Files
linux/tools/testing/selftests/futex
Dan Carpenter 237bfb76c9 selftests/futex: Fix futex_wait() for 32bit ARM
On 32bit ARM systems gcc-12 will use 32bit timestamps while gcc-13 and later
will use 64bit timestamps.  The problem is that SYS_futex will continue
pointing at the 32bit system call.  This makes the futex_wait test fail like
this:

  waiter failed errno 110
  not ok 1 futex_wake private returned: 0 Success
  waiter failed errno 110
  not ok 2 futex_wake shared (page anon) returned: 0 Success
  waiter failed errno 110
  not ok 3 futex_wake shared (file backed) returned: 0 Success

Instead of compiling differently depending on the gcc version, use the
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D_TIME_BITS=64 options to ensure that 64bit timestamps
are used.  Then use ifdefs to make SYS_futex point to the 64bit system call.

Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Borislav Petkov (AMD) <bp@alien8.de>
Reviewed-by: André Almeida <andrealmeid@igalia.com>
Tested-by: Anders Roxell <anders.roxell@linaro.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/20250827130011.677600-6-bigeasy@linutronix.de
2025-09-01 16:26:55 +02:00
..

Futex Test
==========
Futex Test is intended to thoroughly test the Linux kernel futex system call
API.

Functional tests shall test the documented behavior of the futex operation
code under test. This includes checking for proper behavior under normal use,
odd corner cases, regression tests, and abject abuse and misuse.

Futextest will also provide example implementation of mutual exclusion
primitives. These can be used as is in user applications or can serve as
examples for system libraries. These will likely be added to either a new lib/
directory or purely as header files under include/, I'm leaning toward the
latter.

Quick Start
-----------
# make
# ./run.sh

Design and Implementation Goals
-------------------------------
o Tests should be as self contained as is practical so as to facilitate sharing
  the individual tests on mailing list discussions and bug reports.
o The build system shall remain as simple as possible, avoiding any archive or
  shared object building and linking.
o Where possible, any helper functions or other package-wide code shall be
  implemented in header files, avoiding the need to compile intermediate object
  files.
o External dependencies shall remain as minimal as possible. Currently gcc
  and glibc are the only dependencies.
o Tests return 0 for success and < 0 for failure.

Output Formatting
-----------------
Test output shall be easily parsable by both human and machine. Title and
results are printed to stdout, while intermediate ERROR or FAIL messages are
sent to stderr. Tests shall support the -c option to print PASS, FAIL, and
ERROR strings in color for easy visual parsing. Output shall conform to the
following format:

test_name: Description of the test
	Arguments: arg1=val1 #units specified for clarity where appropriate
	ERROR: Description of unexpected error
	 FAIL: Reason for test failure
	# FIXME: Perhaps an " INFO: informational message" option would be
	#        useful here. Using -v to toggle it them on and off, as with -c.
	# there may be multiple ERROR or FAIL messages
Result: (PASS|FAIL|ERROR)

Naming
------
o FIXME: decide on a sane test naming scheme.  Currently the tests are named
  based on the primary futex operation they test. Eventually this will become a
  problem as we intend to write multiple tests which collide in this namespace.
  Perhaps something like "wait-wake-1" "wait-wake-2" is adequate, leaving the
  detailed description in the test source and the output.

Coding Style
------------
o The Futex Test project adheres to the coding standards set forth by Linux
  kernel as defined in the Linux source Documentation/process/coding-style.rst.