| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ========================== |
| Frequently Asked Questions |
| ========================== |
| |
| How is this different from Autotest, kselftest, etc? |
| ==================================================== |
| KUnit is a unit testing framework. Autotest, kselftest (and some others) are |
| not. |
| |
| A `unit test <https://martinfowler.com/bliki/UnitTest.html>`_ is supposed to |
| test a single unit of code in isolation, hence the name. A unit test should be |
| the finest granularity of testing and as such should allow all possible code |
| paths to be tested in the code under test; this is only possible if the code |
| under test is very small and does not have any external dependencies outside of |
| the test's control like hardware. |
| |
| There are no testing frameworks currently available for the kernel that do not |
| require installing the kernel on a test machine or in a VM and all require |
| tests to be written in userspace and run on the kernel under test; this is true |
| for Autotest, kselftest, and some others, disqualifying any of them from being |
| considered unit testing frameworks. |
| |
| Does KUnit support running on architectures other than UML? |
| =========================================================== |
| |
| Yes, well, mostly. |
| |
| For the most part, the KUnit core framework (what you use to write the tests) |
| can compile to any architecture; it compiles like just another part of the |
| kernel and runs when the kernel boots, or when built as a module, when the |
| module is loaded. However, there is some infrastructure, |
| like the KUnit Wrapper (``tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py``) that does not support |
| other architectures. |
| |
| In short, this means that, yes, you can run KUnit on other architectures, but |
| it might require more work than using KUnit on UML. |
| |
| For more information, see :ref:`kunit-on-non-uml`. |
| |
| What is the difference between a unit test and these other kinds of tests? |
| ========================================================================== |
| Most existing tests for the Linux kernel would be categorized as an integration |
| test, or an end-to-end test. |
| |
| - A unit test is supposed to test a single unit of code in isolation, hence the |
| name. A unit test should be the finest granularity of testing and as such |
| should allow all possible code paths to be tested in the code under test; this |
| is only possible if the code under test is very small and does not have any |
| external dependencies outside of the test's control like hardware. |
| - An integration test tests the interaction between a minimal set of components, |
| usually just two or three. For example, someone might write an integration |
| test to test the interaction between a driver and a piece of hardware, or to |
| test the interaction between the userspace libraries the kernel provides and |
| the kernel itself; however, one of these tests would probably not test the |
| entire kernel along with hardware interactions and interactions with the |
| userspace. |
| - An end-to-end test usually tests the entire system from the perspective of the |
| code under test. For example, someone might write an end-to-end test for the |
| kernel by installing a production configuration of the kernel on production |
| hardware with a production userspace and then trying to exercise some behavior |
| that depends on interactions between the hardware, the kernel, and userspace. |
| |
| KUnit isn't working, what should I do? |
| ====================================== |
| |
| Unfortunately, there are a number of things which can break, but here are some |
| things to try. |
| |
| 1. Try running ``./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run`` with the ``--raw_output`` |
| parameter. This might show details or error messages hidden by the kunit_tool |
| parser. |
| 2. Instead of running ``kunit.py run``, try running ``kunit.py config``, |
| ``kunit.py build``, and ``kunit.py exec`` independently. This can help track |
| down where an issue is occurring. (If you think the parser is at fault, you |
| can run it manually against stdin or a file with ``kunit.py parse``.) |
| 3. Running the UML kernel directly can often reveal issues or error messages |
| kunit_tool ignores. This should be as simple as running ``./vmlinux`` after |
| building the UML kernel (e.g., by using ``kunit.py build``). Note that UML |
| has some unusual requirements (such as the host having a tmpfs filesystem |
| mounted), and has had issues in the past when built statically and the host |
| has KASLR enabled. (On older host kernels, you may need to run ``setarch |
| `uname -m` -R ./vmlinux`` to disable KASLR.) |
| 4. Make sure the kernel .config has ``CONFIG_KUNIT=y`` and at least one test |
| (e.g. ``CONFIG_KUNIT_EXAMPLE_TEST=y``). kunit_tool will keep its .config |
| around, so you can see what config was used after running ``kunit.py run``. |
| It also preserves any config changes you might make, so you can |
| enable/disable things with ``make ARCH=um menuconfig`` or similar, and then |
| re-run kunit_tool. |
| 5. Try to run ``make ARCH=um defconfig`` before running ``kunit.py run``. This |
| may help clean up any residual config items which could be causing problems. |
| 6. Finally, try running KUnit outside UML. KUnit and KUnit tests can be |
| built into any kernel, or can be built as a module and loaded at runtime. |
| Doing so should allow you to determine if UML is causing the issue you're |
| seeing. When tests are built-in, they will execute when the kernel boots, and |
| modules will automatically execute associated tests when loaded. Test results |
| can be collected from ``/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test suite>/results``, and |
| can be parsed with ``kunit.py parse``. For more details, see "KUnit on |
| non-UML architectures" in :doc:`usage`. |
| |
| If none of the above tricks help, you are always welcome to email any issues to |
| kunit-dev@googlegroups.com. |