From a7375d12da80d633dfa802f2b66d2361c70c62f5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Dan Streetman <ddstreet@canonical.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2019 11:06:18 -0400
Subject: [PATCH] test: correct TEST-41 StartLimitBurst test
TEST-41 verifies that the StartLimitBurst property will correctly
limit the number of unit restarts, but the test currently doesn't
adjust the StartLimitIntervalSec which defaults to 10 seconds.
On Ubuntu CI, running under un-accelerated qemu, it can take more than
10 seconds to perform all 3 restarts, which avoids the burst limit,
and fails the test.
Instead, specify a long StartLimitIntervalSec in the test, so we can
be sure to correctly test StartLimitBurst even on slow testbeds.
Fixes #13794.
(cherry picked from commit dfec314d41159117c28dffc2b980d3bdd67c3dcb)
Related: #2042896
---
test/TEST-41-ONESHOT-RESTART/testsuite.sh | 26 ++++++++++++++++++-----
1 file changed, 21 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
diff --git a/test/TEST-41-ONESHOT-RESTART/testsuite.sh b/test/TEST-41-ONESHOT-RESTART/testsuite.sh
index f7423dbf9a..4465614ff3 100755
--- a/test/TEST-41-ONESHOT-RESTART/testsuite.sh
+++ b/test/TEST-41-ONESHOT-RESTART/testsuite.sh
@@ -2,14 +2,19 @@
set -ex
set -o pipefail
+# wait this many secs for each test service to succeed in what is being tested
+MAX_SECS=60
+
systemd-analyze log-level debug
systemd-analyze log-target console
-# These three commands should succeed.
+# test one: Restart=on-failure should restart the service
! systemd-run --unit=one -p Type=oneshot -p Restart=on-failure /bin/bash -c "exit 1"
-sleep 5
-
+for ((secs=0; secs<$MAX_SECS; secs++)); do
+ [[ "$(systemctl show one.service -p NRestarts --value)" -le 0 ]] || break
+ sleep 1
+done
if [[ "$(systemctl show one.service -p NRestarts --value)" -le 0 ]]; then
exit 1
fi
@@ -18,10 +23,21 @@ TMP_FILE="/test-41-oneshot-restart-test"
touch $TMP_FILE
-! systemd-run --unit=two -p StartLimitBurst=3 -p Type=oneshot -p Restart=on-failure -p ExecStart="/bin/bash -c \"printf a >> $TMP_FILE\"" /bin/bash -c "exit 1"
+# test two: make sure StartLimitBurst correctly limits the number of restarts
+# and restarts execution of the unit from the first ExecStart=
+! systemd-run --unit=two -p StartLimitIntervalSec=120 -p StartLimitBurst=3 -p Type=oneshot -p Restart=on-failure -p ExecStart="/bin/bash -c \"printf a >> $TMP_FILE\"" /bin/bash -c "exit 1"
-sleep 5
+# wait for at least 3 restarts
+for ((secs=0; secs<$MAX_SECS; secs++)); do
+ [[ $(cat $TMP_FILE) != "aaa" ]] || break
+ sleep 1
+done
+if [[ $(cat $TMP_FILE) != "aaa" ]]; then
+ exit 1
+fi
+# wait for 5 more seconds to make sure there aren't excess restarts
+sleep 5
if [[ $(cat $TMP_FILE) != "aaa" ]]; then
exit 1
fi