On 5/28/20 1:20 PM, Yauheni Kaliuta wrote:
On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 10:09 PM Shuah Khan skhan@linuxfoundation.org wrote:
On 5/28/20 11:10 AM, Yauheni Kaliuta wrote:
Hi, Alexei,
On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 7:14 PM Alexei Starovoitov alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 12:56:31PM +0200, Greg KH wrote:
On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 10:05:57AM +0200, Jiri Benc wrote:
On Wed, 27 May 2020 15:23:13 -0700, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: > I prefer to keep selftests/bpf install broken. > This forced marriage between kselftests and selftests/bpf > never worked well. I think it's a time to free them up from each other.
Alexei, it would be great if you could cooperate with other people instead of pushing your own way. The selftests infrastructure was put to the kernel to have one place for testing. Inventing yet another way to add tests does not help anyone. You don't own the kernel. We're community, we should cooperate.
I agree, we rely on the infrastructure of the kselftests framework so that testing systems do not have to create "custom" frameworks to handle all of the individual variants that could easily crop up here.
Let's keep it easy for people to run and use these tests, to not do so is to ensure that they are not used, which is the exact opposite goal of creating tests.
Greg,
It is easy for people (bpf developers) to run and use the tests. Every developer runs them before submitting patches. New tests is a hard requirement for any new features. Maintainers run them for every push.
What I was and will push back hard is when other people (not bpf developers) come back with an excuse that some CI system has a hard time running these tests. It's the problem of weak CI. That CI needs to be fixed. Not the tests. The example of this is that we already have github/libbpf CI that runs selftests/bpf just fine. Anyone who wants to do another CI are welcome to copy paste what already works instead of burdening people (bpf developers) who run and use existing tests. I frankly have no sympathy to folks who put their own interest of their CI development in front of bpf community of developers. The main job of CI is to help developers and maintainers. Where helping means to not impose new dumb rules on developers because CI framework is dumb. Fix CI instead.
Any good reason why bpf selftests, residing under selftests/, should be an exception? "Breakages" is not, breakages are fixable.
Let's not talk about moving tests. I don't want to discuss that until we are all on the same page on what is the problem in adding install support to bpf Makefile.
It is possible that there is a misunderstanding that bpf maintainer and developer workflow will change. Which is definitely not needed. If this patch series requires it, it isn't correct and needs to be reworked.
patch series does not change it. Running bpf tests in-place is one of my own usecases, I'm not going to break it :)
Great. I wasn't suggesting you would. So there is no need for the concern that bpf developer/maintainer workflow will have to change to add install support.
The series tried to fix what does not work (install and build in $(OUTPUT) directory) but exists in the code. I'll include you in Cc for the respin(s) if you are interested.
Please do.
The discussion is pretty much not connected to the patchset, but about bpf selftests and the infra in general.
Yeah. We have to get a better understanding and be on the same page on this anyway.
thanks, -- Shuah