CONFIG_COVERAGE has been incorrectly used to
change other kconfig options (stack sizes, etc)
code defaults, as well as some samples behaviour,
which should not have dependend on it.
Instead those should have depended on COVERAGE_GCOV,
which, being the one which adds special code and
temporary RAM storage for embedded targets,
require changes to many features.
When building for the native targets, all this was
unnecessary.
=> Fix the dependency.
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alberto.escolar.piedras@nordicsemi.no>
A new Z_SPIN_DELAY() macro has been added which
can be used to reduce a bit the amount of noise
due to the POSIX arch need to break busy loops with
k_busy_wait().
Use it.
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alberto.escolar.piedras@nordicsemi.no>
As of today <zephyr/zephyr.h> is 100% equivalent to <zephyr/kernel.h>.
This patch proposes to then include <zephyr/kernel.h> instead of
<zephyr/zephyr.h> since it is more clear that you are including the
Kernel APIs and (probably) nothing else. <zephyr/zephyr.h> sounds like a
catch-all header that may be confusing. Most applications need to
include a bunch of other things to compile, e.g. driver headers or
subsystem headers like BT, logging, etc.
The idea of a catch-all header in Zephyr is probably not feasible
anyway. Reason is that Zephyr is not a library, like it could be for
example `libpython`. Zephyr provides many utilities nowadays: a kernel,
drivers, subsystems, etc and things will likely grow. A catch-all header
would be massive, difficult to keep up-to-date. It is also likely that
an application will only build a small subset. Note that subsystem-level
headers may use a catch-all approach to make things easier, though.
NOTE: This patch is **NOT** removing the header, just removing its usage
in-tree. I'd advocate for its deprecation (add a #warning on it), but I
understand many people will have concerns.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
Add a bunch of missing "zephyr/" prefixes to #include statements in
various test and test framework files.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Baltieri <fabiobaltieri@google.com>
In order to bring consistency in-tree, migrate all tests to the new
prefix <zephyr/...>. Note that the conversion has been scripted, refer
to #45388 for more details.
Signed-off-by: Gerard Marull-Paretas <gerard.marull@nordicsemi.no>
When the kernel is TICKLESS, timeouts are set as needed, and drivers
all have some minimum amount of time before which they can reliably
schedule an interrupt. When this happens, drivers will kick the
requested interrupt out by one tick. This means that it's not
reliably possible to get a timeout set for "one tick in the
future"[1].
And attempting to do that is dangerous anyway. If the driver will
delay a one-tick interrupt, then code that repeatedly tries to
schedule an imminent interrupt may end up in a state where it is
constantly pushing the interrupt out into the future, and timer
interrupts stop arriving! The timeout layer actually has protection
against this case.
Finally getting to the point: in recent changes, the timeslice layer
lost its integration with the "imminent" test in the timeout code, so
it's now able to run into this situation: very rapidly context
switching code (or rapidly arriving interrupts) will have the effect
of infinitely[2] delaying timeouts and stalling the whole timeout
subsystem.
Don't try to be fancy. Just clamp timeslice duration such that a
slice is 2 ticks at minimum and we'll never hit the problem. Adjust
the two tests that were explicitly requesting very short slice rates.
[1] Of course, the tradeoff is that the tick rate can be 100x higher
or more, so on balance tickless is a huge win.
[2] Actually it only lasts until a 31 bit signed rollover in the HPET
cycle count in practice.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
In Qemu icount mode, busy wait will cause lots of wall time and it's
very easy to get sanitycheck timeout(this case will be successful if
given enough timeout value for sanitycheck), so reduce test interval
to save execution time.
Signed-off-by: Wentong Wu <wentong.wu@intel.com>