linux-stable/Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_wrapper.rst
Rae Moar e588586675 kunit: Add documentation of KUnit test attributes
Add documentation on the use of test attributes under the section "Tips for
Running KUnit Tests" in the KUnit docs.

Documentation includes three sections on how to mark tests with attributes,
how attributes are reported, and how the user can filter tests using test
attributes.

Add descriptions of new flags to list of command-line arguments.

Reviewed-by: David Gow <davidgow@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Rae Moar <rmoar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2023-07-26 13:29:46 -06:00

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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
=============================
Running tests with kunit_tool
=============================
We can either run KUnit tests using kunit_tool or can run tests
manually, and then use kunit_tool to parse the results. To run tests
manually, see: Documentation/dev-tools/kunit/run_manual.rst.
As long as we can build the kernel, we can run KUnit.
kunit_tool is a Python script which configures and builds a kernel, runs
tests, and formats the test results.
Run command:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run
We should see the following:
.. code-block::
Configuring KUnit Kernel ...
Building KUnit kernel...
Starting KUnit kernel...
We may want to use the following options:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --timeout=30 --jobs=`nproc --all`
- ``--timeout`` sets a maximum amount of time for tests to run.
- ``--jobs`` sets the number of threads to build the kernel.
kunit_tool will generate a ``.kunitconfig`` with a default
configuration, if no other ``.kunitconfig`` file exists
(in the build directory). In addition, it verifies that the
generated ``.config`` file contains the ``CONFIG`` options in the
``.kunitconfig``.
It is also possible to pass a separate ``.kunitconfig`` fragment to
kunit_tool. This is useful if we have several different groups of
tests we want to run independently, or if we want to use pre-defined
test configs for certain subsystems.
To use a different ``.kunitconfig`` file (such as one
provided to test a particular subsystem), pass it as an option:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --kunitconfig=fs/ext4/.kunitconfig
To view kunit_tool flags (optional command-line arguments), run:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --help
Creating a ``.kunitconfig`` file
================================
If we want to run a specific set of tests (rather than those listed
in the KUnit ``defconfig``), we can provide Kconfig options in the
``.kunitconfig`` file. For default .kunitconfig, see:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/tools/testing/kunit/configs/default.config.
A ``.kunitconfig`` is a ``minconfig`` (a .config
generated by running ``make savedefconfig``), used for running a
specific set of tests. This file contains the regular Kernel configs
with specific test targets. The ``.kunitconfig`` also
contains any other config options required by the tests (For example:
dependencies for features under tests, configs that enable/disable
certain code blocks, arch configs and so on).
To create a ``.kunitconfig``, using the KUnit ``defconfig``:
.. code-block::
cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO
cp tools/testing/kunit/configs/default.config .kunit/.kunitconfig
We can then add any other Kconfig options. For example:
.. code-block::
CONFIG_LIST_KUNIT_TEST=y
kunit_tool ensures that all config options in ``.kunitconfig`` are
set in the kernel ``.config`` before running the tests. It warns if we
have not included the options dependencies.
.. note:: Removing something from the ``.kunitconfig`` will
not rebuild the ``.config file``. The configuration is only
updated if the ``.kunitconfig`` is not a subset of ``.config``.
This means that we can use other tools
(For example: ``make menuconfig``) to adjust other config options.
The build dir needs to be set for ``make menuconfig`` to
work, therefore by default use ``make O=.kunit menuconfig``.
Configuring, building, and running tests
========================================
If we want to make manual changes to the KUnit build process, we
can run part of the KUnit build process independently.
When running kunit_tool, from a ``.kunitconfig``, we can generate a
``.config`` by using the ``config`` argument:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py config
To build a KUnit kernel from the current ``.config``, we can use the
``build`` argument:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py build
If we already have built UML kernel with built-in KUnit tests, we
can run the kernel, and display the test results with the ``exec``
argument:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py exec
The ``run`` command discussed in section: **Running tests with kunit_tool**,
is equivalent to running the above three commands in sequence.
Parsing test results
====================
KUnit tests output displays results in TAP (Test Anything Protocol)
format. When running tests, kunit_tool parses this output and prints
a summary. To see the raw test results in TAP format, we can pass the
``--raw_output`` argument:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --raw_output
If we have KUnit results in the raw TAP format, we can parse them and
print the human-readable summary with the ``parse`` command for
kunit_tool. This accepts a filename for an argument, or will read from
standard input.
.. code-block:: bash
# Reading from a file
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py parse /var/log/dmesg
# Reading from stdin
dmesg | ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py parse
Filtering tests
===============
By passing a bash style glob filter to the ``exec`` or ``run``
commands, we can run a subset of the tests built into a kernel . For
example: if we only want to run KUnit resource tests, use:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run 'kunit-resource*'
This uses the standard glob format with wildcard characters.
.. _kunit-on-qemu:
Running tests on QEMU
=====================
kunit_tool supports running tests on qemu as well as
via UML. To run tests on qemu, by default it requires two flags:
- ``--arch``: Selects a configs collection (Kconfig, qemu config options
and so on), that allow KUnit tests to be run on the specified
architecture in a minimal way. The architecture argument is same as
the option name passed to the ``ARCH`` variable used by Kbuild.
Not all architectures currently support this flag, but we can use
``--qemu_config`` to handle it. If ``um`` is passed (or this flag
is ignored), the tests will run via UML. Non-UML architectures,
for example: i386, x86_64, arm and so on; run on qemu.
- ``--cross_compile``: Specifies the Kbuild toolchain. It passes the
same argument as passed to the ``CROSS_COMPILE`` variable used by
Kbuild. As a reminder, this will be the prefix for the toolchain
binaries such as GCC. For example:
- ``sparc64-linux-gnu`` if we have the sparc toolchain installed on
our system.
- ``$HOME/toolchains/microblaze/gcc-9.2.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux``
if we have downloaded the microblaze toolchain from the 0-day
website to a directory in our home directory called toolchains.
This means that for most architectures, running under qemu is as simple as:
.. code-block:: bash
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --arch=x86_64
When cross-compiling, we'll likely need to specify a different toolchain, for
example:
.. code-block:: bash
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run \
--arch=s390 \
--cross_compile=s390x-linux-gnu-
If we want to run KUnit tests on an architecture not supported by
the ``--arch`` flag, or want to run KUnit tests on qemu using a
non-default configuration; then we can write our own``QemuConfig``.
These ``QemuConfigs`` are written in Python. They have an import line
``from..qemu_config import QemuArchParams`` at the top of the file.
The file must contain a variable called ``QEMU_ARCH`` that has an
instance of ``QemuArchParams`` assigned to it. See example in:
``tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py``.
Once we have a ``QemuConfig``, we can pass it into kunit_tool,
using the ``--qemu_config`` flag. When used, this flag replaces the
``--arch`` flag. For example: using
``tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py``, the invocation appear
as
.. code-block:: bash
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run \
--timeout=60 \
--jobs=12 \
--qemu_config=./tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/x86_64.py
Running command-line arguments
==============================
kunit_tool has a number of other command-line arguments which can
be useful for our test environment. Below are the most commonly used
command line arguments:
- ``--help``: Lists all available options. To list common options,
place ``--help`` before the command. To list options specific to that
command, place ``--help`` after the command.
.. note:: Different commands (``config``, ``build``, ``run``, etc)
have different supported options.
- ``--build_dir``: Specifies kunit_tool build directory. It includes
the ``.kunitconfig``, ``.config`` files and compiled kernel.
- ``--make_options``: Specifies additional options to pass to make, when
compiling a kernel (using ``build`` or ``run`` commands). For example:
to enable compiler warnings, we can pass ``--make_options W=1``.
- ``--alltests``: Enable a predefined set of options in order to build
as many tests as possible.
.. note:: The list of enabled options can be found in
``tools/testing/kunit/configs/all_tests.config``.
If you only want to enable all tests with otherwise satisfied
dependencies, instead add ``CONFIG_KUNIT_ALL_TESTS=y`` to your
``.kunitconfig``.
- ``--kunitconfig``: Specifies the path or the directory of the ``.kunitconfig``
file. For example:
- ``lib/kunit/.kunitconfig`` can be the path of the file.
- ``lib/kunit`` can be the directory in which the file is located.
This file is used to build and run with a predefined set of tests
and their dependencies. For example, to run tests for a given subsystem.
- ``--kconfig_add``: Specifies additional configuration options to be
appended to the ``.kunitconfig`` file. For example:
.. code-block::
./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --kconfig_add CONFIG_KASAN=y
- ``--arch``: Runs tests on the specified architecture. The architecture
argument is same as the Kbuild ARCH environment variable.
For example, i386, x86_64, arm, um, etc. Non-UML architectures run on qemu.
Default is `um`.
- ``--cross_compile``: Specifies the Kbuild toolchain. It passes the
same argument as passed to the ``CROSS_COMPILE`` variable used by
Kbuild. This will be the prefix for the toolchain
binaries such as GCC. For example:
- ``sparc64-linux-gnu-`` if we have the sparc toolchain installed on
our system.
- ``$HOME/toolchains/microblaze/gcc-9.2.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux``
if we have downloaded the microblaze toolchain from the 0-day
website to a specified path in our home directory called toolchains.
- ``--qemu_config``: Specifies the path to a file containing a
custom qemu architecture definition. This should be a python file
containing a `QemuArchParams` object.
- ``--qemu_args``: Specifies additional qemu arguments, for example, ``-smp 8``.
- ``--jobs``: Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously.
By default, this is set to the number of cores on your system.
- ``--timeout``: Specifies the maximum number of seconds allowed for all tests to run.
This does not include the time taken to build the tests.
- ``--kernel_args``: Specifies additional kernel command-line arguments. May be repeated.
- ``--run_isolated``: If set, boots the kernel for each individual suite/test.
This is useful for debugging a non-hermetic test, one that
might pass/fail based on what ran before it.
- ``--raw_output``: If set, generates unformatted output from kernel. Possible options are:
- ``all``: To view the full kernel output, use ``--raw_output=all``.
- ``kunit``: This is the default option and filters to KUnit output. Use ``--raw_output`` or ``--raw_output=kunit``.
- ``--json``: If set, stores the test results in a JSON format and prints to `stdout` or
saves to a file if a filename is specified.
- ``--filter``: Specifies filters on test attributes, for example, ``speed!=slow``.
Multiple filters can be used by wrapping input in quotes and separating filters
by commas. Example: ``--filter "speed>slow, module=example"``.
- ``--filter_action``: If set to ``skip``, filtered tests will be shown as skipped
in the output rather than showing no output.
- ``--list_tests``: If set, lists all tests that will be run.
- ``--list_tests_attr``: If set, lists all tests that will be run and all of their
attributes.