Resending it at as a plain text.

From: Chaitanya Kulkarni
Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2017 2:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]
Subject: [LFS/MM TOPIC][LFS/MM ATTEND]: - Storage Stack and Driver Testing 
methodology.
  

Hi Folks,

I would like to propose a general discussion on Storage stack and device driver 
testing.

Purpose:-
-------------
The main objective of this discussion is to address the need for 
a Unified Test Automation Framework which can be used by different subsystems
in the kernel in order to improve the overall development and stability
of the storage stack.

For Example:- 
>From my previous experience, I've worked on the NVMe driver testing last year 
>and we
have developed simple unit test framework
 (https://github.com/linux-nvme/nvme-cli/tree/master/tests). 
In current implementation Upstream NVMe Driver supports following subsystems:-
1. PCI Host.
2. RDMA Target.
3. Fiber Channel Target (in progress).
Today due to lack of centralized automated test framework NVMe Driver testing 
is 
scattered and performed using the combination of various utilities like 
nvme-cli/tests, 
nvmet-cli, shell scripts (git://git.infradead.org/nvme-fabrics.git 
nvmf-selftests) etc.

In order to improve overall driver stability with various subsystems, it will 
be beneficial
to have a Unified Test Automation Framework (UTAF) which will centralize overall
testing. 

This topic will allow developers from various subsystem engage in the 
discussion about 
how to collaborate efficiently instead of having discussions on lengthy email 
threads.

Participants:-
------------------
I'd like to invite developers from different subsystems to discuss an approach 
towards 
a unified testing methodology for storage stack and device drivers belongs to 
different subsystems.

Topics for Discussion:-
------------------------------
As a part of discussion following are some of the key points which we can focus 
on:-
1. What are the common components of the kernel used by the various subsystems?
2. What are the potential target drivers which can benefit from this approach? 
  (e.g. NVMe, NVMe Over Fabric, Open Channel Solid State Drives etc.)
3. What are the desired features that can be implemented in this Framework?
  (code coverage, unit tests, stress testings, regression, generating 
Coccinelle reports etc.) 
4. Desirable Report generation mechanism?
5. Basic performance validation?
6. Whether QEMU can be used to emulate some of the H/W functionality to create 
a test 
  platform? (Optional subsystem specific)

Some background about myself I'm Chaitanya Kulkarni, I worked as a team lead 
which was responsible for delivering scalable multiplatform Automated Test 
Framework for device drivers testing at HGST. It's been used for more than 1 
year on 
Linux/Windows for unit testing/regression/performance validation of the NVMe 
Linux and
Windows driver successfully. I've also recently started contributing to the 

NVMe Host and NVMe over Fabrics Target driver.

Regards,
-Chaitanya

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