docs: rust: Add rusttest info

Searching the Rust kernel documentation all existing Rust Make
targets (rustavailable, rustfmt, rustfmtcheck, rustdoc and
rust-analyzer) are explicitly documented with their Make commands.
While the Make target rusttest is mentioned two times in the
existing documentation, it's Make command is not explicitly
documented, yet. Add a test section to document this.

While at it, add some info about the more important KUnit testing
too.

Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Behme <dirk.behme@de.bosch.com>
Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <yakoyoku@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Benno Lossin <benno.lossin@proton.me>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20231212081313.226120-1-dirk.behme@de.bosch.com
[ Added "the", newline and quotes for `.config`. Expanded "repos". ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Dirk Behme 2023-12-12 09:13:13 +01:00 committed by Miguel Ojeda
parent 7583ce66dd
commit be412baf72
1 changed files with 24 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -77,3 +77,27 @@ configuration:
#[cfg(CONFIG_X="y")] // Enabled as a built-in (`y`)
#[cfg(CONFIG_X="m")] // Enabled as a module (`m`)
#[cfg(not(CONFIG_X))] // Disabled
Testing
-------
There are the tests that come from the examples in the Rust documentation
and get transformed into KUnit tests. These can be run via KUnit. For example
via ``kunit_tool`` (``kunit.py``) on the command line::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --make_options LLVM=1 --arch x86_64 --kconfig_add CONFIG_RUST=y
Alternatively, KUnit can run them as kernel built-in at boot. Refer to
Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/index.rst for the general KUnit documentation
and Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/architecture.rst for the details of kernel
built-in vs. command line testing.
Additionally, there are the ``#[test]`` tests. These can be run using
the ``rusttest`` Make target::
make LLVM=1 rusttest
This requires the kernel ``.config`` and downloads external repositories.
It runs the ``#[test]`` tests on the host (currently) and thus is fairly
limited in what these tests can test.