As the name might imply, xfstests is a file system regression test suite which was originally developed by Silicon Graphics (SGI) for the XFS file system. Originally, xfstests, like XFS was only supported on the SGI's Irix operating system. When XFS was ported to Linux, so was xfstests, and now xfstests is only supported on Linux.
Today, xfstests is used as a file system regression test suite for all of Linux's major file systems: xfs, ext2, ext4, cifs, btrfs, f2fs, reiserfs, gfs, jfs, udf, nfs, and tmpfs. Many file system maintainers will run a full set of xfstests before sending patches to Linus, and will require that any major changes be tested using xfstests before they are submitted for integration.
Tests in xfstests were originally named using a three digit number. In 2013 the tests were moved into different classes, depending on whether the test was file system specific, "generic" (meaning it was was file system independent), or "shared" (meaning that test was not truly generic, but which was useful on a handful of file systems). In this scheme, tests would have names such as:
- btrfs/126
- generic/013
- ext4/271
- shared/051
- xfs/090
Tests can be belong to multiple groups, such as "auto", "quick", "aio", "prealloc", "ioctl", and "dangerous". Membership in a group can indicate something about the nature of the test. The "auto" group indicates those tests best suited for automatic test spinners. Tests in the "quick" group should completely quickly, and running the quick group is good for a smoke test for the file system. The "dangerous" group are tests that can crash the kernel, and so they should be run with care.
Other times, the group membership can indicate file system functionality which is exercised by the test. Examples of this would include groups such as "aio", "prealloc", and "ioctl".
The xfstests test suite uses one or two block devices; one is named TEST and must be present, and the other is named SCRATCH, and is optional. Most tests use either the TEST or the SCRATCH device, although there are a few tests that use both devices.
The SCRATCH device is reformatted by tests which need to use the SCRATCH device. Individual tests may not assume that there is a valid file system on the SCRATCH device. In contrast, the TEST device is never formatted by xfstests, and is intended to be a long lived, "aged" file system.
For most ext4 file systems configurations, the TEST and SCRATCH device should be 5GB. Smaller, and some tests may not run correctly. Larger, and the tests will take a long time to run --- especially those tests that need to fill the file system to test ENOSPC handling. There are a few file system configurations for ext4 (most notable, bigalloc_4k) which require a 20GB test and scratch device.
For this reason, kvm-xfstests uses five file system devices, /dev/vdb, /dev/vdc, /dev/vdd, /dev/vde, and /dev/vdf. (/dev/vda is used for the root file system, and /dev/vdg is used for the /results file system.) The first two test devices, /dev/vdb and /dev/vdc, are used for TEST and SCRATCH, respectively, for the standard, default 4k file system configuration. The /dev/vdd device is used for file system configurations which are not compatible with the default 4k block ext4 file system --- for example, a 1k block file system. Since we want to keep the /dev/vdb as a long-term file system test file system aging, we use /dev/vdd instead for the 1k block file system, and the test runner will run mke2fs to format /dev/vdd before starting the xfstests run for that file system configuration. For this reason, /dev/vdd is sometimes called the TEST-1K device -- although there are many other file system configurations which will use /dev/vdd.
The /dev/vde and /dev/vdf file systems are the BIGTEST and BIGSCRATCH disks, and are used for those file system configurations which require a 20GB TEST and SCRATCH device. Like the TEST-1K device, the BIGTEST device will be reformatted using mke2fs at the beginning of an xfstests run for that file system configuration.
The gce-xfstests uses the same set of block devices, although instead of individual virtio devices, gce-xfstests uses Logical Volumes using LVM stored on a GCE Local SSD. Unfortunately, this means that the TEST-4K device is reformatted each time the gce-xfstests VM is started; and so we don't get the benefits of testing the file system against a device suffering from long-term aging.