+kernelci
On 19/07/2023 23:34, shuah wrote:
Hello,
I am reaching out to announce that we are once again planning to gather to discuss testing and dependability related topics at the Kernel Testing & Dependability Micro-conference at LPC 2023.
We invite you to submit proposals for discussion:
The Linux Plumbers 2023 Kernel Testing & Dependability track focuses on advancing the current state of testing of the Linux Kernel and its related infrastructure. The main purpose is to improve software quality and dependability for applications that require predictability and trust.
We aim to create connections between folks working on similar projects, and help individual projects make progress.
This track is intended to promote collaboration between all the communities and people interested in the Kernel testing & dependability. This will help move the conversation forward from where we left off at the LPC 2022 Kernel Testing & Dependability MC.
We ask that any topic discussions focus on issues/problems they are facing and possible alternatives to resolving them. The Micro-conference is open to all topics related to testing on Linux, not necessarily in the kernel space.
Suggested topics:
- KernelCI: Topics on improvements and enhancements for test coverage
- Growing KCIDB, integrating more sources (https://kernelci.org/docs/kcidb/)
- Sanitizers
- Using Clang for better testing coverage
- How to spread KUnit throughout the kernel?
- Building and testing in-kernel Rust code.
- Explore ways to improve testing framework and tests in the kernel
with a specific goal to increase traceability and code coverage.
- Explore how do SBOMs figure into dependability?
Proposals can be submitted here, by August 20th:
Please reach out to MC leads: Shuah Khan (shuah@kernel.org) Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org Guillaume Tucker guillaume.tucker@collabora.com
thank you, -- Shuah