On 03.11.23 13:46, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
On Fri, Nov 03, 2023 at 01:22:54PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
On 03.11.23 13:16, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
On Tue, Jun 06, 2023 at 12:16:37AM -0700, John Hubbard wrote:
As per a discussion with Muhammad Usama Anjum [1], the following is how one is supposed to build selftests:
make headers && make -C tools/testing/selftests/mm
Change the selftest build system's lib.mk to fail out with a helpful message if that prerequisite "make headers" has not been done yet.
NAK NAK NAK
This now means I can no longer run selftests, I thank you very much! :-/
root@spr:/usr/src/linux-2.6# make O=defconfig-build/ -j64 make[1]: Entering directory '/usr/src/linux-2.6/defconfig-build'
*** The source tree is not clean, please run 'make mrproper' *** in /usr/src/linux-2.6
I've always done:
cd tools/testing/selftests/x86; make
and that has always worked
Now I can't bloody well build *any* selftest or risk not being able to do builds.
This change landed in 6.5, no? And 6.6 was just released. Just curious why you notice that now.
Dunno, last time I edited the selftests and needed to recompile was a few weeks ago.
Okay. the question is if your workflow can be easily adjusted, or if we can improve that header handling as a whole.
The problem I had with this recently: just because we did a "make headers" once in a git tree doesn't mean that it is still up-to-date.
So once some selftest changes showed up that require newer headers, building the selftests again fails without a hint that another round of "make headers" would be required.