We quite often want to run the update tests on a Koji task (not
a Bodhi update) for some reason - usually to test a potential
fix for an issue, or at a maintainer's request to test a change
before it is merged upstream and officially sent out as an
update. Up till now I've always hacked up utils.pm on the
staging server by hand to do this, which is horrible. Together
with a commit to fedora_openqa, this should allow us to do it in
a nice, sane way via the CLI. It's mostly just tweaking the
"updates" repo setup in utils.pm as you'd expect, but there's a
bit of subtlety to it because of the installer tests that use
%ADVISORY% as a variable substitution in the disk image name;
you can't do something like `%ADVISORY or KOJITASK%`, sadly, so
I had to have almost-redundant variables ADVISORY, KOJITASK and
ADVISORY_OR_TASK (we could kinda just live with ADVISORY_OR_TASK
except I didn't want to drop ADVISORY as it's an unnecessary
change from previous behavior).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a test which builds a netinst image potentially with
the package(s) from the update, and uploads that image. It also
adds a test which runs a default install using that image. This
is intended to check whether the update breaks the creation or
use of install images; particularly this will let us test
anaconda etc. updates. We also update the minimal disk image
name, as we have to make it bigger to accommodate this test,
and making it bigger changes its name - the actual change to
the disk image itself is in createhdds. We also have to redo a
bunch of installer needles for F28 fonts, after I removed them
a month or so back...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If a test fails to the dracut shell, we currently don't do
anything useful. This should recognize when that happens, and
upload rdsosreport.txt.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The packages from this update seem to be breaking F28 update
tests for some reason; a later update has gone stable anyway, so
this is no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
A bug showed up in Rawhide where, when you run startx in a tty,
when you exit that X session, the tty quits and returns to the
login prompt. This is a slightly sloppy workaround for that
problem.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
That clever-clever 'check the packages from the update were
installed' thing from yesterday breaks on kernel updates, as
they're installonly; after the update, the new version of the
package is installed, but the *old* version is too, and the way
I implemented the check, it treats that as a failure. Let's try
and handle this a somewhat-clever way (if this fails, I'm just
going to grep out lines with 'kernel' in them, as a *dumb* way).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This should fix log collection when a French or Japanese test
fails before the test itself would have done this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If an update test fails before reaching advisory_post, we don't
generate the 'what update packages were installed' and 'were
any update packages *not* installed when they should have been'
logs, but these may well be useful for diagnosing the failure -
so let's also do the same stuff there. Only let's not do it all
twice.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We hit an interesting case in update testing recently:
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2018-115068f60e
An earlier version of that update failed testing. When we dug
into it a bit, we found that the test was failing because an
earlier version of the `pki-server` package was installed than
the version that was in the update; when asked (as part of
FreeIPA deployment) to install it, dnf had noticed that there
were dependency issues with the version of the package from the
update, but it happened to be able to install the version from
the frozen 'stable' repo...so it just went ahead and did that.
In this case, the 'missed' package resulted in a test failure,
but it'd actually be possible for this to happen and the test
to complete; we really ought to notice when this happens, and
treat it as a test failure.
So what this attempts to do is: at the end of all update tests,
check for all installed packages with the same name as a package
from the update, and compare their full NEVR to the one of the
package from the update. If a package with the same name as one
of the update packages is installed, but does not appear to be
the *same NEVR*, we fail, and upload the lists of packages for
manual investigation as to what the heck's going on.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's really no point having separate error and error_report
needles. Just match on error_report as well as clicking on it.
Also add a new error_report needle for latest Rawhide fonts.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Sometimes we get a test failing because the SUT isn't connecting
to the network for some reason. In this case we never get any
logs, because `upload_logs` relies on being able to reacht at
least the worker host system via the network.
This attempts to detect when we can't ping the worker host, and
in that case, send some info out over the serial line instead.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
That whole creaky edifice of conditionals that figured out how
many times to press 'down' was a mess I always hated, and I just
found out that the fix for BLS wasn't complete - I'd assumed in
writing it that systems weren't being migrated to BLS on upgrade
to F30, but actually they are. This makes that design very hard
as we'd have had to find a way to change the number of 'down'
presses part-way through update tests, and all the ways I can
think of to do that would've made this even sillier.
Happily I managed to come up with what looks like a much simpler
approach: just go from the bottom. It seems that in every setup
I can think of to check - all three arches, BLS, no BLS, pre-
install, post-install - the linux line is two lines up from the
bottom of the config stanza (the last line is blank, and the
last line but one is the initramfs line). So we can just press
down 50 times (to make damn sure we're at the bottom) then press
up twice and we should be in the right place, no matter the arch,
the release, or if BLS is in use or not. Whew.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This bug is breaking all update FreeIPA tests; until the updates
go stable, let's pull them in to update tests so the results
are useful.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The one we were using before doesn't seem to exist any more in
Rawhide. /etc/os-release should be fine.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Now the BLS stuff is enabled in Rawhide, we need to press 'down'
a different number of times to reach the 'linux' line when
editing the boot params (I really, really wish there was a
better way to do this :<). It gets tricky as there are all sorts
of cases here (support_server tests use a CURRREL disk image,
and then there's upgrade tests)...I think this covers things for
now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Since a recent sssd update, console login during FreeIPA tests
is taking unusually long. We don't want this to fail all the
tests, so let's extend the timeout, but with a soft fail.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Somehow, recently, FreeIPA tests are running into Firefox not
quitting because it's showing a warning about closing multiple
tabs. (I think we didn't *get* multiple tabs before but now we
do, for some reason). So let's work around this by clicking
"Close tabs" if the warning appears.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
For some reason, in recent tests, switching to a console after
live install completes is taking a long time, and tests are
failing because we 'only' allow 10 seconds for the login prompt
to appear. This seems to indicate some kind of performance bug,
but we don't really want all liveinst tests to fail on in, this
is not primarily a performance testing framework. So let's
tweak the root_console / console_login bits a bit to allow a
configurable timeout for the login prompt to appear, and use
that to wait 30 secs instead of 10 in this case.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In recent Rawhide, it seems the Workstation live session runs on
tty2 not tty1 for some reason. This throws off anacondatest
root_console, which assumes there'll be a vt on tty2. Handle it
by using tty3 instead if we're in a GNOME live environment.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Looking at this, it's a bit weird: the updated packages are
actually included in the upgrade process, but we still run
_advisory_update, which does basically nothing...then reboots.
That's kinda silly and makes the tests a bit flaky, let's fix
it. I don't think there's actually any problem with doing the
upload of updatepkgs.txt in _repo_setup_updates, becase that
already guards against being run more than once, it just bails
very early if it's already been run.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There seems to be a bug in Rawhide lately where, when our tests
want to install a bare X and run Firefox on it, this takes an
unusually long time to start up, with SELinux in enforcing mode.
With SELinux in permissive mode it starts as fast as usual. This
isn't a hard failure and we don't want it to block all later
tests, so let's handle it and treat it as a soft fail.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
OK, we now need to work around this goddamn grub bug in *three*
places, so let's stop copying the loop around and factor it out
instead. The third place is encrypted installs, as they wait
for the decryption prompt on boot.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per Neal Gompa boot will proceed if we just page through the
error(?) messages displayed when #1618928 happens, so let's do
that to let the tests get further and see what else is broken.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems that for some reason the localized layout gets loaded
on the installer VTs by this point in time, so we need to load
'us' again for this complex command to work.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Sometimes on aarch64 clicking the partition scheme drop-down
just doesn't seem to make the menu appear, instead the button
goes active but that's all. It's very unlikely we'll be able
to track down why as this doesn't happen in manual testing on
aarch64 (according to @pwhalen), so instead let's just work
around it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Upstream is gonna change the default from 30 to 0, it seems:
https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst/pull/965
so let's go ahead and change these two cases where we have no
explicit timeout to have one.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The reason we have all this horrible code to use the commented-
out baseurl lines in the repo files instead of the metalinks
that are usually used is a timing issue with the metalink
system. As a protection against stale mirrors, the metalink
system sends the package manager a list of mirrors *and a list
of recent checksums for the repo metadata*. The package manager
goes out and gets the metadata from the first mirror on the
list, then checksums it; if the checksum isn't on the list of
checksums it got from mirrormanager, it assumes that means the
mirror is stale, and tries the next on the list instead.
The problem is that MM's list of checksums is currently only
updated once an hour (by a cron job). So we kept running into
a problem where, when a test ran just after one of the repos
had been regenerated, the infra mirror it's supposed to use
would be rejected because the checksum wasn't on the list - but
not because the mirror was stale, but because it was too fresh,
it had got the new packages and metadata but mirrormanager's
list of checksums hadn't been updated to include the checksum
for the latest metadata.
All this baseurl munging code was getting ridiculous, though,
what with the tests getting more complicated and errors showing
up in the actual repo files and stuff. It occurred to me that
instead of using the baseurl we can just use the 'mirrorlist'
system instead of 'metalink'. mirrorlist is the dumber, older
system which just provides the package manager a list of mirrors
and nothing else - the whole stale-mirror-detection-checksum
thing does not happen with mirrorlists, the package manager just
tries all the mirrors in order and uses the first that works.
And happily, it's very easy to convert the metalink URLs into
mirrorlist URLs, and it saves all that faffing around trying to
fix up baseurls.
Also, adjust upgrade_boot to do the s/metalink/mirrorlist/
substitution, so upgrade tests don't run into the timing issue
in the steps before the main repo_setup run is done by
upgrade_run, and adjust repo_setup_compose to sub this line out
later.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Now F28 went stable, we're not disabling updates on upgrade any
more, and this bug got exposed: the location of the updates and
updates-testing repos actually changed between F27 and F28, so
the `baseurl` line from fedora-repos in F27 isn't correct for
F28. When doing an upgrade from < 28 to > 27, we need to correct
the URL when we're done installing stuff from the old release
repos but before we start trying to pull stuff from the new
release repos.
This repo munging crap is really getting fragile, it'd be great
if we could get that metadata timing issue resolved so we could
reliably use mirrormanager...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds the FreeIPA server and client upgrade tests to a new
updates-server-upgrade flavor which fedora_openqa will schedule
for updates. This way, we can test whether updates break
FreeIPA upgrades, which is a request the FreeIPA team made to
me. This has been deployed on staging for the last week or so
and appears to work fine.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Since gnome-initial-setup-3.28.0-5.fc28 , the g-i-s screens
that are supposed to be suppressed as part of
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/ReduceInitialSetupRedundancy
are now suppressed on FAW installs as well as traditional ones.
So adjust the logic accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We were doing this in a post-install test, but not on failures.
We need it to figure out why Firefox is crashing on aarch64...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Trying to keep track of what these magic numbers mean is really
getting messy, so let's do it a bit more explicitly, using the
page names g-i-s uses internally, and lots of comments. This
should make it clearer and more maintainable when stuff changes.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We do the 'desktop update' test for KDE via the notification
icon thingy, and it behaves differently depending on whether it
has already detected there are updates or not. The test only
works at present in the case where it *hasn't* - it expects the
notification icon to be in the extended panel and it expects to
see a 'refresh' button, neither of which is the case if it's
already noticed there are updates to install.
We should also force PackageKit to update its list of available
updates after we set up our 'special' update, otherwise on this
path KDE will only install the updates it found *before* we did
our stuff, and the test will fail as our special update won't be
there.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
aarch64 managed to hit the problem this 'magic timeout' tries
to avoid, so let's extend it :(
e.g. https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/267174
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I believe this should do all the right repo modifications for
add-on Modularity (i.e. F28+ Server installs, for now).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There are cases where we get logged back into the FreeIPA web UI
automatically by a stale kerberos ticket or something. If we're
logged in as the *right* user, let's just treat this as a soft
failure and continue with the test.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Seems aarch64 needs 12 'down' key presses like ppc64, not 13
like x86_64. Tweak how this is done a bit; the ternary wasn't
elegant any more with the aarch64 change, so just get rid of it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This works around RHBZ #1552814, and it's not incorrect really
because the repo is always empty for Branched. I didn't do it
before because we might theoretically start using the repo for
Branched at some point in the future, and if we did that we'd
probably want it enabled for this test. But to get F28 update
tests working, let's just turn it off for now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Previous approach wouldn't work for tests that run after the
install test...let's just set a password from a chroot after
install completes. Don't really like this as it changes the
'real' install process a bit, but it's the least invasive short
term fix at least. We can maybe do something more sudo-y later
with a bit more thought.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It's really INSTALL_NO_USER, not USER_LOGIN='false'. Also, we
need to make root_console work with no root password, sigh.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's a bug causing the 'getting started' screen to crash.
This doesn't really make the system unusable, so treating it
as a soft failure seems appropriate, especially as this will
unblock all the post-install tests on Workstation.
Modular composes don't include these packages, but we need them
to run the web UI tests for FreeIPA and Cockpit. This is the
most reasonable hack I can come up with for now: just use a
non-modular fedora repo to source these packages when doing
Modular compose testing.
If we ever reach an all-Modular future, these packages should
be available in Modular composes I guess, but for now they are
not.
This reverts commit 8b2977f1d618316ded61420df4fc7d2afd07cbf4.
The initial commit was required for PowerPC
until qemu 2.7.1-6 (in f25) not required anymore
since qemu 2.9.0-5 (in f26)
and call save_screenshot to visually check
for debug purpose only
Also change for PowerPC the number of down key to 12
(rather than 12)
Seems to be mandatory since 20170327.
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
PowerPC arches have the empty disk automatically
mounted on the second position in anaconda (vdb).
Thus, trig installation on second disk.
Change disk checking to point on correct disk.
Warning: this is a workaround specific correction
addressing a specific case.
This will have to be improved/changed with a more
generic code as suggested by Adam Williamson in
https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora/pull-request/1#comment-31858
proposal for a next commit :)
Signed-off-by: Guy Menanteau <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
to avoid upgrade_server test to fail with:
"Repository fedora-source has no mirror or baseurl set."
Signed-off-by: Michel Normand <normand@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
* New OFW variable to identify Open Firmware (used by PowerPC)
* Few needles changes for PowerPC support
* as requested do not change the timers value below for PowerPC
tests/install_source_graphical.pm (300 to 600)
tests/_boot_to_anaconda.pm (300 to 1200)
This will be handled by TIMEOUT_SCALE in templates
Signed-off-by: Guy Menanteau <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
bodhi-client doesn't depend on the 'koji' package but does need
it to do 'bodhi updates download', which we want to do. So we
must explicitly install it here.
There's a bug in current Rawhide causing sourcing of /etc/bashrc
to fail when logging in as a regular user. This results in the
bash prompt looking different, which is currently a hard fail,
and causes most tests to die. It's better to treat this as a
soft fail so the rest of the test can run. So add a needle to
spot this case, and a little finish function the console login
function calls whenever it's successfully logged in, to check
whether it got the no-profile prompt and register a soft fail.
Well, that OCR needle isn't working out so great, as it seems
to match when it shouldn't:
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/119217#step/_graphical_wait_login/5
So let's try another approach. Ditch the OCR needle and have a
function for checking we're at a clean desktop. It does the
normal needle match, but if we're on GNOME, it also tries
hitting alt+f1 and seeing if we're at the overview; if so, it
hits alt+f1 again (to go back to the desktop) and returns.
RHBZ #1222413 was fixed long ago. This workaround is, I think,
the cause of openQA failures to run commands properly with an
extraneous '2' at the start of the command (e.g. 116864).
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
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).
Summary:
This adds some logging related to the update testing workflow,
so we have some idea what we actually tested. We log precisely
which packages were actually downloaded from the update - this
is important as updates can be edited and when examining results
we'll want to know which packages actually got used. We also
add a new module which runs at the end of postinstall and tries
to figure out which packages from the update were installed in
the course of the test. This still isn't a guarantee the test
actually *tested them* in any way, but it at least means they
got installed successfully and didn't interfere with the test.
Test Plan:
Run the update test workflow, check the logs get
uploaded and seem accurate (sometimes some RPM garbage messages
wind up in the package log, I'm not too worried about that at
present). Run the compose test workflow and check it didn't
break.
Reviewers: jsedlak
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1149
Summary:
This adds an entirely new workflow for testing distribution
updates. The `ADVISORY` variable is introduced: when set,
`main.pm` will load an early post-install test that sets up
a repository containing the packages from the specified update,
runs `dnf -y update`, and reboots. A new templates file is
added, `templates-updates`, which adds two new flavors called
`updates-server` and `updates-workstation`, each containing
job templates for appropriate post-install tests. Scheduler is
expected to post `ADVISORY=(update ID) HDD_1=(base image)
FLAVOR=updates-(server|workstation)`, where (base image) is one
of the stable release base disk images produced by `createhdds`
and usually used for upgrade testing. This will result in the
appropriate job templates being loaded.
We rejig postinstall test loading and static network config a
bit so that this works for both the 'compose' and 'updates' test
flows: we have to ensure we bring up networking for the tap
tests before we try and install the updates, but still allow
later adjustment of the configuration. We take advantage of the
openQA feature that was added a few months back to run the same
module multiple times, so the `_advisory_update` module can
reboot after installing the updates and the modules that take
care of bootloader, encryption and login get run again. This
looks slightly wacky in the web UI, though - it doesn't show the
later runs of each module.
We also use the recently added feature to specify `+HDD_1` in
the test suites which use a disk image uploaded by an earlier
post-install test, so the test suite value will take priority
over the value POSTed by the scheduler for those tests, and we
will use the uploaded disk image (and not the clean base image
POSTed by the scheduler) for those tests.
My intent here is to enhance the scheduler, adding a consumer
which listens out for critpath updates, and runs this test flow
for each one, then reports the results to ResultsDB where Bodhi
could query and display them. We could also add a list of other
packages to have one or both sets of update tests run on it, I
guess.
Test Plan:
Try a post something like:
HDD_1=disk_f25_server_3_x86_64.img DISTRI=fedora VERSION=25
FLAVOR=updates-server ARCH=x86_64 BUILD=FEDORA-2017-376ae2b92c
ADVISORY=FEDORA-2017-376ae2b92c CURRREL=25 PREVREL=24
Pick an appropriate `ADVISORY` (ideally, one containing some
packages which might actually be involved in the tests), and
matching `FLAVOR` and `HDD_1`. The appropriate tests should run,
a repo with the update packages should be created and enabled
(and dnf update run), and the tests should work properly. Also
test a regular compose run to make sure I didn't break anything.
Reviewers: jskladan, jsedlak
Reviewed By: jsedlak
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1143
Summary:
This is to handle cases like #1414904 , where the system boots
to emergency mode. We really need logs to try and debug this.
Test Plan:
Force a test to hit emergency mode somehow (right now
you can just run base_services_start on Rawhide over and over
until you hit #1414904, but there's probably an easier way to
do it, I think there's a systemd boot arg to tell it which target
to boot for e.g.) and check logs get uploaded. Also check this
doesn't break log upload for a 'normal' failure.
Reviewers: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1103
I accidentally left the `my $self = shift` lines in these when
changing them from methods into functions, so they don't work
right at all. Whoops. Sorry.
Summary:
This adds a couple of new exporter modules, renames main_common
to utils (this is a better name: openSUSE's main_common is
functions used in main.pm, utils is what they call their module
full of miscellaneous commonly-used functions), and moves a
bunch of utility functions that were previously needlessly
implemented as instance methods in base classes into the
exporter modules. That means we can get rid of all the annoying
$self-> syntax for calling them.
We get rid of `fedorabase` entirely, as it's no longer useful
for anything. Other base classes keep the 'standard' methods
(like `post_fail_hook`) and methods which actually need to be
methods (like `root_console`, whose behaviour is different in
anacondatest and installedtest).
Test Plan:
Do a full test suite run and check everything lines
up. There should be no functional differences from before at all,
this is just a re-org.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Reviewed By: garretraziel_but_actually_jsedlak_who_uses_stupid_nicknames
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qa.fedoraproject.org/D1080
`man printf` says \" is treated as a quote, but not \'. So
let's have the command use double quotes to wrap the format,
and escape any double quotes in the text. Hope this works.
The README looks pretty ugly on Pagure. So let's unwrap it.
Let's also move the function docs into the source files. We're
much more likely to keep them up to date that way, I think. We
should probably change over to proper perl POD documentation at
some point, but comments in-line are OK for now I think.
Summary:
Include some basic testing of Japanese input, and split the
input testing (including Russian) into a separate module, since
it's not really part of 'login' testing.
Test Plan:
Run the test, and the Russian and French tests too to
make sure they didn't break. Tested on staging. Note the Japanese
test soft fails, intentionally, at present, as I discovered a bug
while working on it:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776189
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1072
Summary:
This isn't in the criteria, but it's commonly used, so we ought
to test this way. Require authentication for the iSCSI target
and have the test provide the appropriate auth info.
Test Plan:
Run the iscsi test and check it works (you need the
recent fixes for support_server to make *that* work). Nothing
else should be affected.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1070
Summary:
The non-English tests so far did not test that graphical login
worked as expected, which is a fairly large hole. With this
change, they should do a Workstation install and test login to
both GNOME and the console works as expected. KDE is not yet
tested.
As part of this we tweak the implementation of keyboard layout
switching in graphical environments to use a generic function
in main_common which can handle both anaconda and desktops
(just GNOME at present, but should extend easily to any desktop
with a known switcher key and a visible layout indicator),
replacing the anacondatest class method. I kinda don't like that
the test has to specifically tell the function when it's in
anaconda, but I don't think I want to start experimenting with
a global 'test phase' openQA variable or anything like that at
present.
Fixes T842.
Test Plan:
Run the French and Russian install tests and check
they work as expected. Also run an English Workstation install
if you like, and make sure that didn't break. This change is
live on staging ATM, seems to work fine.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Maniphest Tasks: T842
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1071
This should solve all those annoying "Failed to synchronize
cache for repo 'updates'" failures we've had: there's no need
for the 'updates' repository to be enabled when we've decided
we want the `repo_setup` changes to be made, and having it
enabled causes problems when we run right after the Rawhide
compose completes. We hit the awkward period where the rawhide
repo has been synced but mirrormanager has not been updated
with the new metadata checksums, so mirrormanager rejects the
metadata from dl.fp.o and DNF has to go out and hit other
mirrors until it finds one which didn't sync yet. Since the
point of `repo_setup` is specifically to hack up the config so
we only use packages from the compose *anyway*, there's no
reason at all to worry about leaving 'updates' enabled and
nerfing it like we do 'fedora' and 'rawhide', we can just turn
it off.
Committing without review as this causes failures...try to make
sure we only run the AVC test when it makes sense, and fix
running it on the French install test.
Summary:
The current installedtest post_fail_hook assumes /var/tmp/abrt
exists at all, and dies if it doesn't, leading to no /var/log
upload. We can also avoid using openQA `script_output` - which
is annoyingly indirect and slow - by using this neat `test -n`
trick I found on SO. Let's also use it in the anacondatest
post_fail_hook to avoid uploading /var/tmp when it's empty
(which we currently do). This also drops the 0 arg from a few
more script_run calls, because it's safe to wait for the run
to complete and we should probably do so to avoid later typing
errors if the commands are slow.
Test Plan:
Cause both anaconda and installed tests to fail and
check the hooks work as intended. Maybe twiddle the failures to
ensure directories do and don't exist and/or have contents and
make sure things work OK. I've tested this to some degree and
I'm pretty sure it works right.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1041
It's not always in minimal installs. This is a simple change
and needed to make the post-fail hook work for minimal installs,
so pushing without review.
Summary:
os-autoinst implements `script_run` itself now, we aren't
required to implement it ourselves any more. os-autoinst's
implementation is better than ours, as it allows for verifying
the script actually ran (via the redirect-output-to-serial-
console trick).
So this drops our implementation so we'll just use the upstream
one. Where I judged we don't want to bother with the 'check
the command actually ran' feature I've adjusted our direct
`script_run` calls to pass a wait time of 0, which skips the
'wait for command to run' stuff entirely and just does a simple
'type the string and hit enter'.
Because of how the inheritance works, our `assert_script_run`
calls already used the os-autoinst `script_run`, rather than
the one from our distribution.
This should prevent `prepare_test_packages` sometimes going
wrong right after removing the python3-kickstart package, as
we'll properly wait for that removal to complete now (before
we weren't, we'd just start typing the next command while it
was still running, which could result in lost keypresses).
Test Plan:
Check all tests still run OK (I've tried this on
staging and it seems fine).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1034
Summary:
The code from `check_type_string` was effectively merged into
os-autoinst's `testapi::type_string` as an optional argument,
so let's drop this downstream version and just have the 'safe
typing' functions use `type_string`.
Test Plan:
Run tests, check they pass and work the same (i.e.
make sure they're actually checking for screen change when
typing).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1033
Summary:
Since we can match on multiple needles, we can drop the loop
from console_login and instead do it this way, which is simpler
and should work better on ARM (the timeouts will scale and
allow ARM to be slow here). Also move it to main_common as
there's no logical reason for it to be a class method.
Also remove the `check` arg. `check` was only set to 0 by two
tests, _console_shutdown and anacondatest's _post_fail_hook.
For _console_shutdown, I think I just wanted to give it the
best possible chance of succeeding. But we're really not going
to lose anything significant by checking, the only case where
check=>0 would've helped is if the 'good' needle had stopped
matching, and all sorts of other tests will fail in that case.
anacondatest was only using it to save a screenshot of whatever
was on the tty if it didn't reach a root console, which doesn't
seem that useful, and we'll get screenshots from check_screen
and assert_screen anyway.
Test Plan:
Run all tests, check they behave as expected and
none inappropriately fails on console login.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1016
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
use 'ps' output for Xorg and Xwayland. We'd need some new
openQA var to get this right by 'guessing', as it's vt1 for
Workstation when running live - so long as autologin worked -
but vt2 after install. We'd need a var or some other thing to
detect which case we're running in. LIVE doesn't do it, it's
set even when running a post-install test from a live image.
So instead let's just do it a bit more cleverly. This also
gives us a bit of insurance against changes in GDM, SDDM etc.
behaviour, so long as Xwayland or Xorg is running (and we can
add additional processes to the list, like gnome-shell, if
needed/appropriate). We assume the *final* listed process -
i.e. the most recently-started one - will be the desktop;
this covers gdm's behaviour of starting up on vt1 then running
the user session on vt2. We can make this function more complex
and add args if we ever get to the point where we have multi-
user tests running or anything (e.g. allow to pass a username
and only look for that user's processes).
Landing without review as this broke the live variant of the
test on Workstation in production (kinda not sure why it worked
in testing, or I didn't notice that it failed, but never mind).
I've tested it on staging.
Summary:
Very similar to the CLI update test, but using the desktops'
update applications. This is based off the CLI update test
branch as it uses the shared functions that branch introduced.
We do not use the fake update packages, as they don't really
do anything useful for these tests; for dnf they can help us
distinguish between issues with the dnf mechanism and issues
with the repos, but we can't really tell that in the graphical
case. So we only use the python3-kickstart package here.
Test Plan:
Run the test on both KDE and GNOME and ensure it
performs as intended. I've been testing it on staging, so you
can see it there.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1010
Summary:
this uses a couple of test repos with fake packages to test the
basic dnf mechanisms are working, then messes around with the
python3-kickstart package a bit to try and test the default repo
configuration is working, keys are in place and so on. We use
python3-kickstart because we should be able to rely on the copy
of that package in the 'stable' repo being installable (or else
the compose would have failed), but it shouldn't be vital to
the operation of the system.
Test Plan: Run the test, see if it works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1006
Summary:
by waiting for the bootloader in _boot_to_anaconda rather than
_console_wait_login, we can ensure that we use the anaconda
post-fail hook and thus get logs uploaded when a kickstart
install fails.
Test Plan:
Run a kickstart install test that fails and check
anaconda logs get uploaded. Then run one that works and make
sure it...still works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1005
Summary:
tty2 is where wayland desktop sessions run. I think it makes
sense to use a high tty for the post_fail_hook, so we know the
lower ones can be used by the tests...
Test Plan:
Run a Workstation post-install test that fails, check
the hook works.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D1003
Summary:
the main thing this does is try and type slower in X - this
should cover nearly everywhere we type anything in X, and make
it type slower. We also add a bit more safety checking to some
old tests which didn't have it (mainly _do_install_and_reboot)
- wait_still_screen after typing to make sure all the keypresses
were registered before continuing.
This is an attempt to mitigate the problems we've seen where
the wrong text gets typed into the wrong places and the tests
break.
This branch is live on staging atm. It still has *some* issues,
but I do think it's an improvement.
Test Plan:
run the tests (probably several times), compare to
runs without the change, see if it's better or worse...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D993
cockpit 118 just landed in Rawhide, and it seems the username
field on the login screen is no longer selected by default,
you have to hit tab to navigate to it. We could get smart and
store the cockpit version in a variable or something, but it
doesn't seem worth it for now, let's just use a simple 'if
rawhide' conditional which can be adjusted as necessary as
things change.
https://github.com/cockpit-project/cockpit/issues/5000
when we run firefox in a bare X session, by default we get an
800x600 firefox in a 1024x768 X server with some dead black
space to the right and bottom of the screen. Now it turns out
that if the mouse is in the dead space, Firefox will not get
any keystrokes we send.
This didn't used to be a problem, but I made it into one with
this os-autoinst change:
https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst/pull/559
that makes os-autoinst move the cursor to 1023,767 after each
`assert_and_click`, instead of 0x0 as it did before, unless the
cursor has previously been explicitly place somewhere. So in
this case it gets moved to the dead space, and Firefox stops
responding to keypresses after the first `assert_and_click`.
We could equally well fix this by setting the cursor to 0,0
after running Firefox, but I like this more as it makes sure
we won't run into the same problem some other way, and makes
the videos and screenshots look nicer.
This fixes the realmd_join_cockpit test that's been failing
ever since I installed an os-autoinst with that fix. Committing
without review as it's a straightforward fix and I want the
test working again...
Summary:
we have a long-standing problem with all the tests that hit
the repositories. The tests are triggered as soon as a compose
completes. At this point in time, the compose is not synced to
the mirrors, where the default 'fedora' repo definition looks;
the sync happens after the compose completes, and there is also
a metadata sync step that must happen after *that* before any
operation that uses the 'fedora' repository definition will
actually use the packages from the new compose. Thus all net
install tests and tests that installed packages have been
effectively testing the previous compose, not the current one.
We have some thoughts about how to fix this 'properly' (such
that the openQA tests wouldn't have to do anything special,
but their 'fedora' repository would somehow reflect the compose
under test), but none of them is in place right now or likely
to happen in the short term, so in the mean time this should
deal with most of the issues. With this change, everything but
the default_install tests for the netinst images should use
the compose-under-test's Everything tree instead of the 'fedora'
repository, and thus should install and test the correct
packages.
This relies on a corresponding change to openqa_fedora_tools
to set the LOCATION openQA setting (which is simply the base
location of the compose under test).
Test Plan:
Do a full test run, check (as far as you can) tests run sensibly
and use appropriate repositories.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D989
Summary:
again, added as a non-fatal module for realmd_join_cockpit as
it's convenient to do it here. Also abstract a couple of ipa
bits into a new exporter package in the style of SUSE's
mm_network, rather than using ill-fitting class inheritance as
we have before - we should probably convert our existing class
based stuff to work this way.
Also a few minor tweaks and clean-ups of the other tests:
The path in console_login() where we detect login of a regular
user when we want root or vice versa and log out was actually
broken because it would 'wait' for the result of the 'exit'
command, which obviously doesn't work (as it relies on running
another command afterwards, and we're no longer at a shell).
This commit no longer actually uses that path, but I spotted
the bug with an earlier version of this which did, and we may
as well keep the fix.
/var/log/lastlog is an apparently-extremely-large sparse file.
A couple of times it seemed to cause tar to run very slowly
while creating the /var/log archive for upload on failure. It's
no use for diagnosing bugs, so we may as well exclude it from
the archive.
I caught cockpit webUI login failing one time when testing the
test, so threw in a wait_still_screen before starting to type
the URL, as we have for the FreeIPA webUI.
I also caught a timing issue with the openQA webUI policy add
step; the test flips from the Users screen to the HBAC screen
then clicks the 'add' button, but there's actually an identical
'add' button on *both* screens, so it could wind up trying to
click the one on the Users screen instead, if the web UI took
a few milliseconds to switch. So we throw in a needle match to
make sure we're actually on the HBAC screen before clicking the
button.
We make the freeipa_webui test a 'milestone' so that if the
new test fails, restoring to the last-known-good milestone
doesn't take so long; it actually seems like openQA can get
confused and try to cancel the test if restoring the milestone
takes a *really* long time, and wind up with a zombie qemu
process, which isn't good. This seems to avoid that happening.
Test Plan:
In the simple case, just run all the FreeIPA-related
tests on Fedora 24 (as Rawhide is broken) and make sure they all
work properly. To get a bit more advanced you can throw in an
`assert_script_run 'false'` in either of the non-fatal tests to
break it and make sure things go properly when that happens (the
last milestone should be restored - which should be right after
freeipa_webui, sitting at tty1 - and run properly; things are
set up so each test starts with root logged in on tty1).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D935
Summary:
This requires us to handle decryption each time we reboot in
the upgrade process, so factor that little block out into the
base class so we don't have to keep pasting it. It's also a
bit tricky to integrate into the 'catch a boot loop' code we
have to deal with #1349721, but I think this should work. There
is a matching openqa_fedora_tools diff to generate the disk
image.
Test Plan:
Run the tests, check that they work, run the other
upgrade and encrypted install tests and check they still work
properly too.
Reviewers: garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D922
Summary:
Set up the support server to provide DHCP/DNS functionality and
an NFS server, providing a kickstart. Add a kickstart test just
like the other root-user-crypted-net kickstart tests except it
gets the kickstart from the support server via NFS. Also add NFS
repository tests and a second support server for Server-dvd-iso
flavor: this test must run on that flavor to ensure that packages
are actually available. The support server just mounts the
attached 'DVD' and exports it via NFS.
Note we don't need to do anything clever to avoid IP conflicts
between the two support servers, because os-autoinst-openvswitch
ensures each worker group is on its own VLAN.
As part of adding the NFS repo tests, I did a bit of cleanup,
moving little things we were repeating a lot into anacondatest,
and sharing the 'check if the repo was used' logic between all
the tests (by making it into a test step that's loaded for all
of them). I also simplified the 'was repo used' checks a bit,
it seems silly to run a 'grep' command inside the VM then have
os-autoinst do a grep on the output (which is effectively what
we were doing before), instead we'll just use a single grep
within the VM, and clean up the messy quoting/escaping a bit.
Test Plan:
Run all tests - at least all repository tests - and
check they work (make sure the tests are actually still sane,
not just that they pass). I've done runs of all the repo tests
and they look good to me, but please double-check. I'm currently
re-running the whole 24-20160609.n.0 test on staging with these
changes.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D888
Summary:
this is following a SUSE model for tests where we need a server
end but don't want setting up the server to constitute a real
test in itself, we want it to be stable. The 'support_server'
test just boots a pre-built (by createhdds) disk image, sets up
networking, and runs the iSCSI server.
To run the iSCSI test we need to handle networking config in
anaconda (or we would need to set the support server up as a
DHCP server, which may be worth considering), so this adds that.
We also need to be able to specify the target device for a
volume in custom partitioning, so this adds that too.
Test Plan:
Build the necessary support server disk image (use
D883), then run the test and make sure it works. Also make sure
all other tests continue to work.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D884
Summary:
This requires a few other changes:
* turn clone_host_resolv into clone_host_file, letting you clone
any given host file (cloning /etc/hosts seems to make both
server deployment and client enrolment faster/more reliable)
* allow loading of multiple POSTINSTALL tests (so we can share
the freeipa_client_postinstall test). Note this is compatible,
existing uses will work fine
* move initial password change for the IPA test users into the
server deployment test (so the client tests don't conflict over
doing that)
* add GRUB_POSTINSTALL, for specifying boot parameters for boot of
the installed system, and make it work by tweaking _console_wait
_login (doesn't work for _graphical_wait_login yet, as I didn't
need that)
* make the static networking config for tap tests into a library
function so the tests can share it
* handle ABRT problem dirs showing up in /var/spool/abrt as well
as /var/tmp/abrt (because the enrol attempt hits #1330766 and
the crash report shows up in /var/spool/abrt, don't ask me why
the difference, I just work here)
* specify the DNS servers from the worker host's resolv.conf as
the forwarders for the FreeIPA server when deploying it; if we
don't do this, rolekit defaults to using the root servers as
forwarders(!) and thus we get the public, not phx2-appropriate,
results for e.g. mirrors.fedoraproject.org, some of which the
workers can't reach, so PackageKit package install always fails
(boy, was it fun figuring THAT mess out)
Even after all that, the test still doesn't actually pass, but
I'm reasonably confident this is because it's hitting actual bugs,
not because it's broken. It runs into #1330766 nearly every time
(I think I saw *one* time the enrolment actually succeeded), and
seems to run into a subsequent bug I hadn't seen before when
trying to work around that by trying the join again (see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1330766#c37 ).
Test Plan:
Run the test, see what happens. If you're really lucky,
it'll actually pass. But you'll probably run into #1330766#c37,
I'm mostly posting for comment. You'll need a tap-capable openQA
instance to test this.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D880
we only 'double' the password for the user account, not for root
this is a trivial fix so just pushing it out to get cyrillic
test working at last (hopefully)
Summary:
This adds tests for the Server_cockpit_default and cockpit_basic
test cases. Some notes: I was initially thinking of combining
these into a single test with multiple test modules and coming
up with a system for doing wiki reporting based on individual
test module status, but because we'll also want to do a cockpit
FreeIPA enrol test, I decided against it. We don't really want
to combine all three because then we would skip the cockpit
tests whenever FreeIPA server deployment failed, which isn't
ideal. So since we'll need a separate FreeIPA enrolment test
anyway it doesn't really make sense to go to the trouble of
designing a system for loading multiple postinstall tests (though
I have an idea for that!) and a per-module wiki reporting system.
This was the most minimal and hopefully reliable method for
running Cockpit from a stock Server install that I could think
of. An alternative approach would be to have, say, the most
recent stable Workstation live as a 'stock' asset and have two
tests, one which runs a stock Server install and just waits and
another which boots the live image and accesses the cockpit
running on the other box, but that seems a bit over-complex. It
is not possible to have dependencies between tests for different
ISOs, in case you were wondering about having a Workstation live
test which runs parallel with a Server DVD test, we can't do
that. One funny thing is the font that winds up getting used for
the desktop, but I don't *think* that should be a problem.
Picking needles was a bit tricky; any improvement suggestions
are welcome. I'm hoping it turns out to be safe to rely on some
dbus log messages being present; I think logging into Cockpit
triggers activation of the realmd dbus interface, so there
*should* always be some messages related to that. An alternative
would just be to match on a sliver of the dark grey table header
and the light grey row beneath it and assume that'll always be
the first message (whatever the message is), but then we have to
find some area of the message details screen which is always
present for any message, and it just seems a tad more likely to
result in false passes. Similary I'm making an assumption that
auditd is always going to show up on the first page of the
Services screen and the details screen will always show that
'loaded...enabled' text.
Test Plan:
Run the tests and see if they work! See
https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/21373 and
https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/21371 for my tests.
Reviewers: garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D874
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
Summary:
This requires a PR I sent upstream:
https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst/pull/490
This change is in os-autoinst -10. However, with older packages
it won't crash or anything, it'll just behave as before.
With the change, this allows log upload to fail, so if one of
the logs is missing, the hook doesn't immediately die and fail
to upload the rest of the logs. Various anaconda logs are not
always present: the DNF logs are not present for Atomic or live
installs, and the X.log and syslog are not present for live
installs. Adding a fail-tolerant mode to upstream upload_logs
seemed a better option than testing for the existence of each
log file prior to uploading it, or adding a bunch of GET_VAR
calls to try and figure out which log files 'should' exist.
Test Plan:
Run an Atomic or live install test that fails, and
check what logs get uploaded. You can just test a current
Rawhide Atomic installer ISO, as they're crashing right now.
Without this patch (and the os-autoinst update) the hook dies
when it tries to upload dnf.log, so the traceback and /var/tmp
archive don't get uploaded; with this patch all the present
logs should get uploaded. Compare:
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/14834https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/15371
(I tested this out on staging).
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D834
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:
you can't use validate_script_output like this, it doesn't just
return a bool, it actually kills the test if the output doesn't
validate. So any time we didn't have anything in /var/tmp/abrt,
the post_fail_hook would die at that point and not upload the
contents of /var/log as we wanted it to.
Note that even script_output will kill the test if the return
code is >0. That's OK in this case, but always be careful with
these subroutines.
Test Plan:
Run a test that fails in post-install but doesn't
produce anything in /var/tmp/abrt (you may have to artificially
break something). Check that it now uploads /var/log. I noticed
this while working on FreeIPA tests...
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D830
Summary:
First off, this revises the anaconda crash handling needles a
bit. We ditch gtk3195 and update anaconda_error to reflect
current F24/Rawhide. We keep the old anaconda_error around for
now as anaconda_error-23, to handle crashes in the F23 two-week
Atomic nightlies. We also add an 'early' variant, which is for
when (I think) the installer crashes very early, before it's
loaded in GTK+ settings; when that happens, the dialog uses a
different font. The screenshot comes from a recent Rawhide test
that crashed.
We also restore the anaconda `post_fail_hook` code to click
the Report button when a crash happens. This was erroneously
removed in D637. Before the Report button is clicked, the
`anaconda-tb` file exists but the libreport stuff in `/var/tmp`
does not. By removing this, we lost the libreport bits from
the uploaded files, which makes it harder to report crashes. So
let's add it back.
Finally we fix the actual tarring and uploading of `/var/tmp`;
also in D637 this got broken because it was being tarred up in
whatever directory the commands happened to be running in, but
we were still trying to upload it from `/var/tmp`.
https://openqa.stg.fedoraproject.org/tests/8444 was run with
these changes, and has `/var/tmp` correctly uploaded.
Test Plan:
Run some test that crashes, make sure the crash
handling all works correctly.
Reviewers: jskladan, garretraziel
Reviewed By: garretraziel
Subscribers: tflink
Differential Revision: https://phab.qadevel.cloud.fedoraproject.org/D768
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.