.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 =============== Getting Started =============== Installing dependencies ======================= KUnit has the same dependencies as the Linux kernel. As long as you can build the kernel, you can run KUnit. KUnit Wrapper ============= Included with KUnit is a simple Python wrapper that helps format the output to easily use and read KUnit output. It handles building and running the kernel, as well as formatting the output. The wrapper can be run with: .. code-block:: bash ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run --defconfig For more information on this wrapper (also called kunit_tool) checkout the :doc:`kunit-tool` page. Creating a .kunitconfig ======================= The Python script is a thin wrapper around Kbuild. As such, it needs to be configured with a ``.kunitconfig`` file. This file essentially contains the regular Kernel config, with the specific test targets as well. .. code-block:: bash cd $PATH_TO_LINUX_REPO cp arch/um/configs/kunit_defconfig .kunitconfig Verifying KUnit Works --------------------- To make sure that everything is set up correctly, simply invoke the Python wrapper from your kernel repo: .. code-block:: bash ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run .. note:: You may want to run ``make mrproper`` first. If everything worked correctly, you should see the following: .. code-block:: bash Generating .config ... Building KUnit Kernel ... Starting KUnit Kernel ... followed by a list of tests that are run. All of them should be passing. .. note:: Because it is building a lot of sources for the first time, the ``Building KUnit kernel`` step may take a while. Writing your first test ======================= In your kernel repo let's add some code that we can test. Create a file ``drivers/misc/example.h`` with the contents: .. code-block:: c int misc_example_add(int left, int right); create a file ``drivers/misc/example.c``: .. code-block:: c #include #include "example.h" int misc_example_add(int left, int right) { return left + right; } Now add the following lines to ``drivers/misc/Kconfig``: .. code-block:: kconfig config MISC_EXAMPLE bool "My example" and the following lines to ``drivers/misc/Makefile``: .. code-block:: make obj-$(CONFIG_MISC_EXAMPLE) += example.o Now we are ready to write the test. The test will be in ``drivers/misc/example-test.c``: .. code-block:: c #include #include "example.h" /* Define the test cases. */ static void misc_example_add_test_basic(struct kunit *test) { KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 1, misc_example_add(1, 0)); KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 2, misc_example_add(1, 1)); KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 0, misc_example_add(-1, 1)); KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, INT_MAX, misc_example_add(0, INT_MAX)); KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, -1, misc_example_add(INT_MAX, INT_MIN)); } static void misc_example_test_failure(struct kunit *test) { KUNIT_FAIL(test, "This test never passes."); } static struct kunit_case misc_example_test_cases[] = { KUNIT_CASE(misc_example_add_test_basic), KUNIT_CASE(misc_example_test_failure), {} }; static struct kunit_suite misc_example_test_suite = { .name = "misc-example", .test_cases = misc_example_test_cases, }; kunit_test_suite(misc_example_test_suite); Now add the following to ``drivers/misc/Kconfig``: .. code-block:: kconfig config MISC_EXAMPLE_TEST bool "Test for my example" depends on MISC_EXAMPLE && KUNIT and the following to ``drivers/misc/Makefile``: .. code-block:: make obj-$(CONFIG_MISC_EXAMPLE_TEST) += example-test.o Now add it to your ``.kunitconfig``: .. code-block:: none CONFIG_MISC_EXAMPLE=y CONFIG_MISC_EXAMPLE_TEST=y Now you can run the test: .. code-block:: bash ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py run You should see the following failure: .. code-block:: none ... [16:08:57] [PASSED] misc-example:misc_example_add_test_basic [16:08:57] [FAILED] misc-example:misc_example_test_failure [16:08:57] EXPECTATION FAILED at drivers/misc/example-test.c:17 [16:08:57] This test never passes. ... Congrats! You just wrote your first KUnit test! Next Steps ========== * Check out the :doc:`usage` page for a more in-depth explanation of KUnit.