Hi,
> Are you talking about the same posix test suite that LSB is using? I've
> looked into that a little, but here are the two problems I'm wanting to
> address:
>
> 1. How much of the kernel is getting hit on a run of any given test? Even
> an approximate percentage is fine as long as I ca
> To: Paul Larson/Austin/IBM@ibmus
> cc:
> Subject: Re: Kernel stress testing coverage
>
> >One thing I've been using for coverage (at least some coverage) is the
>
> posix
>
> >test suite
>
> --
>
> Are you talking about th
> 1. How much of the kernel is getting hit on a run of any given test? Even
> an approximate percentage is fine as long as I can prove it.
I've not measured it by percentage. You could use the profiling code in
the kernel to generate a profile and from that measure coverage at least
for non inte
Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 03/08/2001 02:06:06 PM
To: Paul Larson/Austin/IBM@ibmus
cc:
Subject: Re: Kernel stress testing coverage
>One thing I've been using for coverage (at least some coverage) is the
posix
>test suite
--
Are you talki
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> I've heard of tools like gcov for doing this with applications, but
> the kernel itself seems like it might require something more.
Have a look at user-mode Linux (http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net). It
runs the kernel in userspace, so gprof and gcov can be used
I'm looking for some advice from all of you that know and understand the
Linux kernel so well. I'm not a kernel developer, but I want to do some
verification work on it, namely stress testing to begin with. I'm working
on putting together a suite of tests to test the linux kernels under stress
l
6 matches
Mail list logo