This adds a new script - cleanup-needles.py - to use for cleaning
up old needles. It has to be used in conjunction with a database
query; the comment at the top explains how to do that query and
export the needed information. It produces a git commit with
needles that haven't matched since a certain date (specified in
the sql query) removed, subject to a 'keeplist' of needles we
keep even if they seem to be old.
I also enhanced check-needles.py to check for cases where tests
seem to be trying to match a tag we have no needles for. This
was necessary to find cases where the cleanup script was too
aggressive (i.e. the things that wound up in the 'keeplist'),
but it also turned out to find quite a lot of cases where the
code really *was* looking for a needle that had gone in a
previous cleanup or that never existed; the commits before this
one clean up a lot of those cases.
The code to decide which string literals are needle tags is
pretty dumb and hacky and needs some manual cueing sometimes -
that's what the `# testtag` changes in this commit are for.
Making it smarter would probably require this script to get a
lot more complicated and either incorporate or become a
tokenizer, which I don't really want to do.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Move the xauth disablement and the disabling of studies into
_setup_browser, instead of repeating it in a couple of other
places (but *not* doing it in the zezere test, where we should
be doing it). Drop some explicit package installs that should
no longer be needed as Firefox and/or X.org now depend on those
things. Install the current default fonts (Noto), not the old
ones (DejaVu).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
When we run Firefox directly on X lately, we often hit a bug
where X just suddenly exits in the middle of doing stuff in
Firefox. I'm not sure if this is a bug in X or in Firefox (if
Firefox crashed, X would immediately exit). Let's see if this
helps get any info on what's going on with Firefox.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Using .local is apparently Bad Form because it's reserved for
mDNS. However there doesn't appear to be any particularly Good
Form for what to call a test domain you never want to exist
outside of a closed system, apparently. Sigh. Let's try this.
Includes a bump to disk_ks version because the kickstarts on
that image also need to have this change applied.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Remove a bunch of needles that have not been used for some time,
plus a few workarounds that are similarly stale.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems to take a long time sometimes for some reason. Can't
pin it down but it's causing test flakes, so let's just let it
be. It *may* happen when chrony adjusts the system clock just as
Firefox is starting, for some reason.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Investigation suggests that the Firefox certificate validation
failure we sometimes get when loading the FreeIPA web UI in the
freeipa_webui test module is a race issue in Firefox itself:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1530429
refreshing the page seems to work around the problem, so let's
do that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I've seen a few tests fail lately because Firefox suddenly
opened a tab with some "Privacy Study" in it and switched to it.
Per https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1529626 , this
should be the way to disable these...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There seems to be a bug in Rawhide lately where, when our tests
want to install a bare X and run Firefox on it, this takes an
unusually long time to start up, with SELinux in enforcing mode.
With SELinux in permissive mode it starts as fast as usual. This
isn't a hard failure and we don't want it to block all later
tests, so let's handle it and treat it as a soft fail.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There are cases where we get logged back into the FreeIPA web UI
automatically by a stale kerberos ticket or something. If we're
logged in as the *right* user, let's just treat this as a soft
failure and continue with the test.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
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:
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:
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