blob: e126c3c4dae735b0c688dcf900268947e4812f33 [file] [log] [blame] [edit]
AUTHOR = "Autotest Team <autotest@test.kernel.org>"
TIME = "MEDIUM"
NAME = "Sample - Filesystem tests with different fs options"
TEST_TYPE = "client"
TEST_CLASS = "Kernel"
TEST_CATEGORY = "Functional"
DOC = """
Runs a series of filesystem tests on a loopback partition. This shows some
features of the job.partition method, such as creating loopback partitions
instead of using real disk partitions, looping and tags.
"""
partition = job.partition(device='/tmp/looped', loop_size=1024,
mountpoint=job.tmpdir)
# You can use also 'real' partitions, just comment the above and uncomment
# the below
#partition = job.partition('/dev/sdb1', job.tmpdir)
iters = 10
for fstype, mountopts, tag in (('ext2', '', 'ext2'),
('ext3', '-o data=writeback', 'ext3writeback'),
('ext3', '-o data=ordered', 'ext3ordered'),
('ext3', '-o data=journal', 'ext3journal'),
('ext4', '-o data=ordered', 'ext4ordered'),
('ext4', '-o data=journal', 'ext4journal'),):
partition.mkfs(fstype)
partition.mount(args=mountopts)
try:
job.run_test('fsx', dir=job.tmpdir, tag=tag)
job.run_test('iozone', dir=job.tmpdir, iterations=iters, tag=tag)
job.run_test('dbench', iterations=iters, dir=job.tmpdir, tag=tag)
job.run_test('tiobench', dir=job.tmpdir, tag=tag)
finally:
partition.unmount()