On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 12:09 PM Kees Cook keescook@chromium.org wrote:
On Thu, Oct 24, 2019 at 10:15:29AM +0000, Luis Chamberlain wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2019 at 05:42:18PM -0700, Brendan Higgins wrote:
With that, I think the best solution in this case will be the "__visible_for_testing" route. It has no overhead when testing is turned off (in fact it is no different in anyway when testing is turned off). The downsides I see are:
- You may not be able to test non-module code not compiled for
testing later with the test modules that Alan is working on (But the only way I think that will work is by preventing the symbol from being inlined, right?).
- I think "__visible_for_testing" will be prone to abuse. Here, I
think there are reasons why we might want to expose these symbols for testing, but not otherwise. Nevertheless, I think most symbols that should be tested should probably be made visible by default. Since you usually only want to test your public interfaces. I could very well see this getting used as a kludge that gets used far too frequently.
There are two parts to your statement on 2):
a) possible abuse of say __visible_for_testing
I really don't like the idea of littering the kernel with these. It'll
Yeah, I kind of hope that it would make people think more intentionally about what is a public interface so that they wouldn't litter the kernel with those. But I agree that in the world where people *didn't* do that. Lots of these sprinkled around would be annoying.
also require chunks in header files wrapped in #ifdefs. This is really
Why would it require header files wrapped in #ifdefs?
We could put all the ifdeffery logic in the __visible_for_testing macro so that nothing in the original code has to change except for adding an #include and replacing a couple of `static`s with `__visible_for_testing`.
ugly.
b) you typically only want to test your public interfaces
True, but being able to test the little helper functions is a nice starting point and a good building block.
Yeah, I think I have come to accept that. We can argue about how this should change and how people need to learn to be more intentional about which interfaces are public and many other high minded ideas, but when it comes down to it, we need to provide a starting point that is easy.
If our nice starting point becomes a problem, we can always improve it later.
Why can't unit tests live with the code they're testing? They're already logically tied together; what's the harm there? This needn't be the case for ALL tests, etc. The test driver could still live externally. The test in the other .c would just have exported functions... ?
Well, for one, it totally tanks certain cases for building KUnit tests as modules. I don't care about this point *too* much personally, but I accept that there are others that want this, and I don't want to make these people's lives too difficult.
The main reason I care, however, is just that I think it looks bad to me. The file that these tests were in was already pretty long, and the tests made it even longer. So that makes the tests harder to find. If all tests are in a *-test.c file, then it becomes really easy to find all of your tests. Admittedly, this is a pretty minor point. Honestly, the main reason it looks bad to me, is because it is different from what I am used to, which, I know, is not a great reason.