1
0
forked from testing/wiki
testing-wiki/release_criteria/r8/8_release_criteria.md
Lukas Magauer 1a6d80cf8e Add Identity Management testcase (#45)
Co-authored-by: lumarel <lumarel@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-10-13 18:32:51 -05:00

13 KiB
Raw Blame History

title author revision_date rc
Rocky Linux 8 Release Criteria
Trevor Cooper
Lukas Magauer
2022-05-07
prod ver level
Rocky Linux 8 Final

{{ rc.prod }} {{ rc.ver }} {{ rc.level }} Release Objectives

The objective of a release (major or minor) is to provide a solid Enterprise Linux release that is suitable to:

  • Meet the needs of end users
  • Meet the needs of enterprises big or small

{{ rc.prod }} {{ rc.ver }} {{ rc.level }} Release Requirements

In order for {{ rc.prod }} to be released to the general public, a compose must be able to meet all the following criteria as provided in this document. This is allows the decision process to be straightforward and as clear as possible. This document only contains “hard requirement” items. Optional/nice to have items are not to be included in this list.

There may cases where a requirement cannot be met but only in particular configurations. In these types of cases, the Release Engineering Team should use their judgement to determine whether or not the issue should be considered to block the release. They should consider the number of users likely to be affected by said issue, the severity of the case, if the issue can be avoided with ease (by both informed and uninformed users), and if the problem exists upstream in the current Red Hat Enterprise Linux that the release is based on.

!!! info "Release-blocking Server" ...means bugs as it pertains to server functionality can be considered to block a release. This applies to any packages that provide a service such as httpd, nginx, etc. All architectures apply.

!!! info "Release-blocking Desktop" ...means bugs as it pertains to desktop functionality (GNOME) can be considered to block a release. This applies to both x86_64 and aarch64. Additional desktops (as provided by EPEL or a SIG) are not considered blockers.

!!! info "Release-blocking Image" ...means bugs as it pertains to the images built that can block a release. This applies to the DVD, minimal, and boot images on all architectures.

Initialization Requirements

Release-blocking images must boot

Release-blocking installer images must boot when written to optical media or USB flash drive of appropriate sizes (if applicable) via officially supported methods. It is not the testing teams responsibility to test optical media, but they can and report back. If a bug is found, it is considered a blocker.

??? tldr "Optical Media Requirements" Release-blocking images must boot when written to optical media of an appropriate size. Current size requirements are: boot.iso = 789M, minimal.iso = 2.0G and dvd.iso = 10G.

??? tldr "Officially supported USB flash drive writing methods" The following methods of writing USB flash drives are officially support: dd
The following methods of writing USB flash drives are not supported: rufus

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Boot Methods Boot ISO - QA:Testcase Boot Methods DVD - QA:Testcase Media USB dd

Basic Graphics Mode behaviors

The generic video driver option (“basic graphics mode”) on all release-blocking installers must function as intended. This means launching the installer or desktop and attempting to use a generic driver. There must be no bugs that prevent the installer from being reached in this configuration on all systems and classes of hardware supported by the enterprise linux kernel. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Basic Graphics Mode

No Broken Packages

Critical errors, such as undeclared conflicts, unresolved dependencies, or modules relying on packages from another stream will be considered an automatic blocker. There are potential exceptions to this (eg, freeradius cannot be installed on an older perl stream, this is a known issue upstream). ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Media Repoclosure - QA:Testcase Media File Conflicts

Repositories Must Match Upstream

Repositories and the packages within them should match upstream as closely as possible. Notable exceptions would be kmods, kpatch, or what is deemed as “spyware” like insights. Packages that are available from upstream should not have hard requirements on RHSM and packages that have it default built in should be patched out. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Repo Compare - QA:Testcase Packages No Insights - QA:Testcase Packages No RHSM

Debranding

Assets and functionality that are Red Hat specific should not be included. If they are not patched out, it will be considered an automatic blocker. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Debranding

Installer Requirements

Media Consistency Verification

This means that the installers mechanism for verifying the install medium is intact and must complete successfully, with the assumption that the medium was correctly written. It should return a failure message if this not the case. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Media USB dd - QA:Testcase Boot Methods Boot ISO - QA:Testcase Boot Methods DVD

Packages and Installer Sources

The installer must be able to use all supported local/remote packages and installer sources. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Packages and Installer Sources

NAS (Network Attached Storage)"

The installer must be able to detect and install to supported NAS devices (if possible and supported by the kernel). ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Network Attached Storage

Installation Interfaces

The installer must be able to complete an installation using all supported spokes. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Installation Interfaces

Minimal Installation

A minimal installation (via network) must be able to install the minimal package set. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Minimal Installation

Kickstart Installation

A kickstart installation should succeed, whether from optical/USB media or via the network. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Kickstart Installation

Disk Layouts

The installer must be able to create and install to any workable partition layout using any file system or format combination offered or supported by the installer. File systems that are not supported by the EL kernel is not tested here (this means btrfs, zfs, both of wish are not supported). ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Disk Layouts

Firmware RAID

The installer must be able to detect and install to firmware RAID devices. Note that system-specific bugs do not count as blockers. It is likely that some hardware support might be broken or not available at all. DUDs (driver update disks) are not considered for this criteria. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Firmware RAID

Bootloader Disk Selection

The installer must allow the user to choose which disk the bootloader will be installed to or, if the user so chooses, not to install a bootloader. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Bootloader Disk Selection

Storage Volume Resize

Any installer mechanism for resizing storage volumes must correctly attempt the requested operation. This means that if the installer offers a way to resize storage volumes, then it must use the correct resizing tool with the correct parameters. However, it does not require the installer to disallow resizing of unformatted or volumes with an unknown filesystem type. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Storage Volume Resize

Update Image

The installer must be able to use an installer update image retrieved from removable media or a remote package source. This includes DUDs (driver update disks). ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Update Image

Installer Help

Any element in the installer which contains a “help” text must display the appropriate help documentation when selected. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Installer Help

Installer Translations

The installer must correctly display all complete translations that are available for use. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Installer Translations

Cloud Image Requirements

Images Published to Cloud Providers

Release-blocking cloud disk images must be published to appropriate cloud providers (such as Amazon) and they must successfully boot. This also applies to KVM based instances, such as x86 and aarch64 systems. ??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase TBD

Post-Installation Requirements

System Services

All system services present after installation must start properly, with the exception of services that require hardware which is not present. Examples of such services would be:

  • sshd
  • firewalld
  • auditd
  • chronyd

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase System Services

Keyboard Layout

If a particular keyboard layout has been configured for the system, that layout must be used:

  • When unlocking storage volumes (encrypted by LUKS)
  • When logging in at a TTY console
  • When logging in via GDM
  • After logging into a GNOME desktop system, if the user does not have their own layout configuration set.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Keyboard Layout

SELinux Errors (Server)

There must be no SELinux denial logs in /var/log/audit/audit.log

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase SELinux Errors on Server installations

SELinux and Crash Notifications (Desktop Only)

There must be no SELinux denial notifications or crash notifications on boot, during installation, or during first login.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase SELinux Errors on Desktop clients

Default Application Functionality (Desktop Only)

Applications that can be launched within GNOME or on the command line must start successfully and withstand basic functionality tests. This includes:

  • Web browser
  • File manager
  • Package manager
  • Image/Document Viewers
  • Text editors (gedit, vim)
  • Archive manager
  • Terminal Emulator (GNOME Terminal)
  • Problem Reporter
  • Help Viewer
  • System Settings

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Application Functionality

Default Panel Functionality (Desktop Only)

All elements of GNOME should function properly in regular use.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase GNOME UI Functionality

Dual Monitor Setup (Desktop Only)

Computers using two monitors, the graphical output is correctly shown on both monitors.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Multimonitor Setup

Artwork and Assets (Server and Desktop)

Proposed final artwork (such as wallpapers and other assets) must be included. A wallpaper from this package should show up as a default for GDM and GNOME.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Artwork and Assets

Packages and Module Installation

Packages (non-module) should be able to be installed without conflicts or dependent on repositories outside of {{ rc.prod }}.

  • Default modules (as listed in dnf module list) should be installed without requiring them to be enabled.
  • Module streams should be able to be switched and those packages should be able to be installed without errors or unresolved dependencies.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases: - QA:Testcase Basic Package installs - QA:Testcase Module Streams

Identity Management Server Setup

It should be possible to setup a IdM server (FreeIPA), use it's functionality and connect clients.

??? tldr "References" - Test cases - QA:Testcase Identity Management

{% include 'testing/rc_content_bottom.md' %}