Top
Regress
Perform
Ports
Release
Net
Running
Service Announcement
The hardware will move from one server room to a new location.
The availibility and scope of this service will be limited.
Expect downtimes starting from November 25th 2024.
Going back to full operations is planned for February 2025.
All tests in /usr/src/regress are run every day by cron(8).
The test machines are automatically installed from an i386
or amd64 snapshot, the current source tree is checked out
and necessary packages are installed.
The results are shown over the time in a HTML table.
Complete log output from the setup and test run exist.
Tests are skipped if packages are missing, if they are
specific for another architecture, or if additional remote
machines are missing.
The framework to run everything is available at
github.
Anton Lindqvist runs an alternative OpenBSD testing site
regress.basename.se.
It provides less architectures, but builds the system from
sources and runs regress with a matching checkout from cvs.
running
tests current overview
An OpenBSD release is installed.
Based on that, the kernel sources for a specific date are
checked out from cvs.
A new kernel is built, installed, and performace tests are
executed with that.
The checkout, build, test is iterated in a loop while
advancing the cvs checkout date in steps.
Currently iperf TCP and UDP, tcpbench TCP and kernel build
times are measured.
To reach over incompatibilities between the kernel and user
land or build enviroment, so called build quirks are used.
Then the necessary parts of the source tree are updated or
patched.
After building and installing the relevant tools, checkout
and building kernel continues.
running
tests current overview
Run make test for selected ports.
Currently these are mostly Perl ports maintained by Alexander
Bluhm.
To extend the list, send an e-mail to bluhm@.
running
tests current overview
Make build and release.
running
tests current overview
Configure physical and pseudo network interfaces on OpenBSD
machine.
Run network and forwarding test between OpenBSD and Linux.
running
tests current overview
Acknowledgments
Thanks to
genua GmbH
for work time, rack space, hardware, network, and electricity.
Alexander Bluhm, Jan Klemkow, Moritz Buhl
impressum