Re: [PATCH net-next v3 3/9] selftests: net: extend lib.sh to parse drivers/net/net.config
From: Ioana Ciornei <ioana.ciornei@nxp.com>
Date: 2026-03-20 13:28:31
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On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 11:19:18AM +0100, Petr Machata wrote:
Ioana Ciornei [off-list ref] writes:quoted
Extend lib.sh so that it's able to parse driver/net/net.config and environment variables such as NETIF, REMOTE_TYPE, LOCAL_V4 etc described in drivers/net/README.rst. In order to make the transition towards running with a single local interface smoother for the bash networking driver tests, beside sourcing the net.config file also translate the new env variables into the old style based on the NETIFS array. Since the NETIFS array only holds the network interface names, also add a new array - TARGETS - which keeps track of the target on which a specific interfaces resides - local, netns or accesible through an ssh command. For example, a net.config which looks like below: NETIF=eth0 LOCAL_V4=192.168.1.1 REMOTE_V4=192.168.1.2 REMOTE_TYPE=ssh REMOTE_ARGS=root@192.168.1.2 will generate the NETIFS and TARGETS arrays with the following data. NETIFS[p1]="eth0" NETIFS[p2]="eth2" TARGETS[eth0]="local:" TARGETS[eth2]="ssh:root@192.168.1.2" The above will be true if on the remote target, the interface which has the 192.168.1.2 address is named eth2. Since the TARGETS array is indexed by the network interface name, document a new restriction README.rst which states that the remote interface cannot have the same name as the local one.Isn't this going to be a somewhat common scenario though?
It could be if you the remote target is another system just like the DUT. But I couldn't find an easy representation for the relationship between interfaces and their targets that also removes this restriction.
quoted
Also keep the old way of populating the NETIFS variable based on the command line arguments. This will be invoked in case NETIF is not defined. Signed-off-by: Ioana Ciornei <ioana.ciornei@nxp.com> --- Changes in v3: - s/TARGET/CUR_TARGET - this used to be patch #2/9 in v2. Swapped the two patches so that the run_cmd used in this patch is defined earlier, not later. Changes in v2: - patch is new .../testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst | 3 + tools/testing/selftests/net/forwarding/lib.sh | 130 ++++++++++++++++-- 2 files changed, 124 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst b/tools/testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst index c94992acf10b..8d8d9d62e763 100644 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst@@ -26,6 +26,9 @@ The netdevice against which tests will be run must exist, be running Refer to list of :ref:`Variables` later in this file to set up running the tests against a real device. +Also, make sure that if you are using a remote machine for traffic injection, +the local and remote interfaces have different names. + Both modes required ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/net/forwarding/lib.sh b/tools/testing/selftests/net/forwarding/lib.sh index cf40cb766c68..fb5aa56343e1 100644 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/net/forwarding/lib.sh +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/net/forwarding/lib.sh@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ ############################################################################## # Topology description. p1 looped back to p2, p3 to p4 and so on. +#shellcheck disable=SC2034 # SC doesn't see our uses of global variables declare -A NETIFS=( [p1]=veth0@@ -17,6 +18,26 @@ declare -A NETIFS=( [p10]=veth9 ) +# Array indexed by the network interface name keeping track of the target on +# which the interface resides. Values will be strings of the following format - +# <type>:<args>. +# TARGETS[eth0]="local:" - meaning that the eth0 interface is accessible locally +# TARGETS[eth1]="netns:foo" - eth1 is in the foo netns +# TARGETS[eth2]="ssh:root@10.0.0.2" - eth2 is accessible through running the +# 'ssh root@10.0.0.2' command. +declare -A TARGETS=(This is a helper array for internal use only, not a user interface. It should just be declared suitably close to where it's actually initialized. It doesn't even need its own initialization, there's code down there to initialize it accordingly.
Ok. In v3 I added the fallback to run on the local system in case either TARGETS is not declared or the entry is not valid so I can safely remove this now. Thanks!
quoted
+ [veth0]="local:" + [veth1]="local:" + [veth2]="local:" + [veth3]="local:" + [veth4]="local:" + [veth5]="local:" + [veth6]="local:" + [veth7]="local:" + [veth8]="local:" + [veth9]="local:" +) + # Port that does not have a cable connected. : "${NETIF_NO_CABLE:=eth8}"@@ -340,17 +361,108 @@ fi ############################################################################## # Command line options handling -count=0 +check_env() { + local vars_needed=("LOCAL_V4,LOCAL_V6" + "REMOTE_V4,REMOTE_V6" + "REMOTE_TYPE" + "REMOTE_ARGS")Given how much hand-rolled code is needed for cross-checking local x remote config symmetry anyway, I wonder if this whole thing should just be very simply: if [[ ! (( -n "$LOCAL_V4" && -n "$REMOTE_V4") || ( -n "$LOCAL_V6" && -n "$REMOTE_V6" )) ]]; then echo "SKIP: Invalid environment, missing or inconsistent LOCAL_V4/REMOTE_V4/LOCAL_V6/REMOTE_V6" exit "$ksft_skip" fi Then you still need a manual check for REMOTE_TYPE and REMOTE_ARGS, but that's still just three checks all told like the current code, and we get rid of the double nested loop that's kinda tricky to understand. It doesn't look like the generalization really pays off here.
I took as an example the _check_env in env.py and it got to look way worse in bash than necessary, agreed. Will simplify it, thanks!
quoted
+ local missing=() + local choice + + # If a choice has multiple comma separated options, at least one must + # exist + for choice in "${vars_needed[@]}"; do + IFS=',' read -ra entries <<< "$choice"Entries should be declared as local.
Will do.
quoted
+ + local found=0 + for entry in "${entries[@]}"; do + if [[ -n "${!entry}" ]]; then + found=1 + break + fi + done -while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do - if [[ "$count" -eq "0" ]]; then - unset NETIFS - declare -A NETIFS + if [[ $found -eq 0 ]]; then + missing+=("$choice") + fi + done + + # Make sure v4 / v6 configs are symmetric + if [[ (-n "${LOCAL_V6}" && -z "${REMOTE_V6}") || \ + (-z "${LOCAL_V6}" && -n "${REMOTE_V6}") ]]; then + missing+=("LOCAL_V6,REMOTE_V6") fi - count=$((count + 1)) - NETIFS[p$count]="$1" - shift -done + + if [[ (-n "${LOCAL_V4}" && -z "${REMOTE_V4}") || \ + (-z "${LOCAL_V4}" && -n "${REMOTE_V4}") ]]; then + missing+=("LOCAL_V4,REMOTE_V4") + fi + + if [[ ${#missing[@]} -gt 0 ]]; then + echo "SKIP: Invalid environment, missing configuration: ${missing[*]}" + echo "Please see tools/testing/selftests/drivers/net/README.rst" + exit "$ksft_skip" + fi +} + +get_ifname_by_ip() +{ + local ip_addr=$1; shift + + run_cmd ip -j addr show to "$ip_addr" | jq -r '.[].ifname' +} + +# If there is a configuration file, source it +if [[ -f $net_forwarding_dir/../../drivers/net/net.config ]]; then + source "$net_forwarding_dir/../../drivers/net/net.config" +fiThis is going to impact all tests though, not just those that are meant to work with this. If I have this file, it sets NETIF, and all my forwarding tests (presumably) break, because NETIFS doesn't get configured correctly. The requirements for driver tests are different from forwarding tests. In particular, interfaces do not belong to driver tests, the test can't bring them up or down, reassign addresses etc., merely to use them for traffic. (Which you know, I'm just stating it for context.) So I think there needs to be an opt-in variable for this stuff. Like setting DRIVER_TEST_CONFORMANT=yes before sourcing the library or whatever.
I had this kind of approach initially but thought that it might be desirable to also maintain the possibility to run the driver tests as ./test.sh eth0 eth1 as before, so I changed it. I can move back to that approach.
Then NETIF ceases to be a tell and becomes an environment requirement for check_env to validate like the others. (Another alternative is to extract a common core from lib.sh and have both lib.sh and net/driver/lib.sh use that. But that's more of a change and I'm not even sure it's the right way to slice it.)quoted
+# In case NETIF is specified, then the test expects to pass the arguments +# through the variables specified in drivers/net/README.rst file. If not, +# fallback on parsing the script arguments for interface names. +if [[ -v NETIF ]]; then + if (( NUM_NETIFS > 2)); then + echo "SKIP: NETIF defined and NUM_NETIFS is bigger than 2" + exit "$ksft_skip" + fi + + check_env + + # Populate the NETIF and TARGETS arrays automatically based on the + # environment variables + unset NETIFS + declare -A NETIFS + + NETIFS[p1]="$NETIF" + TARGETS[$NETIF]="local:" + + # Locate the name of the remote interface + if [[ -v REMOTE_V4 ]]; then + remote_netif=$(CUR_TARGET="$REMOTE_TYPE:$REMOTE_ARGS" get_ifname_by_ip "$REMOTE_V4") + else + remote_netif=$(CUR_TARGET="$REMOTE_TYPE:$REMOTE_ARGS" get_ifname_by_ip "$REMOTE_V6") + fi + if [[ ! -n "$remote_netif" ]]; then + echo "SKIP: cannot find remote interface" + exit "$ksft_skip" + fiThis should check that $NETIF != $remote_netif.
Ok.