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https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora.git
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5cab5ec565
The 'universal' flavor has been kinda pointless for some time now. It dates back to the earliest days of openQA, before Pungi 4 was a thing, when composes were very different; we only built a boot.iso and some live images nightly for Rawhide, these weren't even formally grouped as a 'compose' at all (fedfind had to invent the concept). The TCs/RCs had DVD installer images (not *Server* DVD, at the time, just a universal DVD installer). We wanted to run some tests on the DVD image if it was available, but we still wanted to run them for the nightlies, so we invented a whole mechanism for that - this 'universal' flavor, with some complicated logic in fedora_openqa which schedules universal on the 'best available' image it can find in the compose. All this is functionally obsolete now. All composes we test are now run through Pungi (except the live respins, but they aren't relevant here). In current config, the Server DVD is non-failable on x86_64 and aarch64, which means it will *always be there* - if it fails to build, the compose itself fails, so we won't test it. It's failable for ppc64le, but we don't care that much about ppc64le; I'm fine with these tests just not running if the Server DVD happens to fail in a ppc64le compose. As a cherry on top, some of the 'universal' tests aren't really universal anyway, they fail if you run them on a netinst (off the top of my head, all the NFS install tests are like this, as we use the ISO to populate the NFS share on the server end). So let's just move all the tests that actually need an installer image to the Server-dvd-iso flavor. Left over in the 'universal' flavor are upgrade tests, which don't need an ISO at all - they boot from hard disk images and run an upgrade using repos. We can change the scheduler logic to be more simple for these, and just always schedule them, with no ISO attached. We could even rename this flavor 'upgrade', but it might not be worth it. One slight complication is that the split happened to be helping us avoid too many tests in a single support_server cluster; we have a cluster of five support_server tests on Server-dvd-iso and five support_server tests on universal. I try to avoid the clusters getting too big as you need as many worker instances on at least one worker host as your largest cluster; if you don't have that many, the cluster's tests simply never get scheduled. Requiring folks to have at least ten worker instances on one host to run these tests is a bit of a big ask. So, to handle that, we create a support_server_2 and have the former universal tests use that one instead, so we'll have two separate clusters on Server-dvd-iso now. Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
34 lines
925 B
Perl
34 lines
925 B
Perl
use base "anacondatest";
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use strict;
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use testapi;
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use anaconda;
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sub run {
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my $self = shift;
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# iscsi config hash
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my %iscsi;
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$iscsi{'iqn.2016-06.local.domain:support.target1'} = ['172.16.2.120', 'test', 'weakpassword'];
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# Anaconda hub
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# Go to INSTALLATION DESTINATION and ensure one regular disk
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# and the iscsi target are selected.
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select_disks(iscsi => \%iscsi);
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assert_and_click "anaconda_spoke_done";
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# now we're at custom part. let's use standard partitioning for
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# simplicity
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custom_scheme_select("standard");
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# Do 'automatic' partition creation
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assert_and_click "anaconda_part_automatic";
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# Make sure / is on the iSCSI target (which appears as sda)
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custom_change_device("root", "sda");
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assert_and_click "anaconda_spoke_done";
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assert_and_click "anaconda_part_accept_changes";
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}
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sub test_flags {
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return {fatal => 1};
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}
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1;
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# vim: set sw=4 et:
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