minix/test/t40c.c
Thomas Veerman 827daf1fca Make test40 behave
Make test40 behave better. It should create its own subdirectory to
conduct its tests and should not write to /tmp. Also, the master-slave
terminal pair it tries to open might be in use; it should try to obtain
another pair. These changes allow the test to be run multiple times
simultaneously from different paths (to test select() more intensively).
2011-04-21 13:18:00 +00:00

161 lines
4.4 KiB
C

/* t40c.c
*
* Test (pseudo) terminal devices
*
* Select works on regular files, (pseudo) terminal devices, streams-based
* files, FIFOs, pipes, and sockets. This test verifies selecting for (pseudo)
* terminal devices.
*
* This test is part of a bigger select test. It expects as argument which sub-
* test it is.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/select.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <string.h>
#define TERMINALW "/dev/ttypf"
#define TERMINALR "/dev/ptypf"
#define SENDSTRING "minixrocks"
#define MAX_ERROR 5
int errct = 0, subtest = -1;
void e(int n, char *s) {
printf("Subtest %d, error %d, %s\n", subtest, n, s);
if (errct++ > MAX_ERROR) {
printf("Too many errors; test aborted\n");
exit(errct);
}
}
void open_terminal(int *child_fd, int *parent_fd) {
int fd1, fd2, i;
char opentermw[5+OPEN_MAX+1];
char opentermr[5+OPEN_MAX+1];
char *term[] = {"f","e","d","c","b","a","9","8","7","6","5","4","3","2","1"};
if (!child_fd || !parent_fd) exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) {
snprintf(opentermw, 5+OPEN_MAX, "/dev/ttyp%s", term[i]);
snprintf(opentermr, 5+OPEN_MAX, "/dev/ptyp%s", term[i]);
/* Open master terminal for writing */
if((fd1 = open(opentermw, O_WRONLY)) == -1) continue;
/* Open slave terminal for reading */
if((fd2 = open(opentermr, O_RDONLY)) == -1) {
close(fd1);
continue;
}
*child_fd = fd1;
*parent_fd = fd2;
return;
}
/* If we get here we failed to find a terminal pair */
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
int do_child(int terminal) {
int retval;
struct timeval tv;
/* Going to sleep for two seconds to allow the parent proc to get ready */
tv.tv_sec = 2;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
select(0, NULL, NULL, NULL, &tv);
/* Try to write. Doesn't matter how many bytes we actually send. */
retval = write(terminal, SENDSTRING, strlen(SENDSTRING));
close(terminal);
/* Wait for another second to allow the parent to process incoming data */
tv.tv_usec = 1000000;
retval = select(0,NULL, NULL, NULL, &tv);
exit(0);
}
int do_parent(int child, int terminal) {
fd_set fds_read, fds_write, fds_error;
int retval;
/* Clear bit masks */
FD_ZERO(&fds_read); FD_ZERO(&fds_write); FD_ZERO(&fds_error);
/* Set read bits */
FD_SET(terminal, &fds_read);
FD_SET(terminal, &fds_write);
/* Test if we can read or write from/to fd. As fd is opened read only we
* cannot actually write, so the select should return immediately with fd
* set in fds_write, but not in fds_read. Note that the child waits two
* seconds before sending data. This gives us the opportunity run this
* sub-test as reading from fd is blocking at this point. */
retval = select(terminal+1, &fds_read, &fds_write, &fds_error, NULL);
if(retval != 1) e(1, "incorrect amount of ready file descriptors");
if(FD_ISSET(terminal, &fds_read)) e(2, "read should NOT be set");
if(!FD_ISSET(terminal, &fds_write)) e(3, "write should be set");
if(FD_ISSET(terminal, &fds_error)) e(4, "error should NOT be set");
/* Block until ready; until child wrote stuff */
FD_ZERO(&fds_read); FD_ZERO(&fds_write); FD_ZERO(&fds_error);
FD_SET(terminal, &fds_read);
retval = select(terminal+1, &fds_read, NULL, &fds_error, NULL);
if(retval != 1) e(5, "incorrect amount of ready file descriptors");
if(!FD_ISSET(terminal, &fds_read)) e(6, "read should be set");
if(FD_ISSET(terminal, &fds_error)) e(7, "error should not be set");
FD_ZERO(&fds_read); FD_ZERO(&fds_error);
FD_SET(terminal, &fds_write);
retval = select(terminal+1, NULL, &fds_write, NULL, NULL);
/* As it is impossible to write to a read only fd, this select should return
* immediately with fd set in fds_write. */
if(retval != 1) e(8, "incorrect amount or ready file descriptors");
close(terminal);
waitpid(child, &retval, 0);
exit(errct);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
int forkres;
int master, slave;
/* Get subtest number */
if(argc != 2) {
printf("Usage: %s subtest_no\n", argv[0]);
exit(-1);
} else if(sscanf(argv[1], "%d", &subtest) != 1) {
printf("Usage: %s subtest_no\n", argv[0]);
exit(-1);
}
open_terminal(&master, &slave);
forkres = fork();
if(forkres == 0) do_child(master);
else if(forkres > 0) do_parent(forkres, slave);
else { /* Fork failed */
perror("Unable to fork");
exit(-1);
}
exit(-2); /* We're not supposed to get here. Both do_* routines should exit*/
}