Re: [PATCH] docs/kselftest: clarify running mainline tests on stables

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Hi Reinette,

On 1/31/22 12:37 PM, Reinette Chatre wrote:
Hi Shuah,

On 1/26/2022 12:13 PM, Shuah Khan wrote:
Update the document to clarifiy support for running mainline
kselftest on stable releases and the reasons for not removing
test code that can test older kernels.

Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
  Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst | 8 ++++++++
  1 file changed, 8 insertions(+)

diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst
index dcefee707ccd..a833ecf12fbc 100644
--- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst
+++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst
@@ -7,6 +7,14 @@ directory. These are intended to be small tests to exercise individual code
  paths in the kernel. Tests are intended to be run after building, installing
  and booting a kernel.
+Kselftest from mainline can be run on older stable kernels. Running tests
+from mainline offers the best coverage. Several test rings run mainline
+kselftest suite on stable releases. The reason is that when a new test
+gets added to test existing code to regression test a bug, we should be
+able to run that test on an older kernel. Hence, it is important to keep
+code that can still test an older kernel and make sure it skips the test
+gracefully on newer releases.
+
  You can find additional information on Kselftest framework, how to
  write new tests using the framework on Kselftest wiki:

(My apologies if this is already documented, I was not able to find this guidance
in Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst nor when looking at the
"Kselftest use-cases..." slides linked from https://kselftest.wiki.kernel.org/)

Could you please clarify what the requirement/expectation is regarding fixes
to tests? Since the recommendation in the above change is that Kselftest from
mainline should be run on older stable kernels, is it required to backport
fixes to the tests themselves to stable kernels?


Couple of things to consider.

- A new test gets added to regression test a bug in stable and mainline
- A new test gets added to test a kernel module/feature/API that has been
  supported by stable and mainline releases

In both of these cases, running mainline kselftest on stables gives you the
best coverage.

Kselftest fixes get pulled into stables like any other kernel fixes. If a few
fixes are missing, it is a good idea to back-port if they fall into above two
categories. If the test is for a new feature then, it doesn't make sense to
back-port.

Hope this is helpful.

thanks,
-- Shuah





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