On Tue, Dec 05, 2023 at 03:31:33PM +0800, davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Tests for drivers often require a struct device to pass to other > functions. While it's possible to create these with > root_device_register(), or to use something like a platform device, this > is both a misuse of those APIs, and can be difficult to clean up after, > for example, a failed assertion. > > Add some KUnit-specific functions for registering and unregistering a > struct device: > - kunit_device_register() > - kunit_device_register_with_driver() > - kunit_device_unregister() > > These helpers allocate a on a 'kunit' bus which will either probe the > driver passed in (kunit_device_register_with_driver), or will create a > stub driver (kunit_device_register) which is cleaned up on test shutdown. > > Devices are automatically unregistered on test shutdown, but can be > manually unregistered earlier with kunit_device_unregister() in order > to, for example, test device release code. At first glance, nice work. But looks like 0-day doesn't like it that much, so I'll wait for the next version to review it properly. One nit I did notice: > +// For internal use only -- registers the kunit_bus. > +int kunit_bus_init(void); Put stuff like this in a local .h file, don't pollute the include/linux/ files for things that you do not want any other part of the kernel to call. > +/** > + * kunit_device_register_with_driver() - Create a struct device for use in KUnit tests > + * @test: The test context object. > + * @name: The name to give the created device. > + * @drv: The struct device_driver to associate with the device. > + * > + * Creates a struct kunit_device (which is a struct device) with the given > + * name, and driver. The device will be cleaned up on test exit, or when > + * kunit_device_unregister is called. See also kunit_device_register, if you > + * wish KUnit to create and manage a driver for you > + */ > +struct device *kunit_device_register_with_driver(struct kunit *test, > + const char *name, > + struct device_driver *drv); Shouldn't "struct device_driver *" be a constant pointer? But really, why is this a "raw" device_driver pointer and not a pointer to the driver type for your bus? Oh heck, let's point out the other issues as I'm already here... > @@ -7,7 +7,8 @@ kunit-objs += test.o \ > assert.o \ > try-catch.o \ > executor.o \ > - attributes.o > + attributes.o \ > + device.o Shouldn't this file be "bus.c" as you are creating a kunit bus? > > ifeq ($(CONFIG_KUNIT_DEBUGFS),y) > kunit-objs += debugfs.o > diff --git a/lib/kunit/device.c b/lib/kunit/device.c > new file mode 100644 > index 000000000000..93ace1a2297d > --- /dev/null > +++ b/lib/kunit/device.c > @@ -0,0 +1,176 @@ > +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 > +/* > + * KUnit basic device implementation "basic bus/driver implementation", not device, right? > + * > + * Implementation of struct kunit_device helpers. > + * > + * Copyright (C) 2023, Google LLC. > + * Author: David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> > + */ > + > +#include <linux/device.h> > + > +#include <kunit/test.h> > +#include <kunit/device.h> > +#include <kunit/resource.h> > + > + > +/* Wrappers for use with kunit_add_action() */ > +KUNIT_DEFINE_ACTION_WRAPPER(device_unregister_wrapper, device_unregister, struct device *); > +KUNIT_DEFINE_ACTION_WRAPPER(driver_unregister_wrapper, driver_unregister, struct device_driver *); > + > +static struct device kunit_bus = { > + .init_name = "kunit" > +}; A static device as a bus? This feels wrong, what is it for? And where does this live? If you _REALLY_ want a single device for the root of your bus (which is a good idea), then make it a dynamic variable (as it is reference counted), NOT a static struct device which should not be done if at all possible. > + > +/* A device owned by a KUnit test. */ > +struct kunit_device { > + struct device dev; > + struct kunit *owner; > + /* Force binding to a specific driver. */ > + struct device_driver *driver; > + /* The driver is managed by KUnit and unique to this device. */ > + bool cleanup_driver; > +}; Wait, why isn't your "kunit" device above a struct kunit_device structure? Why is it ok to be a "raw" struct device (hint, that's almost never a good idea.) > +static inline struct kunit_device *to_kunit_device(struct device *d) > +{ > + return container_of(d, struct kunit_device, dev); container_of_const()? And to use that properly, why not make this a #define? > +} > + > +static int kunit_bus_match(struct device *dev, struct device_driver *driver) > +{ > + struct kunit_device *kunit_dev = to_kunit_device(dev); > + > + if (kunit_dev->driver == driver) > + return 1; > + > + return 0; I don't understand, what are you trying to match here? > +} > + > +static struct bus_type kunit_bus_type = { > + .name = "kunit", > + .match = kunit_bus_match > +}; > + > +int kunit_bus_init(void) > +{ > + int error; > + > + error = bus_register(&kunit_bus_type); > + if (!error) { > + error = device_register(&kunit_bus); > + if (error) > + bus_unregister(&kunit_bus_type); > + } > + return error; > +} > +late_initcall(kunit_bus_init); > + > +static void kunit_device_release(struct device *d) > +{ > + kfree(to_kunit_device(d)); > +} > + > +struct device_driver *kunit_driver_create(struct kunit *test, const char *name) > +{ > + struct device_driver *driver; > + int err = -ENOMEM; > + > + driver = kunit_kzalloc(test, sizeof(*driver), GFP_KERNEL); > + > + if (!driver) > + return ERR_PTR(err); > + > + driver->name = name; > + driver->bus = &kunit_bus_type; > + driver->owner = THIS_MODULE; > + > + err = driver_register(driver); > + if (err) { > + kunit_kfree(test, driver); > + return ERR_PTR(err); > + } > + > + kunit_add_action(test, driver_unregister_wrapper, driver); > + return driver; > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(kunit_driver_create); > + > +struct kunit_device *__kunit_device_register_internal(struct kunit *test, > + const char *name, > + struct device_driver *drv) > +{ > + struct kunit_device *kunit_dev; > + int err = -ENOMEM; > + > + kunit_dev = kzalloc(sizeof(struct kunit_device), GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!kunit_dev) > + return ERR_PTR(err); > + > + kunit_dev->owner = test; > + > + err = dev_set_name(&kunit_dev->dev, "%s.%s", test->name, name); > + if (err) { > + kfree(kunit_dev); > + return ERR_PTR(err); > + } > + > + /* Set the expected driver pointer, so we match. */ > + kunit_dev->driver = drv; Ah, so this is the match function to pass above? If so, why do you need it at all? > + > + kunit_dev->dev.release = kunit_device_release; > + kunit_dev->dev.bus = &kunit_bus_type; > + kunit_dev->dev.parent = &kunit_bus; > + > + err = device_register(&kunit_dev->dev); > + if (err) { > + put_device(&kunit_dev->dev); > + return ERR_PTR(err); > + } > + > + kunit_add_action(test, device_unregister_wrapper, &kunit_dev->dev); > + > + return kunit_dev; > +} > + > +struct device *kunit_device_register_with_driver(struct kunit *test, > + const char *name, > + struct device_driver *drv) > +{ > + struct kunit_device *kunit_dev = __kunit_device_register_internal(test, name, drv); > + > + if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(kunit_dev)) This is almost always a sign that something is wrong with the api. > + return (struct device *)kunit_dev; /* This is an error or NULL, so is compatible */ Ick, the cast is odd, are you sure you need it? Why would you return a struct device and not a kunit_device() anyway? > + > + return &kunit_dev->dev; Again, why this type, why not use the real type you have? thanks, greg k-h