On Wed, May 04, 2022 at 02:19:59PM -0500, Daniel Latypov wrote: > On Wed, May 4, 2022 at 1:46 PM Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > OK so, we can just skip tainting considerations for selftests which > > don't use modules for now. There may be selftests which do wonky > > things in userspace but indeed I agree the userspace taint would > > be better for those but I don't think it may be worth bother > > worrying about those at this point in time. > > > > But my point in that sharing a taint between kunit / selftests modules > > does make sense and is easily possible. The unfortunate aspect is just > > Yes, I 100% agree that we should share a taint for kernelspace testing > from both kunit/kselftest. > Someone running the system won't care what framework was used. OK do you mind doing the nasty work of manually adding the new MODULE_TAINT() to the selftests as part of your effort? *Alternatively*, if we *moved* all sefltests modules to a new lib/debug/selftests/ directory or something like that then t would seem modpost *could* add the taint flag automagically for us without having to edit or require it on new drivers. We have similar type of taint for staging, see add_staging_flag(). I would *highly* prefer this approach, event though it is more work, because I think this is a step we should take anyway. However, I just checked modules on lib/ and well, some of them are already in their own directory, like lib/math/test_div64.c. So not sure, maybe just move a few modules which are just in lib/*.c for now and then just sprinkle the MODULE_TAINT() to the others? > > that selftests don't have a centralized runner, because I can just > > run tools/testing/selftests/sysctl/sysctl.sh for example and that's it. > > So I think we have no other option but to just add the module info > > manually for selftests at this time. > > Somewhat tangential: there's a number of other test modules that > aren't explicitly part of kselftest. Oh interesting, like which one? > Long-term, I think most of them should be converted to kselftest or > kunit as appropriate, so they'll get taken care of eventually. Makes sense. Luis