Re: [PATCH] Documentation: Kunit: Update architecture.rst for minor fixes

From: Bagas Sanjaya
Date: Tue Oct 11 2022 - 05:51:58 EST


On 10/11/22 00:13, Sadiya Kazi wrote:
> The kernel testing library supports KUnit tests written in C using
> -KUnit. KUnit tests are kernel code. KUnit does several things:
> +KUnit. KUnit tests are written in the kernel code. KUnit performs the following
> +tasks:
>

What about "The kernel testing library supports KUnit tests, which are
written in ordinary kernel code."?

> - Organizes tests
> - Reports test results
> @@ -22,8 +23,8 @@ KUnit. KUnit tests are kernel code. KUnit does several things:
> Test Cases
> ----------
>
> -The fundamental unit in KUnit is the test case. The KUnit test cases are
> -grouped into KUnit suites. A KUnit test case is a function with type
> +The test case is the fundamental unit in KUnit. KUnit test cases are organised
> +into suites. A KUnit test case is a function with type

"which is organized into a test suite".

> The KUnit executor can list and run built-in KUnit tests on boot.
> The Test suites are stored in a linker section
> -called ``.kunit_test_suites``. For code, see:
> +called ``.kunit_test_suites``. For code, see the following link:
> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.h?h=v5.15#n945.

Instead of link to torvalds's tree, just say "See ``include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.h``
for the full code".

> On the kernel boot, the KUnit executor uses the start and end addresses
> -of this section to iterate over and run all tests. For code, see:
> -https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/lib/kunit/executor.c
> +of this section to iterate over and run all tests. For code, see the following link:
> +https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/lib/kunit/executor.c.
>

Same reply above.

> In KUnit tests, some error classes do not affect other tests
> or parts of the kernel, each KUnit case executes in a separate thread
> -context. For code, see:
> +context. For code, see the following link:
> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/lib/kunit/try-catch.c?h=v5.15#n58
>

Same reply above.

> Assertion Macros
> ----------------
>
> -KUnit tests verify state using expectations/assertions.
> +KUnit tests verify the state using expectations/assertions.
> All expectations/assertions are formatted as:
> ``KUNIT_{EXPECT|ASSERT}_<op>[_MSG](kunit, property[, message])``
>
> - ``{EXPECT|ASSERT}`` determines whether the check is an assertion or an
> expectation.
>
> - - For an expectation, if the check fails, marks the test as failed
> + - For an expectation, if the check fails, it marks the test as failed
> and logs the failure.
>
> - An assertion, on failure, causes the test case to terminate
> immediately.

Better say:

```
In case of failure, there are differences on testing flow:

- For expectations, the test is marked as failed and the failure is logged.
- On the other hand, failing assertions cause the test case to be
immediately terminated.
```

> -kunit_tool (Command Line Test Harness)
> +kunit_tool (Command-line Test Harness)
> ======================================
>
> -kunit_tool is a Python script ``(tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py)``
> -that can be used to configure, build, exec, parse and run (runs other
> -commands in order) test results. You can either run KUnit tests using
> -kunit_tool or can include KUnit in kernel and parse manually.
> +``kunit_tool`` is a Python script, found in ``tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py``. It
> +is used to configure, build, execute, parse, and run (other commands in order)
> +test results. You have two options for running KUnit tests: either include KUnit
> +in the kernel and parse manually, or use the ``kunit_tool``.
> > - ``configure`` command generates the kernel ``.config`` from a
> ``.kunitconfig`` file (and any architecture-specific options).
> - For some architectures, additional config options are specified in the
> - ``qemu_config`` Python script
> - (For example: ``tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/powerpc.py``).
> + The Python script available in ``qemu_configs`` folder
> + (for example, ``tools/testing/kunit/qemu configs/powerpc.py``) contains
> + additional configuration options for specific architectures.
> It parses both the existing ``.config`` and the ``.kunitconfig`` files
> - and ensures that ``.config`` is a superset of ``.kunitconfig``.
> - If this is not the case, it will combine the two and run
> - ``make olddefconfig`` to regenerate the ``.config`` file. It then
> - verifies that ``.config`` is now a superset. This checks if all
> - Kconfig dependencies are correctly specified in ``.kunitconfig``.
> - ``kunit_config.py`` includes the parsing Kconfigs code. The code which
> - runs ``make olddefconfig`` is a part of ``kunit_kernel.py``. You can
> - invoke this command via: ``./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py config`` and
> + to ensure that ``.config`` is a superset of ``.kunitconfig``.
> + If not, it will combine the two and execute ``make olddefconfig`` to regenerate
> + the ``.config`` file. It then checks to see if ``.config`` has become a superset.
> + This verifies that all the Kconfig dependencies are correctly specified in the file
> + ``.kunitconfig``. The
> + ``kunit_config.py`` script contains the code for parsing Kconfigs. The code which
> + runs ``make olddefconfig`` is part of the ``kunit_kernel.py`` script. You can
> + invoke this command through: ``./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py config`` and
> generate a ``.config`` file.
> - ``build`` runs ``make`` on the kernel tree with required options
> (depends on the architecture and some options, for example: build_dir)
> @@ -184,8 +188,8 @@ kunit_tool or can include KUnit in kernel and parse manually.
> To build a KUnit kernel from the current ``.config``, you can use the
> ``build`` argument: ``./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py build``.
> - ``exec`` command executes kernel results either directly (using
> - User-mode Linux configuration), or via an emulator such
> - as QEMU. It reads results from the log via standard
> + User-mode Linux configuration), or through an emulator such
> + as QEMU. It reads results from the log using standard
> output (stdout), and passes them to ``parse`` to be parsed.
> If you already have built a kernel with built-in KUnit tests,
> you can run the kernel and display the test results with the ``exec``

The kunit_tool description above is redundant. Instead, just say "For
the documentation on using kunit_tool, see
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst".

Thanks.

--
An old man doll... just what I always wanted! - Clara