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[180.214.232.1]) by smtp.gmail.com with ESMTPSA id d5-20020a623605000000b0056b6c7a17c6sm3411713pfa.12.2022.10.23.06.10.07 (version=TLS1_3 cipher=TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 bits=256/256); Sun, 23 Oct 2022 06:10:10 -0700 (PDT) From: Bagas Sanjaya To: linux-doc@vger.kernel.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-kselftest@vger.kernel.org, kunit-dev@googlegroups.com Cc: Jonathan Corbet , Brendan Higgins , David Gow , Lukas Bulwahn , Khalid Masum , Sadiya Kazi , Bagas Sanjaya Subject: [PATCH RESEND 5/7] Documentation: kunit: rewrite "Running tests with kunit_tool" Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2022 20:08:45 +0700 Message-Id: <20221023130846.63296-6-bagasdotme@gmail.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.38.1 In-Reply-To: <20221023130846.63296-1-bagasdotme@gmail.com> References: <20221023130846.63296-1-bagasdotme@gmail.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Developer-Signature: v=1; a=openpgp-sha256; l=18063; i=bagasdotme@gmail.com; h=from:subject; bh=rxjOwzmgDzh9fnwudOgKLwsz0s/nduKdCjKl6wBh20A=; b=owGbwMvMwCH2bWenZ2ig32LG02pJDMmhNnfash6ZKD5YdUItM9VHIbYvfHbG967ptT/W7trzbE37 j+dhHSUsDGIcDLJiiiyTEvmaTu8yErnQvtYRZg4rE8gQBi5OAZjI8zsM/+sVc5RFzabafKtpiYz4cm bu+dalE7ZZ7Vb4/cSL/4iPex/D97rrwb0d3XwnOBSDnM5J3PRy0W08UPHFoujD8wkThXx5AQ== X-Developer-Key: i=bagasdotme@gmail.com; a=openpgp; fpr=701B806FDCA5D3A58FFB8F7D7C276C64A5E44A1D X-Spam-Status: No, score=-0.6 required=5.0 tests=BAYES_00,DKIM_SIGNED, DKIM_VALID,DKIM_VALID_AU,DKIM_VALID_EF,FREEMAIL_FROM, RCVD_IN_DNSWL_NONE,RCVD_IN_SORBS_WEB,SPF_HELO_NONE,SPF_PASS autolearn=no autolearn_force=no version=3.4.6 X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.6 (2021-04-09) on lindbergh.monkeyblade.net Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org X-getmail-retrieved-from-mailbox: =?utf-8?q?INBOX?= X-GMAIL-THRID: =?utf-8?q?1747484153535228890?= X-GMAIL-MSGID: =?utf-8?q?1747484153535228890?= Rewrite the documentation for clarity. Major points: * Switch from first-person to second-person point of view * The configuration step is now within "Kernel configuration" section * Replace description of common options with pointer to running --help for commands of the wrapper script Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya --- Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst | 302 ++++++------------ 1 file changed, 97 insertions(+), 205 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst index dafe8eb28d3015..d683580b21d2db 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst @@ -4,21 +4,20 @@ Running tests with kunit_tool ============================= -We can either run KUnit tests using kunit_tool or can run tests -manually, and then use kunit_tool to parse the results. To run tests -manually, see: Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst. -As long as we can build the kernel, we can run KUnit. +This documentation describes running tests with kunit_tool script. +If you'd like to manually run tests, see +Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst. kunit_tool is a Python script which configures and builds a kernel, runs tests, and formats the test results. -Run command: +To run the tests: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run -We should see the following: +You should see the following output: .. code-block:: @@ -26,124 +25,112 @@ We should see the following: Building KUnit kernel... Starting KUnit kernel... -We may want to use the following options: +You can also specify options to the script when running the tests. For +example, to run tests utilizing all available CPUs within 30 seconds +time limit: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --timeout=30 --jobs=`nproc --all` -- ``--timeout`` sets a maximum amount of time for tests to run. -- ``--jobs`` sets the number of threads to build the kernel. +For list of all options, see:: -kunit_tool will generate a ``.kunitconfig`` with a default -configuration, if no other ``.kunitconfig`` file exists -(in the build directory). In addition, it verifies that the -generated ``.config`` file contains the ``CONFIG`` options in the -``.kunitconfig``. -It is also possible to pass a separate ``.kunitconfig`` fragment to -kunit_tool. This is useful if we have several different groups of -tests we want to run independently, or if we want to use pre-defined -test configs for certain subsystems. + ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --help + +Kernel configuration +==================== + +kunit_tool will generate kernel configuration named ``.kunitconfig`` +if it doesn't exist in the build directory. For list of selected options by +default, see ``tools/testing/kunit/configs/default.config`` file. + +In addition, it verifies that the synchronized ``.config`` file +contains options enabled in ``.kunitconfig``. It will errored out if +you have not enabled option dependencies required by all selected options. + +It is also possible to specify different ``.kunitconfig`` to +kunit_tool. This is useful if you have several different groups of +tests that you want to run independently, or if you want to use pre-defined +configurations for certain subsystems. To use a different ``.kunitconfig`` file (such as one -provided to test a particular subsystem), pass it as an option: +provided to test a particular subsystem), specify ``--kunitconfig`` option. +For example, to run ext4 tests: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --kunitconfig=fs/ext4/.kunitconfig -To view kunit_tool flags (optional command-line arguments), run: +Customizing configuration +------------------------- -.. code-block:: +A ``.kunitconfig`` is a configuration file generated by +``make savedefconfig``, used for running enabled set of tests. This file +contains configuration options with specific enabled tests. The file also +contains any other coptions required by the tests, for example +dependencies for features under tests, arch-specific configs and so on. - ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --help - -Creating a ``.kunitconfig`` file -================================ - -If we want to run a specific set of tests (rather than those listed -in the KUnit ``defconfig``), we can provide Kconfig options in the -``.kunitconfig`` file. For default .kunitconfig, see: -https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/tools/testing/kunit/configs/default.config. -A ``.kunitconfig`` is a ``minconfig`` (a .config -generated by running ``make savedefconfig``), used for running a -specific set of tests. This file contains the regular Kernel configs -with specific test targets. The ``.kunitconfig`` also -contains any other config options required by the tests (For example: -dependencies for features under tests, configs that enable/disable -certain code blocks, arch configs and so on). - -To create a ``.kunitconfig``, using the KUnit ``defconfig``: +To generate default ``.kunitconfig``: .. code-block:: cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO cp tools/testing/kunit/configs/default.config .kunit/.kunitconfig -We can then add any other Kconfig options. For example: +You can then customize the configuration. As with configuring regular kernels +for production deployment, it is recommended to use +:doc:`one of configuration interfaces `. For example, +to configure through menuconfig:: -.. code-block:: + make O=.kunit KCONFIG_CONFIG=.kunit/.kunitconfig menuconfig - CONFIG_LIST_KUNIT_TEST=y +.. note:: + ``.config`` will only be resynchronized if it is the superset of + ``.kunitconfig``. Removing any options from the latter will not + resynchronize the former. In that case, you need to manually + update the former by:: -kunit_tool ensures that all config options in ``.kunitconfig`` are -set in the kernel ``.config`` before running the tests. It warns if we -have not included the options dependencies. + cp .kunitconfig .config -.. note:: Removing something from the ``.kunitconfig`` will - not rebuild the ``.config file``. The configuration is only - updated if the ``.kunitconfig`` is not a subset of ``.config``. - This means that we can use other tools - (For example: ``make menuconfig``) to adjust other config options. - The build dir needs to be set for ``make menuconfig`` to - work, therefore by default use ``make O=.kunit menuconfig``. +Step-by-step run +================ -Configuring, building, and running tests -======================================== +It is possible to sequentially run testing steps for finer-grained control. -If we want to make manual changes to the KUnit build process, we -can run part of the KUnit build process independently. -When running kunit_tool, from a ``.kunitconfig``, we can generate a -``.config`` by using the ``config`` argument: +First, synchronize ``.config`` from ``.kunitconfig`` that have been +configured before: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py config -To build a KUnit kernel from the current ``.config``, we can use the -``build`` argument: +Before the tests can be run, the kernel needs to be built first: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py build -If we already have built UML kernel with built-in KUnit tests, we -can run the kernel, and display the test results with the ``exec`` -argument: +The whole tests can now be executed: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py exec -The ``run`` command discussed in section: **Running tests with kunit_tool**, -is equivalent to running the above three commands in sequence. - Parsing test results ==================== -KUnit tests output displays results in TAP (Test Anything Protocol) -format. When running tests, kunit_tool parses this output and prints -a summary. To see the raw test results in TAP format, we can pass the -``--raw_output`` argument: +KUnit generates test results in TAP (Test Anything Protocol) format. When +the tests are running, kunit_tool parses the result and prints +the summary. To see the results in raw TAP format, you can pass +``--raw_output`` option: .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --raw_output -If we have KUnit results in the raw TAP format, we can parse them and -print the human-readable summary with the ``parse`` command for -kunit_tool. This accepts a filename for an argument, or will read from -standard input. +Now you can parse the output and print the human-readable summary with the +``parse`` command. It accepts the filename argument. If none is given, it +will read from standard input. .. code-block:: bash @@ -155,74 +142,63 @@ standard input. Filtering tests =============== -By passing a bash style glob filter to the ``exec`` or ``run`` -commands, we can run a subset of the tests built into a kernel . For -example: if we only want to run KUnit resource tests, use: +You can also specify tests using :manpage:`glob(7)` pattern. For example, +to run resource tests (which are prefixed by ``kunit-resource``): .. code-block:: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run 'kunit-resource*' -This uses the standard glob format with wildcard characters. - .. _kunit-on-qemu: Running tests on QEMU ===================== -kunit_tool supports running tests on qemu as well as -via UML. To run tests on qemu, by default it requires two flags: +Besides running tests with UML kernel, kunit_wrapper also supports +running tests on QEMU. Two options are required for this to work: -- ``--arch``: Selects a configs collection (Kconfig, qemu config options - and so on), that allow KUnit tests to be run on the specified - architecture in a minimal way. The architecture argument is same as - the option name passed to the ``ARCH`` variable used by Kbuild. - Not all architectures currently support this flag, but we can use - ``--qemu_config`` to handle it. If ``um`` is passed (or this flag - is ignored), the tests will run via UML. Non-UML architectures, - for example: i386, x86_64, arm and so on; run on qemu. +- ``--arch``: Run tests for the specified architecture. The value will be + passed to make as ``ARCH`` environment variable. + Not all architectures currently support this flag. For such architectures, + use ``--qemu_config`` instead (discussed later). If ``um`` is specifed (or + if this option is not given), the tests will run in UML kernel. Otherwise, + the tests run on QEMU. -- ``--cross_compile``: Specifies the Kbuild toolchain. It passes the - same argument as passed to the ``CROSS_COMPILE`` variable used by - Kbuild. As a reminder, this will be the prefix for the toolchain - binaries such as GCC. For example: +- ``--cross_compile``: Specifies the cross-compiler toolchain prefix. + The value will be used for ``CROSS_COMPILE`` environment variable when + building the kernel. - - ``sparc64-linux-gnu`` if we have the sparc toolchain installed on - our system. +Examples: - - ``$HOME/toolchains/microblaze/gcc-9.2.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux`` - if we have downloaded the microblaze toolchain from the 0-day - website to a directory in our home directory called toolchains. + - To run tests for native x86_64 architecture: -This means that for most architectures, running under qemu is as simple as: - -.. code-block:: bash + .. code-block:: bash ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --arch=x86_64 -When cross-compiling, we'll likely need to specify a different toolchain, for -example: + - To cross-compile and test for s390: -.. code-block:: bash + .. code-block:: bash ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run \ --arch=s390 \ --cross_compile=s390x-linux-gnu- -If we want to run KUnit tests on an architecture not supported by -the ``--arch`` flag, or want to run KUnit tests on qemu using a -non-default configuration; then we can write our own``QemuConfig``. -These ``QemuConfigs`` are written in Python. They have an import line -``from..qemu_config import QemuArchParams`` at the top of the file. -The file must contain a variable called ``QEMU_ARCH`` that has an -instance of ``QemuArchParams`` assigned to it. See example in: -``tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py``. +Custom QEMU configuration +------------------------- +If you want to test on an architecture unsupported by the ``--arch`` option, +or to customize QEMU invocation, you can write ``QemuConfig`` configuration, +which is written in Python. The file begins with +:code:`from..qemu_config import QemuArchParams` as import directive. +The file must contain an object called ``QEMU_ARCH`` which is +built from ``QemuArchParams`` class. -Once we have a ``QemuConfig``, we can pass it into kunit_tool, -using the ``--qemu_config`` flag. When used, this flag replaces the -``--arch`` flag. For example: using -``tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py``, the invocation appear -as +Once ``QemuConfig`` have been configured, you can specify the file to +kunit_tool using the ``--qemu_config`` option. This overrides ``--arch`` +option. + +For example, to specify QEMU configuration for native x86_64 architecture +with 12 build jobs and 60 seconds timeout: .. code-block:: bash @@ -231,93 +207,9 @@ as --jobs=12 \ --qemu_config=./tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py -Running command-line arguments -============================== +Command options +=============== -kunit_tool has a number of other command-line arguments which can -be useful for our test environment. Below are the most commonly used -command line arguments: +To see a list of options for a particular command (along with usage), see:: -- ``--help``: Lists all available options. To list common options, - place ``--help`` before the command. To list options specific to that - command, place ``--help`` after the command. - - .. note:: Different commands (``config``, ``build``, ``run``, etc) - have different supported options. -- ``--build_dir``: Specifies kunit_tool build directory. It includes - the ``.kunitconfig``, ``.config`` files and compiled kernel. - -- ``--make_options``: Specifies additional options to pass to make, when - compiling a kernel (using ``build`` or ``run`` commands). For example: - to enable compiler warnings, we can pass ``--make_options W=1``. - -- ``--alltests``: Enable a predefined set of options in order to build - as many tests as possible. - - .. note:: The list of enabled options can be found in - ``tools/testing/kunit/configs/all_tests.config``. - - If you only want to enable all tests with otherwise satisfied - dependencies, instead add ``CONFIG_KUNIT_ALL_TESTS=y`` to your - ``.kunitconfig``. - -- ``--kunitconfig``: Specifies the path or the directory of the ``.kunitconfig`` - file. For example: - - - ``lib/kunit/.kunitconfig`` can be the path of the file. - - - ``lib/kunit`` can be the directory in which the file is located. - - This file is used to build and run with a predefined set of tests - and their dependencies. For example, to run tests for a given subsystem. - -- ``--kconfig_add``: Specifies additional configuration options to be - appended to the ``.kunitconfig`` file. For example: - - .. code-block:: - - ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --kconfig_add CONFIG_KASAN=y - -- ``--arch``: Runs tests on the specified architecture. The architecture - argument is same as the Kbuild ARCH environment variable. - For example, i386, x86_64, arm, um, etc. Non-UML architectures run on qemu. - Default is `um`. - -- ``--cross_compile``: Specifies the Kbuild toolchain. It passes the - same argument as passed to the ``CROSS_COMPILE`` variable used by - Kbuild. This will be the prefix for the toolchain - binaries such as GCC. For example: - - - ``sparc64-linux-gnu-`` if we have the sparc toolchain installed on - our system. - - - ``$HOME/toolchains/microblaze/gcc-9.2.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux`` - if we have downloaded the microblaze toolchain from the 0-day - website to a specified path in our home directory called toolchains. - -- ``--qemu_config``: Specifies the path to a file containing a - custom qemu architecture definition. This should be a python file - containing a `QemuArchParams` object. - -- ``--qemu_args``: Specifies additional qemu arguments, for example, ``-smp 8``. - -- ``--jobs``: Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously. - By default, this is set to the number of cores on your system. - -- ``--timeout``: Specifies the maximum number of seconds allowed for all tests to run. - This does not include the time taken to build the tests. - -- ``--kernel_args``: Specifies additional kernel command-line arguments. May be repeated. - -- ``--run_isolated``: If set, boots the kernel for each individual suite/test. - This is useful for debugging a non-hermetic test, one that - might pass/fail based on what ran before it. - -- ``--raw_output``: If set, generates unformatted output from kernel. Possible options are: - - - ``all``: To view the full kernel output, use ``--raw_output=all``. - - - ``kunit``: This is the default option and filters to KUnit output. Use ``--raw_output`` or ``--raw_output=kunit``. - -- ``--json``: If set, stores the test results in a JSON format and prints to `stdout` or - saves to a file if a filename is specified. + ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py --help