freebsd-nq/tests
Alan Somers 0cfee0c223 Fix subnet and default routes on different FIBs on the same subnet.
These two bugs are closely related.  The root cause is that ifa_ifwithnet
does not consider FIBs when searching for an interface address.

sys/net/if_var.h
sys/net/if.c
	Add a fib argument to ifa_ifwithnet and ifa_ifwithdstadddr.  Those
	functions will only return an address whose interface fib equals the
	argument.

sys/net/route.c
	Update calls to ifa_ifwithnet and ifa_ifwithdstaddr with fib
	arguments.

sys/netinet/in.c
	Update in_addprefix to consider the interface fib when adding
	prefixes.  This will prevent it from not adding a subnet route when
	one already exists on a different fib.

sys/net/rtsock.c
sys/netinet/in_pcb.c
sys/netinet/ip_output.c
sys/netinet/ip_options.c
sys/netinet6/nd6.c
	Add RT_DEFAULT_FIB arguments to ifa_ifwithdstaddr and ifa_ifwithnet.
	In some cases it there wasn't a clear specific fib number to use.
	In others, I was unable to test those functions so I chose
	RT_DEFAULT_FIB to minimize divergence from current behavior.  I will
	fix some of the latter changes along with PR kern/187553.

tests/sys/netinet/fibs_test.sh
tests/sys/netinet/udp_dontroute.c
tests/sys/netinet/Makefile
	Revert r263738.  The udp_dontroute test was right all along.
	However, bugs kern/187550 and kern/187553 cancelled each other out
	when it came to this test.  Because of kern/187553, ifa_ifwithnet
	searched the default fib instead of the requested one, but because
	of kern/187550, there was an applicable subnet route on the default
	fib.  The new test added in r263738 doesn't work right, however.  I
	can verify with dtrace that ifa_ifwithnet returned the wrong address
	before I applied this commit, but route(8) miraculously found the
	correct interface to use anyway.  I don't know how.

	Clear expected failure messages for kern/187550 and kern/187552.

PR:		kern/187550
PR:		kern/187552
Reviewed by:	melifaro
MFC after:	3 weeks
Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
2014-04-24 23:56:56 +00:00
..
lib
sys Fix subnet and default routes on different FIBs on the same subnet. 2014-04-24 23:56:56 +00:00
Kyuafile
Makefile Use DESTDIR for the installation of the /usr/tests/local symlink. 2014-02-16 12:56:05 +00:00
README

src/tests: The FreeBSD test suite
=================================

This file describes the build infrastructure of the FreeBSD test suite.
If you are only interested in using the test suite itself, please refer
to tests(7) instead.

The build of the test suite is organized in the following manner:

* The build of all test artifacts is protected by the MK_TESTS knob.
  The user can disable these with the WITHOUT_TESTS setting in
  src.conf(5).

* The goal for /usr/tests/ (the installed test programs) is to follow
  the same hierarchy as /usr/src/ wherever possible, which in turn drives
  several of the design decisions described below.  This simplifies the
  discoverability of tests.  We want a mapping such as:

    /usr/src/bin/cp/      -> /usr/tests/bin/cp/
    /usr/src/lib/libc/    -> /usr/tests/lib/libc/
    /usr/src/usr.bin/cut/ -> /usr/tests/usr.bin/cut/
    ... and many more ...

* Test programs for specific utilities and libraries are located next
  to the source code of such programs.  For example, the tests for the
  src/lib/libcrypt/ library live in src/lib/libcrypt/tests/.  The tests/
  subdirectory is optional and should, in general, be avoided.

* The src/tests/ hierarchy (this directory) provides generic test
  infrastructure and glue code to join all test programs together into
  a single test suite definition.

* The src/tests/ hierarchy also includes cross-functional test programs:
  i.e. test programs that cover more than a single utility or library
  and thus don't fit anywhere else in the tree.  Consider this to follow
  the same rationale as src/share/man/: this directory contains generic
  manual pages while the manual pages that are specific to individual
  tools or libraries live next to the source code.

In order to keep the src/tests/ hierarchy decoupled from the actual test
programs being installed --which is a worthy goal because it simplifies
the addition of new test programs and simplifies the maintenance of the
tree-- the top-level Kyuafile does not know which subdirectories may
exist upfront.  Instead, such Kyuafile automatically detects, at
run-time, which */Kyuafile files exist and uses those directly.

Similarly, every directory in src/ that wants to install a Kyuafile to
just recurse into other subdirectories reuses this Kyuafile with
auto-discovery features.  As an example, take a look at src/lib/tests/
whose sole purpose is to install a Kyuafile into /usr/tests/lib/.
The goal in this specific case is for /usr/tests/lib/ to be generated
entirely from src/lib/.

-- 
$FreeBSD$