1
0
mirror of https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora.git synced 2024-12-22 18:33:07 +00:00
os-autoinst-distri-fedora/tests/firewall_disabled.pm
Adam Williamson e9ce14a891 consolidate login waits, use postinstall not entrypoint for base
Summary:
I started out wanting to fix an issue I noticed today where
graphical upgrade tests were failing because they didn't wait
for the graphical login screen properly; the test was sitting
at the 'full Fedora logo' state of plymouth for a long time,
so the current boot_to_login_screen's wait_still_screen was
triggered by it and the function wound up failing on the
assert_screen, because it was still some time before the real
login screen appeared.

So I tweaked the boot_to_login_screen implementation to work
slightly differently (look for a login screen match, *then* -
if we're dealing with a graphical login - wait_still_screen
to defeat the 'old GPU buffer showing login screen' problem
and assert the login screen again). But while working on it,
I figured we really should consolidate all the various places
that handle the bootloader -> login, we were doing it quite
differently in all sorts of different places. And as part of
that, I converted the base tests to use POSTINSTALL (and thus
go through the shared _wait_login tests) instead of handling
boot themselves. As part of *that*, I tweaked main.pm to not
require all POSTINSTALL tests have the _postinstall suffix on
their names, as it really doesn't make sense, and renamed the
tests.

Test Plan: Run all tests, see if they work.

Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel

Reviewed By: garretraziel

Subscribers: tflink

Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1015
2016-09-27 11:48:15 -07:00

27 lines
761 B
Perl

use base "installedtest";
use strict;
use testapi;
sub run {
my $self=shift;
if (not( check_screen "root_console", 0)) {
$self->root_console(tty=>3);
}
# this asserts that the command fails (which it does when fw is not running)
assert_script_run '! firewall-cmd --state';
# check there are no 'REJECT' rules in iptables
validate_script_output 'iptables -L -v', sub { $_ !~ m/.*REJECT.*/s };
}
sub test_flags {
# without anything - rollback to 'lastgood' snapshot if failed
# 'fatal' - whole test suite is in danger if this fails
# 'milestone' - after this test succeeds, update 'lastgood'
# 'important' - if this fails, set the overall state to 'fail'
return { fatal => 1 };
}
1;
# vim: set sw=4 et: