The GNOME top bar is now transparent in Rawhide, which broke the
'clean desktop' needle. It also means it'll break every time
the background changes, from now on :( Update the needle.
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
Seems like the top '[patch]' link on kernel.org may now be a
raw patch file which the browser just displays, not a compressed
patch it offers to download. So tweak the needle so we should
click on the *bottom* link instead. openQA looks for matches
as close as possible to the location in the needle.
When running universal tests with a non-Server image, which is
not common but *does* happen (e.g. manually built test image),
the pre-selected filesystem in blivet-gui will be ext4 not xfs
(just as with custom partitioning). So we need xfs and ext4
variants of this needle. Renamed the XFS one for consistency.
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
These tests don't work right at all at present: they don't test
the update at all, they just boot the base image and run the
test, which is stupid.
I looked into various ways of fixing this but it's messy and I
don't think it can work properly without a lot of hacking. Even
if we get the test to do 'the right thing' - boot, set up the
update repo, update, reboot, do the test prep, reboot again, do
the actual test - I don't think it'll be quite a valid test,
because I think any AVCs or crashes that happen *before* the
update is installed will still appear as notifications when the
test finally does log into the desktop. So the test can fail
even if there are no post-update crashes or AVCs, I think.
I decided to give up on trying to make this test work properly
for now and just disable it. We can come back to it later if we
have great ideas and/or lots of time...
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.
This repo is causing problems for Branched update tests. The
repo is not available for 26 at all yet. This shouldn't be a
problem as the repo is disabled by default, but it seems that
some things - at least realmd, as used in the FreeIPA enrolment
tests - still try to update the repo's metadata when installing
packages, and fail because it 404s.
Since none of our tests actually needs this repo AFAIK, let's
just delete it in repo_setup.
Branched update tests are all failing because the baseurl in
fedora.repo is incorrect for Branched. This is a rather hacky
fix for this problem. It relies on the scheduler setting the
DEVELOPMENT variable when the update is for Branched (I named
the variable DEVELOPMENT rather than BRANCHED to be more
future-proof).
Alternative options I rejected were:
i) stick with MM links
ii) do something 'clever' to retrieve the URLs from MM
Rejected i) because the timing problem where the infra repo gets
updated before MM has the updated repodata checksums is just too
much of a problem; whenever that happens, dnf will refuse to use
the metadata from the infra repo and go pull it from an external
mirror, which can wind up timing out.
Rejected ii) because it seemed too fancy and not really any more
robust than just doing this and adapting it if Things Change In
Future (TM).