On 26/10/2020 11.59, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Sun, Oct 25, 2020 at 10:48:38PM +0100, Rasmus Villemoes wrote: >> This is a bit of a mixed bag. >> >> The background is that I have some sort() and list_sort() rework >> planned, but as part of that series I want to extend their their test >> suites somewhat to make sure I don't goof up - and I want to use lots >> of random list lengths with random contents to increase the chance of >> somebody eventually hitting "hey, sort() is broken when the length is >> 3 less than a power of 2 and only the last two elements are out of >> order". But when such a case is hit, it's vitally important that the >> developer can reproduce the exact same test case, which means using a >> deterministic sequence of random numbers. >> >> Since Petr noticed [1] the non-determinism in test_printf in >> connection with Arpitha's work on rewriting it to kunit, this prompted >> me to use test_printf as a first place to apply that principle, and >> get the infrastructure in place that will avoid repeating the "module >> parameter/seed the rnd_state/report the seed used" boilerplate in each >> module. >> >> Shuah, assuming the kselftest_module.h changes are ok, I think it's >> most natural if you carry these patches, though I'd be happy with any >> other route as well. > > Completely in favour of this. > > Reviewed-by: Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Thanks. > One note though. AFAIU the global variables are always being used in the > modules that include the corresponding header. Otherwise we might have an extra > warning(s). I believe you have compiled with W=1 to exclude other cases. Yes, I unconditionally define the two new variables. gcc doesn't warn about them being unused, since they are referenced from inside a if (0) {} block. And when those references are the only ones, gcc is smart enough to elide the static variables completely, so they don't even take up space in .data (or .init.data) - you can verify by running nm on test_printf.o and test_bitmap.o - the former has 'seed' and 'rnd_state' symbols, the latter does not. I did it that way to reduce the need for explicit preprocessor conditionals inside C functions. Rasmus