sudo apt-get install xfslibs-dev uuid-dev libtool-bin \
e2fsprogs automake gcc libuuid1 quota attr libattr1-dev make \
libacl1-dev libaio-dev xfsprogs libgdbm-dev gawk fio dbench \
- uuid-runtime python sqlite3
+ uuid-runtime python sqlite3 liburing-dev
For Fedora, RHEL, or CentOS:
yum install acl attr automake bc dbench dump e2fsprogs fio \
gawk gcc indent libtool lvm2 make psmisc quota sed \
xfsdump xfsprogs \
libacl-devel libattr-devel libaio-devel libuuid-devel \
- xfsprogs-devel btrfs-progs-devel python sqlite
+ xfsprogs-devel btrfs-progs-devel python sqlite liburing-devel
(Older distributions may require xfsprogs-qa-devel as well.)
(Note that for RHEL and CentOS, you may need the EPEL repo.)
- run make
- create fsgqa test user ("sudo useradd -m fsgqa")
- create fsgqa group ("sudo groupadd fsgqa")
- create 123456-fsgqa test user ("sudo useradd 123456-fsgqa")
+ this 2nd user creation step can be safely skipped if your system
+ doesn't support names starting with digits, only a handful of tests
+ require it.
- create fsgqa2 test user ("sudo useradd fsgqa2")
______________________
- set USE_KMEMLEAK=yes to scan for memory leaks in the kernel
after every test, if the kernel supports kmemleak.
- set KEEP_DMESG=yes to keep dmesg log after test
+ - Set TEST_FS_MODULE_RELOAD=1 to unload the module and reload
+ it between test invocations. This assumes that the name of
+ the module is the same as FSTYP.
- or add a case to the switch in common/config assigning
these variables based on the hostname of your test