Adding Maciej. On Fri, 9 Aug 2024, Muhammad Usama Anjum wrote: > On 8/9/24 12:23 PM, Ilpo Järvinen wrote: > > On Fri, 9 Aug 2024, Muhammad Usama Anjum wrote: > > > >> This test doesn't have support for other architectures. Altough resctrl > >> is supported on x86 and ARM, but arch_supports_noncont_cat() shows that > >> only x86 for AMD and Intel are supported by the test. > > > > One does not follow from the other. arch_supports_noncont_cat() is only > > small part of the tests so saying "This test" based on a small subset of > > all tests is bogus. Also, I don't see any reason why ARCH_ARM could not be > > added and arch_supports_noncont_cat() adapted accordingly. > I'm not familiar with resctrl and the architectural part of it. Feel > free to fix it and ignore this patch. > > If more things are missing than just adjusting > arch_supports_noncont_cat(), the test should be turned off until proper > support is added to the test. > > >> We get build > >> errors when built for ARM and ARM64. > > > > As this seems the real reason, please quote any errors when you use them > > as justification so it can be reviewed if the reasoning is sound or not. > > CC resctrl_tests > In file included from resctrl.h:24, > from cat_test.c:11: > In function 'arch_supports_noncont_cat', > inlined from 'noncont_cat_run_test' at cat_test.c:323:6: > ../kselftest.h:74:9: error: impossible constraint in 'asm' > 74 | __asm__ __volatile__ ("cpuid\n\t" > \ > | ^~~~~~~ > cat_test.c:301:17: note: in expansion of macro '__cpuid_count' > 301 | __cpuid_count(0x10, 1, eax, ebx, ecx, edx); > | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~ > ../kselftest.h:74:9: error: impossible constraint in 'asm' > 74 | __asm__ __volatile__ ("cpuid\n\t" > \ > | ^~~~~~~ > cat_test.c:303:17: note: in expansion of macro '__cpuid_count' > 303 | __cpuid_count(0x10, 2, eax, ebx, ecx, edx); > | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~ Okay, so it's specific to lack of CPUID. This seems a kselftest common level problem to me, since __cpuid_count() is provided in kselftest.h. Shuah (or others), what is the intended mechanism for selftests to know if it can be used or not since as is, it's always defined? I see some Makefiles use compile testing a trivial program to decide whether they build some x86_64 tests or not. Is that what should be done here too, test if __cpuid_count() compiles or not (and then build some #ifdeffery based on the result of that compile testing)? -- i.