29cfda8eae
- save compose logs under /var/log/$TEST
- save qemu logs under /var/log/$TEST/qemu.log
- download everything to $TEST_ATTACHMENTS so it can be saved
in CI results
Cherry-picked from
|
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.. | ||
check-cli | ||
check-cloud | ||
composertest.py | ||
README.md | ||
run | ||
vm.install |
Integration Tests
lorax uses Cockpit's integration test framework and infrastructure. To do this,
we're checking out Cockpit's bots/
subdirectory. It contains links to test
images and tools to manipulate and start virtual machines from them.
Each test is run on a new instance of a virtual machine.
Branch/test matrix is configured in bots/tests-scan
inside the
cockpit repository.
Dependencies
These dependencies are needed on Fedora to run tests locally:
$ sudo dnf install curl expect \
libvirt libvirt-client libvirt-daemon libvirt-python \
python python-libguestfs python-lxml libguestfs-xfs \
python3 libvirt-python3 \
libguestfs-tools qemu qemu-kvm rpm-build rsync xz
Building a test VM
To build a test VM, run
$ make vm
This downloads a base image from Cockpit's infrastructure. You can control
which image is downloaded with the TEST_OS
environment variable. Cockpit's
documentation
lists accepted values. It then creates a new image based on that (a qemu
snapshot) in tests/images
, which contain the current tests/
directory and
have newly built rpms from the current checkout installed.
To delete the generated image, run
$ make vm-reset
Base images are stored in bots/images
. Set TEST_DATA
to override this
directory.
Running tests
After building a test image, run
$ ./test/check-cli [TESTNAME]
or any of the other check-*
scripts. To debug a test failure, pass --sit
.
This will keep the test machine running after the first failure and print an
ssh line to connect to it.
Run make vm
after changing tests or lorax source to recreate the test
machine. It is usually not necessary to reset the VM.
Updating images
The bots/
directory is checked out from Cockpit when make vm
is first run.
To get the latest images you need to update it manually (in order not to poll
GitHub every time):
$ make -B bots
GitHub integration
Tests are automatically triggered for every pull request. To disable tests for
a pull request, add the no-test
label when opening it.
To interact with GitHub from scripts in bots/
, generate a
token with at least repo:status,
public_repo, and read:org permissions, and put it into
~/.config/github-token
.
You can retry a failed test with:
$ bots/tests-trigger --repo weldr/lorax <PR> <test>
If no test is given, all failed tests will be retried. Pass --allow
to
trigger tests on a pull request by an outside contributor.
Azure setup
To authenticate Ansible (used in tests) with Azure you need to set the following
environment variables:
AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID
, AZURE_TENANT
, AZURE_CLIENT_ID
and AZURE_SECRET
.
From the left-hand side menu at https://portal.azure.com select
Resource groups >> Click on composer RG. Above the resulting list of resources
you can see Subscription ID -> AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID
.
From the left-hand side menu at https://portal.azure.com select Azure Active Directory >> App registrations >> New registration. Give it a name and leave the rest with default values. Once the AD application has been created you can click on its name to view its properties. There you have:
- Directory (tenant) ID ->
AZURE_TENANT
- Application (client) ID ->
AZURE_CLIENT_ID
- Certificates & secrets (on the left) >> New client secret ->
AZURE_SECRET
Next make sure the newly created AD App has access to the storage account. From the left-hand side menu at https://portal.azure.com select Storage accounts >> composerredhat >> Access control (IAM) >> Role assignments >> Add >> Add role assignment. Then make sure to select
- Role == Contributor
- Scope == Resource group (Inherited)
- AD app name (not the user owning the application)
Storage account itself must be of type StorageV2 so tests can upload blobs to it!