Now that kselftest.h can be used with nolibc convert the za-fork test to
use it. We do still have to open code ksft_print_msg() but that's not the
end of the world. Some of the advantage comes from using printf() which we
could have been using already.
This does change the output when tests are skipped, bringing it in line
with the standard kselftest output by removing the test name - we move
from
ok 0 skipped
to
ok 1 # SKIP fork_test
The old output was not following KTAP format for skips, and the
numbering was not standard or consistent with the reported plan.
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
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| abi | ||
| bti | ||
| fp | ||
| mte | ||
| pauth | ||
| signal | ||
| tags | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README | ||
README
KSelfTest ARM64
===============
- These tests are arm64 specific and so not built or run but just skipped
completely when env-variable ARCH is found to be different than 'arm64'
and `uname -m` reports other than 'aarch64'.
- Holding true the above, ARM64 KSFT tests can be run within the KSelfTest
framework using standard Linux top-level-makefile targets:
$ make TARGETS=arm64 kselftest-clean
$ make TARGETS=arm64 kselftest
or
$ make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=arm64 \
INSTALL_PATH=<your-installation-path> install
or, alternatively, only specific arm64/ subtargets can be picked:
$ make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=arm64 ARM64_SUBTARGETS="tags signal" \
INSTALL_PATH=<your-installation-path> install
Further details on building and running KFST can be found in:
Documentation/dev-tools/kselftest.rst