On 6/10/24 9:21 PM, Jeff Xu wrote:
Hi
On Fri, Jun 7, 2024 at 7:10 PM John Hubbard jhubbard@nvidia.com wrote:
Eventually, once the build succeeds on a sufficiently old distro, the idea is to delete $(KHDR_INCLUDES) from the selftests/mm build, and then after that, from selftests/lib.mk and all of the other selftest builds.
For now, this series merely achieves a clean build of selftests/mm on a not-so-old distro: Ubuntu 23.04:
Add __NR_mseal.
Add fs.h, taken as usual from a snapshot of ./usr/include/linux/fs.h
after running "make headers". This is how we have agreed to do this sort of thing, see [1].
What is the "official" way to build selftests/mm ?
From Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst, it is:
$ make headers $ make -C tools/testing/selftests
I tried a few ways, but it never worked, i.e. due to head missing.
You are correct. Today's rules require "make headers" first. But I'm working on getting rid of that requirement, because it causes problems for some people and situations.
(Even worse is the follow-up rule, in today's documentation, that tells us to *run* the selftests from within Make! This is just madness. Because the tests need to run as root in many cases. And Make will try to rebuild if necessary...thus filling your tree full of root-owned files...but that's for another time.)
1> cd tools/testing/selftests/mm make
migration.c:10:10: fatal error: numa.h: No such file or directory 10 | #include <numa.h> | ^~~~~~~~ compilation terminated.
2> make headers make -C tools/testing/selftests
make[1]: Entering directory '/usr/local/google/home/jeffxu/mm/tools/testing/selftests/mm' CC migration migration.c:10:10: fatal error: numa.h: No such file or directory 10 | #include <numa.h>
Well, actually, for these, one should install libnuma-dev and numactl (those are Ubuntu package names. Arch Linux would be: numactl).
I think. The idea is: use system headers if they are there, and local kernel tree header files if the items are so new that they haven't made it to $OLDEST_DISTO_REASONABLE.
Something like that.
So if you systematically install various packages on your machine, then apply the various patches that I have floating around, then you will be able to build selftests/mm without "make headers", at this point. Or so I claim.
thanks,