[PATCH v2 00/17] kunit: introduce KUnit, the Linux kernel unit testing framework

Theodore Ts'o tytso at mit.edu
Thu May 9 01:44:07 UTC 2019


On Wed, May 08, 2019 at 05:58:49PM -0700, Frank Rowand wrote:
> 
> If KUnit is added to the kernel, and a subsystem that I am submitting
> code for has chosen to use KUnit instead of kselftest, then yes, I do
> *have* to use KUnit if my submission needs to contain a test for the
> code unless I want to convince the maintainer that somehow my case
> is special and I prefer to use kselftest instead of KUnittest.

That's going to be between you and the maintainer.  Today, if you want
to submit a substantive change to xfs or ext4, you're going to be
asked to create test for that new feature using xfstests.  It doesn't
matter that xfstests isn't in the kernel --- if that's what is
required by the maintainer.

> > supposed to be a simple way to run a large number of small tests that
> > for specific small components in a system.
> 
> kselftest also supports running a subset of tests.  That subset of tests
> can also be a large number of small tests.  There is nothing inherent
> in KUnit vs kselftest in this regard, as far as I am aware.

The big difference is that kselftests are driven by a C program that
runs in userspace.  Take a look at tools/testing/selftests/filesystem/dnotify_test.c
it has a main(int argc, char *argv) function.

In contrast, KUnit are fragments of C code which run in the kernel;
not in userspace.  This allows us to test internal functions inside
complex file system (such as the block allocator in ext4) directly.
This makes it *fundamentally* different from kselftest.

Cheers,

						- Ted


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