// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 //! KUnit-based macros for Rust unit tests. //! //! C header: [`include/kunit/test.h`](srctree/include/kunit/test.h) //! //! Reference: use core::{ffi::c_void, fmt}; /// Prints a KUnit error-level message. /// /// Public but hidden since it should only be used from KUnit generated code. #[doc(hidden)] pub fn err(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) { // SAFETY: The format string is null-terminated and the `%pA` specifier matches the argument we // are passing. #[cfg(CONFIG_PRINTK)] unsafe { bindings::_printk( c"\x013%pA".as_ptr() as _, &args as *const _ as *const c_void, ); } } /// Prints a KUnit info-level message. /// /// Public but hidden since it should only be used from KUnit generated code. #[doc(hidden)] pub fn info(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) { // SAFETY: The format string is null-terminated and the `%pA` specifier matches the argument we // are passing. #[cfg(CONFIG_PRINTK)] unsafe { bindings::_printk( c"\x016%pA".as_ptr() as _, &args as *const _ as *const c_void, ); } } /// Asserts that a boolean expression is `true` at runtime. /// /// Public but hidden since it should only be used from generated tests. /// /// Unlike the one in `core`, this one does not panic; instead, it is mapped to the KUnit /// facilities. See [`assert!`] for more details. #[doc(hidden)] #[macro_export] macro_rules! kunit_assert { ($name:literal, $file:literal, $diff:expr, $condition:expr $(,)?) => { 'out: { // Do nothing if the condition is `true`. if $condition { break 'out; } static FILE: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!($file); static LINE: i32 = core::line!() as i32 - $diff; static CONDITION: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!(stringify!($condition)); // SAFETY: FFI call without safety requirements. let kunit_test = unsafe { $crate::bindings::kunit_get_current_test() }; if kunit_test.is_null() { // The assertion failed but this task is not running a KUnit test, so we cannot call // KUnit, but at least print an error to the kernel log. This may happen if this // macro is called from an spawned thread in a test (see // `scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs`) or if some non-test code calls this macro by // mistake (it is hidden to prevent that). // // This mimics KUnit's failed assertion format. $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( " # {}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE}:{LINE}\n", $name )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( " Expected {CONDITION} to be true, but is false\n" )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( " Failure not reported to KUnit since this is a non-KUnit task\n" )); break 'out; } #[repr(transparent)] struct Location($crate::bindings::kunit_loc); #[repr(transparent)] struct UnaryAssert($crate::bindings::kunit_unary_assert); // SAFETY: There is only a static instance and in that one the pointer field points to // an immutable C string. unsafe impl Sync for Location {} // SAFETY: There is only a static instance and in that one the pointer field points to // an immutable C string. unsafe impl Sync for UnaryAssert {} static LOCATION: Location = Location($crate::bindings::kunit_loc { file: FILE.as_char_ptr(), line: LINE, }); static ASSERTION: UnaryAssert = UnaryAssert($crate::bindings::kunit_unary_assert { assert: $crate::bindings::kunit_assert {}, condition: CONDITION.as_char_ptr(), expected_true: true, }); // SAFETY: // - FFI call. // - The `kunit_test` pointer is valid because we got it from // `kunit_get_current_test()` and it was not null. This means we are in a KUnit // test, and that the pointer can be passed to KUnit functions and assertions. // - The string pointers (`file` and `condition` above) point to null-terminated // strings since they are `CStr`s. // - The function pointer (`format`) points to the proper function. // - The pointers passed will remain valid since they point to `static`s. // - The format string is allowed to be null. // - There are, however, problems with this: first of all, this will end up stopping // the thread, without running destructors. While that is problematic in itself, // it is considered UB to have what is effectively a forced foreign unwind // with `extern "C"` ABI. One could observe the stack that is now gone from // another thread. We should avoid pinning stack variables to prevent library UB, // too. For the moment, given that test failures are reported immediately before the // next test runs, that test failures should be fixed and that KUnit is explicitly // documented as not suitable for production environments, we feel it is reasonable. unsafe { $crate::bindings::__kunit_do_failed_assertion( kunit_test, core::ptr::addr_of!(LOCATION.0), $crate::bindings::kunit_assert_type_KUNIT_ASSERTION, core::ptr::addr_of!(ASSERTION.0.assert), Some($crate::bindings::kunit_unary_assert_format), core::ptr::null(), ); } // SAFETY: FFI call; the `test` pointer is valid because this hidden macro should only // be called by the generated documentation tests which forward the test pointer given // by KUnit. unsafe { $crate::bindings::__kunit_abort(kunit_test); } } }; } /// Asserts that two expressions are equal to each other (using [`PartialEq`]). /// /// Public but hidden since it should only be used from generated tests. /// /// Unlike the one in `core`, this one does not panic; instead, it is mapped to the KUnit /// facilities. See [`assert!`] for more details. #[doc(hidden)] #[macro_export] macro_rules! kunit_assert_eq { ($name:literal, $file:literal, $diff:expr, $left:expr, $right:expr $(,)?) => {{ // For the moment, we just forward to the expression assert because, for binary asserts, // KUnit supports only a few types (e.g. integers). $crate::kunit_assert!($name, $file, $diff, $left == $right); }}; }