The FreeIPA UI change that the previous commit adapted to is in
4.8.9. That's stable for Rawhide and F33 already, but still in
testing for F32, and won't go to F31. So we need to make the
change conditional on release number, and we also add the update
to workarounds for F32 so we don't have to do something awkward
while we wait for it to go stable.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
OTP field was moved into the last position in the password change dialog
to prevent issues with OTP code expiring while users enter their
passwords.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Bokovoy <abokovoy@redhat.com>
GNOME now also splits 'Restart...' and 'Power Off...' as KDE
does, so we need to tweak the conditional and add some needles.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In Fedora 33, we generally no longer include a disk-based swap
partition by default (instead swap-on-ZRAM is used, see
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/SwapOnZRAM ). This tweaks
our tests to account for that. In tests that aren't to do with
swap at all, we stop including a swap partition in order to be
closer to the default layout. We replace the old _no_swap blivet
and custom tests with _with_swap tests that, as the name implies,
*explicitly include* a swap partition, and adjust the postinstall
test to check the disk swap partition is there.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
30 seconds doesn't seem to be reliable enough. Let's try 60, if
that's not enough I'll try and think of something smarter.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Just repositioning the mouse appears not to be enough to prevent
the sesssion going idle any more, since the 20200731.n.0 compose.
Not sure what causes this, probably the kernel. Adding a space
keypress seems to help in both KDE and GNOME.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is a bit complex to automate, because we cannot really use
the production Zezere server (provision.fedoraproject.org) as
the test case shows, as we'd have to solve authentication and
we also don't really want to constantly keep registering new
hosts to it that are going to disappear and never be seen again.
So, instead we'll do it by setting up our *own* Zezere, and
provisioning our IoT system in that. We run two tests. The
'ignition' test is the actual IoT 'device'; all it really does
is boot up, sit around, and wait to be provisioned. The 'server'
test first sets up a Zezere server, then logs into it, adds an
ssh key, claims the IoT device, provisions it, and connects to
it to create a special file which tells the 'ignition' test
everything worked and it can close out.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
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>
It actually is supposed to be installed by default, so if it's
missing that's a bug. It's been added to comps now so it should
be there from now on.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It got split out and is not installed by default in 33-0.8. This
is intentional, not a bug, see https://pagure.io/fesco/issue/2114
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a test that automates
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Testcase_Clevis. It requires
os-autoinst-4.6-18.20200623git5038d8c or newer, and a worker
host in the 'tpm' class which is set up to have an instance of
swtpm running at /tmp/mytpmX , where X is the worker instance
number, for each worker. The Fedora infrastructure ansible
plays have been updated to handle this via an instantiated
systemd service, which other instances can also adopt.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
`cp -R foo/*` doesn't get all files in `foo/`, it misses hidden
files. This turns out to be a problem with recent anaconda, as
it expects to find a .treeinfo file here. So, let's use rsync.
We could probably do this with cp too but I can't think of the
right arguments right now...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a pair of tests, one which does almost all the work
from the test case, the other just a client test to check that
we can connect to an HTTP server running in a container on the
host. We also have to bump the _console_wait_login timeout on
this path a bit as we're booting a disk image that was installed
with DHCP working, but we change the network setup so DHCP does
not work any more, and the system spends quite some time trying
to bring the network up on boot before eventually giving up and
proceeding.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Here we are creating ~/.config for a newly-created user with root
ownership. We can't leave it that way, as commands run as the
user account won't be able to change it, as they should be able
to. So we need to change the ownership (and, just in case, fix
SELinux contexts) afterwards.
This was the real source of the problem we were seeing (the test
failing early due to the gsettings command which should turn the
screen background black failing).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're trying to launch stuff the instant we see a desktop, and
it seems to be failing quite often in GNOME. Let's give it a few
seconds.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
IoT does nightly Branched and Rawhide composes that are built
as RC candidates, for some reason. So let's except it from this
check.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I started out trying to fix os-release for the recent change to
add "Prerelease" tags to the VERSION and PRETTY_NAME fields, then
things spiralled. It got me thinking about the awkward DEVELOPMENT
variable we use, so I decided to get rid of it and refactor the
few things that use it. I refactored the anaconda prerelease tag
check, and wrote a new giant comment that gives details about
exactly how anaconda decides whether to show those tags, to give
context to our choices about when to expect them. This check now
uses a new LABEL variable the scheduler now sets. I also wound up
creating new UP1REL and UP2REL vars to define the 'source' release
for upgrade tests, separate from CURRREL and PREVREL, which are
now never lies - they really are the current stable and previous
stable release, even for update upgrade tests.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
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>
This is failing on every update and that's not telling us anything
useful - we already know about the bug - so let's work around it.
Not adding a softfail as it's a bit more awkward to do that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We can get tripped up by the tutorial screen when launching
Boxes; borrow some code from the app start/stop test to check for
and handle it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The default timeout for check_screen is 0, so we were only giving
the enter key press a fraction of a second to take effect before
expecting to see locked_screen_switch_user. This is too tight,
see https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/586257 . Let's give it
five seconds before we give up.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Since GDM shows the "system-menu-button", it could not correctly
switch users on a locked screen. I added a check to see
if we are on a locked screen and behave accordingly.
This adds a new test that implementsQA:Testcase_desktop_login
on both GNOME and KDE.
While working on this, we realized that the "desktop_clean"
needles were really "app menu" needles, and for KDE, this was
a duplication with the new "system menu" needles, because on KDE
the app menu and the system menu are the same. So I (Adam)
started to de-duplicate that, but also realized that "app menu
button" is a much more accurate name for these needles, so I was
renaming the old desktop_clean needles to app_menu_button. That
led me to the realization that "check_desktop_clean" is itself a
dumb name, because we don't (at least, any more, way back in the
mists of time we may have done) do anything to check that the
desktop is "clean" - we're really just asserting that we're at a
desktop *at all*. While thinking *that* through, I *also* realized
that the whole "open the overview and look for the app grid icon"
workaround it did is no longer necessary, because GNOME doesn't
use a translucent top bar any more. That went away in GNOME 3.32,
which is in Fedora 30, our oldest supported release.
So I threw that away, renamed the function "check_desktop",
cleaned up all the needle naming and tagging, and also added an
app menu needle for GNOME in Japanese because we were missing
one (the Japanese tests have been using the "app grid icon"
workaround the whole time).
This stuff is kinda broken in various ways and halfline thinks
he can fix the underlying bug anyway. So let's go back to just
the GNOME live test being broken for now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I tested this workaround on staging before pushing it to git and
it worked, but then when I pushed it to prod it didn't work. On
stg I also had this to set GDM to debugging mode, so maybe this
is also needed for the workaround to work for some reason?
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
A GNOME bug seems to result in us getting to GDM, not a liveuser
desktop, after running 'systemctl isolate graphical.target' from
a live boot to runlevel 3 since the end of March. This works
around that to let the test run, as it's not really a failure of
the test per se.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Previous commit same summary had some side effect
solved by this new one.
And avoid a warning in autoinst-log when ABRT var not defined.
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
I merged the previous commit before realizing the ordering was
wrong. All other 'actions' lines have to come *before* the one
that adds 'reboot', because one of the conditions for that is
whether @actions is populated - basically, if we're taking any
actions, we also have to reboot afterwards. If we add an action
*after* that line (but no actions were added before that line),
we'll do it but then not reboot and the test will break.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 00b756f0e2.
Unfortunately, I made a typo in the script and the fix did not
work. I do not want to rebase the master (in order not to break
things for everyone) so I am reverting again.
Sorry.
This reverts commit d784bf54ca.
It turned out that Locations are not connected to Konqueror
at all. The reason why the test is failing is that the
application has been removed to limit the number of
web browsers.
We seem to be seeing the bug this works around:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1765685
in F30 and F31 update tests even with this wait. At least, it
looks that way. Trying this to see if a longer wait helps.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
RHBZ #1692972 was fixed long ago, so we don't need to worry
about that any more. But this test failed on the recent F31 live
respin compose because it was changed to assume the tutorial
would appear on startup, which only happens on F32+. To make the
test work on F31 respins, let's handle both paths. Once F32 is
stable we can drop this as we won't run the test on F31 any more
after that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
IoT created a branch that's basically Rawhide but is versioned
33. This causes the release_identification tests to fail. I don't
think they'll change this on their end, so let's just have the
test cope with it and expect branches versioned as the Rawhide
release number to behave as Rawhide does here.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems to be actually installing fedora-release-silverblue now
so we get correct identification here. Update the tests.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2020-1070052d10#comment-1284223
It seems the rootfs on the Fedora 30 installer images we build at
present has gotten very big, so big that an update which contains
some very slightly larger firmware packages causes the rootfs to
be completely full (though lorax doesn't fail) and the image
doesn't boot.
I don't yet know when or why the rootfs got that big, but it's
not really a bug in this update, so for now let's just tell
lorax to use a bigger rootfs so the tests pass for this and any
similar future updates, until I can maybe find time to pinpoint
the culprit more precisely.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Initial implementation wasn't correct, I forgot CURRREL is not
'the pre-upgrade release version' but just 'the current stable
release'. This is a dumb way to figure out the correct release
number for this context but off-hand I can't think of a better
one.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
When there's a failed service we get a stupid bullet-point char
at the start of its line, and all the other lines are space-
padded to match indentation. Which is annoying! This (I hope)
ditches that crap without losing anything of value.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Also comment this better. We need to index from the end of the
string here, not the start, because going from the start breaks
when the compose shortname has a dash in it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per https://github.com/weldr/lorax/pull/881 it wasn't doing
anything anyway, and using it causes the command to fail in F32
and later.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
https://github.com/rpm-software-management/mock/commit/cb25d3ba
changes existing mock configs for stable releases to have a
`dnf.conf` section instead of a `yum.conf` section, and this
change got pushed out to F30 and F31, which breaks us :( Our
mock config that we use for building live images assumes the
existence of a `yum.conf` section in the config it inherits
from.
This change is now stable for F30 and F31, so at least we don't
have to do any conditional shenanigans; we can just change to
'the new style' unconditionally and things should work OK.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
IoT is becoming a release-blocking edition for F32, so we should
be testing it for sure. We may add specific tests, but for now
let's run the install and base tests on it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
On graphical flavors we are not at a console when this test runs.
We need to do root_console to get there, and also bypass_1691487
for ppc64le. Copied from base_selinux.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is failing a lot lately. I've no idea why, but it's not
really part of the actual test and we don't need it for debugging
all the time, so let's drop it for now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The text we used to get has been replaced with a spinner, which
is difficult and unreliable to match on. This match was only
here to make the test fail a bit faster if it was broken, so
let's just live without it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're getting issues with KDE's crazy-slow alt-f2 behaviour
here. So try and be even more conservative.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This match keeps giving us problems, and now I look at the test
again, there is actually no need for it at all. Clicking it
doesn't do anything, and we already confirm that we're on the
right page at the next step, where we look for a log entry and
click on that - that will fail if we aren't actually on the
Logs page.
I don't remember what Cockpit used to look like when we first
put this line and needle in, presumably there's a reason we had
them, but they're clearly unnecessary now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
wait_idle is finally removed upstream in recent git os-autoinst.
This replaces all remaining wait_idles with sleeps, except for
one which is removed (I'm hoping improvements to typing in the
last few years should mean it isn't necessary any more, if it
turns out to be, I'll put it back as a sleep).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This failed a couple times in a row on KDE live, let's see if
wait_still_screen is better than sleep.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We need a couple of new needles, plus the 'join domain' button
has disappeared from the front page due to the very inefficient
UI redesign, so we need to scroll down to find it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Lately launching anaconda on the KDE live image seems pretty
unreliable and we're not sure why. My last attempt to fix it
doesn't seem to be working, here's another effort based on the
idea it might be caused by moving the mouse from the hidden
position to the icon and back again, let's try moving the mouse
close to the icon before we assert and click it...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We still have a 'apps_run_firefox_stop' needle tag which is for
the same thing as 'firefox_close_tabs'. That's dumb. Get rid of
it and only have the firefox_close_tabs tag and needles. Also
clean up some old firefox_close_tabs needles that haven't matched
for months and all the 'apps_run_firefox_stop' needles.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
KDE tests are quite frequently failing lately because anaconda
doesn't launch. I'm hoping this will help.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
autocloud is dying soon. So, we want to run the tests in openQA
instead. This adds a test module called 'autocloud' and a test
suite called 'cloud_autocloud' which basically replicate what
autocloud does (download a tarball full of tests and run each
one), and the necessary template bits to run it on Cloud_Base
qcow2 images.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
...otherwise the VNC client tests fail on aarch64 because we try
to apply the 'console=tty0' workaround for #1661288. Fortunately
we don't really need that for the VNC install test to work, so
let's just skip it. We can make this more sophisticated later if
it turns out to be necessary.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
os-autoinst has this code when doing `script_run` on a serial
terminal that does a `wait_serial` for '# ' before running the
command. For some reason when we switch to the anaconda root
console and run a couple of commands after finishing install on
ppc64, the first of these prompt checks times out, which means
the test sits there doing nothing for 90 seconds unnecessarily.
Let's try and avoid that by hacking the prompt check regex to
be empty.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There is nothing inherently 'root'-y about these so it makes no
sense to prefix their names with 'root-'. And why change from
'console' to 'terminal' compared to the naming used in the
actual qemu command and the log files? It's just confusing.
Let's be consistent (except for using - instead of _ here...
but - is easier to type!)
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds tests for vncconnect, a variation on VNC install using
reverse VNC (where the client waits for the server to connect to
it). Very similar to the regular-VNC test, but we have to use
tigervnc as Boxes doesn't do reverse VNC.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a test for QA:Testcase_Anaconda_User_Interface_VNC -
the VNC install test case. It's implemented as a server/client
pair, with the server booting from the Server DVD image with
`inst.vnc` and the client booting from the desktop base disk
image, setting up networking, then running Boxes to connect to
the server and run the install.
There are various little tweaks to test loading and logic to
handle this, mostly pretty clear. We also move the workaround
for 'spurious auth prompt appears on desktop after you switch
away to a VT and back' out of the desktop update test and into
the `desktop_vt` helper function, since now this test can hit
it as well. We enhance _graphical_wait_login to handle the boot
loader if needed (it has never needed to until now).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This handles a case where KDE shows a notification saying
'PIM Maintenance (Finished)', like this:
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/477345#step/desktop_notifications/34
we need to click it away for the desktop_notification test to
pass. It also clarifies the difference between this notification
and the eternal 'akonadi_migration_agent is doing something'
popup in the needle names and comments. It also replaces the
'check_screen then assert_and_click if found' pattern in several
notifications-related places with the better 'check_screen then
click_lastmatch if found' pattern now available upstream.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We don't know exactly what's going on with this bug yet, but as
a 15 second sleep seems to avoid the issue, let's do that for
now so we catch any future issues.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
See https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/473215 - it failed
because we tried to click FINISH CONFIGURATION while it was
still animating downwards.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The way this works at present, with a check_screen and then an
assert_and_click, there's a window where the check has passed
so we're committed to the assert, but it takes a half second or
so for the assert to actually complete (checking for a needle
is a somewhat heavy operation). During that half second the
'new update!' notification can...and quite often does...appear.
Changing the assert_and_click to a click_lastmatch should (I
hope) tighten this window; click_lastmatch should fire faster
than assert_and_click so there'll be less of a window for the
update notification to appear and break stuff.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This PR adds the following:
* moves out the presetting procedures, so that two long terminal tests do not have
to run twice
* add methods for application to register when successfully started
* adds a test that checks if all required applications have registered
This reduces the coverage of the identification test a bit but
also *substantially* simplifies it. We run into a ton of problems
when we try to check the version and prerelease text on screens
where it appears on banners:
* The banners differ between variants
* The pre-release text is translated
* The banners have gradients so for RTL languages, even if some
text is untranslated (e.g. 'Fedora 31') it appears on a
different background color than on LTR languages
* The prerelease text is dark red; if it appears on a dark blue
area of the banner this can trigger an os-autoinst needle
comparison bug: https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/56822
All of this together means we wind up continually fighting these
checks and we have a whole forest of needles just for them, and
it doesn't seem worthwhile. So let's drop all the places where
we were checking version and prerelease on banners, and only
check them in two places where they appear on a grey background,
which avoids most of the problems (we just need one version
needle per release, and one prerelease needle per language).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This PR fixes#124.
It uses the BUILD variable to get the build string from the
tested compose and uses it to compare correct values for Silverblue.
Originally, it used Workstation values that did not match the
Silveblue ones.
Delete bad yank.
One of the test cases we didn't yet automate is:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Testcase_Kickstart_File_Path_Ks_Cfg
Now we have a PXE test, it's actually a good opportunity to test
that at the same time. I don't usually like combining tests like
this but in this case it sort of makes sense as otherwise we'd
have to have a whole parallel PXE install just to test this one
other detail. So, instead of doing an interactive PXE install as
we did at first, let's tweak the test to include a kickstart in
the initramfs and run the install from that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
* server-cockpit-updates tests that Cockpit can be used to update the system.
* server-cockpit-autoupdate tests that users can use dnf-automatic for system
updates.
* cockpit functions were removed from utils.pm and put into an extra library
for cockpit - cockpit.pm which all cockpit tests are now using.
Review cockpit.pm
Review autoupdate test.
Review the update test.
Fix typo in cockpit.pm
Add sleep.
Add missing command.
Delete an unused needle.
mock is changing the config files to be based on templates,
which breaks how we generate the live build mock config. This
should work with both the old and new config files.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is causing all kinds of trouble, because when the test is
run on the Server DVD - with the 'orange to blue' gradient - the
prerelease note is dark red text on a dark blue background.
os-autoinst actually reduces the color depth of images/needles
and greyscales them before performing the match...but for this
dark red text on dark blue background, the result seems to be
that the text and background come out *the same grey*, so *any*
text will match the needle (even if it's completely different
text), as will *no text at all*. I've tried finessing around
this a few times but it just keeps happening, so for now I'm
just disabling the pre-release text check at this point. We still
have the check during _boot_to_anaconda, when the text appears
on a *grey* background and so isn't a problem. I'm not removing
the needles yet, until we hear back from upstream:
https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/56822
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Building images with SELinux in permissive mode worked fine in
F29 and F30, but it seems to be broken in F31. Releng seems to
have it set up so the build environment has SELinux disabled,
so let's do the same. Will file a bug for this, as bcl says it
should be considered a bug.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is doing slightly less to exercise the launcher menus and see
whether icons appear or disappear, but it's much faster and more
reliable. We do still use menu launch for one app, just to check
the mechanism works in general.
This adds a whole wodge of stuff to support_server to make it
act as a PXE server, then adds a new test which boots from PXE
and so should hit the PXE server. We use the NFS install repo as
that can be relied on to work for a support_server install.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We do this in quite a few places and need to do it in another,
so let's just have a function for it. It takes a file glob
so we can have it run on a different one for _live_build.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Split this out of install_default, because it really is not a
part of that test and we do not want that test to fail because
the desktop background is wrong. Make it its own test module
and test suite instead. Don't do it on Rawhide, because we
really can't assert anything worthwhile about Rawhide at the
moment at least (this means the test runs but is a no-op and
will always pass on Rawhide, unfortunately). Move the needles
to a more appropriate location (this has nothing to do with
anaconda) and use 'background' not 'wallpaper' naming (that's
the name we use elsewhere in the project, e.g. package names).
Also, run the test on updates, and add an F29 needle for this
purpose.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
cockpit test often seems to fail because the click on a services
entry to open the services detail screen just gets lost. Let's
wait longer before trying it, and retry once if it fails.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The user and root spokes were moved from during-install to pre-
install hub in Rawhide. This should cope with that, while still
working for older images.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There are three places where we basically want to click away
pop-up update notifications and the buggy akonadi_migration_agent
notification if it's there, in KDE tests. Let's share this code
between them, and also let's record soft failures for the buggy
cases in the desktop_notifications test.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Current KDE seems to like showing us multiple update available
notifications. So the test must dismiss all of them. See:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1730482
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
* Add test to check module defaults.
* Add whitelist download.
* Fix install test to include selected profile to be on the safe side.
* Add test into templates.
Cockpit 198 comes with a UI overhaul, so almost all needles
need an update.
The 'auditd' service is no longer on the first page. To make
this less fragile (at the cost of not testing that clicking on
a service actually opens the detail page *for that service*,
tweak the needles to just look for *any* running service, click
on it, and check we got to a 'details' page. We also redo the
existing needles for this design.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I'm pretty sure I worked around the modifier bug in os-autoinst,
so this shouldn't be necessary any more. See:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1727388
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We can run these tests much like support_server - have a test
which boots from the support_server disk image but with the ISO
to be tested attached, then mounts it and runs the scripts.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
@lruzicka added this to the KDE app tests in 71c4e273, but there
was no need for a new needle as I'd already done the same thing
in the desktop updates tests; let's just use the same needle.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This shouldn't be needed any more (the referenced bug was fixed
in F28) and doesn't work in non-live installer.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This whole block where we do various things at the console after
install completes was becoming a real mess. I had secret hopes
of killing it entirely at some point, but...that doesn't look
like it's gonna happen this century. So let's make it better
instead. The conditionals were getting very nested and icky and
it was hard to see what was actually going on. This rationalizes
things so first we figure out all the things we might want to do
at a console, then if we don't have anything to do at a console
we go ahead and hit the reboot button; otherwise we go to the
console and do all the things we need to do, including rebooting
unless this is the memory check test.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This just doesn't work when running the test on a graphical
install because we're at a desktop when we try and do it, not
a text console. So let's only try to do it if there is no
DESKTOP. See e.g.:
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/408484#step/base_selinux/2
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The way KDE does update notifications has changed - it's now a
permanent pop-up notification. This is a bit awkward for our
logic; it's hard to define a needle that proves this pop-up is
the only notification. Instead, let's dismiss it, then open the
notification tray and assert that there aren't any others. But
we also retain the old behaviour (more or less) for testing old
releases.
The popup notification also blocks the 'refresh' needle in the
systray and so breaks the desktop update test, so we deal with
that too.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
So, turns out new os-autoinst does *not* still accept the old
argument style for assert_and_click...and old os-autoinst
doesn't accept the new one. This adds a wrapper that handles
both, so our tests can work with old and new os-autoinst. We can
drop this once both deployments are on newer os-autoinst.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In the new os-autoinst I just sent to staging, the old style
doesn't work any more, breaks all tests. This style should also
work with the older os-autoinst on stable.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
'use password' now seems to be default when creating a user in
text mode, so we need to handle that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This was necessary for debugging the FreeIPA 4.8 pre-release
update bug, so let's have it for all runs, just in case.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems that when this problem happens now we get *two* auth
requests, so we need to handle that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
File doesn't exist for ostree installs. No point failing if this
fails, we may as well just continue and see what happens.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
No purpose is being served by all update tests failing on this
bug, so let's try and work around it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is covering the NFSISO_variation test as per:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Testcase_install_repository_NFSISO_variation
Change support_server to use support_5 disk image in templates
supposed to be previously created by updated createhdds tool
required for new test.
Signed-off-by: Guy Menanteau <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Since the KDE menus have transparency set, any time the wallpaper
changes the menus will look different, and the app tests may
fail. This sets the desktop wallpaper to black at the start of
the test suite to avoid this problem.
It seems that there was a lag in button drawing, which prevented
OpenQA from fully recognizing the krusader_welcome needle because
it was evaluated too soon.
I added "wait_still_screen 3" to make sure, there is time for a
button to be drawn correctly before assertion.
Change method from assert_script_run to script_run
Change to reboot from console.
Move code in submethod, use ifs to make sure everything runs.
Fix chroot rebooting problem.
In the last few weeks Boxes is showing an auth dialog on start.
I've filed a bug on this; let's have the test handle it as a
soft failure, since this isn't a fatal problem. Do this by
making an existing needle for this dialog a bit more generic
in name and using it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The KDE and GNOME 'apps' tests for Firefox both invented their
own 'oh look Firefox is running' needle, even though we already
had one. The GNOME one was broken by the removal of the app
title bar in Firefox 66.
Instead of having three needles for the same thing, let's just
throw the 'apps' ones out and use the pre-existing one from
needles/firefox for all cases.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Add png files as a background for the needles.
Rewrite the test handling methods to make them ready for KDE
Add the ABRT startstop test.
Make changes and corrections to the abrt test.
Add test for Firewall.
Add test for DNF dragora.
Add wait time for dnfdragora test.
Correct syntax.
Add Language test.
Make some changes to the DNF dragora test.
Add Users test case.
Add needles for DBUS viewer test.
Add Dbusviewer test.
Add Mahjong test and needles for games.
Add Minesweeper tests.
Add Patience test.
Add test for Document Viewer.
add test for gwenview
Add test for koulourpaint.
Add test for Kruler
Add test for Kcolorchooser
Reneedle failing needle.
Add ktorrent tests.
Add tests for CPT editors.
Add test for Krfb
Fix names for those files.
Add test for Kget
Add Akregator test.
Add test for Konversation.
Make Konversation end really.
Add tests for Kmail
Add test for PIM exporter.
Add test for KTnef and Krdc.
Fix problems after test runs.
Make more tries.
Fix needle to be found better.
Fix more errors.
Add test for Falkon.
Add tests for browsers.
Add support for closing tabs into Firefox test.
Add tests for K3B
move needles to correct directory
Add Kaddressbook test.
Add Kontakt text.
Add test for korganizer.
Add menu office needle and correct konqueror needle.
Add test for calligra stage.
Add test for Calligra.
Add test for network connections.
Modify needle for kaddressbook to prevent failing.
Add test for system settings and fix others.
Add test for FMW.
Add test for Dolphin
Add test for Infocenter.
Add test for kparted.
Fix a wrong needle.
Test relnotes.
Fix some errors in tests.
Add test for Discover.
Add test for Ksysguard.
Add tests for Konsole.
Add tests for KDE wallet.
Add tests for several utilities.
Add Krusader test.
Finish utility tests.
Fix some errors.
Fix needle for spectacle.
Add wait time to let Dragora wait for network.
As of Fedora-30-20190316.n.1, gnome-abrt is back under the
Utilities menu and the 'Sundry' menu seems to have disappeared.
Change the test back to using utilities and drop the sundry
needle.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems 3 secs was a bit tight for recent Branched and Rawhide,
test was failing when the screen was just a bit slow to update
for some reason.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Sigh. It seems sometimes the button isn't visible because GNOME
pops up a fricking notification that blocks it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
As there is *always* a base repo error when booting a netinst
image, this check was giving us spurious failures when running
universal tests on a netinst (which we are currently doing on
ppc64 it seems). Tweak it a bit to hopefully avoid this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
wait_idle was deprecated and effectively it just sleeps, so
replace these wait_idles with explicit sleeps - I can't think
of a better choice here as we just need to wait for Firefox to
calm down after various operations.
The wait_still_screens were always hitting the 30 second time
out because of the flashing cursor; setting the similarity level
required to lower than the default 47 should fix this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
ctrl-t seems to be failing often in Firefox tests, and I can't
figure out why. Let's try clicking the 'new tab' button instead
as a workaround.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Just like the installer image build test, only...it builds a live
image. This involves reimplementing quite a chunk of the Koji
livemedia task. Ah, well. Also involves rethinking the flavor
names a bit here, these seem...better.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're getting a spurious "Authentication required" for a
background refresh of the system repos sometimes, depending on
whether it happens while we're at a tty. This is now accepted
by upstream, so let's handle it and make it a soft failure for
now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We quite often want to run the update tests on a Koji task (not
a Bodhi update) for some reason - usually to test a potential
fix for an issue, or at a maintainer's request to test a change
before it is merged upstream and officially sent out as an
update. Up till now I've always hacked up utils.pm on the
staging server by hand to do this, which is horrible. Together
with a commit to fedora_openqa, this should allow us to do it in
a nice, sane way via the CLI. It's mostly just tweaking the
"updates" repo setup in utils.pm as you'd expect, but there's a
bit of subtlety to it because of the installer tests that use
%ADVISORY% as a variable substitution in the disk image name;
you can't do something like `%ADVISORY or KOJITASK%`, sadly, so
I had to have almost-redundant variables ADVISORY, KOJITASK and
ADVISORY_OR_TASK (we could kinda just live with ADVISORY_OR_TASK
except I didn't want to drop ADVISORY as it's an unnecessary
change from previous behavior).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
inst.addrepo was added in F29. In F28 it should just sorta not
do anything at all. It's not worth doing a big workaround to
make F28 graphically add the repo in this case; let's just allow
F28 to not actually add the repo. It's fine! This is fine.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1669256 it became
obvious that there's a missing feature in the new installer test
for updates: the update is both used in the image build process
and built into the installer environment itself, but it is not
actually included in the installed package set. This can be a
problem if the update has a bug that manifests *only* at install
time if it is in the install transaction (which is exactly the
case there), because the test will not catch this, and nor will
any other test.
So this commit makes `support_server` set up the update repo and
serve it out via NFS when it's run in an update context, and
makes the actual update install test run parallel with it and
use that repository. This way the install should include the
package(s) from the update. (It also of course means the test
fails if an update breaks NFS or something like that, but hey,
we want to know that!)
A parallel commit for fedora_openqa is necessary to add the
required CURRREL setting for the updates-installer flavor.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a test which builds a netinst image potentially with
the package(s) from the update, and uploads that image. It also
adds a test which runs a default install using that image. This
is intended to check whether the update breaks the creation or
use of install images; particularly this will let us test
anaconda etc. updates. We also update the minimal disk image
name, as we have to make it bigger to accommodate this test,
and making it bigger changes its name - the actual change to
the disk image itself is in createhdds. We also have to redo a
bunch of installer needles for F28 fonts, after I removed them
a month or so back...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There seems to be an issue in Rawhide ATM which can cause the
'beta nag' screen to take a very long time to appear. Bump the
timeout to avoid tests failing on this.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1666112
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We don't want the tests to fail on this now we know what the
bug is, really - we want to find if there are any subsequent
fails, and allow the post-install tests to run also. So, let's
make it a soft failure.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I'm pretty sure we got all the bugs this was working around
fixed. Again, if not, we can put this back!
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The bug never got explicitly addressed, but it's very old and
anaconda has been substantially changed since. The workaround
sometimes triggers erroneously now (because the icon sometimes
goes black while the spoke is still in 'Checking storage
configuration...' state), which is awkward. I can't be 100% sure
the bug doesn't sometimes still happen, but if it does, we'll
notice fairly soon, and we can tweak this and put it back.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems Rawhide auto-signing is working fine now: openQA claims
this needle has 'never' been matched (which really means 'not
for a long time'), and I can't find any test fail in the last
year which looks like it landed on this 'authenticate' screen
but the needle failed to match, or anything like that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/424393 is a failure
where the 'Download' [updates] button was already visible when
we went to the tab. We already checked whether an 'apply' button
is visible and skipped the 'refresh' click if so, but because
the 'download' button is a new thing, we weren't skipping the
'refresh' click if 'download' was already visible.
So in this case, even though we could already see 'download', we
went ahead and clicked 'refresh'...then *immediately* started
looking for 'download'. It seems that Software did not refresh
and remove the 'Download' button *immediately* when we pressed
'refresh' - it left the 'Download' button visible briefly, and
*in this brief window*, we clicked it. *Then* Software kinda
'noticed' we'd clicked 'Update', and it seems it just sort of
throws away our click on 'Download' at that point and does the
refresh.
So at that point, the test thinks it's clicked 'Download' and
expects to see 'Apply', but actually the 'Download' click got
more or less thrown away, so the test fails, sitting at the
'Download' button.
To solve this, let's just extend the existing check to skip the
'refresh' click if 'download' *or* 'apply' are already visible.
There is a sort of possibility here that we could wind up
downloading and installing some updates that existed and were
noticed *before* we did our python3-kickstart trick, but not
install the python3-kickstart update, and cause the test to fail
because of that, but that doesn't seem to have happened before
when we were seeing the 'update' button, so I think I'm not
going to borrow trouble. If it happens, we'll deal with it I
guess.
The comment talks only about KDE, but clearly it can be the case
that an automatic check makes the button visible on GNOME too,
so let's rewrite the comment too.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The fix for this bug was sent to all releases now, so we should
not need the workaround any more. Let's kill it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is breaking the memory_check tests. I just reproduced it
manually and the UI *does* come back to life if you wait some
time; let's see if we can work around the bug this way.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If an update test fails before reaching advisory_post, we don't
generate the 'what update packages were installed' and 'were
any update packages *not* installed when they should have been'
logs, but these may well be useful for diagnosing the failure -
so let's also do the same stuff there. Only let's not do it all
twice.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We hit an interesting case in update testing recently:
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2018-115068f60e
An earlier version of that update failed testing. When we dug
into it a bit, we found that the test was failing because an
earlier version of the `pki-server` package was installed than
the version that was in the update; when asked (as part of
FreeIPA deployment) to install it, dnf had noticed that there
were dependency issues with the version of the package from the
update, but it happened to be able to install the version from
the frozen 'stable' repo...so it just went ahead and did that.
In this case, the 'missed' package resulted in a test failure,
but it'd actually be possible for this to happen and the test
to complete; we really ought to notice when this happens, and
treat it as a test failure.
So what this attempts to do is: at the end of all update tests,
check for all installed packages with the same name as a package
from the update, and compare their full NEVR to the one of the
package from the update. If a package with the same name as one
of the update packages is installed, but does not appear to be
the *same NEVR*, we fail, and upload the lists of packages for
manual investigation as to what the heck's going on.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
From local experimentation, it still actually produces the
output, even though it prints the message about the order being
wrong and exits 1.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Weirdly, occasionally some update tests seem to fail because
the 'comm' util we use to produce the list of packages from the
update that were actually tested during the job doesn't think
one of the input files is in alphabetical order, even though we
sort them both when they're produced. I don't know if this is
possibly due to the definition of 'alphabetical order' changing
as part of the update, or what. But we really shouldn't *fail*
the test when this happens, as it's not part of the functional
test, we're just producing convenience data. So, let's handle
the command failing, and if it happens, upload the input files
so we can maybe figure out why it's unhappy...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The previous commit would lead to the 'workaround' getting hit
incorrectly, and might have had some other issues...tweak it a
bit.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
GNOME Software 3.30.5 split the offline update process into two
separate 'download' and 'apply' phases. So we need to handle
clicking 'download' before 'apply', if that happens.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Somehow, recently, FreeIPA tests are running into Firefox not
quitting because it's showing a warning about closing multiple
tabs. (I think we didn't *get* multiple tabs before but now we
do, for some reason). So let's work around this by clicking
"Close tabs" if the warning appears.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Lately, we can't be sure the desktop will be on tty1 after we
do 'systemctl isolate graphical.target'. For recent Workstation
lives it actually shows up on tty2.
We could be 'clever' and switch to tty2 on F29+ Workstation
lives...but actually it seems like if we just don't do anything,
systemd switches us to the correct tty. So let's rely on that,
at least as long as it's working.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
At least one test (desktop_notifications_postinstall) boots from
the disk image uploaded by install_default_upload, and needs to
access the grub menu. On F29+ Workstation this is failing,
because the grub menu is now hidden by default, so when the test
boots, it never sees the bootloader screen, and fails.
I considered trying to teach it to hold down shift or hit f8 or
esc at the right time, but that seems like it might be hard. So
instead let's just try to disable the hidden menu when we're
about to upload the installed system image. This is kinda going
against the 'preserve natural system behaviour' principle we try
to use for openQA, but I think it's OK as we do have other tests
that will exercise the 'hidden boot menu' stuff to some extent.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
On F27 we don't get a 'Software is up to date' screen because
there's an upgrade available. Let's work with the refresh button
instead.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're not seeing *exactly* #1314991 any more, but we're seeing
something that looks quite similar: the first attempt to find
updates just doesn't find any. No error message, no updates. I
have reported a bug for this and am investigating it, in the
meantime, let's restore the workaround, elaborated a bit, and
looking for the 'Software is up to date' screen instead of the
error message.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I rather suspect the *bug* is still basically present and it's
why this test often fails, but we no longer seem to see the
*error message* which lets us detect the bug happening. This
needle has not been hit by any test for six months. So let's
remove the workaround as it adds complexity.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
For some reason, in recent tests, switching to a console after
live install completes is taking a long time, and tests are
failing because we 'only' allow 10 seconds for the login prompt
to appear. This seems to indicate some kind of performance bug,
but we don't really want all liveinst tests to fail on in, this
is not primarily a performance testing framework. So let's
tweak the root_console / console_login bits a bit to allow a
configurable timeout for the login prompt to appear, and use
that to wait 30 secs instead of 10 in this case.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The FreeIPA upgrade test didn't actually check that FreeIPA is
actually running after the upgrade and reboot, it just kinda
assumed it is. Let's add a check to the start of the 'check'
test module that makes sure ipa.service actually comes up to
'active' state. This'll make it clearer when tests are failing
because FreeIPA didn't come up right after the upgrade. The
check will run on non-upgrade tests too, but that's fine.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a new test intended to just check boot chain things
for updates. It doesn't run any test modules besides the stock
update ones, but sets a variable, ADVISORY_BOOT_TEST, which
causes _advisory_update to do some additional stuff after
installing the updates but before rebooting: it forces regen
of the initramfs and bootloader config, and reinstalls the
bootloader on BIOS (not UEFI as it's not relevant). If the
following boot fails, we probably have a bug somewhere.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's this annoying problem where the screen sometimes goes
messed up after ipa-server-uninstall. 'clear' doesn't seem to
really work to fix it up either. Let's try flipping between
ttys. I don't like this much as it's already a pain trying to
work out / remember what tty we might possibly be on at any
given time, but I think we're always on either 1 or 3 here, so
let's do ctrl-alt-f1 ctrl-alt-f3 to ensure at least one change
and wind up on tty3...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Looking at this, it's a bit weird: the updated packages are
actually included in the upgrade process, but we still run
_advisory_update, which does basically nothing...then reboots.
That's kinda silly and makes the tests a bit flaky, let's fix
it. I don't think there's actually any problem with doing the
upload of updatepkgs.txt in _repo_setup_updates, becase that
already guards against being run more than once, it just bails
very early if it's already been run.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I'm going to figure out if it's a bug that it takes so long, but
for now let's just bump the timeout.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
RHBZ#1625572 is for gnome-initial-setup running in 'first login'
mode after it's already run in 'user creation' mode (which isn't
meant to happen). This works around that so the subsequent tests
can run. We don't soft-fail because meh.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If USER_LOGIN is false we can just return; when we reach the
login screen. We don't need a huge conditional when we don't do
anything *after* it, in the false case.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It transpires that decommissioning wipes some stuff, like the
dirsrv logs. Obviously we want these included in the logs we
upload for reference purposes, so let's upload earlier.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a set of jobs to test FreeIPA replication. We deploy
a server, deploy a replica of that server, then enrol a client
against the replica and run the client tests.
At first I was planning to add the replica testing into the
main set of FreeIPA tests, but the test ordering/blocking (via
mutexes and barriers and what-have-you) just turns into a big
nightmare that way. This way seems rather simpler to deal with.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We'd really like to know if FreeIPA is working aside from this
crasher bug, so let's workaround it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We kind of want to know if FreeIPA is working aside from this
known bug, so let's treat it as a soft failure and work around
it. But only for Rawhide, not for F27/F28 updates tests.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1600823 shows a
case where systemd throws a service that would usually have been
started out of the boot process *entirely* in order to resolve a
dependency loop. This means the service won't show up as failed,
it will just be inactive when it should be active. This still
should constitute a failure of this test, so let's add a check
for the log message that indicates this situation.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
As for the domain controller role, stop using rolekit on F29+,
as it's going away. Continue using it on <F29.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
...because by this point in the upgrade test, the system is
upgraded, and rolekit won't be there on F29+.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Rolekit is going away. At least for the F29 cycle, though, we
still want to test basically the same functionality. This ports
the 'domain controller role' test to use ipa-server-install
directly rather than rolectl.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems that for some reason the localized layout gets loaded
on the installer VTs by this point in time, so we need to load
'us' again for this complex command to work.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We need this as part of the fix for #1593028, at least until
the kernel package is changed to no longer have
CONFIG_CMDLINE="console=ttyAMA0" in the config for aarch64
builds. Fully fixing the bug also requires some change to the
kernel or dracut or something.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The way this currently works, the test unconditionally waits 60
seconds for the "Timbuktu screen" (the warning dialog shown on
pre-release images) to appear when anaconda is starting up, even
if it's testing an image where it doesn't show up. Now we test
Atomic nightlies and live respins and stuff this happens quite a
lot, so let's avoid it. This way if the hub appears during those
60 seconds we'll spot it right away and continue, otherwise we
behave the same as before.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Upstream is gonna change the default from 30 to 0, it seems:
https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst/pull/965
so let's go ahead and change these two cases where we have no
explicit timeout to have one.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The reason we have all this horrible code to use the commented-
out baseurl lines in the repo files instead of the metalinks
that are usually used is a timing issue with the metalink
system. As a protection against stale mirrors, the metalink
system sends the package manager a list of mirrors *and a list
of recent checksums for the repo metadata*. The package manager
goes out and gets the metadata from the first mirror on the
list, then checksums it; if the checksum isn't on the list of
checksums it got from mirrormanager, it assumes that means the
mirror is stale, and tries the next on the list instead.
The problem is that MM's list of checksums is currently only
updated once an hour (by a cron job). So we kept running into
a problem where, when a test ran just after one of the repos
had been regenerated, the infra mirror it's supposed to use
would be rejected because the checksum wasn't on the list - but
not because the mirror was stale, but because it was too fresh,
it had got the new packages and metadata but mirrormanager's
list of checksums hadn't been updated to include the checksum
for the latest metadata.
All this baseurl munging code was getting ridiculous, though,
what with the tests getting more complicated and errors showing
up in the actual repo files and stuff. It occurred to me that
instead of using the baseurl we can just use the 'mirrorlist'
system instead of 'metalink'. mirrorlist is the dumber, older
system which just provides the package manager a list of mirrors
and nothing else - the whole stale-mirror-detection-checksum
thing does not happen with mirrorlists, the package manager just
tries all the mirrors in order and uses the first that works.
And happily, it's very easy to convert the metalink URLs into
mirrorlist URLs, and it saves all that faffing around trying to
fix up baseurls.
Also, adjust upgrade_boot to do the s/metalink/mirrorlist/
substitution, so upgrade tests don't run into the timing issue
in the steps before the main repo_setup run is done by
upgrade_run, and adjust repo_setup_compose to sub this line out
later.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Sometimes rebooting during upgrade tests seems to take longer
than these timeouts allow, so let's bump them a bit.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The text changed from 'added repo' to 'enabled repo' in Rawhide
after F28, so let's handle both at least till F28 is EOL.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We've been seeing an odd case lately where the language select
screen is not foregrounded when it appears (so all text is
grey). It happens very occasionally on x86_64, but a lot on
ppc64. To work around this, let's add a needle that matches the
inactive screen, and click on the screen when it appears just
to make sure it's active.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We do the 'desktop update' test for KDE via the notification
icon thingy, and it behaves differently depending on whether it
has already detected there are updates or not. The test only
works at present in the case where it *hasn't* - it expects the
notification icon to be in the extended panel and it expects to
see a 'refresh' button, neither of which is the case if it's
already noticed there are updates to install.
We should also force PackageKit to update its list of available
updates after we set up our 'special' update, otherwise on this
path KDE will only install the updates it found *before* we did
our stuff, and the test will fail as our special update won't be
there.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In F28 tests, the notification 'counter' thing that we rely on
to check there's only *one* notification seems to suddenly
disappear...right around 10 minutes after the desktop starts up,
which is just how long our test idles for to catch crashes that
happen a little after boot. That causes test fails. Let's try
just cutting the wait down to 8 minutes to see if that helps.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
KDE in F28+ seems to show a network connection notification on
live boot, for some reason. Just dismiss it to help the test
pass.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This test expects to pick up from freeipa_webui, but that test
is not fatal (i.e. it can fail and we still carry on to this
one). We should probably make them independent, but for now,
just check if 'test3' (one of the users freeipa_webui creates
and that this test requires) actually exists, at the start. If
not, we can just die right away.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This reduces duplication, but it also means that if the FreeIPA
web UI module fails, the password change module will pick up
from a point where Firefox is set up and won't fail in a bogus
way because it isn't.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This mouse placement is in the middle of where the 'install
addon' popover appears in Firefox, and that seems like it
sometimes causes the popover to immediately disappear in KDE.
This is pretty corner-case-y so I don't wanna report it as a
bug, let's just tweak the cursor hiding location and see if it
solves the problem.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
...as somehow a Workstation live install currently has the
desktop on tty3, I have no idea why (g-i-s not quitting right?)
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is the best workaround I can think of for RHBZ #1553807 -
just check (in the 60 second 'move the mouse' loop) if anaconda
is still running, based on whether its icon is in the top bar
(on Workstation live installs only, obviously).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Seems with the long period of not doing anything and possibly
with very aggressive timeouts in Fedora 28, Workstation live
wants to blank the screen while we're installing. Stop it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Previous approach wouldn't work for tests that run after the
install test...let's just set a password from a chroot after
install completes. Don't really like this as it changes the
'real' install process a bit, but it's the least invasive short
term fix at least. We can maybe do something more sudo-y later
with a bit more thought.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Workstation live installs for F28+ drop the user creation and
root password panes from anaconda, so we need to not try and
use them any more. But we still want the old behaviour for F27.
I'm hoping this approach will work, if not, we'll find out soon
enough. This removes the install_no_user test for F28+ as it
will no longer differ from the install_default test.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a check that the default package set selection is
actually correct, where possible and appropriate, as part of
the `_software_selection` test. We do this by examining the
`packaging.log` log file and checking which environment group
was selected.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is currently broken, but openQA doesn't notice; we really
should. We could also check the default in other cases, but I
think that's less clear-cut, as it's kind of an anaconda design
choice, it's not mandated in Fedora requirements anywhere.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's a problem with using `--releasever=rawhide` for upgrade
tests ATM - see #1531356 . To avoid this, we'll try using the
real Rawhide release number (which I'm adapting the scheduler
code to discover and pass in as `RAWREL`).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's a bug causing the 'getting started' screen to crash.
This doesn't really make the system unusable, so treating it
as a soft failure seems appropriate, especially as this will
unblock all the post-install tests on Workstation.
It takes an unusally long time for Modular images to get from
language selection to the 'timbuktu screen', so give 'em a bit
more time. See bug report for more info.
Modular composes don't include these packages, but we need them
to run the web UI tests for FreeIPA and Cockpit. This is the
most reasonable hack I can come up with for now: just use a
non-modular fedora repo to source these packages when doing
Modular compose testing.
If we ever reach an all-Modular future, these packages should
be available in Modular composes I guess, but for now they are
not.
Since April there's been some kind of issue in the F26 base
image which means gnome-initial-setup doesn't run on the first
user login (as it should). The F25 base image is fine. I've
not yet had the time to look into this.
I put a workaround in place to prevent this problem causing
false fails of update tests that boot from the F26 base image,
but didn't apply the same workaround to upgrade tests, which
is why upgrade tests from F26 Workstation always fail - they
expect g-i-s to run on first login (which happens after the
upgrade, in upgrade tests) and it doesn't. So let's just extend
the workaround to apply to upgrade tests too, for now, until we
can figure out why this happens.
The default action on the reboot confirmation dialog changed
from Reboot to Cancel, so when we hit enter, we just cancel the
reboot. Tweak this to hit tab on F27+ (but not <F26, so update
tests continue to work too).
The font Firefox uses when we don't ensure dejavu is installed
seems to bounce around a bit, so let's ensure the dejavu fonts
are there before we start Firefox. Also update a needle for
this.
We can deal with this annoying bug by looking out for the error
we see when it happens, hitting the 'refresh' button again, and
resetting the loop counter to 1 (requires changing the loop to
a C-style loop).
previously required on f25 host with qemu 2.7.1-6
it is not needed anymore on f26 with qemu 2.9.0-5
This reverts commit 0eb15266117aae47f663297f5f332d480d8549b9.
This reverts commit 8b2977f1d618316ded61420df4fc7d2afd07cbf4.
The initial commit was required for PowerPC
until qemu 2.7.1-6 (in f25) not required anymore
since qemu 2.9.0-5 (in f26)
by direct grep of mount command
because nfs mounting not traced in ananconda or packaging log.
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This is required because anaconda is still checking for it
even if not mandatory. Already tracked by bug
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1172791
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
because started qcow2 may be obsolete for update repo.
Note: despite deprecated "update" alias,
continue to use it rather than "upgrade" command.
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
PowerPC arches have the empty disk automatically
mounted on the second position in anaconda (vdb).
Thus, trig installation on second disk.
Change disk checking to point on correct disk.
Warning: this is a workaround specific correction
addressing a specific case.
This will have to be improved/changed with a more
generic code as suggested by Adam Williamson in
https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora/pull-request/1#comment-31858
proposal for a next commit :)
Signed-off-by: Guy Menanteau <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
* New OFW variable to identify Open Firmware (used by PowerPC)
* Few needles changes for PowerPC support
* as requested do not change the timers value below for PowerPC
tests/install_source_graphical.pm (300 to 600)
tests/_boot_to_anaconda.pm (300 to 1200)
This will be handled by TIMEOUT_SCALE in templates
Signed-off-by: Guy Menanteau <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Previously we just got a screenshot of some AVCs or coredumps,
which told us something was wrong but didn't really help debug
it. So, let's upload the output of the commands and then also
use the post-fail hook to upload the system logs, which should
give us much more info to work with.
We often want to see the logs from the FreeIPA deployment test
even if that test passes - to look for some detail that doesn't
cause a test to fail, for instance, or if one of the *client*
tests failed for a reason that involves the server. So, let's
do that.
That other one didn't help, so let's try this - try and spot if
the spoke is in the unexpected state (the needle should only
match if the spoke is done processing and still in warning
state, it shouldn't match while the needle is still thinking)
and click through it again if so.
Well, that OCR needle isn't working out so great, as it seems
to match when it shouldn't:
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/119217#step/_graphical_wait_login/5
So let's try another approach. Ditch the OCR needle and have a
function for checking we're at a clean desktop. It does the
normal needle match, but if we're on GNOME, it also tries
hitting alt+f1 and seeing if we're at the overview; if so, it
hits alt+f1 again (to go back to the desktop) and returns.
IIRC disk_guided_empty is the only storage test that clicks
through INSTALLATION DESTINATION *really* fast, so let's try
adding a 2-second sleep to it to see if it works around the
'sometimes spoke shows as incomplete' bug that cropped up in
F26 and hasn't been fixed yet and tends to cause failures.
Summary:
As we're getting the Workstation dvd-ostree (OStree installer
image) built for Rawhide now, let's try testing it.
Test Plan:
Run the tests on a Rawhide compose that works and
has the image (e.g. 20170615.n.0). Check that new tests work
as expected and old tests are not adversely affected. A
corresponding diff for fedora_openqa will be coming to take
care of scheduling. Note that the tests will often soft fail
for now; this is intentional due to RHBZ#1193590, the bash
prompt for root is incorrect on ostree installs, so I have
added a needle that matches the incorrect prompt but which is
flagged as a workaround needle (so causing the test result to
be a soft fail).
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1211
Summary:
This just adds the FreeIPA web UI and password change
test modules to the FreeIPA upgrade test (client end). It's
useful to check out these features too. We don't need to
separate these into separate jobs, as we're not trying to
fill out different matrix checkboxes here, we just want to
know whether everything works.
Test Plan:
Run the test, see that the modules work properly.
I was actually expecting this to fail given the issues with
the upgrade on the server end, but it seems to pass.
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1207
Summary:
This adds an upgrade variant of the FreeIPA tests, with only
the simplest client enrolment (sssd) for now. The server test
starts from the N-1 release and deploys the domain controller
role. The client test similarly starts from the N-1 release
and, when the server is deployed, enrols as a domain client.
Then the server upgrades itself, while the client waits (as the
server is its name server). Then the client upgrades itself,
while the server does some self-checks. The server then waits
for the client to do its checks before decommissioning itself,
as usual. So, summary: *deployment* of both server and client
occurs on N-1, then both are upgraded, then the actual *checks*
occur on N.
In my testing, this all more or less works, except the role
decommission step fails. This failure seems to be a genuine one
so far as I can tell; I intend to file a bug for it soon.
Test Plan:
Run the new tests, check they work. Run the existing
FreeIPA tests (both the compose and the update variants), check
they both behave the same.
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1204
Previously this module changed test1's password, so that it
would still be able to work even if the webui test module
failed (so test3/test4 didn't get created). But this means
that, for about 30 seconds, test1's password is 'loremipsum'
not 'batterystaple', and if one of the *other* client test
jobs happens to hit a point where it has to auth as test1
during the 30 seconds test1's password is different, it will
fail. This looks to be what happened to the join_kickstart
test the last few days - it failed because it tried to login
as test1 during the password change window.
By using the test3 user instead (which is only used by the
join_cockpit test, currently) we avoid this problem, at the
cost that the password_change module will always fail if the
webui module fails.
With the latest F26 base images, it seems like g-i-s fails to
run at first login. This is clearly some kind of bug somewhere
and I'll investigate it, but it shouldn't be causing the update
tests to fail - we can still validly run the tests with g-i-s
not running. So for now, adjust the _graphical_wait_login test
to tolerate this behaviour when running update tests.
Summary:
Loading the same module more than once *kinda* works, but it
shows up all kinds of funky in the openQA web interface. There's
a POO for this:
https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/10514
But it doesn't seem like it's going to be resolved immediately,
so in the mean time maybe we should avoid doing it so we don't
have to deal with the weirdness it produces in the web UI. So
here's a kinda icky hack that uses symlinks and stuff to load
multiple instances of 'the same' test module.
Test Plan:
Run an update test, look at how it looks in the web
UI and confirm it's a lot clearer and less buggy. Check there
aren't any bugs in the loading approach. This is deployed on stg
so you can look at it there.
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1186
It's not really a good idea to have the comments that explain
the test_flags in *every* test, because they can go stale and
then we either have to live with them being old or update them
all. Like, now. So let's just take 'em all out. There's always
a reference in the openQA and os-autoinst docs, and those get
updated faster.
More importantly, add the new `ignore_failure` flag to relevant
tests - all the tests that don't have the 'important' or
'fatal' flag at present. Upstream killed the 'important' flag
(making all tests 'important' by default), I got it replaced
with the 'ignore_failure' flag, we now need to explicitly mark
all modules we want the 'ignore_failure' behaviour for.
The way this was set up before, if `anaconda_main_hub` matched
immediately but some spoke was still in a 'processing' state,
it only had 30 seconds (default `assert_and_click` timeout) to
complete and allow the 'Begin Installation' button to appear.
It seems unnecessary to match on *both* needles, really, so
let's just give 300 seconds for the `begin_installation` needle
to appear. It's not going to appear on any other screen.
This problem caused a couple of spurious failures today -
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/77839 and
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/77858 - because they
took a bit too long for the INSTALLATION DESTINATION spoke to
clear.
Summary:
This adds a new test suite, run for Workstation and KDE live
images, which does not create a user during install. It then
expects initial-setup (KDE) or gnome-initial-setup (Workstation)
to appear after install, creates a user, and proceeds with
normal boot.
Note the ARM image test already covers the initial-setup text
mode, and the ARM minimal image is the only case where that
actually matters (it's not included in Server).
Test Plan:
Run the new tests, check they work. Run all old
tests, check the changes didn't break them.
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1185
There's an issue where the follow-on _advisory_post test tries
to log in before the 'login failed' error has cleared. We can
easily avoid this by using tty2 for the login tests, then
_advisory_post will switch to tty3 for its stuff.
Summary:
For some reason, we have `USER_LOGIN` set to 'false' for the KDE
package set install test. I really don't know / remember why
that would be; I'd think we should create a user and log in as
that user to make sure it works properly when installing KDE
from the traditional installer. It's not strictly part of the
package set test, true, but still, seems worth doing.
Also, when `USER_LOGIN` is set to 'false' and the installer runs,
we create a user called 'false'. This doesn't seem like what we
wanted, so let's not do that. I dunno if there are any other
cases besides the KDE one that this commit changes, but still.
Test Plan:
Run the full test suite and look for weirdness, check
KDE package set test works as intended (now creates a user called
'test' and logs in as that user).
Reviewers: jsedlak, jskladan
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1182
Committing without review as this is pretty trivial and I've
had it on staging for the last few days without issue. Just gets
us somewhat better info for debugging FreeIPA issues.
We used to do this only for KDE, but I've seen the new update
tests sometimes fail at this point for no apparent reason, and
I'm thinking a wait may help (in case they're clicking the
button before it's really 'ready').
This keeps failing because the default `assert_script_run`
timeout changed from 90 to 30 in the last os-autoinst update
(an unintended consequence of a change I made). This has been
fixed upstream, but in the mean time, let's just set an
explicit timeout on the call.
Noticed in e.g. https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/58798
we're doing this wrong, `boot_decrypt` was moved into utils as
a function, but we were still calling it as a method...
Summary:
This adds some logging related to the update testing workflow,
so we have some idea what we actually tested. We log precisely
which packages were actually downloaded from the update - this
is important as updates can be edited and when examining results
we'll want to know which packages actually got used. We also
add a new module which runs at the end of postinstall and tries
to figure out which packages from the update were installed in
the course of the test. This still isn't a guarantee the test
actually *tested them* in any way, but it at least means they
got installed successfully and didn't interfere with the test.
Test Plan:
Run the update test workflow, check the logs get
uploaded and seem accurate (sometimes some RPM garbage messages
wind up in the package log, I'm not too worried about that at
present). Run the compose test workflow and check it didn't
break.
Reviewers: jsedlak
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1149
Summary:
This adds an entirely new workflow for testing distribution
updates. The `ADVISORY` variable is introduced: when set,
`main.pm` will load an early post-install test that sets up
a repository containing the packages from the specified update,
runs `dnf -y update`, and reboots. A new templates file is
added, `templates-updates`, which adds two new flavors called
`updates-server` and `updates-workstation`, each containing
job templates for appropriate post-install tests. Scheduler is
expected to post `ADVISORY=(update ID) HDD_1=(base image)
FLAVOR=updates-(server|workstation)`, where (base image) is one
of the stable release base disk images produced by `createhdds`
and usually used for upgrade testing. This will result in the
appropriate job templates being loaded.
We rejig postinstall test loading and static network config a
bit so that this works for both the 'compose' and 'updates' test
flows: we have to ensure we bring up networking for the tap
tests before we try and install the updates, but still allow
later adjustment of the configuration. We take advantage of the
openQA feature that was added a few months back to run the same
module multiple times, so the `_advisory_update` module can
reboot after installing the updates and the modules that take
care of bootloader, encryption and login get run again. This
looks slightly wacky in the web UI, though - it doesn't show the
later runs of each module.
We also use the recently added feature to specify `+HDD_1` in
the test suites which use a disk image uploaded by an earlier
post-install test, so the test suite value will take priority
over the value POSTed by the scheduler for those tests, and we
will use the uploaded disk image (and not the clean base image
POSTed by the scheduler) for those tests.
My intent here is to enhance the scheduler, adding a consumer
which listens out for critpath updates, and runs this test flow
for each one, then reports the results to ResultsDB where Bodhi
could query and display them. We could also add a list of other
packages to have one or both sets of update tests run on it, I
guess.
Test Plan:
Try a post something like:
HDD_1=disk_f25_server_3_x86_64.img DISTRI=fedora VERSION=25
FLAVOR=updates-server ARCH=x86_64 BUILD=FEDORA-2017-376ae2b92c
ADVISORY=FEDORA-2017-376ae2b92c CURRREL=25 PREVREL=24
Pick an appropriate `ADVISORY` (ideally, one containing some
packages which might actually be involved in the tests), and
matching `FLAVOR` and `HDD_1`. The appropriate tests should run,
a repo with the update packages should be created and enabled
(and dnf update run), and the tests should work properly. Also
test a regular compose run to make sure I didn't break anything.
Reviewers: jskladan, jsedlak
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1143
Summary:
This is to handle cases like #1414904 , where the system boots
to emergency mode. We really need logs to try and debug this.
Test Plan:
Force a test to hit emergency mode somehow (right now
you can just run base_services_start on Rawhide over and over
until you hit #1414904, but there's probably an easier way to
do it, I think there's a systemd boot arg to tell it which target
to boot for e.g.) and check logs get uploaded. Also check this
doesn't break log upload for a 'normal' failure.
Reviewers: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1103
Summary:
This adds a couple of new exporter modules, renames main_common
to utils (this is a better name: openSUSE's main_common is
functions used in main.pm, utils is what they call their module
full of miscellaneous commonly-used functions), and moves a
bunch of utility functions that were previously needlessly
implemented as instance methods in base classes into the
exporter modules. That means we can get rid of all the annoying
$self-> syntax for calling them.
We get rid of `fedorabase` entirely, as it's no longer useful
for anything. Other base classes keep the 'standard' methods
(like `post_fail_hook`) and methods which actually need to be
methods (like `root_console`, whose behaviour is different in
anacondatest and installedtest).
Test Plan:
Do a full test suite run and check everything lines
up. There should be no functional differences from before at all,
this is just a re-org.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1080
Summary:
Since 26.17, anaconda shows a warning when the user password
contains non-ASCII characters, and requires a second Done click
to confirm. This change should handle that.
On the 'catch cases where password typing went wrong and re-try'
bit: to keep that, but not re-type the password *every single
time* on the Russian install test, we'd have to make the needle
match the text of the warning. This is problematic because then
that needle will be able to break without us easily noticing;
that's why I wanted to keep the 'warning bar' needle text-free.
Unfortunately, that means we have to skip the protection for
switched-layout installs.
Note the protection was actually not working for any non-English
install anyhow, because the needle had `LANGUAGE-english` as a
tag. We never noticed that. Failed password typing is pretty
rare now, so we can live without the protection - it's just nice
to have it for the English install tests because there's so many
of them.
Test Plan:
Run the Russian install with a recent Rawhide image,
check it clicks 'Done' twice. Note, it will still fail, because
of RHBZ #1413813.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1084
Summary:
This adds a new test, memory_check, which just does a default
package set install with `inst.debug` parameter then uploads
the memory usage file (`/tmp/memory.dat`) at the end. We can
have check-compose use the data to analyze changes in memory
usage over time.
Test Plan:
Fire off the Workstation network install image tests
and make sure the memory usage test runs and works on all three
machines. This is live on staging already.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1082
The old version wasn't working - it was passing even though two
services fail to start in Workstation currently. I'm really not
sure why the old approach wasn't working, but it wasn't, and I
rather hate `script_output` anyway, so here's a different way
of doing it which relies on `eval`ing `assert_script_output`
instead. (I really should send a PR for a non-fatal version of
assert_script_output...)
Without this, when there are failed services, we get an extra
column to the left of the service names with a unicode dot for
each failed service, which is awkward and screws up the parsing.
Summary:
Include some basic testing of Japanese input, and split the
input testing (including Russian) into a separate module, since
it's not really part of 'login' testing.
Test Plan:
Run the test, and the Russian and French tests too to
make sure they didn't break. Tested on staging. Note the Japanese
test soft fails, intentionally, at present, as I discovered a bug
while working on it:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776189
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1072
Summary:
This isn't in the criteria, but it's commonly used, so we ought
to test this way. Require authentication for the iSCSI target
and have the test provide the appropriate auth info.
Test Plan:
Run the iscsi test and check it works (you need the
recent fixes for support_server to make *that* work). Nothing
else should be affected.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1070
Summary:
The non-English tests so far did not test that graphical login
worked as expected, which is a fairly large hole. With this
change, they should do a Workstation install and test login to
both GNOME and the console works as expected. KDE is not yet
tested.
As part of this we tweak the implementation of keyboard layout
switching in graphical environments to use a generic function
in main_common which can handle both anaconda and desktops
(just GNOME at present, but should extend easily to any desktop
with a known switcher key and a visible layout indicator),
replacing the anacondatest class method. I kinda don't like that
the test has to specifically tell the function when it's in
anaconda, but I don't think I want to start experimenting with
a global 'test phase' openQA variable or anything like that at
present.
Fixes T842.
Test Plan:
Run the French and Russian install tests and check
they work as expected. Also run an English Workstation install
if you like, and make sure that didn't break. This change is
live on staging ATM, seems to work fine.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Maniphest Tasks: T842
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1071
support_server was failing because of #1402427. I re-generated
the disk image with latest F25 so the fixed selinux-policy is
used, but even then, it seems we have to run 'restorecon' on
rpcbind manually before starting nfs.
Committing without review as this causes failures...try to make
sure we only run the AVC test when it makes sense, and fix
running it on the French install test.
Summary:
This has all console tests check for AVCs (with ausearch) and
crashes (with coredumpctl) at post-install stage. It's non-
fatal as this doesn't really mean the test failed, but we want
to spot when there are unexpected AVCs or crashes.
Test Plan:
Run some console tests, check it works right. I only
tested with one test, since so many are broken on Rawhide ATM
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1066
Committing without review as this is pretty trivial. Running
top *after* all the other collect_data tasks leads to some
meaningless fluctuations in the output; I intended to look for
activity caused by stuff running 'as usual', not activity from
the other collect_data tasks.
Summary:
I've been wanting to do this for a while; I think it'll let us
check for some significant changes between composes. This should
cause runs of a few test cases to collect and upload info on:
* installed packages
* free memory
* disk space
* active services
* 1 minute of CPU usage info (via top)
immediately after install and initial login. In some cases this
will be useful / interesting simply to look at directly, but
we can also have check-compose analyze the data and include
significant changes in its reports.
Test Plan:
Run affected tests, make sure the data collection
works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1046
Summary:
GNOME's update notification criteria are pretty braindead: it
fires the update check timer once on login then once every hour
thereafter, but only actually checks for and notifies of updates
once a day if it's after 6am(?!?!?!). So we have to do a bunch
of fiddling around to ensure we reliably get a notification.
Move the clock to 6am if it's earlier than that, and reset the
'last update check' timer to 48 hours ago, then log in to GNOME
after that.
Note: I thought this still wasn't fully reliable, but I've looked
into all the recent failures of either test on staging and
there's only one which was really 'no update notification came
up', and the logs clearly indicate PK did run an update check,
so I don't think that was a test bug (I think something went
wrong with the update check). The other failures are all 'GNOME
did something wacky', plus one case where the needle didn't quite
match because I think the match area is slightly too tall; I'll
fix that in a second.
Test Plan:
Run the tests on both KDE and GNOME and check they
work properly now (assuming nothing unrelated breaks, like KDE
crashing...)
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1039
We're not really *testing* shutdown here, we're just shutting
down to make sure the uploaded disk image is clean. So we don't
really mind if shutdown takes a while. It often seems to take
longer than 1 minute on KDE installs and cause a soft fail, so
let's bump the timeout to 3 minutes.
Summary:
os-autoinst implements `script_run` itself now, we aren't
required to implement it ourselves any more. os-autoinst's
implementation is better than ours, as it allows for verifying
the script actually ran (via the redirect-output-to-serial-
console trick).
So this drops our implementation so we'll just use the upstream
one. Where I judged we don't want to bother with the 'check
the command actually ran' feature I've adjusted our direct
`script_run` calls to pass a wait time of 0, which skips the
'wait for command to run' stuff entirely and just does a simple
'type the string and hit enter'.
Because of how the inheritance works, our `assert_script_run`
calls already used the os-autoinst `script_run`, rather than
the one from our distribution.
This should prevent `prepare_test_packages` sometimes going
wrong right after removing the python3-kickstart package, as
we'll properly wait for that removal to complete now (before
we weren't, we'd just start typing the next command while it
was still running, which could result in lost keypresses).
Test Plan:
Check all tests still run OK (I've tried this on
staging and it seems fine).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1034
Summary:
Since we started using `type_very_safely` for typing the root
password, we starting hitting a race issue. If we complete the
root password spoke so slowly that the software deployment
process completes in the meantime, anaconda will wait until we
complete the spoke then immediately flip to the 'post-install
configuration' step, at which point access to the USER CREATION
spoke is blocked.
We don't hit this case on regular RPM installs or live installs
as the deployment phase still takes a while for both of those,
but we are sometimes hitting it for the Atomic ostree install
image, as the software deployment phase is pretty fast there.
We *could* just not bother creating a user and testing we can
log in as a user for that test, but I don't like that approach,
we *should* be testing that user creation and login works OK
for ostree installs. So instead, let's just type the root
password a bit less safely for ostree installs; this will be
more vulnerable to typing errors but hopefully will avoid the
race problem.
Test Plan:
Run a few Atomic installs, see if they hit the race.
Might need to run other tests at the same time, and you may not
be able to hit it, this is obviously dependent on the I/O of
the worker host...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1022
Summary:
Since we can match on multiple needles, we can drop the loop
from console_login and instead do it this way, which is simpler
and should work better on ARM (the timeouts will scale and
allow ARM to be slow here). Also move it to main_common as
there's no logical reason for it to be a class method.
Also remove the `check` arg. `check` was only set to 0 by two
tests, _console_shutdown and anacondatest's _post_fail_hook.
For _console_shutdown, I think I just wanted to give it the
best possible chance of succeeding. But we're really not going
to lose anything significant by checking, the only case where
check=>0 would've helped is if the 'good' needle had stopped
matching, and all sorts of other tests will fail in that case.
anacondatest was only using it to save a screenshot of whatever
was on the tty if it didn't reach a root console, which doesn't
seem that useful, and we'll get screenshots from check_screen
and assert_screen anyway.
Test Plan:
Run all tests, check they behave as expected and
none inappropriately fails on console login.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1016
As with the text install test, there's an additional choice on
the 'Time settings' path compared to whatever image garret
developed the test on; right after 'Time settings' you have to
pick 'Set timezone' or 'Configure NTP servers'. So adjust the
test to handle this, just like we did there.
Summary:
I started out wanting to fix an issue I noticed today where
graphical upgrade tests were failing because they didn't wait
for the graphical login screen properly; the test was sitting
at the 'full Fedora logo' state of plymouth for a long time,
so the current boot_to_login_screen's wait_still_screen was
triggered by it and the function wound up failing on the
assert_screen, because it was still some time before the real
login screen appeared.
So I tweaked the boot_to_login_screen implementation to work
slightly differently (look for a login screen match, *then* -
if we're dealing with a graphical login - wait_still_screen
to defeat the 'old GPU buffer showing login screen' problem
and assert the login screen again). But while working on it,
I figured we really should consolidate all the various places
that handle the bootloader -> login, we were doing it quite
differently in all sorts of different places. And as part of
that, I converted the base tests to use POSTINSTALL (and thus
go through the shared _wait_login tests) instead of handling
boot themselves. As part of *that*, I tweaked main.pm to not
require all POSTINSTALL tests have the _postinstall suffix on
their names, as it really doesn't make sense, and renamed the
tests.
Test Plan: Run all tests, see if they work.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1015
I have a better fix for this coming, but it's a big change that
requires review, so for now, do this. The tests are actually
failing because the 30 second wait_still_screen is too short(!)
- it's triggering while the test is sitting at the 'full Fedora
logo' bootsplash screen then doing a 30 second assert_screen
graphical_login, which is failing because it actually takes
more than 60 seconds to get from the 'full F' screen to the
login screen. So let's just make the wait_still_screen 45
seconds for now.
use 'ps' output for Xorg and Xwayland. We'd need some new
openQA var to get this right by 'guessing', as it's vt1 for
Workstation when running live - so long as autologin worked -
but vt2 after install. We'd need a var or some other thing to
detect which case we're running in. LIVE doesn't do it, it's
set even when running a post-install test from a live image.
So instead let's just do it a bit more cleverly. This also
gives us a bit of insurance against changes in GDM, SDDM etc.
behaviour, so long as Xwayland or Xorg is running (and we can
add additional processes to the list, like gnome-shell, if
needed/appropriate). We assume the *final* listed process -
i.e. the most recently-started one - will be the desktop;
this covers gdm's behaviour of starting up on vt1 then running
the user session on vt2. We can make this function more complex
and add args if we ever get to the point where we have multi-
user tests running or anything (e.g. allow to pass a username
and only look for that user's processes).
Landing without review as this broke the live variant of the
test on Workstation in production (kinda not sure why it worked
in testing, or I didn't notice that it failed, but never mind).
I've tested it on staging.
When a package is unsigned, KDE will prompt for authentication.
Let's handle this. But count it as a soft fail, because
puiterwijk claims that Rawhide packages will be autosigned
from next week, so this *should* not happen and would indicate
an unsigned package in the repos. We make the KDE 'update
complete' needle area smaller because the wider area includes
some transparency and so will only match if the update applet
is open; this area will match whether it's open (no auth case)
or not open (auth case - the applet seems to disappear after
you provide the password in the auth prompt).
Pushing without review as the test is in production so I want
to make sure it works correctly.
(Also, hey, check out that array match for assert_screen and
that match_has_tag! This is gonna make some things so much
easier...thanks upstream)
Summary:
this more or less covers desktop_error_checks and desktop_
update_notification, though it can't really distinguish
between them easily. All we know is that if both the live and
postinstall versions of this test pass, both of those tests
pass. Any fails will have to be investigated manually.
Test Plan:
Run the tests for both KDE and Workstation, see
what happens. Workstation will fail for F25 and Rawhide at
present, due to SELinux/abrt notifications.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1004
Summary:
Very similar to the CLI update test, but using the desktops'
update applications. This is based off the CLI update test
branch as it uses the shared functions that branch introduced.
We do not use the fake update packages, as they don't really
do anything useful for these tests; for dnf they can help us
distinguish between issues with the dnf mechanism and issues
with the repos, but we can't really tell that in the graphical
case. So we only use the python3-kickstart package here.
Test Plan:
Run the test on both KDE and GNOME and ensure it
performs as intended. I've been testing it on staging, so you
can see it there.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1010
Summary:
this uses a couple of test repos with fake packages to test the
basic dnf mechanisms are working, then messes around with the
python3-kickstart package a bit to try and test the default repo
configuration is working, keys are in place and so on. We use
python3-kickstart because we should be able to rely on the copy
of that package in the 'stable' repo being installable (or else
the compose would have failed), but it shouldn't be vital to
the operation of the system.
Test Plan: Run the test, see if it works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1006
Summary:
by waiting for the bootloader in _boot_to_anaconda rather than
_console_wait_login, we can ensure that we use the anaconda
post-fail hook and thus get logs uploaded when a kickstart
install fails.
Test Plan:
Run a kickstart install test that fails and check
anaconda logs get uploaded. Then run one that works and make
sure it...still works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1005
I guess this was developed on F24, or an older F25? There is
an additional choice showing up in production: before the tz
choice, it asks if you want to set the tz or configure NTP. So
we have to pick tz.
Summary:
the main thing this does is try and type slower in X - this
should cover nearly everywhere we type anything in X, and make
it type slower. We also add a bit more safety checking to some
old tests which didn't have it (mainly _do_install_and_reboot)
- wait_still_screen after typing to make sure all the keypresses
were registered before continuing.
This is an attempt to mitigate the problems we've seen where
the wrong text gets typed into the wrong places and the tests
break.
This branch is live on staging atm. It still has *some* issues,
but I do think it's an improvement.
Test Plan:
run the tests (probably several times), compare to
runs without the change, see if it's better or worse...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D993
Summary:
Pretty straightforward tests which deploy the database
server role and exercise it a bit.
Test Plan: Run the tests, check they work properly.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D991
In F25+, Firefox seems to do kerberos auth automatically, so if
we go to the FreeIPA admin URL while kerberos-authed as test4,
we are logged in right away as test4 - neat! But not what we
wanted. So let's kdestroy.
when we run firefox in a bare X session, by default we get an
800x600 firefox in a 1024x768 X server with some dead black
space to the right and bottom of the screen. Now it turns out
that if the mouse is in the dead space, Firefox will not get
any keystrokes we send.
This didn't used to be a problem, but I made it into one with
this os-autoinst change:
https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst/pull/559
that makes os-autoinst move the cursor to 1023,767 after each
`assert_and_click`, instead of 0x0 as it did before, unless the
cursor has previously been explicitly place somewhere. So in
this case it gets moved to the dead space, and Firefox stops
responding to keypresses after the first `assert_and_click`.
We could equally well fix this by setting the cursor to 0,0
after running Firefox, but I like this more as it makes sure
we won't run into the same problem some other way, and makes
the videos and screenshots look nicer.
This fixes the realmd_join_cockpit test that's been failing
ever since I installed an os-autoinst with that fix. Committing
without review as it's a straightforward fix and I want the
test working again...
I assumed the 'compose location' sent by fedmsg was https, but
in fact it's http (you get redirected to https when you access
it). Could just change the default back to 4, but why not make
it properly robust. Sending without review so this doesn't go
wrong all weekend.
Summary:
we have a long-standing problem with all the tests that hit
the repositories. The tests are triggered as soon as a compose
completes. At this point in time, the compose is not synced to
the mirrors, where the default 'fedora' repo definition looks;
the sync happens after the compose completes, and there is also
a metadata sync step that must happen after *that* before any
operation that uses the 'fedora' repository definition will
actually use the packages from the new compose. Thus all net
install tests and tests that installed packages have been
effectively testing the previous compose, not the current one.
We have some thoughts about how to fix this 'properly' (such
that the openQA tests wouldn't have to do anything special,
but their 'fedora' repository would somehow reflect the compose
under test), but none of them is in place right now or likely
to happen in the short term, so in the mean time this should
deal with most of the issues. With this change, everything but
the default_install tests for the netinst images should use
the compose-under-test's Everything tree instead of the 'fedora'
repository, and thus should install and test the correct
packages.
This relies on a corresponding change to openqa_fedora_tools
to set the LOCATION openQA setting (which is simply the base
location of the compose under test).
Test Plan:
Do a full test run, check (as far as you can) tests run sensibly
and use appropriate repositories.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D989
Summary:
the dictionary error bug was fixed some time back, so drop this
workaround for it.
Test Plan:
Run all tests for F25 and Rawhide and verify they don't need
this workaround any longer.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D988
Summary: Pretty simple!
Test Plan:
Check the upgrade tests work the same as before the
change.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D979
in the recent commit to always use nogpgcheck I inadvertently
broke the upgrade tests, by dropping the `--releasever` from
the `dnf system-upgrade download` command. So fix that.
Summary:
Except when running on the pre-upgrade release in the upgrade
tests (where GPG check should always be OK).
Currently we always need to use --nogpgcheck on Rawhide, and we
must also use it on Branched prior to the Bodhi activation
point. At present we don't really have any simple way to know
when the Bodhi activation point has kicked in. We could assume
that it's safe to do GPG checking for 'candidate' (not nightly)
composes, but even that isn't 100% safe and isn't really the
*right* thing to do. So I think for now it's best to just always
use --nogpgcheck , until we come up with a decent way to check
for Bodhi enablement, or releng figures things out so we can
rely on packages being signed in Rawhide and in Branched before
Bodhi enablement.
Test Plan:
Check the tests all still run, make sure I didn't
miss any dnf calls.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D964
Summary:
pretty simple stuff here. The distinction between 'firefox' and
'browser' is that the 'browser' needles I expect would also be
correct for other default browsers, while the 'firefox' needles
are specific to Firefox. We need '-kde' variants of some Firefox
needles where interface text is included, because the font is
Cantarell in GNOME but whatever the default 'sans' font is in
KDE - I suppose we should really use -thatfontsname rather than
-kde, but I can't think what it's called...
I couldn't do the 'log in to FAS' bit of the test since we don't
really have a sane way to provide a password while not exposing
it to the public.
Test Plan:
Run the test, check it works - for both KDE and
Workstation.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D938
Summary:
again, added as a non-fatal module for realmd_join_cockpit as
it's convenient to do it here. Also abstract a couple of ipa
bits into a new exporter package in the style of SUSE's
mm_network, rather than using ill-fitting class inheritance as
we have before - we should probably convert our existing class
based stuff to work this way.
Also a few minor tweaks and clean-ups of the other tests:
The path in console_login() where we detect login of a regular
user when we want root or vice versa and log out was actually
broken because it would 'wait' for the result of the 'exit'
command, which obviously doesn't work (as it relies on running
another command afterwards, and we're no longer at a shell).
This commit no longer actually uses that path, but I spotted
the bug with an earlier version of this which did, and we may
as well keep the fix.
/var/log/lastlog is an apparently-extremely-large sparse file.
A couple of times it seemed to cause tar to run very slowly
while creating the /var/log archive for upload on failure. It's
no use for diagnosing bugs, so we may as well exclude it from
the archive.
I caught cockpit webUI login failing one time when testing the
test, so threw in a wait_still_screen before starting to type
the URL, as we have for the FreeIPA webUI.
I also caught a timing issue with the openQA webUI policy add
step; the test flips from the Users screen to the HBAC screen
then clicks the 'add' button, but there's actually an identical
'add' button on *both* screens, so it could wind up trying to
click the one on the Users screen instead, if the web UI took
a few milliseconds to switch. So we throw in a needle match to
make sure we're actually on the HBAC screen before clicking the
button.
We make the freeipa_webui test a 'milestone' so that if the
new test fails, restoring to the last-known-good milestone
doesn't take so long; it actually seems like openQA can get
confused and try to cancel the test if restoring the milestone
takes a *really* long time, and wind up with a zombie qemu
process, which isn't good. This seems to avoid that happening.
Test Plan:
In the simple case, just run all the FreeIPA-related
tests on Fedora 24 (as Rawhide is broken) and make sure they all
work properly. To get a bit more advanced you can throw in an
`assert_script_run 'false'` in either of the non-fatal tests to
break it and make sure things go properly when that happens (the
last milestone should be restored - which should be right after
freeipa_webui, sitting at tty1 - and run properly; things are
set up so each test starts with root logged in on tty1).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D935