OpenCores
URL https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc_2011-10-31/openrisc_2011-10-31/trunk

Subversion Repositories openrisc_2011-10-31

[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-src/] [gcc-4.2.2/] [contrib/] [reghunt/] [reg_search] - Blame information for rev 165

Go to most recent revision | Details | Compare with Previous | View Log

Line No. Rev Author Line
1 38 julius
#! /bin/bash
2
 
3
########################################################################
4
#
5
# File:    reg_search
6
# Author:  Janis Johnson 
7
# Date:    2002/12/15
8
#
9
# Search for a small time interval within a range of dates in which
10
# results for a test changed, using a binary search.  The functionality
11
# for getting sources, building the component to test, and running the
12
# test are in other scripts that are run from here.  Before the search
13
# begins, we verify that we get the expected behavior for the first and
14
# last dates.
15
#
16
# Define these in a file whose name is the argument to this script:
17
#   LOW_DATE:   Date string recognized by the date command (local time).
18
#   HIGH_DATE:  Date string recognized by the date command (local time).
19
#   REG_UPDATE: Pathname of script to update your source tree; returns
20
#               zero for success, nonzero for failure.
21
#   REG_BUILD:  Pathname of script to build enough of the product to run
22
#               the test; returns zero for success, nonzero for failure.
23
#   REG_TEST:   Pathname of script to run the test; returns 1 if we
24
#               should search later dates, 0 if we should search earlier
25
#               dates.
26
# Optional:
27
#   DELTA:      Search to an interval within this many seconds; default
28
#               is one hour (although 300 works well).
29
#   REG_FINISH  Pathname of script to call at the end with the two final
30
#               dates as arguments.
31
#   SKIP_LOW    If 1, skip verifying the low date of the range;
32
#               define this only if you're restarting and have already
33
#               tested the low date.
34
#   SKIP_HIGH   If 1, skip verifying the high date of the range;
35
#               define this only if you're restarting and have already
36
#               tested the high date.
37
#   FIRST_MID   Use this as the first midpoint, to avoid a midpoint that
38
#               is known not to build.
39
#   HAS_CHANGES Pathname of script to report whether the current date has
40
#               no differences from one of the ends of the current range
41
#               to skip unnecessary build and testing; default is "true".
42
#   VERBOSITY   Default is 0, to print only errors and final message.
43
#   DATE_IN_MSG If set to anything but 0, include the time and date in
44
#               messages.
45
#
46
#
47
#
48
# Copyright (c) 2002, 2003, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
49
#
50
# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
51
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
52
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
53
# (at your option) any later version.
54
#
55
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
56
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
57
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
58
# GNU General Public License for more details.
59
#
60
# For a copy of the GNU General Public License, write the the
61
# Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
62
# Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
63
#
64
########################################################################
65
 
66
########################################################################
67
# Functions
68
########################################################################
69
 
70
# Issue a message if its verbosity level is high enough.
71
 
72
msg() {
73
  test ${1} -gt ${VERBOSITY}  && return
74
 
75
  if [ "x${DATE_IN_MSG}" = "x" ]; then
76
    echo "${2}"
77
  else
78
    echo "`${DATE}`  ${2}"
79
  fi
80
}
81
 
82
# Issue an error message and exit with a non-zero status.  If there
83
# is a valid current range whose end points have been tested, report
84
# it so the user can start again from there.
85
 
86
error() {
87
  msg 0 "error: ${1}"
88
  test ${VALID_RANGE} -eq 1 && \
89
    echo "current range:"
90
    echo "LOW_DATE=\"${LATER_THAN}\""
91
    echo "HIGH_DATE=\"${EARLIER_THAN}\""
92
  exit 1
93
}
94
 
95
# Turn seconds since the epoch into a date we can use with source
96
# control tools and report to the user.
97
 
98
make_date() {
99
  MADE_DATE="`${DATE} -u +\"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M %Z\" --date \"1970-01-01 ${1} seconds\"`" \
100
    || error "make_date: date command failed"
101
}
102
 
103
# Build the components to test using sources as of a particular date and
104
# run a test case.  Pass each of the scripts the date that we're
105
# testing; the first one needs it, the others can ignore it if they want.
106
 
107
process_date() {
108
  TEST_DATE="${1}"
109
 
110
  ${REG_UPDATE} "${TEST_DATE}" || error "source update failed for ${TEST_DATE}"
111
 
112
  # If we're already in a valid range, skip this date if there are no
113
  # differences from either end of the range and adjust LATER.
114
 
115
  if [ ${VALID_RANGE} = 1 ]; then
116
    ${HAS_CHANGES} "${TEST_DATE}" "${LATER_THAN}" "${EARLIER_THAN}"
117
    RET=$?
118
    case ${RET} in
119
    0) ;;
120
    1) LATER=1; return;;
121
    2) LATER=0; return;;
122
    *) error "process_date: unexpected return value from ${HAS_CHANGES}";;
123
    esac
124
  fi
125
 
126
  ${REG_BUILD} "${TEST_DATE}"  || error "build failed for ${TEST_DATE}"
127
  ${REG_TEST} "${TEST_DATE}"
128
  LATER=$?
129
}
130
 
131
# Perform a binary search on dates within the range specified by
132
# the arguments, bounded by the number of seconds in DELTA.
133
 
134
search_dates() {
135
  let LOW=$1
136
  let HIGH=$2
137
  let DIFF=HIGH-LOW
138
 
139
  # Get the date in the middle of the range; MID is in seconds since
140
  # the epoch, DATE is readable by humans and tools.  The user can
141
  # override the initial mid date if it is known to have problems,
142
  # e.g., if a build fails for that date.
143
 
144
  if [ ${FIRST_MID} -ne 0 ]; then
145
    let MID=${FIRST_MID}
146
  else
147
    let MID=LOW/2+HIGH/2
148
  fi
149
 
150
  while [ ${DIFF} -ge ${DELTA} ]; do
151
    make_date ${MID}
152
    TEST_DATE="${MADE_DATE}"
153
 
154
    # Test it.
155
 
156
    process_date "${TEST_DATE}"
157
 
158
    # Narrow the search based on the outcome of testing DATE.
159
 
160
    if [ ${LATER} -eq 1 ]; then
161
      msg 1 "search dates later than \"${TEST_DATE}\""
162
      LATER_THAN="${TEST_DATE}"
163
      let LOW=MID
164
    else
165
      msg 1 "search dates earlier than \"${TEST_DATE}\""
166
      EARLIER_THAN="${TEST_DATE}"
167
      let HIGH=MID
168
    fi
169
 
170
    let DIFF=HIGH-LOW
171
    let MID=LOW/2+HIGH/2
172
  done
173
}
174
 
175
########################################################################
176
# Main program (so to speak)
177
########################################################################
178
 
179
# If DATE isn't defined, use the default date command; the configuration
180
# file can override this.
181
 
182
if [ "x${DATE}" = "x" ]; then
183
  DATE=date
184
fi
185
 
186
# The error function uses this.
187
 
188
VALID_RANGE=0
189
 
190
# Process the configuration file.
191
 
192
if [ $# != 1 ]; then
193
  echo Usage: $0 config_file
194
  exit 1
195
fi
196
 
197
CONFIG=${1}
198
if [ ! -f ${CONFIG} ]; then
199
  error "configuration file ${CONFIG} does not exist"
200
fi
201
 
202
# OK, the config file exists.  Source it, make sure required parameters
203
# are defined and their files exist, and give default values to optional
204
# parameters.
205
 
206
. ${CONFIG}
207
 
208
test "x${REG_UPDATE}" = "x" && error "REG_UPDATE is not defined"
209
test "x${REG_BUILD}" = "x" && error "REG_BUILD is not defined"
210
test "x${REG_TEST}" = "x" && error "REG_TEST is not defined"
211
test -x ${REG_TEST} || error "REG_TEST is not an executable file"
212
test "x${SKIP_LOW}" = "x" && SKIP_LOW=0
213
test "x${SKIP_HIGH}" = "x" && SKIP_HIGH=0
214
test "x${DELTA}" = "x" && DELTA=3600
215
test "x${VERBOSITY}" = "x" && VERBOSITY=0
216
test "x${HAS_CHANGES}" = "x" && HAS_CHANGES=true
217
test "x${REG_FINISH}" = "x" && REG_FINISH=true
218
 
219
msg 2 "LOW_DATE   = ${LOW_DATE}"
220
msg 2 "HIGH_DATE  = ${HIGH_DATE}"
221
msg 2 "REG_UPDATE = ${REG_UPDATE}"
222
msg 2 "REG_BUILD  = ${REG_BUILD}"
223
msg 2 "REG_TEST   = ${REG_TEST}"
224
msg 2 "SKIP_LOW   = ${SKIP_LOW}"
225
msg 2 "SKIP_HIGH  = ${SKIP_HIGH}"
226
msg 2 "FIRST_MID  = ${FIRST_MID}"
227
msg 2 "VERBOSITY  = ${VERBOSITY}"
228
msg 2 "DELTA      = ${DELTA}"
229
 
230
# Verify that DELTA is at least two minutes.
231
 
232
test ${DELTA} -lt 120 && \
233
  error "DELTA is ${DELTA}, must be at least 120 (two minutes)"
234
 
235
# Change the dates into seconds since the epoch.  This uses an extension
236
# in GNU date.
237
 
238
LOW_DATE=`${DATE} +%s --date "${LOW_DATE}"` || \
239
  error "date command failed for \"${LOW_DATE}\""
240
HIGH_DATE=`${DATE} +%s --date "${HIGH_DATE}"` || \
241
  error "date command failed for \"${LOW_DATE}\""
242
 
243
# If FIRST_MID was defined, convert it and make sure it's in the range.
244
 
245
if [ "x${FIRST_MID}" != "x" ]; then
246
  FIRST_MID=`${DATE} +%s --date "${FIRST_MID}"` || \
247
    error "date command failed for \"${FIRST_MID}\""
248
  test ${FIRST_MID} -le ${LOW_DATE}  && \
249
    error "FIRST_MID date is earlier than LOW_DATE"
250
  test ${FIRST_MID} -ge ${HIGH_DATE} && \
251
    error "FIRST_MID is later than HIGH_DATE"
252
else
253
  FIRST_MID=0
254
fi
255
 
256
# Keep track of the bounds of the range where the test behavior changes,
257
# using a human-readable version of each date.
258
 
259
make_date ${LOW_DATE}
260
LATER_THAN="${MADE_DATE}"
261
make_date ${HIGH_DATE}
262
EARLIER_THAN="${MADE_DATE}"
263
 
264
msg 2 "LATER_THAN   = ${LATER_THAN}"
265
msg 2 "EARLIER_THAN = ${EARLIER_THAN}"
266
 
267
# Verify that the range isn't backwards.
268
 
269
test ${LOW_DATE} -lt ${HIGH_DATE} || error "date range is backwards"
270
 
271
# Verify that the first and last date in the range get the results we
272
# expect.  If not, quit, because any of several things could be wrong.
273
 
274
if [ ${SKIP_LOW} -eq 0 ]; then
275
  process_date "${LATER_THAN}"
276
  test ${LATER} -ne 1 && \
277
    error "unexpected result for low date ${LATER_THAN}"
278
  msg 1 "result for low date is as expected"
279
fi
280
 
281
if [ ${SKIP_HIGH} -eq 0 ]; then
282
  process_date "${EARLIER_THAN}"
283
  test ${LATER} -ne 0 && \
284
    error "unexpected result for high date ${EARLIER_THAN}"
285
  msg 1 "result for high date is as expected"
286
fi
287
 
288
# Search within the range, now that we know that the end points are valid.
289
 
290
VALID_RANGE=1
291
search_dates ${LOW_DATE} ${HIGH_DATE}
292
 
293
# Report the range that's left to investigate.
294
 
295
echo "Continue search between ${LATER_THAN} and ${EARLIER_THAN}"
296
 
297
# Invoke the optional script to report additional information about
298
# changes between the two dates.
299
 
300
${REG_FINISH} "${LATER_THAN}" "${EARLIER_THAN}"

powered by: WebSVN 2.1.0

© copyright 1999-2024 OpenCores.org, equivalent to Oliscience, all rights reserved. OpenCores®, registered trademark.