The import was working around the fact "tuple[T]" was used instead of typing.Tuple[T]. Convert it to use type.Tuple to be consistent with how the rest of the code is anotated. Signed-off-by: Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@xxxxxxxxxx> --- tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py | 6 ++---- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py index e1951fa60027..5987d5b1b874 100644 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_kernel.py @@ -6,15 +6,13 @@ # Author: Felix Guo <felixguoxiuping@xxxxxxxxx> # Author: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@xxxxxxxxxx> -from __future__ import annotations import importlib.util import logging import subprocess import os import shutil import signal -from typing import Iterator -from typing import Optional +from typing import Iterator, Optional, Tuple from contextlib import ExitStack @@ -208,7 +206,7 @@ def get_source_tree_ops(arch: str, cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> LinuxSourceT raise ConfigError(arch + ' is not a valid arch') def get_source_tree_ops_from_qemu_config(config_path: str, - cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> tuple[ + cross_compile: Optional[str]) -> Tuple[ str, LinuxSourceTreeOperations]: # The module name/path has very little to do with where the actual file # exists (I learned this through experimentation and could not find it base-commit: 87c9c16317882dd6dbbc07e349bc3223e14f3244 -- 2.32.0.93.g670b81a890-goog