added to the ARC in its compressed form - l2arc_write_buffers() may write it to the L2ARC (as is) - l2arc_read_done() compares the checksum to the BP (compressed) However, if compressed_arc is disabled: - the block is read from disk - It is decompressed - It is added to the ARC (uncompressed) - l2arc_write_buffers() will use l2arc_apply_transforms() to recompress the block, before writing it to the L2ARC - l2arc_read_done() compares the checksum to the BP (compressed) - l2arc_read_done() will use l2arc_untransform() to uncompress it This test writes out a test file to a pool consisting of one disk and one cache device, then randomly reads from it. Since the arc_max in the tests is low, this will feed the L2ARC, and result in reads from the L2ARC. We compare the value of the kstat l2_cksum_bad before and after to determine if any blocks failed to survive the trip through the L2ARC. Sponsored-by: The FreeBSD Foundation Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allanjude@freebsd.org> Closes #10693 |
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runfiles | ||
test-runner | ||
zfs-tests | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README.md |
ZFS Test Suite README
- Building and installing the ZFS Test Suite
The ZFS Test Suite runs under the test-runner framework. This framework is built along side the standard ZFS utilities and is included as part of zfs-test package. The zfs-test package can be built from source as follows:
$ ./configure
$ make pkg-utils
The resulting packages can be installed using the rpm or dpkg command as appropriate for your distributions. Alternately, if you have installed ZFS from a distributions repository (not from source) the zfs-test package may be provided for your distribution.
- Installed from source
$ rpm -ivh ./zfs-test*.rpm, or
$ dpkg -i ./zfs-test*.deb,
- Installed from package repository
$ yum install zfs-test
$ apt-get install zfs-test
- Running the ZFS Test Suite
The pre-requisites for running the ZFS Test Suite are:
- Three scratch disks
- Specify the disks you wish to use in the $DISKS variable, as a space delimited list like this: DISKS='vdb vdc vdd'. By default the zfs-tests.sh script will construct three loopback devices to be used for testing: DISKS='loop0 loop1 loop2'.
- A non-root user with a full set of basic privileges and the ability to sudo(8) to root without a password to run the test.
- Specify any pools you wish to preserve as a space delimited list in the $KEEP variable. All pools detected at the start of testing are added automatically.
- The ZFS Test Suite will add users and groups to test machine to verify functionality. Therefore it is strongly advised that a dedicated test machine, which can be a VM, be used for testing.
Once the pre-requisites are satisfied simply run the zfs-tests.sh script:
$ /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests.sh
Alternately, the zfs-tests.sh script can be run from the source tree to allow developers to rapidly validate their work. In this mode the ZFS utilities and modules from the source tree will be used (rather than those installed on the system). In order to avoid certain types of failures you will need to ensure the ZFS udev rules are installed. This can be done manually or by ensuring some version of ZFS is installed on the system.
$ ./scripts/zfs-tests.sh
The following zfs-tests.sh options are supported:
-v Verbose zfs-tests.sh output When specified additional
information describing the test environment will be logged
prior to invoking test-runner. This includes the runfile
being used, the DISKS targeted, pools to keep, etc.
-q Quiet test-runner output. When specified it is passed to
test-runner(1) which causes output to be written to the
console only for tests that do not pass and the results
summary.
-x Remove all testpools, dm, lo, and files (unsafe). When
specified the script will attempt to remove any leftover
configuration from a previous test run. This includes
destroying any pools named testpool, unused DM devices,
and loopback devices backed by file-vdevs. This operation
can be DANGEROUS because it is possible that the script
will mistakenly remove a resource not related to the testing.
-k Disable cleanup after test failure. When specified the
zfs-tests.sh script will not perform any additional cleanup
when test-runner exists. This is useful when the results of
a specific test need to be preserved for further analysis.
-f Use sparse files directly instead of loopback devices for
the testing. When running in this mode certain tests will
be skipped which depend on real block devices.
-c Only create and populate constrained path
-I NUM Number of iterations
-d DIR Create sparse files for vdevs in the DIR directory. By
default these files are created under /var/tmp/.
-s SIZE Use vdevs of SIZE (default: 4G)
-r RUNFILES Run tests in RUNFILES (default: common.run,linux.run)
-t PATH Run single test at PATH relative to test suite
-T TAGS Comma separated list of tags (default: 'functional')
-u USER Run single test as USER (default: root)
The ZFS Test Suite allows the user to specify a subset of the tests via a runfile or list of tags.
The format of the runfile is explained in test-runner(1), and the files that zfs-tests.sh uses are available for reference under /usr/share/zfs/runfiles. To specify a custom runfile, use the -r option:
$ /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests.sh -r my_tests.run
Otherwise user can set needed tags to run only specific tests.
- Test results
While the ZFS Test Suite is running, one informational line is printed at the
end of each test, and a results summary is printed at the end of the run. The
results summary includes the location of the complete logs, which is logged in
the form /var/tmp/test_results/[ISO 8601 date]
. A normal test run launched
with the zfs-tests.sh
wrapper script will look something like this:
$ /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests.sh -v -d /tmp/test
--- Configuration ---
Runfile: /usr/share/zfs/runfiles/linux.run
STF_TOOLS: /usr/share/zfs/test-runner
STF_SUITE: /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests
STF_PATH: /var/tmp/constrained_path.G0Sf
FILEDIR: /tmp/test
FILES: /tmp/test/file-vdev0 /tmp/test/file-vdev1 /tmp/test/file-vdev2
LOOPBACKS: /dev/loop0 /dev/loop1 /dev/loop2
DISKS: loop0 loop1 loop2
NUM_DISKS: 3
FILESIZE: 4G
ITERATIONS: 1
TAGS: functional
Keep pool(s): rpool
/usr/share/zfs/test-runner/bin/test-runner.py -c /usr/share/zfs/runfiles/linux.run \
-T functional -i /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests -I 1
Test: /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests/tests/functional/arc/setup (run as root) [00:00] [PASS]
...more than 1100 additional tests...
Test: /usr/share/zfs/zfs-tests/tests/functional/zvol/zvol_swap/cleanup (run as root) [00:00] [PASS]
Results Summary
SKIP 52
PASS 1129
Running Time: 02:35:33
Percent passed: 95.6%
Log directory: /var/tmp/test_results/20180515T054509