The import was working around the fact "tuple[T]" was used instead of typing.Tuple[T].
Convert it to use typing.Tuple to be consistent with how the rest of the code is annotated.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov dlatypov@google.com Reviewed-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com Reviewed-by: Brendan Higgins brendanhiggins@google.com Tested-by: Brendan Higgins brendanhiggins@google.com --- v1 -> v2: fix typos in commit message. --- tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py | 6 ++---- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py index 90bc007f1f93..2c6f916ccbaf 100644 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py @@ -6,15 +6,13 @@ # Author: Felix Guo felixguoxiuping@gmail.com # Author: Brendan Higgins brendanhiggins@google.com
-from __future__ import annotations import importlib.util import logging import subprocess import os import shutil import signal -from typing import Iterator -from typing import Optional +from typing import Iterator, Optional, Tuple
from contextlib import ExitStack
@@ -208,7 +206,7 @@ def get_source_tree_ops(arch: str, cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> LinuxSourceT raise ConfigError(arch + ' is not a valid arch')
def get_source_tree_ops_from_qemu_config(config_path: str, - cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> tuple[ + cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> Tuple[ str, LinuxSourceTreeOperations]: # The module name/path has very little to do with where the actual file # exists (I learned this through experimentation and could not find it
base-commit: 1d71307a6f94df3750f8f884545a769e227172fe