Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> writes:
On 28/02/2023 20.06, Alex Bennée wrote:
This test is exceptionally heavyweight (nearly 330s) compared to the
two (both endians) TuxRun baseline tests which complete in under 160s.
The coverage is slightly reduced but a more directed test could make
up the difference.
tests/avocado/tuxrun_baselines.py:TuxRunBaselineTest.test_ppc64:
Overall coverage rate:
lines......: 9.6% (44110 of 458817 lines)
functions..: 16.5% (6767 of 41054 functions)
branches...: 6.0% (13395 of 222634 branches)
tests/avocado/boot_linux.py:BootLinuxPPC64.test_pseries_tcg:
Overall coverage rate:
lines......: 11.6% (53408 of 458817 lines)
functions..: 18.7% (7691 of 41054 functions)
branches...: 7.9% (17692 of 224218 branches)
So lets skip for GITLAB_CI and also unless AVOCADO_TIMEOUT_EXPECTED
is
specified by the user.
The explanation sounds somewhat implausible to me.
AVOCADO_TIMEOUT_EXPECTED should be for jobs where we are not sure
whether the job really finishes in time, e.g. when compiling QEMU with
debug flags enabled, and not for jobs that simply run a little bit
longer (in the latter case, it would be enough to simply bump the
timeout setting a little bit if necessary). So did you check whether
you really run into timeout issues here when compiling QEMU with debug
flags?
Ahh I realise now that I was running into the timeout because it was a
gcov build. I'll drop the AVOACADO_TIMEOUT_EXPECTED bit for now.
Anyway, if you add AVOCADO_TIMEOUT_EXPECTED, then I think you don't
need GITLAB_CI anymore, since we certainly don't set
AVOCADO_TIMEOUT_EXPECTED in the gitlab CI.