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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 | // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 //! Generates KUnit tests from saved `rustdoc`-generated tests. //! //! KUnit passes a context (`struct kunit *`) to each test, which should be forwarded to the other //! KUnit functions and macros. //! //! However, we want to keep this as an implementation detail because: //! //! - Test code should not care about the implementation. //! //! - Documentation looks worse if it needs to carry extra details unrelated to the piece //! being described. //! //! - Test code should be able to define functions and call them, without having to carry //! the context. //! //! - Later on, we may want to be able to test non-kernel code (e.g. `core`, `alloc` or //! third-party crates) which likely use the standard library `assert*!` macros. //! //! For this reason, instead of the passed context, `kunit_get_current_test()` is used instead //! (i.e. `current->kunit_test`). //! //! Note that this means other threads/tasks potentially spawned by a given test, if failing, will //! report the failure in the kernel log but will not fail the actual test. Saving the pointer in //! e.g. a `static` per test does not fully solve the issue either, because currently KUnit does //! not support assertions (only expectations) from other tasks. Thus leave that feature for //! the future, which simplifies the code here too. We could also simply not allow `assert`s in //! other tasks, but that seems overly constraining, and we do want to support them, eventually. use std::{ fs, fs::File, io::{BufWriter, Read, Write}, path::{Path, PathBuf}, }; /// Find the real path to the original file based on the `file` portion of the test name. /// /// `rustdoc` generated `file`s look like `sync_locked_by_rs`. Underscores (except the last one) /// may represent an actual underscore in a directory/file, or a path separator. Thus the actual /// file might be `sync_locked_by.rs`, `sync/locked_by.rs`, `sync_locked/by.rs` or /// `sync/locked/by.rs`. This function walks the file system to determine which is the real one. /// /// This does require that ambiguities do not exist, but that seems fair, especially since this is /// all supposed to be temporary until `rustdoc` gives us proper metadata to build this. If such /// ambiguities are detected, they are diagnosed and the script panics. fn find_real_path<'a>(srctree: &Path, valid_paths: &'a mut Vec<PathBuf>, file: &str) -> &'a str { valid_paths.clear(); let potential_components: Vec<&str> = file.strip_suffix("_rs").unwrap().split('_').collect(); find_candidates(srctree, valid_paths, Path::new(""), &potential_components); fn find_candidates( srctree: &Path, valid_paths: &mut Vec<PathBuf>, prefix: &Path, potential_components: &[&str], ) { // The base case: check whether all the potential components left, joined by underscores, // is a file. let joined_potential_components = potential_components.join("_") + ".rs"; if srctree .join("rust/kernel") .join(prefix) .join(&joined_potential_components) .is_file() { // Avoid `srctree` here in order to keep paths relative to it in the KTAP output. valid_paths.push( Path::new("rust/kernel") .join(prefix) .join(joined_potential_components), ); } // In addition, check whether each component prefix, joined by underscores, is a directory. // If not, there is no need to check for combinations with that prefix. for i in 1..potential_components.len() { let (components_prefix, components_rest) = potential_components.split_at(i); let prefix = prefix.join(components_prefix.join("_")); if srctree.join("rust/kernel").join(&prefix).is_dir() { find_candidates(srctree, valid_paths, &prefix, components_rest); } } } assert!( valid_paths.len() > 0, "No path candidates found. This is likely a bug in the build system, or some files went \ away while compiling." ); if valid_paths.len() > 1 { eprintln!("Several path candidates found:"); for path in valid_paths { eprintln!(" {path:?}"); } panic!( "Several path candidates found, please resolve the ambiguity by renaming a file or \ folder." ); } valid_paths[0].to_str().unwrap() } fn main() { let srctree = std::env::var("srctree").unwrap(); let srctree = Path::new(&srctree); let mut paths = fs::read_dir("rust/test/doctests/kernel") .unwrap() .map(|entry| entry.unwrap().path()) .collect::<Vec<_>>(); // Sort paths. paths.sort(); let mut rust_tests = String::new(); let mut c_test_declarations = String::new(); let mut c_test_cases = String::new(); let mut body = String::new(); let mut last_file = String::new(); let mut number = 0; let mut valid_paths: Vec<PathBuf> = Vec::new(); let mut real_path: &str = ""; for path in paths { // The `name` follows the `{file}_{line}_{number}` pattern (see description in // `scripts/rustdoc_test_builder.rs`). Discard the `number`. let name = path.file_name().unwrap().to_str().unwrap().to_string(); // Extract the `file` and the `line`, discarding the `number`. let (file, line) = name.rsplit_once('_').unwrap().0.rsplit_once('_').unwrap(); // Generate an ID sequence ("test number") for each one in the file. if file == last_file { number += 1; } else { number = 0; last_file = file.to_string(); // Figure out the real path, only once per file. real_path = find_real_path(srctree, &mut valid_paths, file); } // Generate a KUnit name (i.e. test name and C symbol) for this test. // // We avoid the line number, like `rustdoc` does, to make things slightly more stable for // bisection purposes. However, to aid developers in mapping back what test failed, we will // print a diagnostics line in the KTAP report. let kunit_name = format!("rust_doctest_kernel_{file}_{number}"); // Read the test's text contents to dump it below. body.clear(); File::open(path).unwrap().read_to_string(&mut body).unwrap(); // Calculate how many lines before `main` function (including the `main` function line). let body_offset = body .lines() .take_while(|line| !line.contains("fn main() {")) .count() + 1; use std::fmt::Write; write!( rust_tests, r#"/// Generated `{name}` KUnit test case from a Rust documentation test. #[no_mangle] pub extern "C" fn {kunit_name}(__kunit_test: *mut kernel::bindings::kunit) {{ /// Overrides the usual [`assert!`] macro with one that calls KUnit instead. #[allow(unused)] macro_rules! assert {{ ($cond:expr $(,)?) => {{{{ kernel::kunit_assert!("{kunit_name}", "{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $cond); }}}} }} /// Overrides the usual [`assert_eq!`] macro with one that calls KUnit instead. #[allow(unused)] macro_rules! assert_eq {{ ($left:expr, $right:expr $(,)?) => {{{{ kernel::kunit_assert_eq!("{kunit_name}", "{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $left, $right); }}}} }} // Many tests need the prelude, so provide it by default. #[allow(unused)] use kernel::prelude::*; // Unconditionally print the location of the original doctest (i.e. rather than the location in // the generated file) so that developers can easily map the test back to the source code. // // This information is also printed when assertions fail, but this helps in the successful cases // when the user is running KUnit manually, or when passing `--raw_output` to `kunit.py`. // // This follows the syntax for declaring test metadata in the proposed KTAP v2 spec, which may // be used for the proposed KUnit test attributes API. Thus hopefully this will make migration // easier later on. kernel::kunit::info(format_args!(" # {kunit_name}.location: {real_path}:{line}\n")); /// The anchor where the test code body starts. #[allow(unused)] static __DOCTEST_ANCHOR: i32 = core::line!() as i32 + {body_offset} + 1; {{ {body} main(); }} }} "# ) .unwrap(); write!(c_test_declarations, "void {kunit_name}(struct kunit *);\n").unwrap(); write!(c_test_cases, " KUNIT_CASE({kunit_name}),\n").unwrap(); } let rust_tests = rust_tests.trim(); let c_test_declarations = c_test_declarations.trim(); let c_test_cases = c_test_cases.trim(); write!( BufWriter::new(File::create("rust/doctests_kernel_generated.rs").unwrap()), r#"//! `kernel` crate documentation tests. const __LOG_PREFIX: &[u8] = b"rust_doctests_kernel\0"; {rust_tests} "# ) .unwrap(); write!( BufWriter::new(File::create("rust/doctests_kernel_generated_kunit.c").unwrap()), r#"/* * `kernel` crate documentation tests. */ #include <kunit/test.h> {c_test_declarations} static struct kunit_case test_cases[] = {{ {c_test_cases} {{ }} }}; static struct kunit_suite test_suite = {{ .name = "rust_doctests_kernel", .test_cases = test_cases, }}; kunit_test_suite(test_suite); MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); "# ) .unwrap(); } |