On Sat, Jul 2, 2022 at 6:33 AM Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Jul 01, 2022 at 04:47:44PM +0800, David Gow wrote: > > Make any kselftest test module (using the kselftest_module framework) > > taint the kernel with TAINT_TEST on module load. > > > > Note that several selftests use kernel modules which are not based on > > the kselftest_module framework, and so will not automatically taint the > > kernel. > > > > This can be done in two ways: > > - Moving the module to the tools/testing directory. All modules under > > this directory will taint the kernel. > > - Adding the 'test' module property with: > > MODULE_INFO(test, "Y") > > This just needs to be documented somewhere other than a commit log. > Otherwise I am not sure how we can be sure it will catch on. I've updated the kselftest documentation for v5. > > Similarly, selftests which do not load modules into the kernel generally > > should not taint the kernel (or possibly should only do so on failure), > > as it's assumed that testing from user-space should be safe. Regardless, > > they can write to /proc/sys/kernel/tainted if required. > > > > Signed-off-by: David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Looks good otherwise! > > Reviewed-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Do we want this to go through selftest / kunit / modules tree? > Happy for it to through any. I can't predict a conflict. I don't mind which tree it goes through either -- I'm not aware of anything which would depend on it. I do have it on the list of things pending for the KUnit tree, but it's much less KUnit-specific now compared to v1. Regardless, I'll leave in the KUnit to-do list, and we'll pick it up if no-one else particularly wants to. Cheers, -- David