Files
apfstests/tests/xfs/268.out
T
Dave Chinner fc48dfb966 xfstests: move xfs specific tests out of top directory
And into tests/xfs. Tests found and moved via:

$ grep "supported_fs xfs$" [0-2]* | cut -d : -f 1 > xfs.tests
$ for i in `cat xfs.tests`; do
> git mv $i* tests/xfs/
> grep ^$i group >> tests/xfs/group
> sed -i -e "/^$i/d" group
> done

Output now looks like:

 sudo ./check -g quick -r
FSTYP         -- xfs (debug)
PLATFORM      -- Linux/x86_64 test-1 3.5.0-rc5-dgc+
MKFS_OPTIONS  -- -f -bsize=4096 /dev/vdb
MOUNT_OPTIONS -- /dev/vdb /mnt/scratch

xfs/170  4s
generic/120      16s
generic/248      0s
generic/213      0s
generic/256      39s
xfs/121  6s
xfs/026  11s
generic/131      1s
xfs/187  1s
generic/135      0s
....

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Phil White <pwhite@sgi.com>
[rjohnston@sgi.com did not move test 032, belongs in shared]
Signed-off-by: Rich Johnston <rjohnston@sgi.com>
2013-03-26 18:27:34 -05:00

87 lines
3.1 KiB
Plaintext

QA output created by 268
Put scsi tape driver into variable block size mode
Creating directory system to dump using src/fill.
Setup Attribute "attr1" set to a 10 byte value for bigg1:
some_text1
.Attribute "attr2" set to a 10 byte value for bigg2:
some_text2
.
Erasing tape
Dumping to tape...
xfsdump -d8 -f TAPE_DEV -M stress_tape_media -L stress_268 SCRATCH_MNT
xfsdump: using scsi tape (drive_scsitape) strategy
xfsdump: level 0 dump of HOSTNAME:SCRATCH_MNT
xfsdump: dump date: DATE
xfsdump: session id: ID
xfsdump: session label: "stress_268"
xfsdump: ino map <PHASES>
xfsdump: ino map construction complete
xfsdump: estimated dump size: NUM bytes
xfsdump: /var/xfsdump/inventory created
xfsdump: preparing drive
xfsdump: creating dump session media file 0 (media 0, file 0)
xfsdump: dumping ino map
xfsdump: dumping directories
xfsdump: dumping non-directory files
xfsdump: ending media file
xfsdump: media file size NUM bytes
xfsdump: creating dump session media file 1 (media 0, file 1)
xfsdump: dumping ino map
xfsdump: dumping directories
xfsdump: dumping non-directory files
xfsdump: ending media file
xfsdump: media file size NUM bytes
xfsdump: dumping session inventory
xfsdump: beginning inventory media file
xfsdump: media file 2 (media 0, file 2)
xfsdump: ending inventory media file
xfsdump: inventory media file size NUM bytes
xfsdump: writing stream terminator
xfsdump: beginning media stream terminator
xfsdump: media file 3 (media 0, file 3)
xfsdump: ending media stream terminator
xfsdump: media stream terminator size BLOCKSZ bytes
xfsdump: dump size (non-dir files) : NUM bytes
xfsdump: dump complete: SECS seconds elapsed
xfsdump: Dump Status: SUCCESS
Rewinding tape
Restoring from tape...
xfsrestore -f TAPE_DEV -L stress_268 RESTORE_DIR
xfsrestore: using scsi tape (drive_scsitape) strategy
xfsrestore: using online session inventory
xfsrestore: searching media for directory dump
xfsrestore: preparing drive
xfsrestore: examining media file 0
xfsrestore: reading directories
xfsrestore: 2 directories and 3 entries processed
xfsrestore: directory post-processing
xfsrestore: restoring non-directory files
xfsrestore: examining media file 1
xfsrestore: seeking past media file directory dump
xfsrestore: restoring non-directory files
xfsrestore: restore complete: SECS seconds elapsed
xfsrestore: Restore Status: SUCCESS
Comparing listing of dump directory with restore directory
Files TMP.dump_dir and TMP.restore_dir are identical
Comparing dump directory with restore directory
Files DUMP_DIR/bigg1 and RESTORE_DIR/DUMP_SUBDIR/bigg1 are identical
Files DUMP_DIR/bigg2 and RESTORE_DIR/DUMP_SUBDIR/bigg2 are identical
Only in SCRATCH_MNT: RESTORE_SUBDIR
Comparing dump directory with restore directory
Looking at the extended attributes (EAs)
EAs on dump
User names
Attribute "attr2" had a 10 byte value for DUMP_DIR/bigg2:
some_text2
Root names
Attribute "attr1" had a 10 byte value for DUMP_DIR/bigg1:
some_text1
EAs on restore
User names
Attribute "attr2" had a 10 byte value for DUMP_DIR/bigg2:
some_text2
Root names
Attribute "attr1" had a 10 byte value for DUMP_DIR/bigg1:
some_text1
Files 268.ea1 and 268.ea2 are identical