xdp-testing
XDP-for-Windows test execution and debugging workflow. Use when running tests (functional, spinxsk, pktfuzz, ringperf, rxfilter, xskmaprx, xskfwdkm), debugging…
npx skills add https://github.com/microsoft/xdp-for-windows --skill xdp-testingXDP for Windows: Testing & Debugging
This skill covers everything an agent needs to execute tests on the required separate test machine, attach kd for crash analysis, and recover the machine to a known-good state after a bugcheck.
[!IMPORTANT] All XDP testing must occur on a separate Windows test machine — never the dev machine. Always pass
-ComputerName <machine>explicitly on every test command. Do not rely ontools\remote-set-default.ps1alone — the session default lives in the PowerShell global scope and is silently lost when a new terminal spawns (afterStart-Process, kd sessions, or whenever the tool host opens a fresh shell). A test script invoked without-ComputerNameand without an active session default will run against the dev machine and may damage local state. Treat-ComputerNameas required.
When to Use
- Running any of:
functional.ps1,spinxsk.ps1,prepare-machine.ps1(non-build scenarios),check-drivers.ps1,rxfilter.ps1,rxfilterperf.ps1,ringperf.ps1,xskmaprx.ps1,xskfwdkm.ps1,pktfuzz.ps1. - Triggering, observing, or analyzing a kernel bugcheck.
- Recovering a test machine that's stuck after a crash.
- Choosing default parameters for a test invocation.
Build-only scripts (always local, ignore -ComputerName)
build.ps1, merge-artifacts.ps1, publish-nuget.ps1,
prepare-machine.ps1 -ForBuild / -ForEbpfBuild,
create-test-archive.ps1, update-nuspec.ps1.
Remote-test workflow
-
Ask the user once per chat session which test machine to use: "Which test machine should I run tests on?". Accept hostname, FQDN, or IP. Remember the value for the rest of the session and pass it as
-ComputerName <machine>on every test invocation. -
(Optional, human convenience only) set the session default. Does not replace
-ComputerNamefor agent-driven runs:.\tools\remote-set-default.ps1 <machine> -
Run any test script with
-ComputerName— it auto-deploysartifacts\bin\<plat>_<cfg>\and streams output back:.\tools\functional.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -ListTestCases .\tools\functional.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -TestCaseFilter "Name=GenericBinding" .\tools\spinxsk.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -Minutes 5 -
Credentials. First connect auto-adds the host to WSMan TrustedHosts (UAC prompt) and, if WinRM rejects with auth error, prompts at the console (
Read-Host, no GUI) for username and password. Credentials are cached in$global:XdpRemoteCredentialCachefor the rest of the session. Do not generateGet-Credentialcalls or store passwords in scripts.[!IMPORTANT] When run by an agent, console password prompts are invisible to the user (the terminal is not interactive and any typed characters would be shown in plaintext). If a test command stalls waiting for credentials, do not send them to the terminal. Instead, collect username and password through the chat UI (
vscode_askQuestions) and pass them to subsequent commands via the-Credentialparameter or by pre-populating$global:XdpRemoteCredentialCachebefore re-running the script. -
One-time test-machine setup (the user must run, requires elevation):
.\tools\remote.ps1 -EnableRemotingIf the user hasn't done this, the connection fails with "WinRM client cannot process the request" — surface this and ask them to run it.
-
Build first. Always run
.\tools\build.ps1(or rely on a recent build) before remote test commands, since deploy pulls fromartifacts\bin\<plat>_<cfg>\.
Choosing test parameters
When the user doesn't specify parameters, derive sensible defaults from the matching job in .github/workflows/ci.yml. That file is the source of truth for which switches each test exercises in CI.
- spinxsk:
tools/spinxsk.ps1 -Verbose -Stats -Driver <XDPMP|FNMP> -Minutes <N> -XdpmpPollProvider <NDIS|FNDIS> -SuccessThresholdPercent <pct> -EnableEbpf [-TxInspect]. Scale-Minutesdown for smoke runs as requested. - functional: mirror
-Config,-Platform, and any-TestCaseFilter/-XdpInstallerflags from the CI job. - perf/fuzz: copy the CI invocation verbatim, adjusting only duration/iteration counts when the user asks for a shorter run.
Respect explicit user overrides; leave everything else at CI defaults.
Kernel debugger (kd) attach for bugcheck monitoring
Test machines typically have a kd "head" already attached and exposing
a debug server over a named pipe (started on the head with
.server npipe:pipe=<name>). To watch for breaks during a test run,
attach a passive remote kd client from the dev machine in a
separate background terminal before kicking off the test:
# Run with mode=async; <pipe-name> defaults to the same value as
# -ComputerName / Set-XdpRemoteDefault.
kd.exe -remote npipe:server=localhost,pipe=<pipe-name>
kd usage rules
- Always
-remote npipe:server=localhost,pipe=<name>— never-k com:pipe,port=...(that's the serial-pipe transport for VMs and will not connect to a kd debug server). - Default
pipeto the value of-ComputerName/Set-XdpRemoteDefault. If that fails to connect, ask the user once for the correct pipe name. - Run kd
mode=asyncso test invocations stream output in parallel. - Periodically check the kd terminal for break-in prompts (
kd>after a break) or bugcheck banners; surface them to the user, otherwise let kd run idle. - If kd reports "Cannot connect to server" or exits immediately, no kd head is currently attached. Inform the user and continue without kd.
- Keep kd attached across reboots. After
.reboot, leave the kd terminal running — secondary breaks (early-boot Driver Verifier hits, watchdog timeouts, follow-on bugchecks from corrupted state) often happen during the next boot. - Issuing
.rebootnon-interactively from the dev machine. Usekd.exe -cf <scriptfile>with a hidden window:
Do not try to drive an interactive$cmd = New-TemporaryFile Set-Content -Path $cmd -Value ".reboot`r`nqd" Start-Process kd.exe -ArgumentList @( "-remote","npipe:server=localhost,pipe=<machine>", "-cf",$cmd.FullName) -PassThru -WindowStyle Hidden | ForEach-Object { $_.WaitForExit(60000) | Out-Null } Remove-Item $cmd.FullName -Forcekd>prompt via PowerShell's terminal stdin — that connects you to the host shell, not kd. Then pollTest-WSMan -ComputerName <machine>until it succeeds. - When the chat session ends or the user moves on, kill the kd terminal.
Bugcheck recovery loop
Bugchecks frequently leave the test machine in a partially-corrupted
state that prevents the next iteration from running. The recovery
script is tools\check-drivers.ps1 -Force. The dev loop cannot move
on until that command reports "No loaded XDP drivers found!".
Recovery doctrine
-
Bugchecks can corrupt on-disk and registry state. Files written in the seconds before the crash may be truncated, partially written, or filled with NUL bytes. Driver registry keys, INF/catalog files, PnP metadata, and Windows Installer product databases are common victims.
-
Reinstall over partial state when feasible. When an installer/MSI/INF reports the product is missing from its database but the on-disk binaries are still present, reinstall on top of the existing layout (which reseeds the database) and then run the normal uninstall. Prefer this over hand-rolled service/driver teardown.
-
Recovery flags MUST be opt-in. Behaviors that downgrade errors, reinstall over corruption, or paper over partial state belong behind a
-Forceswitch on the recovery script (e.g.tools\check-drivers.ps1 -Force). Don't change default install/uninstall behavior — that would silently mask real bugs. -
Persist until clean. Each bugcheck tends to expose a slightly different corruption (NUL-filled scripts last time, wedged eBPF service this time, something else next time). When
check-drivers.ps1fails:- Read the actual error and identify which component / step is stuck.
- Improve
tools\setup.ps1(ortools\check-drivers.ps1) with a targeted fix for that specific failure mode — add a stuck service to the cleanup list, detect a specific MSI exit code, add a NUL-byte check for a specific file path, etc. - Re-run
check-drivers.ps1 -Forceand repeat until it succeeds. - Only then return to the build/test/deploy loop.
Do not stop at "the recovery is partially working" — partial recovery means the next test run will hit the residual broken state and waste an iteration. Avoid broad ignore-everything error handling; recovery should be targeted and understandable.
Common test commands
# Functional tests
.\tools\prepare-machine.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -ForFunctionalTest
.\tools\functional.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -Config Debug -Platform x64
.\tools\functional.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -TestCaseFilter "Name=GenericBinding"
.\tools\functional.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -ListTestCases
.\tools\log.ps1 -Convert -Name xdpfunc
# Stress tests (spinxsk)
.\tools\prepare-machine.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -ForSpinxskTest
.\tools\spinxsk.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -XdpmpPollProvider FNDIS -QueueCount 2 -Minutes 10
.\tools\log.ps1 -Convert -Name spinxsk
# Recovery
.\tools\check-drivers.ps1 -ComputerName <machine> -Force
See docs/remote-testing.md for the human-facing reference.