Files
android_kernel_xiaomi_sm8450/tools/testing/selftests
Shuah Khan 7fb2c3ea28 selftests: add kselftest framework for uniform test reporting
Add kselftest framework for tests to use. This is a light
weight framework provides a set of interfaces to report test
results. Tests can use these interfaces to report pass, and
fail cases as well as when failure is due to configuration
problems such as missing modules, or when a test that is should
fail, fails as expected, and a test that should fail, passes.
The framework uses POSIX standard return codes for reporting
results to address the needs of users that want to run the kernel
selftests from their user-space test suites and want to know why a
test failed. In addition, the framework includes interfaces to use
to report test statistics on number of tests passed and failed.

Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <shuahkh@osg.samsung.com>
2014-11-17 10:38:56 -07:00
..
2014-09-30 00:10:00 -07:00

Linux Kernel Selftests

The kernel contains a set of "self tests" under the tools/testing/selftests/
directory. These are intended to be small unit tests to exercise individual
code paths in the kernel.

On some systems, hot-plug tests could hang forever waiting for cpu and
memory to be ready to be offlined. A special hot-plug target is created
to run full range of hot-plug tests. In default mode, hot-plug tests run
in safe mode with a limited scope. In limited mode, cpu-hotplug test is
run on a single cpu as opposed to all hotplug capable cpus, and memory
hotplug test is run on 2% of hotplug capable memory instead of 10%.

Running the selftests (hotplug tests are run in limited mode)
=============================================================

To build the tests:

  $ make -C tools/testing/selftests


To run the tests:

  $ make -C tools/testing/selftests run_tests

- note that some tests will require root privileges.

To run only tests targeted for a single subsystem: (including
hotplug targets in limited mode)

  $  make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=cpu-hotplug run_tests

See the top-level tools/testing/selftests/Makefile for the list of all possible
targets.

Running the full range hotplug selftests
========================================

To build the tests:

  $ make -C tools/testing/selftests hotplug

To run the tests:

  $ make -C tools/testing/selftests run_hotplug

- note that some tests will require root privileges.

Contributing new tests
======================

In general, the rules for for selftests are

 * Do as much as you can if you're not root;

 * Don't take too long;

 * Don't break the build on any architecture, and

 * Don't cause the top-level "make run_tests" to fail if your feature is
   unconfigured.