On Sat, 9 Sept 2023 at 05:32, Rae Moar rmoar@google.com wrote:
Expand the documentation on the KUnit debugfs filesystem on the run_manual.rst page.
Add section describing how to access results using debugfs.
Add section describing how to run tests after boot using debugfs.
Signed-off-by: Rae Moar rmoar@google.com Co-developed-by: Sadiya Kazi sadiyakazi@google.com Signed-off-by: Sadiya Kazi sadiyakazi@google.com
Looks good to me, a few nitpicks, and the fact that we'll probably need to add something about init section suites when those are implemented.
(Also, since you sent the email, your sign off should be at the bottom of the list above.)
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst | 45 ++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 41 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst index e7b46421f247..613385c5ba5b 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst @@ -49,9 +49,46 @@ loaded.
The results will appear in TAP format in ``dmesg``.
+debugfs +=======
+``debugfs`` is a file system that enables user interaction with the files to +make kernel information available to user space. A user can interact with +the debugfs filesystem using a variety of file operations, such as open, +read, and write.
+By default, only the root user has access to the debugfs directory.
These two paragraphs are probably a bit excessive: we want to focus on what KUnit can do with debugfs, not describing what debugfs is as a whole (which is best left to pages like Documentation/filesystems/debugfs.rst )
+If ``CONFIG_KUNIT_DEBUGFS`` is enabled, you can use KUnit debugfs +filesystem to perform the following actions.
+Retrieve Test Results +=====================
+You can use debugfs to retrieve KUnit test results. The test results are +accessible from the debugfs filesystem in the following read-only file:
+.. code-block :: bash
/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test_suite>/results
+The test results are available in KTAP format.
We _could_ mention that this is a separate KTAP document (i.e., the numbering starts at 1), though it may be obvious.
+Run Tests After Kernel Has Booted +=================================
+You can use the debugfs filesystem to trigger built-in tests to run after +boot. To run the test suite, you can use the following command to write to +the ``/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test_suite>/run`` file:
+.. code-block :: bash
echo "any string" > /sys/kernel/debugfs/kunit/<test_suite>/run
+As a result, the test suite runs and the results are printed to the kernel +log.
.. note ::
If ``CONFIG_KUNIT_DEBUGFS`` is enabled, KUnit test results will
be accessible from the ``debugfs`` filesystem (if mounted).
They will be in ``/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test_suite>/results``, in
TAP format.
The contents written to the debugfs file
``/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test_suite>/run`` are not saved.
This is possibly a bit obvious. Maybe it'd be more useful with a bit more context, e.g., "The contents written to the file ... are discarded; it is the act of writing which triggers the test, not the specific contents written."?
It might be worth having a note that tests cannot run concurrently, so this may block or fail.
Equally, it may be worth having a note for test authors, that their tests will need to correctly initialise and/or clean up any data, so the test runs correctly a second time.
-- 2.42.0.283.g2d96d420d3-goog