Project Description
multipath-tools is in urgent need of better CI, both unit tests and "real world" tests. We a very basic set of unit tests, but the coverage is miserable. Also, there's some minimal github workflow code, which could be improved a lot while I'm learning about github workflows.
Goal for this Hackweek
Improve github workflows: add workflows for non-intel architectures for compilation and at least part of the unit tests. Add some more unit tests.
Hackweek 20 results
It took a while to figure out ways how to run multiarch build and unit tests on Github. I eventually got all the puzzle pieces together. The results can be seen in the actions page of the openSUSE multipath-tools repository, where I can now run automated build and (admittedly quite sparse) unit test CI for multipath-tools on 7 different distros and 5 architectures (I could do more, but it would be overkill). The effort relies heavily on the build-multipath project, where I'd collected container specifications for building multipath for some time. Who knows, maybe this will turn into a more generic build recipe in the future.
Looking for hackers with the skills:
This project is part of:
Hack Week 20
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Description
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The project is meant to be Linux-specific, so I'm going to use io_uring, pidfs, namespaces, and Linux-specific features in order to drive all of this.
I'm open for suggestions and so on, but this is meant to be a solo project, as this is more of a learning exercise for me than anything else.
Goals
- Have a better understanding of different Linux features from user space down to the kernel internals.
- Most importantly: have fun.
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