[dpdk-dev] [PATCH] app/test: fix autotest_runner crash
Burakov, Anatoly
anatoly.burakov at intel.com
Wed Jun 12 16:18:44 CEST 2019
On 12-Jun-19 2:33 PM, Herakliusz Lipiec wrote:
> On some systems when dpdk test is executed with make test command
> autotest_runner crashes in first_cpu_on_node. This happens when list
> of available cpus contains something that is not a cpu as first element.
> Fixed by removing all non-cpu values from list of available cpus.
>
> Bugzilla ID: 253
> Fixes: 22dcd9a4d90f ("test: parallelize unit tests")
> Cc: anatoly.burakov at intel.com
> Cc: stable at dpdk.org
> Signed-off-by: Herakliusz Lipiec <herakliusz.lipiec at intel.com>
> ---
> app/test/autotest_runner.py | 9 ++++-----
> 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/app/test/autotest_runner.py b/app/test/autotest_runner.py
> index b72716e1e..7aece8905 100644
> --- a/app/test/autotest_runner.py
> +++ b/app/test/autotest_runner.py
> @@ -43,11 +43,10 @@ def get_numa_nodes():
> # find first (or any, really) CPU on a particular node, will be used to spread
> # processes around NUMA nodes to avoid exhausting memory on particular node
> def first_cpu_on_node(node_nr):
> - cpu_path = glob.glob("/sys/devices/system/node/node%d/cpu*" % node_nr)[0]
> - cpu_name = os.path.basename(cpu_path)
> - m = re.match(r"cpu(\d+)", cpu_name)
> - return int(m.group(1))
> -
This is an unnecessary whitespace change.
> + cpu_path = glob.glob("/sys/devices/system/node/node%d/cpu*" % node_nr)
> + r = re.compile(r"cpu(\d+)")
> + cpu_name = filter(None ,map(r.match, map(os.path.basename, cpu_path)))
Typo, should be "None, map" rather than "None ,map". Also, perhaps
splitting this on multiple lines would benefit readability, like this:
cpu_name = filter(None,
map(r.match,
map(os.path.basename, cpu_path)
)
)
No preference though, can be left as is.
> + return int(next(iter(cpu_name)).group(1))
IMO too much going on on one line, maybe leave the return as it was and
just fix the match? As in,
m = next(iter(cpu_name))
return int(m.group(1))
Also probably needs a comment explaining why iter() is there - namely,
that return value from a filter is a list in Python 2, but a generator
in Python 3, and next() only works with generators.
Otherwise,
Reviewed-by: Anatoly Burakov <anatoly.burakov at intel.com>
>
> pool_child = None # per-process child
>
>
--
Thanks,
Anatoly
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