On 3/11/23 00:42, David Gow wrote: > On Sat, 11 Mar 2023 at 07:34, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Quoting David Gow (2023-03-10 00:09:48) >>> On Fri, 10 Mar 2023 at 07:19, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> Hmm. I think you're suggesting that the unit test data be loaded >>>> whenever CONFIG_OF=y and CONFIG_KUNIT=y. Then tests can check for >>>> CONFIG_OF and skip if it isn't enabled? >>>> >>> >>> More of the opposite: that we should have some way of supporting tests >>> which might want to use a DTB other than the built-in one. Mostly for >>> non-UML situations where an actual devicetree is needed to even boot >>> far enough to get test output (so we wouldn't be able to override it >>> with a compiled-in test one). >> >> Ok, got it. >> >>> >>> I think moving to overlays probably will render this idea obsolete: >>> but the thought was to give test code a way to check for the required >>> devicetree nodes at runtime, and skip the test if they weren't found. >>> That way, the failure mode for trying to boot this on something which >>> required another device tree for, e.g., serial, would be "these tests >>> are skipped because the wrong device tree is loaded", not "I get no >>> output because serial isn't working". >>> >>> Again, though, it's only really needed for non-UML, and just loading >>> overlays as needed should be much more sensible anyway. >> >> I still have one niggle here. Loading overlays requires >> CONFIG_OF_OVERLAY, and the overlay loading API returns -ENOTSUPP when >> CONFIG_OF_OVERLAY=n. For now I'm checking for the config being enabled >> in each test, but I'm thinking it may be better to simply call >> kunit_skip() from the overlay loading function if the config is >> disabled. This way tests can simply call the overlay loading function >> and we'll halt the test immediately if the config isn't enabled. >> > > That sounds sensible, though there is a potential pitfall. If > kunit_skip() is called directly from overlay code, might introduce a > dependency on kunit.ko from the DT overlay, which we might not want. > The solution there is either to have a kunit wrapper function (so the > call is already in kunit.ko), or to have a hook to skip the current > test (which probably makes sense to do anyway, but I think the wrapper > is the better option). > > >>> >>>>> >>>>> That being said, I do think that there's probably some sense in >>>>> supporting the compiled-in DTB as well (it's definitely simpler than >>>>> patching kunit.py to always pass the extra command-line option in, for >>>>> example). >>>>> But maybe it'd be nice to have the command-line option override the >>>>> built-in one if present. >>>> >>>> Got it. I need to test loading another DTB on the commandline still, but >>>> I think this won't be a problem. We'll load the unittest-data DTB even >>>> with KUnit on UML, so assuming that works on UML right now it should be >>>> unchanged by this series once I resend. >>> >>> Again, moving to overlays should render this mostly obsolete, no? Or >>> am I misunderstanding how the overlay stuff will work? >> >> Right, overlays make it largely a moot issue. The way the OF unit tests >> work today is by grafting a DTB onto the live tree. I'm reusing that >> logic to graft a container node target for kunit tests to add their >> overlays too. It will be clearer once I post v2. >> >>> >>> One possible future advantage of being able to test with custom DTs at >>> boot time would be for fuzzing (provide random DT properties, see what >>> happens in the test). We've got some vague plans to support a way of >>> passing custom data to tests to support this kind of case (though, if >>> we're using overlays, maybe the test could just patch those if we >>> wanted to do that). >> >> Ah ok. I can see someone making a fuzzer that modifies devicetree >> properties randomly, e.g. using different strings for clock-names. >> >> This reminds me of another issue I ran into. I wanted to test adding the >> same platform device to the platform bus twice to confirm that the >> second device can't be added. That prints a warning, which makes >> kunit.py think that the test has failed because it printed a warning. Is >> there some way to avoid that? I want something like >> >> KUNIT_EXPECT_WARNING(test, <call some function>) >> >> so I can test error cases. DT unittests already have a similar concept. A test can report that a kernel warning (or any other specific text) either (1) must occur for the test to pass or (2) must _not_ occur for the test to pass. The check for the kernel warning is done by the test output parsing program scripts/dtc/of_unittest_expect. The reporting by a test of an expected error in drivers/of/unittest.c is done by EXPECT_BEGIN() and EXPECT_END(). These have been in unittest for a long time. The reporting by a test of a not expected to occur error is done by EXPECT_NOT_BEGIN() and EXPECT_NOT_END(). These are added to unittest in linux 6.3-rc1. I discussed this concept in one of the early TAP / KTAP discussion threads and expect to start a discussion thread on this specific topic in the KTAP Specification V2 context. I expect the discussion to result in a different implementation than what DT unittests are using (bike shedding likely to ensue) but whatever is agreed to should be easy for DT to switch to. > > Hmm... I'd've thought that shouldn't be a problem: kunit.py should > ignore most messages during a test, unless it can't find a valid > result line. What does the raw KTAP output look like? (You can get it > from kunit.py by passing the --raw_output option). > > That being said, a KUNIT_EXPECT_LOG_MESSAGE() or similar is something > we've wanted for a while. I think that the KASAN folks have been > working on something similar using console tracepoints: > https://lore.kernel.org/all/ebf96ea600050f00ed567e80505ae8f242633640.1666113393.git.andreyknvl@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > Cheers, > -- David