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65 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
65 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
| Supported Targets | ESP32 | ESP32-C2 | ESP32-C3 | ESP32-C6 | ESP32-H2 | ESP32-P4 | ESP32-S2 | ESP32-S3 |
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| ----------------- | ----- | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- |
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# Introduction
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The panic test app checks the behavior of ESP-IDF Panic Handler.
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This test app is relatively complex because it has to check many possible combinations of:
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- Failure scenario: abort, assertion, interrupt watchdog, illegal instruction, ...
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- Chip target: esp32, esp32c3, ...
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- Configuration: default, GDB Stub, Core Dump to UART, ...
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Failure scenarios are implemented in [test_panic.c](main/test_panic.c). The test application receives the name of the scenario from console (e.g. `test_illegal_instruction` ). The failure scenario is executed and the app panics. Once the panic output is printed, the pytest-based test case parses the output and verifies that the behavior of the panic handler was correct.
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In [pytest_panic.py](pytest_panic.py), there typically is one test function for each failure scenario. Each test function is then parametrized by `config` parameter. This creates "copies" of the test case for each of the configurations (default, GDB Stub, etc.) Tests are also parametrized with target-specific markers. Most tests can run on every target, but there are a few exceptions, such as failure scenarios specific to the dual-core chips.
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The test cases use a customized DUT class `PanicTestDut`, defined in [panic_dut.py](test_panic_util/panic_dut.py). This class is derived from [`IdfDut`](https://docs.espressif.com/projects/pytest-embedded/en/latest/references/pytest_embedded_idf/#pytest_embedded_idf.dut.IdfDut). It defines several helper functions to make the test cases easier to read.
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# Building
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Several configurations are provided as `sdkconfig.ci.XXX` and serve as a template.
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For example, to build the test app with configuration `panic` for ESP32-C3, run:
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```bash
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idf.py set-target esp32c3
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cat sdkconfig.defaults sdkconfig.ci.panic > sdkconfig
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idf.py build
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```
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# Building multiple configurations side by side
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If you need to work with multiple configurations at the same time it can be useful to keep each build in a separate directory. For example, to build the `panic` configuration for ESP32-C3 in a separate directory, run:
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```bash
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idf.py -DIDF_TARGET=esp32c3 -DSDKCONFIG_DEFAULTS="sdkconfig.defaults;sdkconfig.ci.panic" -DSDKCONFIG=build_esp32c3_panic/sdkconfig -B build_esp32c3_panic build
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```
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This way, all the build products and the sdkconfig file are kept in the directory `build_esp32c3_gdbstub`. pytest-embedded will search for binaries in this directory if you run tests as shown in the section below.
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This approach allows switching between different build configurations and targets without deleting the build directories.
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# Running the app manually
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```bash
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idf.py flash monitor
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```
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(don't forget the -B argument if you have built the app in a directory other than `build`)
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Once the app is running, input the name of the test (e.g. `test_abort`) and press Enter.
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# Running tests
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Suppose you have built the app for a specific target and with a certain `sdkconfig.ci.CONFIG` config. You need to run the tests just for this config and the target:
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```bash
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pytest --target TARGET -k '[CONFIG]'
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```
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For example, if you have built the `panic` config for ESP32-C3, run:
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```bash
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pytest --target esp32c3 -k '[panic]'
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```
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Or, to run a single test for the given config, e.g. `test_abort`:
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```bash
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pytest --target esp32c3 -k 'test_abort[panic]'
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```
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