Summary:
pretty simple, just make sure no services failed to start. We
may run into the rngd issue here, not sure, let's land it and
see!
Test Plan:
I guess run the test and see what happens? I haven't
actually tested this myself yet, so, yeah.
Reviewers: garretraziel, jskladan
Reviewed By: garretraziel, jskladan
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D710
Summary:
so here's our first attempt to use the 'carry on from a previous
test' stuff! This adds a base_selinux test that uses a disk
image from a previous default_install run, and adds jobtemplates
to run base_selinux for appropriate products: generic_boot
(for nightly tests), server_dvd, and workstation_live. Note that
you'll want to either update to the newest openQA package I just
built in COPR or create /var/lib/openqa/share/factory/tmp owned
by geekotest; openQA tries to use that directory as MOJO_TMPDIR
but in 4.2, if the directory doesn't exist, it doesn't create it,
and we wind up with the default MOJO_TMPDIR which is /tmp; when
the disk image is uploaded it creates a huge temp file in /tmp
and may well exhaust the available space as it's a tmpfs. I've
backported a recent upstream commit that tries to create the
directory if it doesn't exist, in 4.2-10.
It seems like openQA is smart enough to figure out the
dependencies correctly, so the 'base_selinux' test for each
product depends on the 'default_install' test for the same
product (not any of the other default_install runs) and will
use the hard disk image it produces.
Test Plan:
Do a full test run and make sure base_selinux tests
appear for appropriate products, depend on the correct default_
install test, the default_install test uploads the hard disk
image correctly, and the base_selinux test runs correctly. And
of course that nothing else broke in the process...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: jskladan
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D699
Summary:
Instead of sitting there waiting 6000 seconds twice, when DNF
explicitly tells us it failed, just die.
This is why we haven't been getting proper compose check reports
lately; the upgrade tests are failing, waiting 6000 seconds to
time out, then being cloned and tried again, waiting another 6000
seconds. This is just barely going beyond check-compose's 8 hour
wait limit, as it's some time before the upgrade tests even get
started (they're low in the priority list). We're still going to
have that problem if the tests fail any other way, but this at
least catches that case.
Test Plan:
Run the upgrade tests and see that they fail quicker
(assuming the dependency problems they're dying on aren't fixed).
Maybe also do a 22-23 upgrade test and check it still succeeds
properly.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D650
Summary:
When Rawhide's using a debug kernel, the install is pretty slow,
and often times out. This gives us a 33% longer timeout for the
install process when running on Rawhide. This will slow Rawhide
runs down a bit when there are genuine failures at this point,
but it seems kind of unavoidable.
Test Plan: Do a Rawhide run and see if we get fewer false fails.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D643
Instead of removing the ` QA:Testcase_Anaconda_user_creation` from all
the testsuites, make OpenQA login in console (as user) each time.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D636
Summary:
Updating the stable release prior to doing the update can take
a long time if the image hasn't been updated for a while, and
the upgrade download process itself can take a long time. If
the screen blanks out in either case, either the following
needle match may fail (if we're waiting for a needle) or 'still
screen' may be detected early (if we're waiting for a still
screen), so let's disable screen blanking to avoid it.
Test Plan: Run the upgrade tests and see if they work.
Reviewers: garretraziel, jskladan
Reviewed By: jskladan
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D628
Summary:
For Rawhide, the text in os-release-fedora is 'rawhide' not
'Rawhide', so lc the $VERSION value when checking. For other
releases it's digits, so the lc won't change anything - lc('23')
is '23'.
Test Plan: Run the Rawhide upgrade tests, they should succeed.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D620
Summary:
T617 makes some good points about the language tags; this is my
suggestion for an improvement. It requires a bit of cleverness
in unregister_prefix_tags(), but the upshot is that you don't
need to know to set any special tags when creating needles, a
needle with no language-related tags will be considered as valid
for all languages. You have to explicitly add LANGUAGE- tag(s)
to a needle for the language filtering to 'kick in' in any way.
If a needle has at least one LANGUAGE- tag, it will be filtered
unless it has the appropriate tag for the job's specified
language (default is still 'english').
With this approach, only needles which we specifically want to
*only* match their tagged language(s) need the tags, so we can
drop all those -ALL tags.
We're using LANGUAGE- instead of ENV-LANGUAGE- now because the
ENV- tag names denote tags that are treated slightly specially
by openQA, and this is not one. We cannot cleanly use
ENV-INSTLANG because openQA has a hardwired default of 'en_US'
for that.
Test Plan:
Check both English and French tests still work as
intended.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D589
Summary:
this handles Non-English European Language Install. Basically
it's a bunch of new screenshots for existing tag names, plus
a bit of configurability in _boot_to_anaconda and tweaking some
existing needles to do non-text matches. The weird 'half-the-
icon' needles are for cases where there may or may not be a
warning triangle but we want to click it either way (saves
duplicating the needle).
This also sets up a convention for tagging what languages a
needle is appropriate for. If it's specifically appropriate for
one or more languages, a tag ENV-LANGUAGE-(LANGUAGE) should be
applied for each language, where (LANGUAGE) is the install
language in upper-case ('LANGUAGE' variable, which should also
be the string that will be typed into the language selection
screen). If the needle ought to be used for *all* languages -
i.e. it's not a text match, or any text in the match is known
not to be translated - the tag ENV-INSTLANG-ALL should be
applied.
To back this, main.pm now unregisters all needles that are not
tagged with either ENV-LANGUAGE-ALL or the tag for the language
actually being used (if the LANGUAGE var is not set, we assume
english). The point of this is to check the install is actually
translated; if we allow all needles to match, the test would
pass even if no translations appeared at all.
Test Plan:
Run all tests and make sure you get the expected
results. You can schedule a run against 23 Beta TC1 to see the
French test fails 'correctly' when translations are missing.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D577
Summary:
This is a first cut which more or less works for now. Issues:
1) We're not really testing the BUILD, here. All the test does
is try and upgrade to the specified VERSION - so it'll be using
the latest 'stable' for the given VERSION at the time the test
runs. This isn't really that terrible, but especially for TC/RC
validation, we might want to make things a bit more elaborate
and set up the repo for the actual BUILD (and disable the main
repos).
2) We'd actually need --nogpgcheck for non-Rawhide, at one
specific point in the release cycle - after Branching but
before Bodhi activation (which is when we can be sure all
packages are signed). This won't matter until 24 branches, and
maybe releng will have it fixed by then...if not, I'll tweak
it.
3) We don't really test that the upgrade actually *happened*
for desktop, at the moment - the only thing in the old test
that really checked that was where we checked for the fedup
boot menu entry, but that has no analog in dnf. What we should
probably do is check that GUI login works, then switch to a
console and check /etc/fedora-release just as the minimal test
does.
Test Plan:
Run the tests. Note that creating the desktop disk
image doesn't work ATM, so I can't verify the desktop test
works, but the minimal one seems to (with D565). There'll be
a matching diff for openqa_fedora_tools to update the test
case names there.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: jskladan, garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D567
I've seen no_swap fail several times with the 'Click for details
or press Done again to continue.' message showing (e.g. job
967 on BOS). I think this is just because sometimes we try and
click Done too fast, so introduce a 1-second sleep between Done
clicks to try and solve that.
Summary:
since we did this live at Flock today, I figured I'd tidy it
up and submit it. This is an 'optional' test, but some people
do run this way so it'd be nice to have it. This adds another
little helper method in anacondatest.pm, for deleting partitions,
which works much like the others added in previous commits.
Test Plan: Schedule a test run, see if the test runs and works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: jskladan, garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D503
Summary:
This adds three new custom storage tests and some needles to
support them, and tweaks the custom storage methods a bit to
address some things that cropped up in writing the tests. A
new method is added for changing the filesystem, as that's
a distinct operation from changing the device type.
This also restores the previous behaviour of select_disks()
where it handled selecting custom partitioning when needed.
Turns out it's pretty common to use regex'es in perl! Who'd'a
thought.
A corresponding commit to add the tests to openqa_fedora_tools
is coming.
There's no post-install step for the tests yet; I'll try and
write those up and add them soon.
Test Plan:
Do a full run, including the new tests, on Alpha RC2 and check
all are scheduled correctly and run correctly. The LVM thinp
test is expected to fail as it catches a genuine bug.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D490
Summary:
This contains several tweaks to storage handling. It adds a
method for disk selection which all the storage tests can
share. It sets up a more extensible approach for main.pm to
run the storage tests, instead of an ever-growing forest of
'else' clauses. Finally it sets up a couple of methods for
changing partitioning schemes on the custom part screen and
uses one of them in the software RAID test; the other will
be used for other custom storage tests.
This kills the two_disks needle. I could keep it and work
it into select_disks, but it doesn't fit naturally and I
really just don't see the point of the needle. The only thing
we lose is we don't check that anaconda actually sees two
disks in the 'attach two disks, only install to one' test
(that's server_sata_multi), but the other multi-disk tests
will serve to catch that case failing for some reason.
What I actually intended to do was add some more tests for
different custom part storage types, but it seemed a good
idea to do some of this cleanup so that can be implemented
efficiently. I'll have followups for that.
Test Plan:
Run all tests and ensure they work exactly as
before (not just that they still pass, but that the correct
test steps are actually scheduled in each case.)
Reviewers: garretraziel, jskladan
Reviewed By: garretraziel, jskladan
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D475
Summary:
I was having a weird failure that I finally figured out: when
software source config runs then storage config, the 'begin_
installation' needle can match while the 'slide down from the
top' animation is still playing, and by the time os-autoinst
positions the cursor to click where the button was when the
match happened, it's moved down and we wind up clicking outside
the button area. So, wait a sec before clicking to avoid this.
Test Plan: Run the server_sata_multi test.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D464
Summary:
Root console in anaconda got broken by RHBZ #1222413 - no
shell on tty2. Decided to clean up console use in general as
part of fixing it.
This creates a class 'fedorabase' and has 'anacondalog' and
'fedoralog' both inherit from it. boot_to_login_screen is
moved there (as it seems appropriate) and it has a new
method, console_login, which basically handles 'get me a
shell on a console': if we're already at one it returns,
if not it'll type the user name and the password *if
necessary* (sometimes it's not) and return once it sees a
prompt. It takes a hash of named parameters for user,
password and 'check', which is whether it should die if it
fails to reach a console or not (some users don't want it
to).
anacondalog and fedoralog both get 'root_console' methods
which do something appropriate and then call
console_login; both have a hash of named parameters,
anacondalog's version only bothers with 'check', while
fedoralog's also accepts 'tty' to pick the tty to use.
This also adjusts all things which try to get to a console
prompt to use either root_console or console_login as
appropriate.
It also tweaks the needle tags a bit, drops some unneeded
needles, and adds a new 'user console prompt' needle; we
really just need two versions of the root prompt needle
and two of the user prompt needle (one for <F23, one for
F23+ - the console font changed in F23, and the @ character
at least doesn't match between the two). I think we still
need the <F23 case for upgrade tests, for now.
Test Plan:
Do a full test run and see that more tests
succeed. I've done a run on happyassassin with a hack to
workaround the SELinux issue for interactive installs,
and the results look good. I also fiddled about a bit to
test some different cases, like forcing a failure in a
live test to test post_fail_hook (and hence root_console)
in that scenario, and forcing failures after some console
commands had been run to check that it DTRT when we've
already reached a console, etc.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: jskladan, garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D462
This requires adding products, flavors and needles and test
cases, and tweaking some existing ones to handle the
slightly different behaviour of live images in shared tests.
To handle the different main hub screens in live and non-live,
a less stringent needle is added which is unregistered for
non-live tests, so they don't match on it before they've
finished updating repository metadata.
There are a few small bugfix tweaks in this too, like some
delays in user creation to try and avoid intermittent failures
there.
A new root_logged_in needle is also included, to handle a new
console font in Rawhide - that has nothing strictly to do with
live testing, it just happened to come up while working on
this.