summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/tests/tdef/tdef_vty_test_config_subnode.vty
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAgeFilesLines
* represent negative T-timers as Osmocom-specific X-timersNeels Hofmeyr2019-03-061-17/+38
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | fi->T values are int, i.e. can be negative. Do not log them as unsigned, but define a distinct timer class "Xnnnn" for negative T values: i.e. for T == -1, print "Timeout of X1" instead of "Timeout of T4294967295". The negative T timer number space is useful to distinguish freely invented timers from proper 3GPP defined T numbers. So far I was using numbers like T993210 or T9999 for invented T, but X1, X2 etc. is a better solution. This way we can make sure to not accidentally define an invented timer number that actually collides with a proper 3GPP specified timer number that the author was not aware of at the time of writing. Add OSMO_T_FMT and OSMO_T_FMT_ARGS() macros as standardized timer number print format. Use that in fsm.c, tdef_vty.c, and adjust vty tests accordingly. Mention the two timer classes in various API docs and VTY online-docs. Change-Id: I3a59457623da9309fbbda235fe18fadd1636bff6
* platform independence fix: tdef range testsNeels Hofmeyr2019-02-061-11/+11
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Run INT_MAX and ULONG_MAX related tests only manually, remove from automatic testing. This will hopefully fix recent build failures on various platforms. Add a 64 bit output example for expected results when invoking `./tdef_test range'. This is not checked automatically and merely serves for manual reference. For vty tests, use 32bit max values instead of INT_MAX and ULONG_MAX. Change-Id: I6242243bde1d7ddebb858512a1f0b07f4ec3e5c2
* add osmo_tdef API, originally adopted from osmo-bsc T_defNeels Hofmeyr2019-02-041-0/+107
Move T_def from osmo-bsc to libosmocore as osmo_tdef. Adjust naming to be more consistent. Upgrade to first class API: - add timer grouping - add generic vty support - add mising API doc - add C test - add VTY transcript tests, also as examples for using the API From osmo_fsm_inst_state_chg() API doc, cross reference to osmo_tdef API. The root reason for moving to libosmocore is that I want to use the mgw_endpoint_fsm in osmo-msc for inter-MSC handover, and hence want to move the FSM to libosmo-mgcp-client. This FSM uses the T_def from osmo-bsc. Though the mgw_endpoint_fsm's use of T_def is minimal, I intend to use the osmo_tdef API in osmo-msc (and probably elsewhere) as well. libosmocore is the most sensible place for this. osmo_tdef provides: - a list of Tnnnn (GSM) timers with description, unit and default value. - vty UI to allow users to configure non-default timeouts. - API to tie T timers to osmo_fsm states and set them on state transitions. - a few standard units (minute, second, millisecond) as well as a custom unit (which relies on the timer's human readable description to indicate the meaning of the value). - conversion for standard units: for example, some GSM timers are defined in minutes, while our FSM definitions need timeouts in seconds. Conversion is for convenience only and can be easily avoided via the custom unit. By keeping separate osmo_tdef arrays, several groups of timers can be kept separately. The VTY tests in tests/tdef/ showcase different schemes: - tests/vty/tdef_vty_test_config_root.c: Keep several timer definitions in separately named groups: showcase the osmo_tdef_vty_groups*() API. Each timer group exists exactly once. - tests/vty/tdef_vty_test_config_subnode.c: Keep a single list of timers without separate grouping. Put this list on a specific subnode below the CONFIG_NODE. There could be several separate subnodes with timers like this, i.e. continuing from this example, sets timers could be separated by placing timers in specific config subnodes instead of using the global group name. - tests/vty/tdef_vty_test_dynamic.c: Dynamically allocate timer definitions per each new created object. Thus there can be an arbitrary number of independent timer definitions, one per allocated object. T_def was introduced during the recent osmo-bsc refactoring for inter-BSC handover, and has proven useful: - without osmo_tdef, each invocation of osmo_fsm_inst_state_chg() needs to be programmed with the right timeout value, for all code paths that invoke this state change. It is a likely source of errors to get one of them wrong. By defining a T timer exactly for an FSM state, the caller can merely invoke the state change and trust on the original state definition to apply the correct timeout. - it is helpful to have a standardized config file UI to provide user configurable timeouts, instead of inventing new VTY commands for each separate application of T timer numbers. Change-Id: Ibd6b1ed7f1bd6e1f2e0fde53352055a4468f23e5