Burstable CFS controller is introduced in Linux 5.14. This helps with parallel workloads that might be bursty. They can get throttled even when their average utilization is under quota. And they may be latency sensitive at the same time so that throttling them is undesired. This feature borrows time now against the future underrun, at the cost of increased interference against the other system users, by introducing cfs_burst_us into CFS bandwidth control to enact the cap on unused bandwidth accumulation, which will then used additionally for burst. The patch adds the support/control for CFS bandwidth burst. runtime-spec: https://github.com/opencontainers/runtime-spec/pull/1120 Co-authored-by: Akihiro Suda <suda.kyoto@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Nadeshiko Manju <me@manjusaka.me> Signed-off-by: Kailun Qin <kailun.qin@intel.com>
runc Integration Tests
Integration tests provide end-to-end testing of runc.
Note that integration tests do not replace unit tests.
As a rule of thumb, code should be tested thoroughly with unit tests. Integration tests on the other hand are meant to test a specific feature end to end.
Integration tests are written in bash using the bats (Bash Automated Testing System) framework.
Running integration tests
The easiest way to run integration tests is with Docker:
$ make integration
Alternatively, you can run integration tests directly on your host through make:
$ sudo make localintegration
Or you can just run them directly using bats
$ sudo bats tests/integration
To run a single test bucket:
$ make integration TESTPATH="/checkpoint.bats"
To run them on your host, you need to set up a development environment plus bats (Bash Automated Testing System).
For example:
$ cd ~/go/src/github.com
$ git clone https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core.git
$ cd bats-core
$ ./install.sh /usr/local
Note
: There are known issues running the integration tests using devicemapper as a storage driver, make sure that your docker daemon is using aufs if you want to successfully run the integration tests.
Writing integration tests
helper functions are provided in order to facilitate writing tests.
#!/usr/bin/env bats
# This will load the helpers.
load helpers
# setup is called at the beginning of every test.
function setup() {
setup_busybox
}
# teardown is called at the end of every test.
function teardown() {
teardown_bundle
}
@test "this is a simple test" {
runc run containerid
# "The runc macro" automatically populates $status, $output and $lines.
# Please refer to bats documentation to find out more.
[ "$status" -eq 0 ]
# check expected output
[[ "${output}" == *"Hello"* ]]
}