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Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adam Williamson
bc1e9681f9 Add KDE live image build and test for updates
I hacked this up quickly on staging to test a specific update,
but there's really no reason we shouldn't just do it generally.
We have the capacity.

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2021-04-22 16:00:16 -07:00
Adam Williamson
72edbfe991 Use qemu host IP 172.16.2.2 not 10.0.2.2
This is to make the infra folks happy, apparently using 10.0.x.x
and 10.1.x.x is causing conflicts since our actual infra network
uses those ranges too.

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2020-07-23 16:40:45 -07:00
Adam Williamson
3bc1e8335a Put /var/lib/mock on separate disk for live image build test
The update live image build test keeps running out of disk space.
We've bumped the minimal disk image from 12GB all the way up to
20GB so far but it keeps happening. So let's try a different
strategy: use a scratch disk to mount /var/lib/mock. That's where
all the space gets used. This should allow us to reduce the size
of the minimal disk image again, and giving it 25GB of empty disk
should avoid it running out of space again for a while.

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2020-05-05 21:12:12 -07:00
Adam Williamson
80c54d5491 Add cockpit_updates and remote_logging tests to updates
Again, no reason not to run these on updates. Includes adding
oldcantarell versions of several needles for current cockpit,
as they're needed for the tests to pass. Also tweak a couple of
needles to avoid false matches (add more empty space).

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2020-01-24 21:03:41 +01:00
Adam Williamson
44d1dc3607 Add base_reboot_unmount and base_system_logging to update tests
No reason not to run these on updates as well. And it's much
easier with FIF!

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2020-01-24 20:50:39 +01:00
Adam Williamson
2c197d520c Add a whole intermediate template format ('FIF') and tools
I and @lruzicka (and I think @jskladan and @jsedlak and
@michelmno and everyone else who's ever touched it...) are being
gradually driven nuts by manually editing the test templates.
The bigger the files get the more awkward it is to keep them
straight and be sure we're doing it right. Upstream doesn't do
things the same way we do (they mostly edit in the web UI and
dump to file for the record), but we do still think making
changes in the repo and posting to the web UI is the right way
around to do it, we just wish the format was saner.

Upstream has actually recently introduced a YAML-based approach
to storing job templates which tries to condense things a bit,
and you can dump to that format with dump-templates --json, but
@lruzicka and I agree that that format is barely better for
hand editing in a text editor than the older one our templates
currently use.

So, this commit introduces...Fedora Intermediate Format (FIF) -
an alternative format for representing job templates - and some
tools for working with it. It also contains our existing
templates in this new format, and removes the old template files.
The format is documented in the docstrings of the tools, but
briefly, it keeps Machines, Products and TestSuites but improves
their format a bit (by turning dicts-of-lists into dicts-of-
dicts), and adds Profiles, which are combinations of Machines and
Products. TestSuites can indicate which Profiles they should be
run on.

The intermediate format converter (`fifconverter`) converts
existing template data (in JSON format; use tojson.pm to convert
our perl templates to JSON) to the intermediate format and
writes it out. As this was really intended only for one-time use
(the idea is that after one-time conversion, we will edit the
templates in the intermediate format from now on), its operation
is hardcoded and relies on specific filenames.

The intermediate format loader (`fifloader`) generates
JobTemplates from the TestSuites and Profiles, reverses the
quality-of-life improvements of the intermediate format, and
produces template data compatible with the upstream loader, then
can write it to disk and/or call the upstream loader directly.

The check script (`fifcheck`) runs existing template data through
both the converter and the loader, then checks that the result is
equivalent to the input. Again this was mostly written for one-
time use so is fairly rough and hard-coded, but I'm including it
in the commit so others can check the work and so on.

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
2020-01-24 15:21:23 +01:00