phunix/minix/tests/Makefile
David van Moolenbroek 6f3e0bcd3d MIB/libsys: support for remote MIB (RMIB) subtrees
Most of the nodes in the general sysctl tree will be managed directly
by the MIB service, which obtains the necessary information as needed.
However, in certain cases, it makes more sense to let another service
manage a part of the sysctl tree itself, in order to avoid replicating
part of that other service in the MIB service.  This patch adds the
basic support for such delegation: remote services may now register
their own subtrees within the full sysctl tree with the MIB service,
which will then forward any sysctl(2) requests on such subtrees to the
remote services.

The system works much like mounting a file system, but in addition to
support for shadowing an existing node, the MIB service also supports
creating temporary mount point nodes.  Each have their own use cases.
A remote "kern.ipc" would use the former, because even when such a
subtree were not mounted, userland would still expect some of its
children to exist and return default values.  A remote "net.inet"
would use the latter, as there is no reason to precreate nodes for all
possible supported networking protocols in the MIB "net" subtree.

A standard remote MIB (RMIB) implementation is provided for services
that wish to make use of this functionality.  It is essentially a
simplified and somewhat more lightweight version of the MIB service's
internals, and works more or less the same from a programmer's point
of view.  The most important difference is the "rmib" prefix instead
of the "mib" prefix.  Documentation will hopefully follow later.

Overall, the RMIB functionality should not be used lightly, for
several reasons.  First, despite being more lightweight than the MIB
service, the RMIB module still adds substantially to the code
footprint of the containing service.  Second, the RMIB protocol not
only adds extra IPC for sysctl(2), but has also not been optimized for
performance in other ways.  Third, and most importantly, the RMIB
implementation also several limitations.  The main limitation is that
remote MIB subtrees must be fully static.  Not only may the user not
create or destroy nodes, the service itself may not either, as this
would clash with the simplified remote node versioning system and
the cached subtree root node child counts.  Other limitations exist,
such as the fact that the root of a remote subtree may only be a
node-type node, and a stricter limit on the highest node identifier
of any child in this subtree root (currently 4095).

The current implementation was born out of necessity, and therefore
it leaves several improvements to future work.  Most importantly,
support for exit and crash notification is missing, primarily in the
MIB service.  This means that remote subtrees may not be cleaned up
immediately, but instead only when the MIB service attempts to talk
to the dead remote service.  In addition, if the MIB service itself
crashes, re-registration of remote subtrees is currently left up to
the individual RMIB users.  Finally, the MIB service uses synchronous
(sendrec-based) calls to the remote services, which while convenient
may cause cascading service hangs.  The underlying protocol is ready
for conversion to an asynchronous implementation already, though.

A new test set, testrmib.sh, tests the basic RMIB functionality.  To
this end it uses a test service, rmibtest, and also reuses part of
the existing test87 MIB service test.

Change-Id: I3378fe04f2e090ab231705bde7e13d6289a9183e
2016-06-18 12:46:59 +00:00

117 lines
2.7 KiB
Makefile

NOGCCERROR:= yes
BINDIR?= /usr/tests/minix-posix
FILESDIR?= /usr/tests/minix-posix
WARNS?= 1
# Tests have no manpages
MKMAN= no
# They are all bin-owned; by default normal executable mode
BINOWN= bin
# Needed by testsh1.sh
FILES= test1.c
CFLAGS+= -fno-builtin
LDADD+= -lm
.include <bsd.own.mk>
SUBDIR+= blocktest
SUBDIR+= ddekit
SUBDIR+= rmibtest
# Some have special flags compiling
CPPFLAGS.test56.c += -D_MINIX_SYSTEM=1
COPTS.test9.c= -O0
COPTS.test37.c= -O0
COPTS.test53.c= -O0
COPTS.test68.c= -O0
# Some have special libraries
LDADD.test59= -lmthread
LDADD.test76= -lutil
LDADD.test77= -lutil
# Some have an extra file
OBJS.test57= test57loop.o
OBJS.test56+= common-socket.o
OBJS.test80+= common-socket.o
OBJS.test81+= common-socket.o
# Cache testing programs
OBJS.test71+= testcache.o
OBJS.test72+= testcache.o
OBJS.test74+= testcache.o
LDADD.test72+= -lminixfs
PROGS += testvm
OBJS.testvm+= testcache.o
LDSTATIC.testvm= -static
LDADD.testvm+= -lsys -ltimers
FILES += testvm.conf
# Tests to compile, For every architecture
MINIX_TESTS= \
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 \
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 \
41 42 43 44 45 46 48 49 50 52 53 54 55 56 58 59 60 \
61 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 \
81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89
FILES += t84_h_nonexec.sh
.if ${MACHINE_ARCH} == "i386"
MINIX_TESTS+= \
47 51 57 \
62
.endif # ${MACHINE_ARCH} == "i386"
.for t in ${MINIX_TESTS}
PROGS+= test${t}
.endfor
PROGS+= t10a t11a t11b t40a t40b t40c t40d t40e t40f t40g t60a t60b \
t67a t67b t68a t68b tvnd t84_h_spawn t84_h_spawnattr
SCRIPTS+= run check-install testinterp.sh testsh1.sh testsh2.sh testmfs.sh \
testisofs.sh testvnd.sh testkyua.sh testrelpol.sh testrmib.sh
# test57loop.S is not linked into the .bcl file.
# This way, we can link it in when linking the final binary
LDADD.test57+= ${${USE_BITCODE:Uno} != "no":? test57loop.o -Wl,-allow-multiple-definition:}
.if ${MKPIC} == "yes"
# Build them as dynamic executables by default if shared libraries
# are available; so that the building and executing of dynamic
# executables is tested
LDSTATIC= -dynamic
LDFLAGS.mod+= -shared # make shared object
# Files which have to be compiled with -fPIC
mod.o: mod.c
${COMPILE.c} -fPIC ${.IMPSRC}
common.o: common.c
${COMPILE.c} -fPIC ${.IMPSRC}
# Add test that must be linked dynamically, and its dynamically loaded
# module
PROGS+= test63 mod
.endif # ${MKPIC} == "yes"
.for o in ${PROGS}
OBJS.${o} += common.o
.endfor
# LSC Make sure there is not leftover after a failed testrun
clean: .PHONY .MAKE
@rm -rf DIR*
.include <bsd.prog.mk>
.include <bsd.subdir.mk>