On Mon, Dec 11, 2023 at 05:32:16PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote: > On 11.12.23 17:15, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote: > > Ok, I was updating my headers and that's why I could not reproduce it. > > David, should the test be modified to handle old linux headers > > (disable the new tests #ifndef _UFFDIO_MOVE or some other way)? > That's an open question: do we want to be able to build selftests against > any host headers, and not the in-tree headers that have to be manually > installed and dirty the git tree? Quite a lot of existing selftests rely on the headers being installed to build... > One obvious drawbacks is that we'll have to deal with all that using a bunch > of #ifdef, and the tests that will be built+run will depend on the host > headers. > Especially the letter is relevant I think: Our upstream testing won't be > able to build+run tests that rely on new upstream features. But that's what > some key benefit of these selftests, and being able to run them > automatically on a bunch of different combinations upstream. ...for exactly this reason. It causes real pain testing new interfaces. > Further, the tests are closely related to the given kernel version, they are > not some completely separate tests. Note that there's a general desire for the tests to *run* with older kernels and use whatever feature test mechanisms exist to skip tests that won't run. That's often needed anyway for configurable things. > (3) avoids dirtying the tree as a "make headers_install" would, but it also > means that each test that makes use of new uapi has to update the relevant > headers (what people working on QEMU are used to). Note that you can do an out of tree build to avoid dirtying things.
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