It isn't always obvious what happened when the rootfs runs out of space,
especially when using lorax via pungi. So this checks for the out of
space error string when building the runtime image and logs it to the
primary logfile and console as an error with the rootfs size.
eg.
2020-01-20 18:52:58,920: The rootfs ran out of space with size=1
Without this, depending on which version of pylint is used, you may see
errors related to the rpm.RPMTAG_* constants. This makes sure that
pylint allows loading the rpm module.
This makes sure that depsolving shim installs the shim-* package, and
that depsolving grub2-efi-*-cdboot installs a specific -cdboot package.
Related: rhbz#1641601
Cherry-picked from: 47fd6e85b2
Chasing updated package versions is silly. We already have other tests
to make sure the blueprints support version numbers there is no need to
fail a test at the whim of an upstream repo.
The enabled bool is now being used so the cli should only show the types
actually available on the architecture.
Also modifies the test in test_compose_sanity.sh
Related: rhbz#1751998
The callers, and the documentation, all expect int 0/1 to use as the
exit status for the program. Not True/False, even though that works most
of the time.
These use beakerlib to download a Fedora boot.iso and run mkksiso on
it. It currently does not try to boot the resulting iso, it mounts it
and checks that the expected config files have been modified and the
extra files have been added.
This builds a boot.iso in the vm, copies it out, and boots it.
The tests that run inside the boot.iso
(/tests/lorax/test_boot_bootiso.sh) cannot use beakerlib so it needs to
be a simple shell script returning 1 on failure along with a descriptive
message.
/var/log/audit/audit.log isn't always available (eg. tar liveimg
install), but it is logged to the journal, which can be grepped with
'journalctl -g' so use that instead.
Note: use podman-docker to avoid changing tests too much. This
is also what we have on the RHEL branches.
There's no service to be started/restarted so remove everything
related to docker service.
On Fedora 31 passworless root login is no longer working. We already
install a ssh key, may as well use it.
This also reduces the live boot timeout to 2s from 60s, which should
help with timeout problems when booting.
Nested virt is not reliable enough, especially on other arches, to rely
on for testing the created images. This moves the test code into
test_boot_* scripts to be run from inside the booted images.
It also adds copying the results of the build into
/var/tmp/test-results/, and includes the generated ssh key so that
whatever boots the image can also log in.
The tests/test_image.sh script has been added to handle running the
test_boot_* scripts without any of the extra lorax-composer specific
setup.
The 'enabled' field in the /compose/types output now reflects whether or
not the type is supported on the current architecture. Disabled types
are not allowed to be built, and will raise an error like:
Compose type 'alibaba' is disabled on this architecture
This uses a new Ansible module, ec2_snapshot_import, which is included
here until it is available from upstream.
It will upload the AMI to s3, convert it to a snapshot, and then
register the snapshot as an AMI. The s3 object is deleted when it has
been successfully uploaded.
Since we have both compose uuids and upload uuids they need to be
clearly named. This updates the upload naming to use 'upload_uuid' in
the inputs, and 'upload_id' in the output (_id instead of _uuid for
consistency with build_id naming in the status responses).
This also adds 'upload_id' to the /upload/log response.
This tests the routes for saving a profile, listing profiles, deleting
profiles, as well as composing with upload.
The composes run fake composes with upload data, one selects a profile
the other passes in the settings. No actual upload is done, but it tests
that the info, log, and cancel routes work.
This also updates the test setup to copy over the share/lifted directory
so that the providers are available to the tests.