On resource constrained test runs, the last modification time on the image is an unreliable date to check against the filesystem creation time. Use dump.erofs to get the filesystem creation time from the superblock. This should get the timestamp as shown by GRUB's ls -l.
Signed-off-by: Glenn Washburn <[email protected]> --- tests/util/grub-fs-tester.in | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/tests/util/grub-fs-tester.in b/tests/util/grub-fs-tester.in index 579b937f5bc1..c4d557d530fc 100644 --- a/tests/util/grub-fs-tester.in +++ b/tests/util/grub-fs-tester.in @@ -1470,6 +1470,12 @@ for LOGSECSIZE in $(range "$MINLOGSECSIZE" "$MAXLOGSECSIZE" 1); do # With some abstractions like mdraid flushing to disk # may be delayed for a long time. FSTIME="$UMOUNT_TIME";; + x"erofs_"*) + # Creating the erofs image may take more than a few + # seconds. Use the more accurate timestamp from the + # superblock. + FSTIME="$(dump.erofs -s "${FSIMAGEP}0.img" | grep ^"Filesystem created:" | (read _ _ REST; echo $REST) )" + FSTIME="$(date -d "$FSTIME" -u '+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')";; xsquash*) # Creating the squash image may take more than a few # seconds. Use the more accurate timestamp from the -- 2.34.1 _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel
