On 2/29/24 2:20 PM, Guillaume Tucker wrote:
Hello,
On 28/02/2024 23:55, Helen Koike wrote:
Dear Kernel Community,
This patch introduces a `.gitlab-ci` file along with a `ci/` folder, defining a
basic test pipeline triggered by code pushes to a GitLab-CI instance. This
initial version includes static checks (checkpatch and smatch for now) and build
tests across various architectures and configurations. It leverages an
integrated cache for efficient build times and introduces a flexible 'scenarios'
mechanism for subsystem-specific extensions.
This sounds like a nice starting point to me as an additional way
to run tests upstream. I have one particular question as I see a
pattern through the rest of the email, please see below.
[...]
4. **Collaborative Testing Environment:** The kernel community is already
engaged in numerous testing efforts, including various GitLab-CI pipelines such
as DRM-CI, which I maintain, along with other solutions like KernelCI and
BPF-CI. This proposal is designed to further stimulate contributions to the
evolving testing landscape. Our goal is to establish a comprehensive suite of
common tools and files.
[...]
**Leveraging External Test Labs:**
We can extend our testing to external labs, similar to what DRM-CI currently
does. This includes:
- Lava labs
- Bare metal labs
- Using KernelCI-provided labs
**Other integrations**
- Submit results to KCIDB
[...]
**Join Our Slack Channel:**
We have a Slack channel, #gitlab-ci, on the KernelCI Slack instance https://kernelci.slack.com/ .
Feel free to join and contribute to the conversation. The KernelCI team has
weekly calls where we also discuss the GitLab-CI pipeline.
**Acknowledgments:**
A special thanks to Nikolai Kondrashov, Tales da Aparecida - both from Red Hat -
and KernelCI community for their valuable feedback and support in this proposal.
Where does this fit on the KernelCI roadmap?
I see it mentioned a few times but it's not entirely clear
whether this initiative is an independent one or in some way
linked to KernelCI. Say, are you planning to use the kci tool,
new API, compiler toolchains, user-space and Docker images etc?
Or, are KernelCI plans evolving to follow this move?
I would say this is an important part of KernelCI the project, considering its
aim to improve testing and CI in the kernel. It's not a part of KernelCI the
service as it is right now, although I would say it would be good to have
ability to submit KernelCI jobs from GitLab CI and pull results in the same
pipeline, as we discussed earlier.
Nick