Remove some of the outmoded "Why KUnit" rationale, and move some UML-specific information to the kunit_tool page. Also update the Getting Started guide to mention running tests without the kunit_tool wrapper.
Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com --- Thanks for your comments. I've reinstated the "Why KUnit" section with some minor changes.
Changes since v1[1]: - Reinstated the "Why Kunit?" section, minus the comparison with other testing frameworks (covered in the FAQ), and the description of UML. - Moved the description of UML into to kunit_tool page. - Tidied up the wording around how KUnit is built and run to make it work without the UML description.
[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-kselftest/9c703dea-a9e1-94e2-c12d-3cb0a09e75ac...
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst | 33 ++++---- Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst | 7 ++ Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst | 80 ++++++++++++++++---- 3 files changed, 92 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst index d16a4d2c3a41..ca6cd6dd6ab7 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst @@ -17,14 +17,23 @@ What is KUnit? ==============
KUnit is a lightweight unit testing and mocking framework for the Linux kernel. -These tests are able to be run locally on a developer's workstation without a VM -or special hardware.
KUnit is heavily inspired by JUnit, Python's unittest.mock, and Googletest/Googlemock for C++. KUnit provides facilities for defining unit test cases, grouping related test cases into test suites, providing common infrastructure for running tests, and much more.
+KUnit consists of a kernel component, which provides a set of macros for easily +writing unit tests. Tests written against KUnit will run on kernel boot if +built-in, or when loaded if built as a module. These tests write out results to +the kernel log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format. + +To make running these tests (and reading the results) easier, KUnit offsers +:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>`, which builds a `User Mode Linux +http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net`_ kernel, runs it, and parses the test +results. This provides a quick way of running KUnit tests during development, +without requiring a virtual machine or separate hardware. + Get started now: :doc:`start`
Why KUnit? @@ -36,20 +45,11 @@ allow all possible code paths to be tested in the code under test; this is only possible if the code under test is very small and does not have any external dependencies outside of the test's control like hardware.
-Outside of KUnit, there are no testing frameworks currently -available for the kernel that do not require installing the kernel on a test -machine or in a VM and all require tests to be written in userspace running on -the kernel; this is true for Autotest, and kselftest, disqualifying -any of them from being considered unit testing frameworks. +KUnit provides a common framework for unit tests within the kernel.
-KUnit addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a virtual -machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a Linux -architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it compiles -to a standalone program that can be run like any other program directly inside -of a host operating system; to be clear, it does not require any virtualization -support; it is just a regular program. - -Alternatively, kunit and kunit tests can be built as modules and tests will +KUnit tests can be run on most kernel configurations, and most tests are +architecture independent. All built-in KUnit tests run on kernel startup. +Alternatively, KUnit and KUnit tests can be built as modules and tests will run when the test module is loaded.
KUnit is fast. Excluding build time, from invocation to completion KUnit can run @@ -75,9 +75,12 @@ someone sends you some code. Why trust that someone ran all their tests correctly on every change when you can just run them yourself in less time than it takes to read their test log?
+ How do I use it? ================
* :doc:`start` - for new users of KUnit * :doc:`usage` - for a more detailed explanation of KUnit features * :doc:`api/index` - for the list of KUnit APIs used for testing +* :doc:`kunit-tool` - for more information on the kunit_tool helper script +* :doc:`faq` - for answers to some common questions about KUnit diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst index 50d46394e97e..949af2da81e5 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst @@ -12,6 +12,13 @@ the Linux kernel as UML (`User Mode Linux http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/`_), running KUnit tests, parsing the test results and displaying them in a user friendly manner.
+kunit_tool addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a +virtual machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a +Linux architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it +compiles the kernel as a standalone Linux executable that can be run like any +other program directly inside of a host operating system. To be clear, it does +not require any virtualization support: it is just a regular program. + What is a kunitconfig? ======================
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst index 4e1d24db6b13..e1c5ce80ce12 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst @@ -9,11 +9,10 @@ Installing dependencies KUnit has the same dependencies as the Linux kernel. As long as you can build the kernel, you can run KUnit.
-KUnit Wrapper -============= -Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper that helps format the output to -easily use and read KUnit output. It handles building and running the kernel, as -well as formatting the output. +Running tests with the KUnit Wrapper +==================================== +Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper which runs tests under User Mode +Linux, and formats the test results.
The wrapper can be run with:
@@ -21,22 +20,42 @@ The wrapper can be run with:
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --defconfig
-For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) checkout the +For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) check out the :doc:`kunit-tool` page.
Creating a .kunitconfig -======================= -The Python script is a thin wrapper around Kbuild. As such, it needs to be -configured with a ``.kunitconfig`` file. This file essentially contains the -regular Kernel config, with the specific test targets as well. - +----------------------- +If you want to run a specific set of tests (rather than those listed in the +KUnit defconfig), you can provide Kconfig options in the ``.kunitconfig`` file. +This file essentially contains the regular Kernel config, with the specific +test targets as well. The ``.kunitconfig`` should also contain any other config +options required by the tests. + +A good starting point for a ``.kunitconfig`` is the KUnit defconfig: .. code-block:: bash
cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO cp arch/um/configs/kunit_defconfig .kunitconfig
-Verifying KUnit Works ---------------------- +You can then add any other Kconfig options you wish, e.g.: +.. code-block:: none + + CONFIG_LIST_KUNIT_TEST=y + +:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>` will ensure that all config options set in +``.kunitconfig`` are set in the kernel ``.config`` before running the tests. +It'll warn you if you haven't included the dependencies of the options you're +using. + +.. note:: + Note that removing something from the ``.kunitconfig`` will not trigger a + rebuild of the ``.config`` file: the configuration is only updated if the + ``.kunitconfig`` is not a subset of ``.config``. This means that you can use + other tools (such as make menuconfig) to adjust other config options. + + +Running the tests +-----------------
To make sure that everything is set up correctly, simply invoke the Python wrapper from your kernel repo: @@ -62,6 +81,41 @@ followed by a list of tests that are run. All of them should be passing. Because it is building a lot of sources for the first time, the ``Building KUnit kernel`` step may take a while.
+Running tests without the KUnit Wrapper +======================================= + +If you'd rather not use the KUnit Wrapper (if, for example, you need to +integrate with other systems, or use an architecture other than UML), KUnit can +be included in any kernel, and the results read out and parsed manually. + +.. note:: + KUnit is not designed for use in a production system, and it's possible that + tests may reduce the stability or security of the system. + + + +Configuring the kernel +---------------------- + +In order to enable KUnit itself, you simply need to enable the ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` +Kconfig option (it's under Kernel Hacking/Kernel Testing and Coverage in +menuconfig). From there, you can enable any KUnit tests you want: they usually +have config options ending in ``_KUNIT_TEST``. + +KUnit and KUnit tests can be compiled as modules: in this case the tests in a +module will be run when the module is loaded. + +Running the tests +----------------- + +Build and run your kernel as usual. Test output will be written to the kernel +log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format. + +.. note:: + It's possible that there will be other lines and/or data interspersed in the + TAP output. + + Writing your first test =======================
-----Original Message----- From: David Gow davidgow@google.com
Remove some of the outmoded "Why KUnit" rationale, and move some UML-specific information to the kunit_tool page. Also update the Getting Started guide to mention running tests without the kunit_tool wrapper.
Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com
Thanks for your comments. I've reinstated the "Why KUnit" section with some minor changes.
Changes since v1[1]:
- Reinstated the "Why Kunit?" section, minus the comparison with other testing frameworks (covered in the FAQ), and the description of UML.
- Moved the description of UML into to kunit_tool page.
- Tidied up the wording around how KUnit is built and run to make it work without the UML description.
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst | 33 ++++---- Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst | 7 ++ Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst | 80 ++++++++++++++++---- 3 files changed, 92 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst index d16a4d2c3a41..ca6cd6dd6ab7 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst @@ -17,14 +17,23 @@ What is KUnit? ==============
KUnit is a lightweight unit testing and mocking framework for the Linux kernel. -These tests are able to be run locally on a developer's workstation without a VM -or special hardware.
KUnit is heavily inspired by JUnit, Python's unittest.mock, and Googletest/Googlemock for C++. KUnit provides facilities for defining unit test cases, grouping related test cases into test suites, providing common infrastructure for running tests, and much more.
+KUnit consists of a kernel component, which provides a set of macros for easily +writing unit tests. Tests written against KUnit will run on kernel boot if +built-in, or when loaded if built as a module. These tests write out results to +the kernel log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format.
+To make running these tests (and reading the results) easier, KUnit offsers +:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>`, which builds a `User Mode Linux +http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net`_ kernel, runs it, and parses the test +results. This provides a quick way of running KUnit tests during development, +without requiring a virtual machine or separate hardware.
Get started now: :doc:`start`
Why KUnit? @@ -36,20 +45,11 @@ allow all possible code paths to be tested in the code under test; this is only possible if the code under test is very small and does not have any external dependencies outside of the test's control like hardware.
-Outside of KUnit, there are no testing frameworks currently -available for the kernel that do not require installing the kernel on a test -machine or in a VM and all require tests to be written in userspace running on -the kernel; this is true for Autotest, and kselftest, disqualifying -any of them from being considered unit testing frameworks. +KUnit provides a common framework for unit tests within the kernel.
-KUnit addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a virtual -machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a Linux -architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it compiles -to a standalone program that can be run like any other program directly inside -of a host operating system; to be clear, it does not require any virtualization -support; it is just a regular program.
-Alternatively, kunit and kunit tests can be built as modules and tests will +KUnit tests can be run on most kernel configurations, and most tests are +architecture independent. All built-in KUnit tests run on kernel startup. +Alternatively, KUnit and KUnit tests can be built as modules and tests will run when the test module is loaded.
KUnit is fast. Excluding build time, from invocation to completion KUnit can run @@ -75,9 +75,12 @@ someone sends you some code. Why trust that someone ran all their tests correctly on every change when you can just run them yourself in less time than it takes to read their test log?
How do I use it?
- :doc:`start` - for new users of KUnit
- :doc:`usage` - for a more detailed explanation of KUnit features
- :doc:`api/index` - for the list of KUnit APIs used for testing
+* :doc:`kunit-tool` - for more information on the kunit_tool helper script +* :doc:`faq` - for answers to some common questions about KUnit diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst index 50d46394e97e..949af2da81e5 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst @@ -12,6 +12,13 @@ the Linux kernel as UML (`User Mode Linux http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/`_), running KUnit tests, parsing the test results and displaying them in a user friendly manner.
+kunit_tool addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a +virtual machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a +Linux architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it +compiles the kernel as a standalone Linux executable that can be run like any +other program directly inside of a host operating system. To be clear, it does +not require any virtualization support: it is just a regular program.
What is a kunitconfig?
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst index 4e1d24db6b13..e1c5ce80ce12 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst @@ -9,11 +9,10 @@ Installing dependencies KUnit has the same dependencies as the Linux kernel. As long as you can build the kernel, you can run KUnit.
-KUnit Wrapper
-Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper that helps format the output to -easily use and read KUnit output. It handles building and running the kernel, as -well as formatting the output. +Running tests with the KUnit Wrapper +==================================== +Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper which runs tests under User Mode +Linux, and formats the test results.
The wrapper can be run with:
@@ -21,22 +20,42 @@ The wrapper can be run with:
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --defconfig
-For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) checkout the +For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) check out the :doc:`kunit-tool` page.
Creating a .kunitconfig
-The Python script is a thin wrapper around Kbuild. As such, it needs to be -configured with a ``.kunitconfig`` file. This file essentially contains the -regular Kernel config, with the specific test targets as well.
+----------------------- +If you want to run a specific set of tests (rather than those listed in the +KUnit defconfig), you can provide Kconfig options in the ``.kunitconfig`` file. +This file essentially contains the regular Kernel config, with the specific +test targets as well. The ``.kunitconfig`` should also contain any other config +options required by the tests.
+A good starting point for a ``.kunitconfig`` is the KUnit defconfig: .. code-block:: bash
cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO cp arch/um/configs/kunit_defconfig .kunitconfig
-Verifying KUnit Works
+You can then add any other Kconfig options you wish, e.g.: +.. code-block:: none
CONFIG_LIST_KUNIT_TEST=y
+:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>` will ensure that all config options set in +``.kunitconfig`` are set in the kernel ``.config`` before running the tests. +It'll warn you if you haven't included the dependencies of the options you're +using.
+.. note::
- Note that removing something from the ``.kunitconfig`` will not trigger a
- rebuild of the ``.config`` file: the configuration is only updated if the
- ``.kunitconfig`` is not a subset of ``.config``. This means that you can use
- other tools (such as make menuconfig) to adjust other config options.
+Running the tests +-----------------
To make sure that everything is set up correctly, simply invoke the Python wrapper from your kernel repo: @@ -62,6 +81,41 @@ followed by a list of tests that are run. All of them should be passing. Because it is building a lot of sources for the first time, the ``Building KUnit kernel`` step may take a while.
+Running tests without the KUnit Wrapper +=======================================
+If you'd rather not use the KUnit Wrapper (if, for example, you need to +integrate with other systems, or use an architecture other than UML), KUnit can +be included in any kernel, and the results read out and parsed manually.
+.. note::
- KUnit is not designed for use in a production system, and it's possible that
- tests may reduce the stability or security of the system.
+Configuring the kernel +----------------------
+In order to enable KUnit itself, you simply need to enable the ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` +Kconfig option (it's under Kernel Hacking/Kernel Testing and Coverage in +menuconfig). From there, you can enable any KUnit tests you want: they usually +have config options ending in ``_KUNIT_TEST``.
+KUnit and KUnit tests can be compiled as modules: in this case the tests in a +module will be run when the module is loaded.
+Running the tests +-----------------
+Build and run your kernel as usual. Test output will be written to the kernel +log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format.
+.. note::
- It's possible that there will be other lines and/or data interspersed in the
- TAP output.
Writing your first test
-- 2.25.0.265.gbab2e86ba0-goog
Thanks for responding to the feedback. This looks good to me. I'd give it a "reviewed-by" from me, but it would have to be a weak one since my focus was on the rationale parts, and I haven't tested the detailed instructions for executing the tests.
-- Tim
On 2/12/20 5:00 PM, David Gow wrote:
Remove some of the outmoded "Why KUnit" rationale, and move some UML-specific information to the kunit_tool page. Also update the Getting Started guide to mention running tests without the kunit_tool wrapper.
Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com
Thanks for your comments. I've reinstated the "Why KUnit" section with some minor changes.
Changes since v1[1]:
- Reinstated the "Why Kunit?" section, minus the comparison with other testing frameworks (covered in the FAQ), and the description of UML.
- Moved the description of UML into to kunit_tool page.
- Tidied up the wording around how KUnit is built and run to make it work without the UML description.
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst | 33 ++++---- Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst | 7 ++ Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst | 80 ++++++++++++++++---- 3 files changed, 92 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst index d16a4d2c3a41..ca6cd6dd6ab7 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst @@ -17,14 +17,23 @@ What is KUnit? ============== KUnit is a lightweight unit testing and mocking framework for the Linux kernel. -These tests are able to be run locally on a developer's workstation without a VM -or special hardware. KUnit is heavily inspired by JUnit, Python's unittest.mock, and Googletest/Googlemock for C++. KUnit provides facilities for defining unit test cases, grouping related test cases into test suites, providing common infrastructure for running tests, and much more. +KUnit consists of a kernel component, which provides a set of macros for easily +writing unit tests. Tests written against KUnit will run on kernel boot if +built-in, or when loaded if built as a module. These tests write out results to +the kernel log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format.
+To make running these tests (and reading the results) easier, KUnit offsers
offers
+:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>`, which builds a `User Mode Linux +http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net`_ kernel, runs it, and parses the test +results. This provides a quick way of running KUnit tests during development, +without requiring a virtual machine or separate hardware.
Get started now: :doc:`start` Why KUnit? @@ -36,20 +45,11 @@ allow all possible code paths to be tested in the code under test; this is only possible if the code under test is very small and does not have any external dependencies outside of the test's control like hardware. -Outside of KUnit, there are no testing frameworks currently -available for the kernel that do not require installing the kernel on a test -machine or in a VM and all require tests to be written in userspace running on -the kernel; this is true for Autotest, and kselftest, disqualifying -any of them from being considered unit testing frameworks. +KUnit provides a common framework for unit tests within the kernel. -KUnit addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a virtual -machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a Linux -architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it compiles -to a standalone program that can be run like any other program directly inside -of a host operating system; to be clear, it does not require any virtualization -support; it is just a regular program.
-Alternatively, kunit and kunit tests can be built as modules and tests will +KUnit tests can be run on most kernel configurations, and most tests are
s/kernel configurations/architectures/
+architecture independent. All built-in KUnit tests run on kernel startup. +Alternatively, KUnit and KUnit tests can be built as modules and tests will run when the test module is loaded. KUnit is fast. Excluding build time, from invocation to completion KUnit can run @@ -75,9 +75,12 @@ someone sends you some code. Why trust that someone ran all their tests correctly on every change when you can just run them yourself in less time than it takes to read their test log?
How do I use it?
- :doc:`start` - for new users of KUnit
- :doc:`usage` - for a more detailed explanation of KUnit features
- :doc:`api/index` - for the list of KUnit APIs used for testing
+* :doc:`kunit-tool` - for more information on the kunit_tool helper script +* :doc:`faq` - for answers to some common questions about KUnit diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst index 50d46394e97e..949af2da81e5 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/kunit-tool.rst @@ -12,6 +12,13 @@ the Linux kernel as UML (`User Mode Linux http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/`_), running KUnit tests, parsing the test results and displaying them in a user friendly manner. +kunit_tool addresses the problem of being able to run tests without needing a
This paragraph was moved from index.rst to here (kunit-tool.rst) and the leading word changed from 'KUnit' to 'kunit_tool'.
The previous wording and location are better. The UML kernel can be run without using kunit_tool (and in fact, I have never used kunit_tool to run my KUnit UML kernel).
Stating 'kunit_tool' here is conflating the functionality that KUnit provides with the optional ease of use that kunit_tool provides.
+virtual machine or actual hardware with User Mode Linux. User Mode Linux is a +Linux architecture, like ARM or x86; however, unlike other architectures it +compiles the kernel as a standalone Linux executable that can be run like any +other program directly inside of a host operating system. To be clear, it does +not require any virtualization support: it is just a regular program.
What is a kunitconfig?
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst index 4e1d24db6b13..e1c5ce80ce12 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/start.rst @@ -9,11 +9,10 @@ Installing dependencies KUnit has the same dependencies as the Linux kernel. As long as you can build the kernel, you can run KUnit.
-KUnit Wrapper
-Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper that helps format the output to -easily use and read KUnit output. It handles building and running the kernel, as -well as formatting the output. +Running tests with the KUnit Wrapper +==================================== +Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper which runs tests under User Mode +Linux, and formats the test results. The wrapper can be run with: @@ -21,22 +20,42 @@ The wrapper can be run with: ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --defconfig -For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) checkout the +For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) check out the :doc:`kunit-tool` page. Creating a .kunitconfig -======================= -The Python script is a thin wrapper around Kbuild. As such, it needs to be -configured with a ``.kunitconfig`` file. This file essentially contains the -regular Kernel config, with the specific test targets as well.
+----------------------- +If you want to run a specific set of tests (rather than those listed in the +KUnit defconfig), you can provide Kconfig options in the ``.kunitconfig`` file. +This file essentially contains the regular Kernel config, with the specific +test targets as well. The ``.kunitconfig`` should also contain any other config +options required by the tests.
+A good starting point for a ``.kunitconfig`` is the KUnit defconfig: .. code-block:: bash cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO cp arch/um/configs/kunit_defconfig .kunitconfig
-Verifying KUnit Works
+You can then add any other Kconfig options you wish, e.g.: +.. code-block:: none
CONFIG_LIST_KUNIT_TEST=y
+:doc:`kunit_tool <kunit-tool>` will ensure that all config options set in +``.kunitconfig`` are set in the kernel ``.config`` before running the tests. +It'll warn you if you haven't included the dependencies of the options you're +using.
+.. note::
- Note that removing something from the ``.kunitconfig`` will not trigger a
- rebuild of the ``.config`` file: the configuration is only updated if the
- ``.kunitconfig`` is not a subset of ``.config``. This means that you can use
- other tools (such as make menuconfig) to adjust other config options.
+Running the tests +----------------- To make sure that everything is set up correctly, simply invoke the Python wrapper from your kernel repo: @@ -62,6 +81,41 @@ followed by a list of tests that are run. All of them should be passing. Because it is building a lot of sources for the first time, the ``Building KUnit kernel`` step may take a while. +Running tests without the KUnit Wrapper +=======================================
+If you'd rather not use the KUnit Wrapper (if, for example, you need to +integrate with other systems, or use an architecture other than UML), KUnit can +be included in any kernel, and the results read out and parsed manually.
+.. note::
- KUnit is not designed for use in a production system, and it's possible that
- tests may reduce the stability or security of the system.
+Configuring the kernel +----------------------
+In order to enable KUnit itself, you simply need to enable the ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` +Kconfig option (it's under Kernel Hacking/Kernel Testing and Coverage in +menuconfig). From there, you can enable any KUnit tests you want: they usually +have config options ending in ``_KUNIT_TEST``.
+KUnit and KUnit tests can be compiled as modules: in this case the tests in a +module will be run when the module is loaded.
+Running the tests +-----------------
+Build and run your kernel as usual. Test output will be written to the kernel +log in `TAP https://testanything.org/`_ format.
+.. note::
- It's possible that there will be other lines and/or data interspersed in the
- TAP output.
Writing your first test
Reviewed-by: Frank Rowand frank.rowand@sony.com
linux-kselftest-mirror@lists.linaro.org