Add -monitor none to turn off the qemu monitor multiplexing.
Pass -boot d for -cdrom booting instead of 'c'.
Add 'console=ttyS0,115200n8' to the boot arguments so that kernel output
will show up on the serial port.
This also includes extensive tests for each of the currently supported
customizations. It should be generic enough to continue working as long
as the list of dicts includes a 'name' or 'user' field in the dict.
Otherwise support for a new dict key will need to be added to the
customizations_diff function.
Instead of setting up the routes inside a function we can now use a
BlueprintSkip class, which allows us to register them at different
routes (eg. /api/v0/ and /api/v1/) and override any routes that will be
replaced by the new API version.
When adding a new API we want to use the old code for any routes that
aren't being overridden.
This modifies the Flask Blueprint class so that a skip_rules list can be
passed to server.register_blueprint()
the biggest slow down is fetching data for many repositories
over a slow network. The previous retry count and sleep times
sometimes are not enough on Fedora.
It's necessary to make sure the blueprints directory doesn't contain
the git/ directory before the tests are run, so that we can just simply
modify the blueprint files without using blueprints push.
Related: rhbz#1714298
Beakerlib upstream can't do this yet, but might at some point:
https://github.com/beakerlib/beakerlib/issues/42
This is only enabled in combination with the `--sit` option of the
`test/check-*` scripts. It leaves the system in exacly the state it was
in when an assertion failed. Finishing the test run would run cleanup as
well (such as deleting created images). It also takes longer.
`setup_tests()` expected BLUEPRINTS_DIR to be set, but it wasn't when
running in automated mode (with $CLI set).
Fix this and move share and blueprint dirs to function arguments.
Test the HTTP API directly from outside the VM by forwarding
/run/weldr/api.socket to a TCP port on the host.
This is only a start to test that the API always returns JSON (see
previous commit).
this makes it possible to have more granular test execution
reported as separate statuses on GitHub. ATM we will have:
- cockpit/fedora-30
- cockpit/fedora-30/live-iso
- cockpit/fedora-30/qcow2
- cockpit/fedora-30/aws
- cockpit/fedora-30/azure
- cockpit/fedora-30/openstack
- cockpit/fedora-30/vmware
Helps in figuring out which tests are in a file without having to open
it. Use like this:
$ test/check-cli -l
TestImages.test_live_iso
TestImages.test_partitioned_disk
TestImages.test_qcow2
TestImages.test_tar
TestSanity.test_blueprint_sanity
TestSanity.test_compose_sanity
Names of classes containing multiple tests can be given, just like
normal:
$ test/check-cli -l TestSanity
TestSanity.test_blueprint_sanity
TestSanity.test_compose_sanity
Not all parts of the script has been switched from awscli to ansible yet,
because the ansible aws modules do not support importing s3 object as snapshots.
(https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/53453)
Workaround using the image_location parameter of the ec2_ami ansible module
would mean adding extra code for generating AMI manifest with pre-signed
URLs.
Commit 4783f6562f introduced the assumption that beakerlib is already
installed in non-RHEL images. As the test script runs without `set -e`,
this hasn't been noticed as the test silently succeeds.
Go back to installing beakerlib everywhere.
We were checking for composer's FINISHED status only, which meant that
when a compose failed, the test ran until it timed out.
Check for failed as well. Also, always time out after 30 minutes.
Some test runners don't have nested virtualization enabled. Because
these checks are only checking that a boot works, kvm doesn't give us
that much. Disable for now.
Also remove the check for qemu-kvm. It doesn't abort the test
prematurely anyway.