On Thu, 16 May 2024 09:26:33 +0530 Dev Jain <dev.jain@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Post FEAT_LPA2, Aarch64 extends the 4KB and 16KB translation granule to > large virtual addresses. Currently, the test is being skipped for said > granule sizes, because the page sizes have been statically defined; to > work around that would mean breaking the nice array of structs used for > adding testcases. Which array is that? testcases[]? If so, we could keep if fairly nice by doing the array population at runtime. Something like: static struct testcase *testcases; static void init_thing() { struct testcase t[] = { ... }; testcases = malloc(sizeof(t)); memcpy(testcases, t, sizeof(t)); } > > +#if defined(__aarch64__) > +void failure_message(void) > +{ > + printf("TEST MAY FAIL: Are you running on a pagesize other than 64K?\n"); > + printf("If yes, please change macros manually. Ensure to change the\n"); > + printf("address macros too if running defconfig on 16K pagesize,\n"); > + printf("since userspace VA = 47 bits post FEAT_LPA2.\n"); > +} > +#else > +void failure_message(void) {} > +#endif > + > int main(int argc, char **argv) > { > int ret; > @@ -308,5 +320,8 @@ int main(int argc, char **argv) > ret = run_test(testcases, ARRAY_SIZE(testcases)); > if (argc == 2 && !strcmp(argv[1], "--run-hugetlb")) > ret = run_test(hugetlb_testcases, ARRAY_SIZE(hugetlb_testcases)); > + > + if (ret) > + failure_message(); > return ret; > } This seems rather lame :(. It would be nice to fix this for once and for all.