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From: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
To: "Daniel P. Berrangé" <berrange@redhat.com>
Cc: "Beraldo Leal" <bleal@redhat.com>,
	"Philippe Mathieu-Daudé" <f4bug@amsat.org>,
	qemu-devel@nongnu.org,
	"Wainer dos Santos Moschetta" <wainersm@redhat.com>,
	"Cleber Rosa" <crosa@redhat.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] tests/avocado: Cancel BootLinux tests in case there is no free port
Date: Tue, 8 Mar 2022 20:13:44 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <7188b069-5a79-452a-ff1e-d6387771e137@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <YiZTggnk26UymcVY@redhat.com>

On 07/03/2022 19.48, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 07, 2022 at 07:31:50PM +0100, Thomas Huth wrote:
>> On 07/03/2022 13.50, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
>>> On Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 12:43:25PM +0100, Thomas Huth wrote:
>>>> The BootLinux tests are currently failing with an ugly python
>>>> stack trace on my RHEL8 system since they cannot get a free port
>>>> (likely due to the firewall settings on my system). Let's properly
>>>> check the return value of find_free_port() instead and cancel the
>>>> test gracefully if it cannot get a free port.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
>>>> ---
>>>>    Unfortunately, it still takes > 70 seconds for each and every
>>>>    tests from tests/avocado/boot_linux.py to get canceled, so
>>>>    tests/avocado/boot_linux.py still renders "make check-avocado"
>>>>    for me pretty unusable... looking at the implementation of
>>>>    find_free_port() in Avocado, I wonder whether there isn't a
>>>>    better way to get a free port number in Python? Brute-forcing
>>>>    all ports between 1024 and 65536 seems just quite cumbersome
>>>>    to me...
>>>
>>> Even in the worst case of testing every single port,
>>> for INET and INET6 and for STREAM and DGRAM sockets,
>>> that find_free_port port completes in a couple of
>>> seconds.
>>
>> Weird, on my system, the test runs for 70 seconds, just to finally
>> discovered that there was no free port available.
> 
> Incidentally I'm really suprised you even hit the 'no free port'
> scenario. I've never seen that happen unless the machine was
> basically doomed due to something leaking open sockets by the
> 10's of 1000's.
> 
> You mention firewall settings above, but I don't think that's
> relevant. The find_free_port() call is with no args, so it
> gets set to 'address=localhost' which means is_port_free
> takes the bind() codepath. The firewall has no interaction
> with the bind() codepath in the kernel AFAIK.

Yes, I've now had another closer look, and indeed, the firewall is not the 
problem here - but is_port_free() seems to be very buggy. The problem is 
that I do not have any IPv6 address configured on my system, and in that 
case the current code fails.
See https://github.com/avocado-framework/avocado/issues/5273 ... I need this 
patch to fix it:

diff --git a/avocado/utils/network/ports.py b/avocado/utils/network/ports.py
--- a/avocado/utils/network/ports.py
+++ b/avocado/utils/network/ports.py
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ def is_port_free(port, address):
                      if localhost:
                          return False
                  sock.close()
-        return True
+                return True
      finally:
          if sock is not None:
              sock.close()

  Thomas



  reply	other threads:[~2022-03-08 19:14 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2022-02-28 11:43 [PATCH] tests/avocado: Cancel BootLinux tests in case there is no free port Thomas Huth
2022-03-07 12:31 ` Beraldo Leal
2022-03-07 12:50 ` Daniel P. Berrangé
2022-03-07 18:31   ` Thomas Huth
2022-03-07 18:48     ` Daniel P. Berrangé
2022-03-08 19:13       ` Thomas Huth [this message]
2022-03-10 15:28 ` Cleber Rosa

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