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	docs: dev-tools: Add UAPI checker documentation
Add detailed documentation for scripts/check-uapi.sh. Signed-off-by: John Moon <quic_johmoo@quicinc.com> Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
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							|  | @ -0,0 +1,477 @@ | |||
| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| ============ | ||||
| UAPI Checker | ||||
| ============ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The UAPI checker (``scripts/check-uapi.sh``) is a shell script which | ||||
| checks UAPI header files for userspace backwards-compatibility across | ||||
| the git tree. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Options | ||||
| ======= | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| This section will describe the options with which ``check-uapi.sh`` | ||||
| can be run. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Usage:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     check-uapi.sh [-b BASE_REF] [-p PAST_REF] [-j N] [-l ERROR_LOG] [-i] [-q] [-v] | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Available options:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     -b BASE_REF    Base git reference to use for comparison. If unspecified or empty, | ||||
|                    will use any dirty changes in tree to UAPI files. If there are no | ||||
|                    dirty changes, HEAD will be used. | ||||
|     -p PAST_REF    Compare BASE_REF to PAST_REF (e.g. -p v6.1). If unspecified or empty, | ||||
|                    will use BASE_REF^1. Must be an ancestor of BASE_REF. Only headers | ||||
|                    that exist on PAST_REF will be checked for compatibility. | ||||
|     -j JOBS        Number of checks to run in parallel (default: number of CPU cores). | ||||
|     -l ERROR_LOG   Write error log to file (default: no error log is generated). | ||||
|     -i             Ignore ambiguous changes that may or may not break UAPI compatibility. | ||||
|     -q             Quiet operation. | ||||
|     -v             Verbose operation (print more information about each header being checked). | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Environmental args:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     ABIDIFF  Custom path to abidiff binary | ||||
|     CC       C compiler (default is "gcc") | ||||
|     ARCH     Target architecture of C compiler (default is host arch) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Exit codes:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     0) Success | ||||
|     1) ABI difference detected | ||||
|     2) Prerequisite not met | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Examples | ||||
| ======== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Basic Usage | ||||
| ----------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| First, let's try making a change to a UAPI header file that obviously | ||||
| won't break userspace:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     --- a/include/uapi/linux/acct.h | ||||
|     +++ b/include/uapi/linux/acct.h | ||||
|     @@ -21,7 +21,9 @@ | ||||
|      #include <asm/param.h> | ||||
|      #include <asm/byteorder.h> | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     -/* | ||||
|     +#define FOO | ||||
|     + | ||||
|     +/* | ||||
|       *  comp_t is a 16-bit "floating" point number with a 3-bit base 8 | ||||
|       *  exponent and a 13-bit fraction. | ||||
|       *  comp2_t is 24-bit with 5-bit base 2 exponent and 20 bit fraction | ||||
|     diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h b/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Now, let's use the script to validate:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     All 912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Let's add another change that *might* break userspace:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     --- a/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     +++ b/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ struct bpf_insn { | ||||
|             __u8    dst_reg:4;      /* dest register */ | ||||
|             __u8    src_reg:4;      /* source register */ | ||||
|             __s16   off;            /* signed offset */ | ||||
|     -       __s32   imm;            /* signed immediate constant */ | ||||
|     +       __u32   imm;            /* unsigned immediate constant */ | ||||
|      }; | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|      /* Key of an a BPF_MAP_TYPE_LPM_TRIE entry */ | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The script will catch this:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     ==== ABI differences detected in include/linux/bpf.h from HEAD -> dirty tree ==== | ||||
|         [C] 'struct bpf_insn' changed: | ||||
|           type size hasn't changed | ||||
|           1 data member change: | ||||
|             type of '__s32 imm' changed: | ||||
|               typedef name changed from __s32 to __u32 at int-ll64.h:27:1 | ||||
|               underlying type 'int' changed: | ||||
|                 type name changed from 'int' to 'unsigned int' | ||||
|                 type size hasn't changed | ||||
|     ================================================================================== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| In this case, the script is reporting the type change because it could | ||||
| break a userspace program that passes in a negative number. Now, let's | ||||
| say you know that no userspace program could possibly be using a negative | ||||
| value in ``imm``, so changing to an unsigned type there shouldn't hurt | ||||
| anything. You can pass the ``-i`` flag to the script to ignore changes | ||||
| in which the userspace backwards compatibility is ambiguous:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh -i | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     All 912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Now, let's make a similar change that *will* break userspace:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     --- a/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     +++ b/include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     @@ -71,8 +71,8 @@ enum { | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|      struct bpf_insn { | ||||
|             __u8    code;           /* opcode */ | ||||
|     -       __u8    dst_reg:4;      /* dest register */ | ||||
|             __u8    src_reg:4;      /* source register */ | ||||
|     +       __u8    dst_reg:4;      /* dest register */ | ||||
|             __s16   off;            /* signed offset */ | ||||
|             __s32   imm;            /* signed immediate constant */ | ||||
|      }; | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Since we're re-ordering an existing struct member, there's no ambiguity, | ||||
| and the script will report the breakage even if you pass ``-i``:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh -i | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     ==== ABI differences detected in include/linux/bpf.h from HEAD -> dirty tree ==== | ||||
|         [C] 'struct bpf_insn' changed: | ||||
|           type size hasn't changed | ||||
|           2 data member changes: | ||||
|             '__u8 dst_reg' offset changed from 8 to 12 (in bits) (by +4 bits) | ||||
|             '__u8 src_reg' offset changed from 12 to 8 (in bits) (by -4 bits) | ||||
|     ================================================================================== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Let's commit the breaking change, then commit the innocuous change:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % git commit -m 'Breaking UAPI change' include/uapi/linux/bpf.h | ||||
|     [detached HEAD f758e574663a] Breaking UAPI change | ||||
|      1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) | ||||
|     % git commit -m 'Innocuous UAPI change' include/uapi/linux/acct.h | ||||
|     [detached HEAD 2e87df769081] Innocuous UAPI change | ||||
|      1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Now, let's run the script again with no arguments:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD^1... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD^1 and HEAD... | ||||
|     All 912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| It doesn't catch any breaking change because, by default, it only | ||||
| compares ``HEAD`` to ``HEAD^1``. The breaking change was committed on | ||||
| ``HEAD~2``. If we wanted the search scope to go back further, we'd have to | ||||
| use the ``-p`` option to pass a different past reference. In this case, | ||||
| let's pass ``-p HEAD~2`` to the script so it checks UAPI changes between | ||||
| ``HEAD~2`` and ``HEAD``:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh -p HEAD~2 | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD~2... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD~2 and HEAD... | ||||
|     ==== ABI differences detected in include/linux/bpf.h from HEAD~2 -> HEAD ==== | ||||
|         [C] 'struct bpf_insn' changed: | ||||
|           type size hasn't changed | ||||
|           2 data member changes: | ||||
|             '__u8 dst_reg' offset changed from 8 to 12 (in bits) (by +4 bits) | ||||
|             '__u8 src_reg' offset changed from 12 to 8 (in bits) (by -4 bits) | ||||
|     ============================================================================== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Alternatively, we could have also run with ``-b HEAD~``. This would set the | ||||
| base reference to ``HEAD~`` so then the script would compare it to ``HEAD~^1``. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Architecture-specific Headers | ||||
| ----------------------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Consider this change:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     --- a/arch/arm64/include/uapi/asm/sigcontext.h | ||||
|     +++ b/arch/arm64/include/uapi/asm/sigcontext.h | ||||
|     @@ -70,6 +70,7 @@ struct sigcontext { | ||||
|      struct _aarch64_ctx { | ||||
|             __u32 magic; | ||||
|             __u32 size; | ||||
|     +       __u32 new_var; | ||||
|      }; | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|      #define FPSIMD_MAGIC   0x46508001 | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| This is a change to an arm64-specific UAPI header file. In this example, I'm | ||||
| running the script from an x86 machine with an x86 compiler, so, by default, | ||||
| the script only checks x86-compatible UAPI header files:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     No changes to UAPI headers were applied between HEAD and dirty tree | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| With an x86 compiler, we can't check header files in ``arch/arm64``, so the | ||||
| script doesn't even try. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| If we want to check the header file, we'll have to use an arm64 compiler and | ||||
| set ``ARCH`` accordingly:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % CC=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc ARCH=arm64 ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     ==== ABI differences detected in include/asm/sigcontext.h from HEAD -> dirty tree ==== | ||||
|         [C] 'struct _aarch64_ctx' changed: | ||||
|           type size changed from 64 to 96 (in bits) | ||||
|           1 data member insertion: | ||||
|             '__u32 new_var', at offset 64 (in bits) at sigcontext.h:73:1 | ||||
|         -- snip -- | ||||
|         [C] 'struct zt_context' changed: | ||||
|           type size changed from 128 to 160 (in bits) | ||||
|           2 data member changes (1 filtered): | ||||
|             '__u16 nregs' offset changed from 64 to 96 (in bits) (by +32 bits) | ||||
|             '__u16 __reserved[3]' offset changed from 80 to 112 (in bits) (by +32 bits) | ||||
|     ======================================================================================= | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/884 UAPI headers compatible with arm64 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| We can see with ``ARCH`` and ``CC`` set properly for the file, the ABI | ||||
| change is reported properly. Also notice that the total number of UAPI | ||||
| header files checked by the script changes. This is because the number | ||||
| of headers installed for arm64 platforms is different than x86. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Cross-Dependency Breakages | ||||
| -------------------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Consider this change:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     --- a/include/uapi/linux/types.h | ||||
|     +++ b/include/uapi/linux/types.h | ||||
|     @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ typedef __u32 __bitwise __wsum; | ||||
|      #define __aligned_be64 __be64 __attribute__((aligned(8))) | ||||
|      #define __aligned_le64 __le64 __attribute__((aligned(8))) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     -typedef unsigned __bitwise __poll_t; | ||||
|     +typedef unsigned short __bitwise __poll_t; | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|      #endif /*  __ASSEMBLY__ */ | ||||
|      #endif /* _UAPI_LINUX_TYPES_H */ | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Here, we're changing a ``typedef`` in ``types.h``. This doesn't break | ||||
| a UAPI in ``types.h``, but other UAPIs in the tree may break due to | ||||
| this change:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     ==== ABI differences detected in include/linux/eventpoll.h from HEAD -> dirty tree ==== | ||||
|         [C] 'struct epoll_event' changed: | ||||
|           type size changed from 96 to 80 (in bits) | ||||
|           2 data member changes: | ||||
|             type of '__poll_t events' changed: | ||||
|               underlying type 'unsigned int' changed: | ||||
|                 type name changed from 'unsigned int' to 'unsigned short int' | ||||
|                 type size changed from 32 to 16 (in bits) | ||||
|             '__u64 data' offset changed from 32 to 16 (in bits) (by -16 bits) | ||||
|     ======================================================================================== | ||||
|     include/linux/eventpoll.h did not change between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     It's possible a change to one of the headers it includes caused this error: | ||||
|     #include <linux/fcntl.h> | ||||
|     #include <linux/types.h> | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Note that the script noticed the failing header file did not change, | ||||
| so it assumes one of its includes must have caused the breakage. Indeed, | ||||
| we can see ``linux/types.h`` is used from ``eventpoll.h``. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| UAPI Header Removals | ||||
| -------------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Consider this change:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     cat << 'EOF' | patch -l -p1 | ||||
|     diff --git a/include/uapi/asm-generic/Kbuild b/include/uapi/asm-generic/Kbuild | ||||
|     index ebb180aac74e..a9c88b0a8b3b 100644 | ||||
|     --- a/include/uapi/asm-generic/Kbuild | ||||
|     +++ b/include/uapi/asm-generic/Kbuild | ||||
|     @@ -31,6 +31,6 @@ mandatory-y += stat.h | ||||
|      mandatory-y += statfs.h | ||||
|      mandatory-y += swab.h | ||||
|      mandatory-y += termbits.h | ||||
|     -mandatory-y += termios.h | ||||
|     +#mandatory-y += termios.h | ||||
|      mandatory-y += types.h | ||||
|      mandatory-y += unistd.h | ||||
|     EOF | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| This script removes a UAPI header file from the install list. Let's run | ||||
| the script:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from dirty tree... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from HEAD... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between HEAD and dirty tree... | ||||
|     ==== UAPI header include/asm/termios.h was removed between HEAD and dirty tree ==== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/912 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Removing a UAPI header is considered a breaking change, and the script | ||||
| will flag it as such. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Checking Historic UAPI Compatibility | ||||
| ------------------------------------ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| You can use the ``-b`` and ``-p`` options to examine different chunks of your | ||||
| git tree. For example, to check all changed UAPI header files between tags | ||||
| v6.0 and v6.1, you'd run:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh -b v6.1 -p v6.0 | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from v6.1... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from v6.0... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between v6.0 and v6.1... | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     --- snip --- | ||||
|     error - 37/907 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Note: Before v5.3, a header file needed by the script is not present, | ||||
| so the script is unable to check changes before then. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| You'll notice that the script detected many UAPI changes that are not | ||||
| backwards compatible. Knowing that kernel UAPIs are supposed to be stable | ||||
| forever, this is an alarming result. This brings us to the next section: | ||||
| caveats. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Caveats | ||||
| ======= | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The UAPI checker makes no assumptions about the author's intention, so some | ||||
| types of changes may be flagged even though they intentionally break UAPI. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Removals For Refactoring or Deprecation | ||||
| --------------------------------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Sometimes drivers for very old hardware are removed, such as in this example:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     % ./scripts/check-uapi.sh -b ba47652ba655 | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from ba47652ba655... OK | ||||
|     Installing user-facing UAPI headers from ba47652ba655^1... OK | ||||
|     Checking changes to UAPI headers between ba47652ba655^1 and ba47652ba655... | ||||
|     ==== UAPI header include/linux/meye.h was removed between ba47652ba655^1 and ba47652ba655 ==== | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     error - 1/910 UAPI headers compatible with x86 appear _not_ to be backwards compatible | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The script will always flag removals (even if they're intentional). | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Struct Expansions | ||||
| ----------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Depending on how a structure is handled in kernelspace, a change which | ||||
| expands a struct could be non-breaking. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| If a struct is used as the argument to an ioctl, then the kernel driver | ||||
| must be able to handle ioctl commands of any size. Beyond that, you need | ||||
| to be careful when copying data from the user. Say, for example, that | ||||
| ``struct foo`` is changed like this:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     struct foo { | ||||
|         __u64 a; /* added in version 1 */ | ||||
|     +   __u32 b; /* added in version 2 */ | ||||
|     +   __u32 c; /* added in version 2 */ | ||||
|     } | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| By default, the script will flag this kind of change for further review:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     [C] 'struct foo' changed: | ||||
|       type size changed from 64 to 128 (in bits) | ||||
|       2 data member insertions: | ||||
|         '__u32 b', at offset 64 (in bits) | ||||
|         '__u32 c', at offset 96 (in bits) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| However, it is possible that this change was made safely. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| If a userspace program was built with version 1, it will think | ||||
| ``sizeof(struct foo)`` is 8. That size will be encoded in the | ||||
| ioctl value that gets sent to the kernel. If the kernel is built | ||||
| with version 2, it will think the ``sizeof(struct foo)`` is 16. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The kernel can use the ``_IOC_SIZE`` macro to get the size encoded | ||||
| in the ioctl code that the user passed in and then use | ||||
| ``copy_struct_from_user()`` to safely copy the value:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     int handle_ioctl(unsigned long cmd, unsigned long arg) | ||||
|     { | ||||
|         switch _IOC_NR(cmd) { | ||||
|         0x01: { | ||||
|             struct foo my_cmd;  /* size 16 in the kernel */ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|             ret = copy_struct_from_user(&my_cmd, arg, sizeof(struct foo), _IOC_SIZE(cmd)); | ||||
|             ... | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| ``copy_struct_from_user`` will zero the struct in the kernel and then copy | ||||
| only the bytes passed in from the user (leaving new members zeroized). | ||||
| If the user passed in a larger struct, the extra members are ignored. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| If you know this situation is accounted for in the kernel code, you can | ||||
| pass ``-i`` to the script, and struct expansions like this will be ignored. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Flex Array Migration | ||||
| -------------------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| While the script handles expansion into an existing flex array, it does | ||||
| still flag initial migration to flex arrays from 1-element fake flex | ||||
| arrays. For example:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     struct foo { | ||||
|           __u32 x; | ||||
|     -     __u32 flex[1]; /* fake flex */ | ||||
|     +     __u32 flex[];  /* real flex */ | ||||
|     }; | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| This change would be flagged by the script:: | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|     [C] 'struct foo' changed: | ||||
|       type size changed from 64 to 32 (in bits) | ||||
|       1 data member change: | ||||
|         type of '__u32 flex[1]' changed: | ||||
|           type name changed from '__u32[1]' to '__u32[]' | ||||
|           array type size changed from 32 to 'unknown' | ||||
|           array type subrange 1 changed length from 1 to 'unknown' | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| At this time, there's no way to filter these types of changes, so be | ||||
| aware of this possible false positive. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Summary | ||||
| ------- | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| While many types of false positives are filtered out by the script, | ||||
| it's possible there are some cases where the script flags a change | ||||
| which does not break UAPI. It's also possible a change which *does* | ||||
| break userspace would not be flagged by this script. While the script | ||||
| has been run on much of the kernel history, there could still be corner | ||||
| cases that are not accounted for. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The intention is for this script to be used as a quick check for | ||||
| maintainers or automated tooling, not as the end-all authority on | ||||
| patch compatibility. It's best to remember: use your best judgment | ||||
| (and ideally a unit test in userspace) to make sure your UAPI changes | ||||
| are backwards-compatible! | ||||
|  | @ -34,6 +34,7 @@ Documentation/dev-tools/testing-overview.rst | |||
|    kselftest | ||||
|    kunit/index | ||||
|    ktap | ||||
|    checkuapi | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| .. only::  subproject and html | ||||
|  |  | |||
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	 John Moon
						John Moon