#!/bin/bash # perf kallsyms tests # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 err=0 test_kallsyms() { echo "Basic perf kallsyms test" # Check if /proc/kallsyms is readable if [ ! -r /proc/kallsyms ]; then echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Skipped: /proc/kallsyms not readable]" err=2 return fi # Use a symbol that is definitely a function and present in all kernels, e.g. schedule symbol="schedule" # Run perf kallsyms # It prints "address symbol_name" output=$(perf kallsyms $symbol 2>&1) ret=$? if [ $ret -ne 0 ] || [ -z "$output" ]; then # If empty or failed, it might be due to permissions (kptr_restrict) # Check if we can grep the symbol from /proc/kallsyms directly if grep -q "$symbol" /proc/kallsyms 2>/dev/null; then # If it's in /proc/kallsyms but perf kallsyms returned empty/error, # it likely means perf couldn't parse it or access it correctly (e.g. kptr_restrict=2). echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Skipped: $symbol found in /proc/kallsyms but perf kallsyms failed (output: '$output')]" err=2 return else echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Skipped: $symbol not found in /proc/kallsyms]" err=2 return fi fi if echo "$output" | grep -q "not found"; then echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Failed: output '$output' does not contain $symbol]" err=1 return fi if perf kallsyms ErlingHaaland | grep -vq "not found"; then echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Failed: ErlingHaaland found in the output]" err=1 return fi echo "Basic perf kallsyms test [Success]" } test_kallsyms exit $err