On Wed, 5 Oct 2011 08:20:38 -0500, Alex Elder <aelder@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Sun, 2011-09-18 at 18:54 +0400, Dmitry Monakhov wrote:
> > It is very hard to predict runtime for fsstress. In many cases it
> > is useful to give test to run a reasonable time, and then kill it.
> > But currently there is no reliable way to kill test without leaving
> > running children.
> > This patch add sanity cleanup logic which looks follow:
> > - On sigterm received by parent, it resend signal to it's children
> > - Wait for each child to terminates
> > - EXTRA_SANITY: Even if parent was killed by other signal, children
> > will be terminated with SIGKILL to preven staled children.
> >
> > So now one can simply run fsstress like this:
> > ./fsstress -p 1000 -n999999999 -d $TEST_DIR &
> > PID=$!
> > sleep 300
> > kill $PID
> > wait $PID
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Dmitry Monakhov <dmonakhov@xxxxxxxxxx>
>
> I think this is an interesting change and it looks
> OK to me. I agree with Christoph's suggestion (on
> the second patch in this series) that it would be
> nice to have at least one of the tests make use of
> it, if nothing else just to document that it's a
> reasonable thing to do.
>
> But even without that I think this is both useful
> and harmless.
>
> Reviewed-by: Alex Elder <aelder@xxxxxxx>
Ok i'll resend patch shortly, Actually test_case was explained inside
description. So far i've able to caught 3 different minor
fs-corruptions, one BUG_ON on ext4. And when i've run this test
on host with 24-cores it deadlock inside dcache core.
>
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