Re: [stress-driver-users] Problem running Bash Script file on linux
Status: Alpha
Brought to you by:
faught
From: Danny R. F. <fa...@te...> - 2004-06-11 19:06:18
|
khy...@wi... wrote: > Hi, I have a simple test script file which only prints the hostname. I'm > trying to run this using the stress_driver tool. > > I'm getting the following log: > > stress_driver started on Fri Jun 11 11:11:19 2004, pid 11870 > options: > tmout_min=0 > tmout_max=0 > max=1 > min=1 > seed=1086980062 > log=soaklog > sig=INT > test: test > [06/11/104 11:11:19] starting pid 11871, user=root, timeout=0s (1 tests > running): > test > [06/11/104 11:11:20] pid 11871 exited, return code = 1 (0 tests running) > . > . > . > . > . > . > [06/11/104 11:11:20] starting pid 11880, user=root, timeout=0s (1 tests > running): > test > [06/11/104 11:11:20] pid 11880 exited, return code = 1 (0 tests running) > [06/11/104 11:11:20] starting pid 11881, user=root, timeout=0s (1 tests > running): > test > [06/11/104 11:11:20] stress_driver: aborted by SIGINT > [06/11/104 11:11:22] pid 11881 died from timeout signal (0 tests running) > [06/11/104 11:11:22] FAIL - error statistics for 11 total tests: > [06/11/104 11:11:22] 0 died by an unhandled signal > [06/11/104 11:11:22] 10 exited with a non-zero status > [06/11/104 11:11:22] 0 never died after a KILL signal > [06/11/104 11:11:22] 0 internal errors > > > The process stops only when I do a Ctrl+C If you don't specify -iterate or -life, the default is to run until interrupted. You might want to read some of the documentation linked from http://stress-driver.sourceforge.net/ for a better description of how it works. I just filed bug 971359 to note that the man page needs to describe this better. Thanks for raising these issues. > Also, there is one test.fail file created for every processID. Your script is returning "1" every time it runs, which indicates failure. Check the contents of some of the test.fail files to see if you're getting an error message. If there's no real error, you can add "exit 0" at the bottom of the script to make sure it signals success. -- Danny R. Faught Tejas Software Consulting http://tejasconsulting.com/ |