On Sun, Oct 6, 2019 at 10:18 AM Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sun, Oct 6, 2019 at 9:55 AM Theodore Y. Ts'o <tytso@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Well, one thing we *can* do is if (a) if we can create a kselftest > > branch which we know is stable and won't change, and (b) we can get > > assurances that Linus *will* accept that branch during the next merge > > window, those subsystems which want to use kself test can simply pull > > it into their tree. > > Yes. > > At the same time, I don't think it needs to be even that fancy. Even > if it's not a stable branch that gets shared between different > developers, it would be good to just have people do a "let's try this" > throw-away branch to use the kunit functionality and verify that > "yeah, this is fairly convenient for ext4". > > It doesn't have to be merged in that form, but just confirmation that > the infrastructure is helpful before it gets merged would be good. I thought we already had done this satisfactorily. We have one proof-of-concept test in the branch in the kselftest repo (proc sysctl test) that went out in the pull request, and we also had some other tests that were not in the pull request (there is the ext4 timestamp stuff mentioned above, and we also had one against the list data structure), which we were planning on sending out for review once Shuah's pull request was accepted. I know the apparmor people also wrote some tests that they said were useful; however, I have not coordinated with them on upstreaming their tests. I know of some other people who are using it, but I don't think the tests are as far along for upstreaming. The point is: I thought we had plenty of signal that KUnit would be useful to have merged into the mainline kernel. I thought the only reason it was rejected for 5.4 was due to the directory name issue combined with bad timing. Please correct me if I missed anything. Thanks!