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This is an external parser script for [UEFI SCT]. (WIP)
It's designed to read a `.ekl` results log from an [UEFI SCT] run, and a
generated `.seq` from [UEFI SCT] configurator.
It will proceed to generate a Markdown file listing number of failures, passes, each test from the sequence file set that was Silently dropped, and a list of all failures and warnings.
Usage to generate a "result md" is such. `python3 parser.py <log_file.ekl> <seq_file.seq>`
If you do no provided any command line arguments it will use `sample.ekl` and `sample.seq`.
The output filename can be specified with `--md <filename>`.
An online help is available with the `-h` option.
For a custom Key:value search, the next two arguments *MUST be included together.* The program will search and display files that met that constraint, without the crosscheck, and display the names, guid, and key:value to the command line. `python3 parser.py <file.ekl> <file.seq> <search key> <search value>`
you can use the `test_dict` below to see available keys.
It is possible to sort the tests data before output using
the `--sort <key1,key2,...>` option.
Sorting the test data helps when comparing results with diff.
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --sort \
'group,descr,set guid,test set,sub set,guid,name,log' ...
```
### Filtering data
The `--filter` option allows to specify a python3 expression, which is used as a
filter. The expression is evaluated for each test; if it evaluates to True the
test is kept, otherwise it is omitted. The expression has access to the test
as dict "x".
Example command, which keeps only the failed tests:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --filter "x['result'] == 'FAILURE'" ...
```
Filtering takes place after the configuration rules, which are described below.
This filtering mechanism can also be (ab)used to transform tests results.
Example command, which adds a "comment" field (and keeps all the tests):
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py \
--filter "x.update({'comment': 'Transformed'}) or True" ...
```
Example command, which removes filenames prefixes in the "log" field (and keeps
all the tests):
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py \
--filter "x.update({'log': re.sub(r'/.*/', '', x['log'])}) \
or True" ...
```
### Keeping only certain fields
Except for the markdown and the config template formats, it is possible to
specify which tests data fields to actually write using the `--fields` option.
Example command, suitable for triaging:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --fields 'result,sub set,descr,name,log' ...
```
The csv format and printing to stdout can retain the fields order.
### Collapsing duplicates
It is possible to "collapse" duplicate tests data into a single entry using the
`--uniq` option, much similar in principle to the UNIX `uniq -c` command.
This step happens after tests and fields filtering, and it adds a "count" field.
Example command, suitable for triaging:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py \
--filter "x.update({'log': re.sub(r'/.*/', '', x['log'])}) \
or x['result'] != 'PASS'" \
--fields 'count,result,sub set,descr,name,log' --uniq ...
```
### Printing a summary
It is possible to print results to stdout using the `--print` option. This is
more useful when only few fields are printed. Example command:
Example printing command:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --fields 'result,name' --print ...
```
More condensed summaries can be obtained with further filtering.
Example summary command:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py \
--filter "x.update({'log': re.sub(r'/.*/', '', x['log'])}) \
or x['result'] in ['FAILURE', 'WARNING']" \
--fields 'count,result,name' --uniq --print ...
```
## Configuration file
It is possible to use a configuration file with command line option `--config
<filename>`.
This configuration file describes operations to perform on the tests results,
such as marking tests as false positives or waiving failures.
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --config EBBR.yaml /path/to/Summary.ekl EBBR.seq ...
```
You need to install the [PyYAML] module for this to work.
[EBBR]: https://github.com/ARM-software/ebbr
[PyYAML]: https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml
The configuration file is in [YAML] format. It contains a list of rules:
``` {.yaml}
- rule: name/description (optional)
criteria:
key1: value1
key2: value2
...
update:
key3: value3
key4: value4
...
- rule...
```
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### Rule processing
The rules will be applied to each test one by one in the following manner:
* An attempt is made at matching all the keys/values of the rule's 'criteria'
dict to the keys/values of the test dict. Matching test and criteria is done
with a "relaxed" comparison (more below).
- If there is no match, processing moves on to the next rule.
- If there is a match:
1. The test dict is updated with the 'update' dict of the rule.
2. An 'Updated by' key is set in the test dict to the rule name.
3. Finally, no more rule is applied to that test.
A test value and a criteria value match if the criteria value string is present
anywhere in the test value string.
For example, the test value "abcde" matches the criteria value "cd".
You can use `--debug` to see more details about which rules are applied to the
tests.
### Sample
A `sample.yaml` configuration file is provided as example, to use with the
`sample.ekl` and `sample.seq` files.
Try it with:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --config sample.yaml ...
```
### Generating a configuration template
To ease the writing of yaml configurations, there is a `--template` option to
generate a configuration "template" from the results of a run:
``` {.sh}
$ ./parser.py --template template.yaml ...
```
This generated configuration can then be further edited manually.
* Tests with result "PASS" are omitted.
* The following tests fields are omitted from the generated rule "criteria":
"iteration", "start date" and "start time".
* The generated rule "criteria" "log" field is filtered to remove the leading
path before C filename.
* "comment" is currently not implemented, as formatting is not currently consistent, should reflect the comments from the test.
* some lines in ekl file follow Different naming Conventions
* some tests in the sequence file are not strongly Associated with the test spec.
### Documentation
It is possible to convert this `README.md` into `README.pdf` with pandoc using
`make doc`. See `make help`.
### Sanity checks
To perform sanity checks, run `make check`. For the moment this runs `yamllint`,
which will inspect all [YAML] files and report errors. See `make help`.
### db structure:
tests = [
test_dict,
est_dict2...
]
test_dict = {
"name": "some test",
"result": "pass/fail",
"group": "some group",
"sub set": "some subset",
"set guid": "XXXXXX",
"guid": "XXXXXX",
"log": "full log output"
}
<guid> : seq_dict
<guid2> : seq_dict2...
}
seq_dict = {
"name": "set name",
"guid": "set guid",
"Iteration": "some hex/num of how many times to run",
"rev": "some hex/numb",
"Order": "some hex/num"
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#### Spurious tests
Spurious tests are tests, which were run according to the log file but were not
meant to be run according to the sequence file.
We force the "result" fields of those tests to "SPURIOUS".
#### Dropped tests sets
Dropped tests sets are the tests sets, which were were meant to be run according
to the sequence file but for which no test have been run according to the log
file.
We create artificial tests entries for those dropped tests sets, with the
"result" fields set to "DROPPED". We convert some fields coming from the
sequence file, and auto-generate others:
``` {.python}
dropped_test_dict = {
"name": "",
"result": "DROPPED",
"group": "Unknown",
"test set": "",
"sub set": <name from sequence file>,
"set guid": <guid from sequence file>,
"revision": <rev from sequence file>,
"guid": "",
"log": ""
}
```
#### Skipped tests sets
Skipped tests sets are the tests sets, which were considered but had zero of
their test run according to the log file.
We create artificial tests entries for those dropped tests sets, with the
"result" fields set to "SKIPPED".