Summary:
The test here is a bit ugly, but it should work. Better ideas
welcome =)
Test Plan:
Run the test, check it works (and maybe hack it up
a bit and check it fails properly too, it worked first time for
me which is always suspicious)
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D870
Summary:
the Server DVD now just has 'Fedora Server' and 'Custom
Operating System' environments. Custom is basically minimal.
So we can use the DVD for 'universal' testing again, these
needles match the anaconda_minimal tags.
Test Plan:
Run the 'universal' tests on a DVD ISO with these
needles added, test that they work OK and use the 'Custom' env.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D844
Summary:
Requires new needles and test suite and job template, plus a
few tweaks to handle 'switched' keyboard layouts (so we use the
switched layout in the username and password).
Test Plan:
Run the test and see that it...fails. But that's OK!
It's a genuine bug: RHBZ #1333998 . At least make sure it gets
to that point and no other tests have broken and all the needles
look sane.
Reviewers: garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D846
ARM actually doesn't have "install" test, but in install matrix,
there is test whether ARM disk boots into initial_setup. HDD is saved
after this test for Base tests.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D853
Summary:
I really just want to add the desktop_terminal test, but I think
this refactor is in order now. It splits up loading of the
various test phases (much as SUSE do it) and allows us to run
the post-install tests without the install tests, for e.g. I
tweaked things to allow the upgrade tests to use the existing
_wait_login tests for final login and combine the two upgrade
postinstall tests into one simple one.
This comes with a bit of a behaviour change to make graphical
wait login behave the same as console wait login: it will log
in unless USER_LOGIN is set to 'false'. Previously it only
logged in if both USER_LOGIN and USER_PASSWORD were set, which
I don't think ever happened in a graphical test, so we never
actually did a graphical login. The intent here is we should do
a login on the default_install tests. That's going a bit beyond
the test case, but it seems like a reasonable thing to test. We
can set USER_LOGIN to false if we don't want to do it.
Test Plan:
Do a full test run, make sure the new tests work and
no old tests break.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D839
Summary:
These require openQA tap networking to allow the server and
client boxes to communicate, and require masquerading (NAT) so
the server at least can reach a repository (dnf/rolekit really,
really do not want to work without a repo connection).
They use the 'parallel' test support to have the server deploy
run first while the client enrol test waits at the grub menu
until the server is done before it goes ahead.
This is all deployed and working on stg. The really tricky bit
was getting all the openvswitch and firewall config right in
ansible.
We *could* do the server deploy test as a follow-on from the
default install test to save the install, but then we'd have to
teach it to change the hostname and set up static networking
post-install. I'm not sure if it's worth doing that.
This requires the corresponding openqa_fedora_tools commit that
adds the hard disks (containing the kickstarts - it's possible
to get them from remote during install, but we have to set up
name resolution or hard code the IP of the server).
Test Plan:
Deploy this and the openqa_fedora_tools commit,
generate the disks, configure the networking (good luck! See
the docs in openqa_fedora_tools) and see if you can run the
tests. If you're using Docker, uh...sorry. You somehow need to
set things up so the workers can use tap interfaces that can
talk to each other and are NATed to the outside world. Have fun.
I can talk you through it on IRC...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D831
Summary:
BOOT_UPDATES_IMG_URL is a pretty misleading name - it used to
be the actual URL, but now it's simply a boolean that decides
whether we look for the effect of the openQA updates image or
not. TEST_UPDATES seems clearer.
GRUBADD does the same thing as GRUB, on top of it. The point of
this is so we can add an option to the scheduler CLI that lets
you say 'run the normal tests, but with this updates image' -
so we can easily (albeit manually triggered) check the impact
of some anaconda change that needs testing. It should never be
set in the templates or the tests, it's there strictly for the
scheduler (whether that's fedora_openqa_schedule or literally a
person calling `client isos post`) to use as a kind of override.
The tests that test updates image loading will probably fail
when doing this, but all other tests should work as intended,
including ones that specify GRUB, becase the extra params will
just get added on top. That's why I invented a new var instead
of just letting the scheduler override GRUB's value when POST
ing.
Test Plan:
Check the rename didn't break anything (updates tests
still work). Run tests with GRUBADD param, make sure value is
correctly appended to cmdline both when GRUB is also specified
and when it is not.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D801
Summary:
per details in T759, the 'unipony' updates image we use to test
the updates image features doesn't work with latest anaconda (f24
and Rawhide). I've built a new updates image which uses a neat
anaconda feature that allows you to override CSS with a file in
a special location; it sets the background for disk capacity
texts on the INSTALLATION DESTINATION spoke to be pink. This
lets us use a simple needle that just looks for a pink blob on
that spoke, on the basis that it's unlikely there'll ever be a
pink blob there for any other reason, so if there is one, the
updates image worked. There will be an accompanying tools diff
to change the updates disk image to use the new updates image.
Test Plan:
Do a test run and check the updates image tests pass
and no other tests are broken. You'll need to pull in the tools
diff and re-generate the updates disk image to check that test,
the scsi_updates_img test should work with just this diff.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D799
Summary:
this should avoid unnecessary disk uploads and hopefully help
further reduce the incidence of weird failures in the chained
tests.
With this change we should only upload disk images for the cases
where we're actually going to run the chained tests: we won't
upload disk images for default_install runs on images we don't
run the chained tests for, or for the UEFI job for images we
*do* run the chained tests for.
We only actually need to run the current chained tests
for Server DVD, Workstation live and KDE live x86_64; there's
no need to run them for Everything boot, so we drop that.
Test Plan:
Do a full test run and make sure all tests run
properly and we now only upload disk images where we really need
to.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D794
Summary:
these together test QA:Testcase_kickstart_firewall from the
Server matrix. I'll have to come up with some kinda way to
handle reporting that, might be tricky.
Couple of tweaks to overall test flow: tests can now specify
a POSTINSTALL variable which will load a post-install test
following a naming convention, and tests can specify USER_LOGIN
as 'false' to disable the 'log in as a user' step entirely. We
could easily adjust the kickstarts to create a user so the test
could log in as one, but it seems like an unnecessary step and
I liked the idea of allowing the user login to be skipped.
Test Plan:
Schedule 'universal' tests, check the new tests run
and pass or fail as they should, check no other test is broken
by the logic flow changes.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D792
Summary:
We named a bunch of the tests 'server_foo' back when we were
starting out and didn't really know what we were doing. They're
all really installation tests, not 'server' tests. I actually
want to start adding some Server tests now, so it seems like a
good time to fix that mess. This standardizes on 'install_' as
a prefix for installation tests, converting all the 'server_'
tests and fixing up a couple of odd cases to use 'install_'.
Test Plan:
Apply along with the matching commit for tools, do
a full test run and report test, and make sure all tests run
with the new names and correct ResTups are generated for wiki
submission.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D790
With the arrival of Pungi 4, the scheduler is no longer using
fedfind-provided BUILD and FLAVOR values, but ones derived from
Pungi properties. BUILD is now simply the Pungi compose_id.
FLAVOR is produced by joining the Pungi variant, type, and
format with '-' characters as the separators.
Pungi, unfortunately, does not treat 'Rawhide' as a release, it
synthesizes a release number for Rawhide composes and places
that in the compose ID. To cope with that, for now, the
scheduler will set RAWHIDE to '1' if the compose is a Rawhide
one. As we have to adapt all places where we parse the release
in any case, this commit consolidates them into a fedorabase
subroutine.
For the one place where we also used to parse the 'milestone'
from fedfind, there is a placeholder get_milestone subroutine
which currently returns an empty string, as I don't yet have a
good handle on how to draw the kinds of distinctions fedfind
mapped to 'milestone' from Pungi metadata.
Summary:
per T691, this has never actually tested SATA. With os-autoinst
4.2 it actually tests PATA, with os-autoinst 4.3 it breaks.
We can't find a way to make it do what we want with os-autoinst
4.3, so we're dropping the HDDMODEL bit entirely for now. We
will file a ticket upstream to see if this can be solved. We
keep the test itself because it's also the only test that hits
'guided_multi'; I'll post a matching diff for tools to change
the wiki reporting config to match.
Test Plan:
Schedule tests with os-autoinst 4.3 and see if this
one runs properly now.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D730
Summary:
we have a KDE column for the 'base' tests, so we should run
them on the kde_live flavor.
Test Plan:
Schedule a full test run, ensure all three base
tests are scheduled and run correctly for KDE live.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D720
Summary:
Not much to say, pretty much just implements the test case using
some commands I dug up that give us handy 0/1 exit statuses.
The assert_script_run function (from testapi) simply runs a
command/script and passes or fails based on the exit status;
we use a handy bash-ism when we *want* the exit status to be 1.
Test Plan: Run the test and check that it passes (properly).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D713
I messed up the last commit and mistakenly included this test,
which I've been working on and is not yet reviewed. The commit
was only supposed to add base_services_start. I'll send a new
diff for service_manipulation.
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:
Along with the matching change to fedora-openqa-schedule to pass
these variables in when scheduling jobs, this avoids hardcoding
the release numbers for the upgrade tests (which means someone
has to remember to edit them every release). The new createhdds
similarly uses get_current_release() to decide what releases it
needs images for, so all this should hook up and work magically
without any human intervention required.
For clarity, the effect of the '_upgrade_' tests is "run an
upgrade from the 'current' Fedora release to whatever release
is being tested", and the effect of the '_upgrade_2_' tests is
"run an upgrade from the 'previous' Fedora release to whatever
release is being tested".
Test Plan:
Apply with D702, schedule upgrade tests, and make
sure the correct hard disk image filenames are used.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D703
This adds missing default_install tests to templates - we've missed
KDE live and Server DVD on UEFI for some reason and Workstation netinst was
missing. After this, we should have all non-optional tests from "Default
boot and install" section covered.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D693
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:
this is following a couple of upstream changes I noticeed while
playing with dump_templates. Upstream has completely got rid of
the 'variables' keys from all dicts, and when you run dump_
templates the output does not contain any 'variables' keys, so
it seems reasonable to ditch these entirely (I think it was some
old thing that got subsumed into 'settings'). Also, when you
run dump_templates the 'prio' values come out in JobTemplates,
not in TestSuites; if you look at load_templates there's a bit
marked "we have to migrate the prio from the TestSuite to the
JobTemplate" which does exactly what it sounds like, so it
seems a good idea to move these instead of relying on that to
always be there.
While I had to re-do all the priorities anyway I tried to clean
them up a bit. The idea is roughly this:
10 - 19: most-critical sanity tests (i.e. default_install)
20 - 29: Alpha tests
30 - 39: Beta tests
40 - 49: Final tests
50+ : Optional tests
within each group I ordered 64-bit first, UEFI second, and
32-bit last (usually just as x0 / x1 / x2).
Test Plan:
Check that the file is valid and loads correctly,
and that everything works more or less the same except the
order of tests run is a bit different.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: jskladan, garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D692
add KDE package set testcase - this only adds needles and
new testcase configuration, because with needles cleanup from D670,
it should work without change in code.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D673
Let's use the same principle with DESKTOP tag as we use with
LANGUAGE tag. Where there are any GNOME-only (or KDE-only) needles, tag
them with `DESKTOP-gnome` and delete then when different `DESKTOP` value
is specified. This will help with `QA:Testcase_Package_Sets_KDE_Package_Install`
testcase - we will be able to use almost the same code and check that KDE
got installed properly.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D670
damnit, that was still wrong. This should do the trick: we can
do 32-bit F23 upgrade tests now (virt-builder added the base
image we need), so re-add that, and put things in the best
order and fix the priorities.
Noticed some problems with the commit while testing it: we
weren't doing 32-bit minimal (to avoid having too many tests,
I think) so let's not do it for upgrade_2 for now, and also
the arch on one test was wrong.
Summary:
This bumps the existing upgrade tests to F23, and drops the
32-bit ones for now, as there is no 32-bit F23 base image for
virt-builder - RHBZ #1288733. It then adds new tests named
'upgrade_2_(etc)' and associates them with the F22 images. The
intent is that we should always have two sets of upgrade tests,
one for each of the currently-supported stable releases; when
we bump to testing F25, the 'upgrade' tests will be bumped to
F24 and the 'upgrade_2' tests to F23, and so on. There will be
a matching diff for openqa_fedora_tools.
Test Plan:
Execute a test run and make sure all the upgrade
tests run; of course you need to make sure you've built the
required disk images.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D679
As we saw with F23 testing, qemu32 isn't really supported CPU. Also,
we cannot be sure that `std` is really supported graphics. This changes MACHINE
variables to use `host` CPU with 64bit machines (moreover, this is the case in
BOS now). It also deletes 32bit machine and schedules 32bit tests on 64bit
instead. It also changes graphics to `qxl`. Even though we aren't using SPICE, qxl has
better support (and higher priority) and it seems to work OK with VNC. Fixes T637.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D655
There is a bug (it is fixed in newest unstable version though) in openQA
4.2-1.2 that when you use iSCI HDD device, it fails to boot. Workaround is to
set CDMODEL=scsi-cd (and it won't hurt even when this gets fixed in stable).
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D642
PART_TABLE_TYPE variable says which type of partition table type
should be on attached HDDs.
Some tests with uefi have to use disks with gpt.
Tests are amended to use right disks.
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D623
Summary: simple enough. scheduler should already have the necessary bits.
Test Plan:
Kick off a run and see if we get tests, and the results are
reported to the wiki (Final TC1 should work).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D607
Summary:
We have these 'atomic installer' images (so far just Cloud),
and maxamillion wanted to get them tested. Turns out it's
pretty trivial - they look much like other installs. Only
little wrinkle is they have a reduced hub (no repository
needles) like live images, but are not like live images in
any other way, so I rejigged the 'small hub needle filtering'
handling a bit.
There will be an accompanying diff for tools, and also some
changes in fedfind (these images are getting built nightly
for *current stable*, and it'd be good to test those).
Because we'd like to test the 22 nightlies, I had to add some
needles for 'olddpi' versions of a few screens. See 2e4c1c2 -
the 22 Atomic installer images still have the old GTK+ code
meaning they run at 96.09dpi. I only retook the necessary
needles for the default-install test, if we add any others we
made need to retake a few more needles.
Test Plan:
Schedule jobs for a compose with the atomic installer
image. You will need the matching openqa_fedora_tools diff and
the very latest git fedfind. Check the test for that image runs,
all other tests run as usual, excessive images are not
downloaded, and the atomic installer is not used for running
universal tests.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D595
Summary:
So test runs are getting very long on BOS, and we have UEFI
tests coming. Try to help out by reducing the 32-bit test load
a bit. I tried to strategically drop the tests that are least
likely to differ, e.g. different storage layouts (but not
filesystem/device types), kickstart delivery, and only doing
one upgrade test.
Test Plan:
Check the templates file loads and there are no
obvious errors. See if you agree with the tests I cut.
Reviewers: garretraziel, jskladan
Reviewed By: jskladan
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D580
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
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 duplicates basically the entire test suite for 32-bit. We
could choose to run only a few tests for 32-bit if we wanted,
but I figure we may as well do as much testing as we can. Only
a few of the results will actually wind up 'counting' separately
in the wiki, but we can always see the results for all the tests
in openQA itself.
Next we can duplicate the whole set again for UEFI!
Test Plan:
Schedule a full test run and make sure all the tests
run for both arches. Also check result submission works
correctly. Requires the corresponding change to tools (or
you can just use one of the trigger commands which lets you
specify arch with a parameter).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D500
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
The flavor names changed and we started using the * version
wild card in the 'live' merge, so we need to correct the jobs
that were added to master in the meantime.
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.