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Mount tmpfses over the networkd and resolved config and state
directories, and stop the services beforehand. This ensures that the
test does not mess with an existing networkd/resolved setup. At least
for ethernet setups, this does not sever existing links, so is good
enough for the CI cases we are interested in (QEMU and LXC).
Relax the skip check to only skip the test when trying to run this on
real iron, but start running it in virtual machines now.
This allows us to run the test on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS in CI, which uses
both services by default.
The extended testsuite only works with uid=0. It contains of several
subdirectories named "test/TEST-??-*", which are run one by one.
To run the extended testsuite do the following:
$ make all # Avoid the "sudo make" below building anything as root
$ cd test
$ sudo make clean check
...
make[1]: Entering directory `/mnt/data/harald/git/systemd/test/TEST-01-BASIC'
Making all in .
Making all in po
TEST: Basic systemd setup [OK]
make[1]: Leaving directory `/mnt/data/harald/git/systemd/test/TEST-01-BASIC'
...
If one of the tests fails, then $subdir/test.log contains the log file of
the test.
To debug a special testcase of the testsuite do:
$ make all
$ cd test/TEST-01-BASIC
$ sudo make clean setup run
QEMU
====
If you want to log in the testsuite virtual machine, you can specify
additional kernel command line parameter with $KERNEL_APPEND.
$ sudo make KERNEL_APPEND="systemd.unit=multi-user.target" clean setup run
you can even skip the "clean" and "setup" if you want to run the machine again.
$ sudo make KERNEL_APPEND="systemd.unit=multi-user.target" run
You can specify a different kernel and initramfs with $KERNEL_BIN and $INITRD.
(Fedora's or Debian's default kernel path and initramfs are used by default)
$ sudo make KERNEL_BIN=/boot/vmlinuz-foo INITRD=/boot/initramfs-bar clean check
A script will try to find your QEMU binary. If you want to specify a different
one you can use $QEMU_BIN.
$ sudo make QEMU_BIN=/path/to/qemu/qemu-kvm clean check