.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 ============================ Run Tests without kunit_tool ============================ If we do not want to use kunit_tool (For example: we want to integrate with other systems, or run tests on real hardware), we can include KUnit in any kernel, read out results, and parse manually. .. note:: KUnit is not designed for use in a production system. It is possible that tests may reduce the stability or security of the system. Configure the Kernel ==================== KUnit tests can run without kunit_tool. This can be useful, if: - We have an existing kernel configuration to test. - Need to run on real hardware (or using an emulator/VM kunit_tool does not support). - Wish to integrate with some existing testing systems. KUnit is configured with the ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` option, and individual tests can also be built by enabling their config options in our ``.config``. KUnit tests usually (but don't always) have config options ending in ``_KUNIT_TEST``. Most tests can either be built as a module, or be built into the kernel. .. note :: We can enable the ``KUNIT_ALL_TESTS`` config option to automatically enable all tests with satisfied dependencies. This is a good way of quickly testing everything applicable to the current config. Once we have built our kernel (and/or modules), it is simple to run the tests. If the tests are built-in, they will run automatically on the kernel boot. The results will be written to the kernel log (``dmesg``) in TAP format. If the tests are built as modules, they will run when the module is loaded. .. code-block :: bash # modprobe example-test The results will appear in TAP format in ``dmesg``. .. note :: If ``CONFIG_KUNIT_DEBUGFS`` is enabled, KUnit test results will be accessible from the ``debugfs`` filesystem (if mounted). They will be in ``/sys/kernel/debug/kunit/<test_suite>/results``, in TAP format.