# Copyright 2018-2019 Florian Fischer # # This file is part of allocbench. # # allocbench is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # allocbench is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with allocbench. If not, see . """Collect facts about the benchmark environment""" import ctypes import datetime import multiprocessing import os import platform import subprocess import src.globalvars as gv from src.util import print_error def collect_facts(): """Collect facts ad store them in src.globalvars.facts""" # Populate src.globalvars.facts on import _uname = platform.uname() gv.facts["hostname"] = _uname.node gv.facts["system"] = _uname.system gv.facts["kernel"] = _uname.release gv.facts["arch"] = _uname.machine gv.facts["cpus"] = multiprocessing.cpu_count() gv.facts["LD_PRELOAD"] = os.environ.get("LD_PRELOAD", None) with open(os.path.join(gv.builddir, "ccinfo"), "r") as ccinfo: gv.facts["cc"] = ccinfo.readlines()[-1][:-1] gv.facts["allocbench"] = subprocess.run(["git", "rev-parse", "master"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True).stdout starttime = datetime.datetime.now().isoformat() # strip seconds from string starttime = starttime[:starttime.rfind(':')] gv.facts["starttime"] = starttime # Copied from pip. # https://github.com/pypa/pip/blob/master/src/pip/_internal/utils/glibc.py # Licensed under MIT. def glibc_version_string(executable=None): "Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc." # ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen # manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the # main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out # which libc our process is actually using. try: process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(executable) except OSError: return None try: gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version except AttributeError: # Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to # glibc. return None # Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5" gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p version_str = gnu_get_libc_version() # py2 / py3 compatibility: if not isinstance(version_str, str): version_str = version_str.decode("ascii") return version_str # platform.libc_ver regularly returns completely nonsensical glibc # versions. E.g. on my computer, platform says: # # ~$ python2.7 -c 'import platform; print(platform.libc_ver())' # ('glibc', '2.7') # ~$ python3.5 -c 'import platform; print(platform.libc_ver())' # ('glibc', '2.9') # # But the truth is: # # ~$ ldd --version # ldd (Debian GLIBC 2.22-11) 2.22 # # This is unfortunate, because it means that the linehaul data on libc # versions that was generated by pip 8.1.2 and earlier is useless and # misleading. Solution: instead of using platform, use our code that actually # works. def libc_ver(executable=None): """Return glibc version or platform.libc_ver as fallback""" glibc_version = glibc_version_string(executable) if glibc_version is None: # For non-glibc platforms, fall back on platform.libc_ver return platform.libc_ver(executable) return ("glibc", glibc_version) def exe_version(executable, version_flag="--version"): """Return version of executable""" proc = subprocess.run([executable, version_flag], universal_newlines=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE) if proc.returncode != 0: print_warning(f"failed to get version of {executable}") return "" return proc.stdout[:-1]