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Mark Brown authored
The BPF selftests have build time dependencies on cutting edge versions of tools in the BPF ecosystem including LLVM which are more involved to satisfy than more typical requirements like installing a package from your distribution. This causes issues for users looking at kselftest in as a whole who find that a default build of kselftest fails and that resolving this is time consuming and adds administrative overhead. The fast pace of BPF development and the need for a full BPF stack to do substantial development or validation work on the code mean that people working directly on it don't see a reasonable way to keep supporting older environments without causing problems with the usability of the BPF tests in BPF development so these requirements are unlikely to be relaxed in the immediate future. There is already support for skipping targets so in order to reduce the barrier to entry for people interested in kselftest as a whole let's use that to skip the BPF tests by default when people work with the top level kselftest build system. Users can still build the BPF selftests as part of the wider kselftest build by specifying SKIP_TARGETS, including setting an empty SKIP_TARGETS to build everything. They can also continue to build the BPF selftests individually in cases where they are specifically focused on BPF. This isn't ideal since it means people will need to take special steps to build the BPF tests but the dependencies mean that realistically this is already the case to some extent and it makes it easier for people to pick up and work with the other selftests which is hopefully a net win. Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
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