Implemented two instantiations of Fault-Space Regions (FSR) as a program-structure-guided approximation of fault spaces based on the precise Def/Use-Pruning using basic blocks or function calls.
Further reading:
Program-Structure-Guided Approximation of Large Fault Spaces
Oskar Pusz and Daniel Kiechle and Christian Dietrich and Daniel Lohmann
In: 24th Pacific Rim International Symposium on Dependable Computing (PRDC'19)
IEEE Computer Science Press, 2019
Some configurations for bochs and generic-experiment
As the first cmd.parse() call was already checked before, parsing a
second time should never fail. Nevertheless, we can look at the
return value without much effort. Found by Coverity Scan, CID 25494.
Change-Id: Id012cf7183fe7b2022d33e6cbcb19ba49b544c99
The --incremental switch allows to add more samples if the resulting
confidence intervals are not satisfactory yet.
Change-Id: I65dc99522f45f8a4eaf4ce68e832f7636585381d
The SamplingPruner implements "normal" sampling with equivalence-class
reuse. Unlike the FESamplingPruner, the SamplingPruner implements
uniform fault-space sampling that counts multiple hits of an
equivalence class.
This change modifies the database schema, more specifically it adds
the "weight" column to the fspgroup table. Update existing databases
with this query:
ALTER TABLE fspgroup ADD COLUMN weight INT UNSIGNED;
Change-Id: I668fc9b25fc4d79a60aa1ef8d69cdf5fa076cc6d
This change makes all C++-based tools in tools/ abort when they
encounter an unknown commandline parameter (both option or
non-option). This has already caused some confusion, as in some cases
unexpected behaviour can be the result. For example, "prune-trace -t
mytrace.tc -d database" up to now ignored the "-t" parameter, took
"mytrace.tc" as the first non-option parameter (and ignored it); as no
option parameter may follow the non-option parameters, all other
options were ignored as well.
Change-Id: Ia0812a518c4760fa28ed54979c81f43fa7aa096e
By using the AliasedRegistry, "prune-trace --help" (and
"prune-trace -p '?'") now lists all available Pruners to the user.
Change-Id: Ib5e3d00aabc37e6d48d804d2d709812af3f7efb2
With this change, prune-trace checks for existing fsppilot/fspgroup
entries for each variant to be pruned, and skips the variant in this
case. This safety measure can be switched off with --overwrite.
Change-Id: I7e758a9853a25685ca176cf1a1810523753cdd4a
If no --variant / --benchmark is specified, it's more reasonable to
prune or run *all* variants/benchmarks (using the wildcard "%")
instead of defaulting to "none"/"none". The trivial case with only
one single variant/benchmark (which may still be "none"/"none" if
import-trace's default is used) is still covered by this new default
behavior.
Change-Id: I0e9001137d5e052183dd74211e2edbcfab749528
The FESamplingPruner implements the fault-expansion variance reduction
technique (FE-VRT) as described in: Smith, D. Todd and Johnson, Barry W. and
Andrianos, Nikos and Profeta, III, Joseph A., "A variance-reduction technique
via fault-expansion for fault-coverage estimation" (1997), 366--374.
Change-Id: I04a0c9bb2622974278bd8c73793e51451119e650
Before this change, running prune-trace with, e.g.
"prune-trace -d fsp_mibench -v bitmap% --benchmark-exclude clockcnv"
resulted in an implied "--benchmark none", rendering --benchmark-exclude
ineffective and resulting in nothing being pruned. Now, the "none" default
only applies when neither --benchmark nor --benchmark-exclude (analogously
for --variant / --variant-exclude) is provided.
Change-Id: Ic7c88919d7cfde1261749a745dc6a679472ff348
- Variants/benchmarks can now be selected with wildcards
(--variant/--benchmark), and can be excluded from pruning
(--variant-exclude/--benchmark-exclude).
- The database clearing step can be skipped with --no-delete to
avoid deadlocks with concurrent DB accesses.
- Internals:
* injection_instr / injection_instr_absolute moves from
fspgroup to fsppilot. fsppilot now contains all information we
need for running FI experiments.
TODO: generic campaign needs to be modified, too.
* Force MySQL to use an efficient join order (STRAIGHT_JOIN).
Change-Id: I6241ea2de9da1a1e709fae6374df4fc06ef262a0
The dciao-kernelstructs experiment does a trace imported by the
DCiAOKernelImporter:
bin/import-trace -t trace.pb -i DCiAOKernelImporter --elf-file app.elf
Pruned by the basic method:
bin/prune-trace
and does CiAO fault injection experiments, where the results are
stored in the database.
Change-Id: I485dc2e5097b3ebaf354241f474ee3d317213707
The DatabaseCampaign interacts with the MySQL tables that are created
by the import-trace and prune-trace tools. It does offer all
unfinished experiment pilots from the database to the
fail-clients. Those clients send back a (by the experiment) defined
protobuf message as a result. The custom protobuf message does have to
need the form:
import "DatabaseCampaignMessage.proto";
message ExperimentMsg {
required DatabaseCampaignMessage fsppilot = 1;
repeated group Result = 2 {
// custom fields
required int32 bitoffset = 1;
optional int32 result = 2;
}
}
The DatabaseCampaignMessage is the pilot identifier from the
database. For each of the repeated result entries a row in a table is
allocated. The structure of this table is constructed (by protobuf
reflection) from the description of the message. Each field in the
Result group becomes a column in the result table. For the given
example it would be:
CREATE TABLE result_ExperimentMessage(
pilot_id INT,
bitoffset INT NOT NULL,
result INT,
PRIMARY_KEY(pilot_id)
)
Change-Id: I28fb5488e739d4098b823b42426c5760331027f8
This tool creates the fault-space pruning pilot and group
entries. Those are used by the generic campaign to do fault
experiments.
Currently prune-trace only implements conventional def/use pruning
(--prune-method "basic").
Change-Id: I1dfb431e3b1d3cd2ee891a49a3b6ac01210be11f