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diff --git a/doc/rtd/topics/cloud_tests.rst b/doc/rtd/topics/cloud_tests.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 0fbb1301..00000000 --- a/doc/rtd/topics/cloud_tests.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,764 +0,0 @@ -************************ -Cloud tests (Deprecated) -************************ - -Cloud tests are longer be maintained. For writing integration -tests, see the :ref:`integration_tests` page. - -Overview -======== - -This page describes the execution, development, and architecture of the -cloud-init integration tests: - -* Execution explains the options available and running of tests -* Development shows how to write test cases -* Architecture explains the internal processes - -Execution -========= - -Overview --------- - -In order to avoid the need for dependencies and ease the setup and -configuration users can run the integration tests via tox: - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ git clone https://github.com/canonical/cloud-init - $ cd cloud-init - $ tox -e citest -- -h - -Everything after the double dash will be passed to the integration tests. -Executing tests has several options: - -* ``run`` an alias to run both ``collect`` and ``verify``. The ``tree_run`` - command does the same thing, except uses a deb built from the current - working tree. - -* ``collect`` deploys on the specified platform and distro, patches with the - requested deb or rpm, and finally collects output of the arbitrary - commands. Similarly, ```tree_collect`` will collect output using a deb - built from the current working tree. - -* ``verify`` given a directory of test data, run the Python unit tests on - it to generate results. - -* ``bddeb`` will build a deb of the current working tree. - -Run ---- - -The first example will provide a complete end-to-end run of data -collection and verification. There are additional examples below -explaining how to run one or the other independently. - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ git clone https://github.com/canonical/cloud-init - $ cd cloud-init - $ tox -e citest -- run --verbose \ - --os-name stretch --os-name xenial \ - --deb cloud-init_0.7.8~my_patch_all.deb \ - --preserve-data --data-dir ~/collection \ - --preserve-instance - -The above command will do the following: - -* ``run`` both collect output and run tests the output - -* ``--verbose`` verbose output - -* ``--os-name stretch`` on the Debian Stretch release - -* ``--os-name xenial`` on the Ubuntu Xenial release - -* ``--deb cloud-init_0.7.8~patch_all.deb`` use this deb as the version of - cloud-init to run with - -* ``--preserve-data`` always preserve collected data, do not remove data - after successful test run - -* ``--preserve-instance`` do not destroy the instance after test to allow - for debugging the stopped instance during integration test development. By - default, test instances are destroyed after the test completes. - -* ``--data-dir ~/collection`` write collected data into `~/collection`, - rather than using a temporary directory - -For a more detailed explanation of each option see below. - -.. note:: - By default, data collected by the run command will be written into a - temporary directory and deleted after a successful. If you would - like to preserve this data, please use the option ``--preserve-data``. - -Collect -------- - -If developing tests it may be necessary to see if cloud-config works as -expected and the correct files are pulled down. In this case only a -collect can be ran by running: - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ tox -e citest -- collect -n xenial --data-dir /tmp/collection - -The above command will run the collection tests on xenial and place -all results into `/tmp/collection`. - -Verify ------- - -When developing tests it is much easier to simply rerun the verify scripts -without the more lengthy collect process. This can be done by running: - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ tox -e citest -- verify --data-dir /tmp/collection - -The above command will run the verify scripts on the data discovered in -`/tmp/collection`. - -TreeRun and TreeCollect ------------------------ - -If working on a cloud-init feature or resolving a bug, it may be useful to -run the current copy of cloud-init in the integration testing environment. -The integration testing suite can automatically build a deb based on the -current working tree of cloud-init and run the test suite using this deb. - -The ``tree_run`` and ``tree_collect`` commands take the same arguments as -the ``run`` and ``collect`` commands. These commands will build a deb and -write it into a temporary file, then start the test suite and pass that deb -in. To build a deb only, and not run the test suite, the ``bddeb`` command -can be used. - -Note that code in the cloud-init working tree that has not been committed -when the cloud-init deb is built will still be included. To build a -cloud-init deb from or use the ``tree_run`` command using a copy of -cloud-init located in a different directory, use the option ``--cloud-init -/path/to/cloud-init``. - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ tox -e citest -- tree_run --verbose \ - --os-name xenial --os-name stretch \ - --test modules/final_message --test modules/write_files \ - --result /tmp/result.yaml - -Bddeb ------ - -The ``bddeb`` command can be used to generate a deb file. This is used by the -tree_run and tree_collect commands to build a deb of the current working tree -using the packaging template contained in the ``packages/debian/`` directory. -It can also be used to generate a deb for use in other situations and avoid -needing to have all the build and test dependencies installed locally. - -* ``--bddeb-args``: arguments to pass through to bddeb -* ``--build-os``: distribution to use as build system (default is xenial) -* ``--build-platform``: platform to use for build system (default is lxd) -* ``--cloud-init``: path to base of cloud-init tree (default is '.') -* ``--deb``: path to write output deb to (default is '.') -* ``--packaging-branch``: import the ``debian/`` packaging directory - from the specified branch (default: ``ubuntu/devel``) instead of using - the packaging template. - -Setup Image ------------ - -By default an image that is used will remain unmodified, but certain -scenarios may require image modification. For example, many images may use -a much older cloud-init. As a result tests looking at newer functionality -will fail because a newer version of cloud-init may be required. The -following options can be used for further customization: - -* ``--deb``: install the specified deb into the image -* ``--rpm``: install the specified rpm into the image -* ``--repo``: enable a repository and upgrade cloud-init afterwards -* ``--ppa``: enable a ppa and upgrade cloud-init afterwards -* ``--upgrade``: upgrade cloud-init from repos -* ``--upgrade-full``: run a full system upgrade -* ``--script``: execute a script in the image. This can perform any setup - required that is not covered by the other options - -Test Case Development -===================== - -Overview --------- - -As a test writer you need to develop a test configuration and a -verification file: - - * The test configuration specifies a specific cloud-config to be used by - cloud-init and a list of arbitrary commands to capture the output of - (e.g my_test.yaml) - - * The verification file runs tests on the collected output to determine - the result of the test (e.g. my_test.py) - -The names must match, however the extensions will of course be different, -yaml vs py. - -Configuration -------------- - -The test configuration is a YAML file such as *ntp_server.yaml* below: - -.. code-block:: yaml - - # - # Empty NTP config to setup using defaults - # - # NOTE: this should not require apt feature, use 'which' rather than 'dpkg -l' - # NOTE: this should not require no_ntpdate feature, use 'which' to check for - # installation rather than 'dpkg -l', as 'grep ntp' matches 'ntpdate' - # NOTE: the verifier should check for any ntp server not 'ubuntu.pool.ntp.org' - cloud_config: | - #cloud-config - ntp: - servers: - - pool.ntp.org - required_features: - - apt - - no_ntpdate - - ubuntu_ntp - collect_scripts: - ntp_installed_servers: | - #!/bin/bash - dpkg -l | grep ntp | wc -l - ntp_conf_dist_servers: | - #!/bin/bash - ls /etc/ntp.conf.dist | wc -l - ntp_conf_servers: | - #!/bin/bash - cat /etc/ntp.conf | grep '^server' - -There are several keys, 1 required and some optional, in the YAML file: - -1. The required key is ``cloud_config``. This should be a string of valid - YAML that is exactly what would normally be placed in a cloud-config - file, including the cloud-config header. This essentially sets up the - scenario under test. - -2. One optional key is ``collect_scripts``. This key has one or more - sub-keys containing strings of arbitrary commands to execute (e.g. - ```cat /var/log/cloud-config-output.log```). In the example above the - output of dpkg is captured, grep for ntp, and the number of lines - reported. The name of the sub-key is important. The sub-key is used by - the verification script to recall the output of the commands ran. - -3. The optional ``enabled`` key enables or disables the test case. By - default the test case will be enabled. - -4. The optional ``required_features`` key may be used to specify a list - of features flags that an image must have to be able to run the test - case. For example, if a test case relies on an image supporting apt, - then the config for the test case should include ``required_features: - [ apt ]``. - - -Default Collect Scripts ------------------------ - -By default the following files will be collected for every test. There is -no need to specify these items: - -* ``/var/log/cloud-init.log`` -* ``/var/log/cloud-init-output.log`` -* ``/run/cloud-init/.instance-id`` -* ``/run/cloud-init/result.json`` -* ``/run/cloud-init/status.json`` -* ```dpkg-query -W -f='${Version}' cloud-init``` - -Verification ------------- - -The verification script is a Python file with unit tests like the one, -`ntp_server.py`, below: - -.. code-block:: python - - # This file is part of cloud-init. See LICENSE file for license information. - - """cloud-init Integration Test Verify Script""" - from tests.cloud_tests.testcases import base - - - class TestNtp(base.CloudTestCase): - """Test ntp module""" - - def test_ntp_installed(self): - """Test ntp installed""" - out = self.get_data_file('ntp_installed_empty') - self.assertEqual(1, int(out)) - - def test_ntp_dist_entries(self): - """Test dist config file has one entry""" - out = self.get_data_file('ntp_conf_dist_empty') - self.assertEqual(1, int(out)) - - def test_ntp_entires(self): - """Test config entries""" - out = self.get_data_file('ntp_conf_empty') - self.assertIn('pool 0.ubuntu.pool.ntp.org iburst', out) - self.assertIn('pool 1.ubuntu.pool.ntp.org iburst', out) - self.assertIn('pool 2.ubuntu.pool.ntp.org iburst', out) - self.assertIn('pool 3.ubuntu.pool.ntp.org iburst', out) - - # vi: ts=4 expandtab - - -Here is a breakdown of the unit test file: - -* The import statement allows access to the output files. - -* The class can be named anything, but must import the - ``base.CloudTestCase``, either directly or via another test class. - -* There can be 1 to N number of functions with any name, however only - functions starting with ``test_*`` will be executed. - -* There can be 1 to N number of classes in a test module, however only - classes inheriting from ``base.CloudTestCase`` will be loaded. - -* Output from the commands can be accessed via - ``self.get_data_file('key')`` where key is the sub-key of - ``collect_scripts`` above. - -* The cloud config that the test ran with can be accessed via - ``self.cloud_config``, or any entry from the cloud config can be accessed - via ``self.get_config_entry('key')``. - -* See the base ``CloudTestCase`` for additional helper functions. - -Layout ------- - -Integration tests are located under the `tests/cloud_tests` directory. -Test configurations are placed under `configs` and the test verification -scripts under `testcases`: - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - cloud-init$ tree -d tests/cloud_tests/ - tests/cloud_tests/ - ├── configs - │ ├── bugs - │ ├── examples - │ ├── main - │ └── modules - └── testcases - ├── bugs - ├── examples - ├── main - └── modules - -The sub-folders of bugs, examples, main, and modules help organize the -tests. View the README.md in each to understand in more detail each -directory. - -Test Creation Helper --------------------- - -The integration testing suite has a built in helper to aid in test -development. Help can be invoked via ``tox -e citest -- create --help``. It -can create a template test case config file with user data passed in from -the command line, as well as a template test case verifier module. - -The following would create a test case named ``example`` under the -``modules`` category with the given description, and cloud config data read -in from ``/tmp/user_data``. - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ tox -e citest -- create modules/example \ - -d "a simple example test case" -c "$(< /tmp/user_data)" - - -Development Checklist ---------------------- - -* Configuration File - * Named 'your_test.yaml' - * Contains at least a valid cloud-config - * Optionally, commands to capture additional output - * Valid YAML - * Placed in the appropriate sub-folder in the configs directory - * Any image features required for the test are specified -* Verification File - * Named 'your_test.py' - * Valid unit tests validating output collected - * Passes pylint & pep8 checks - * Placed in the appropriate sub-folder in the test cases directory -* Tested by running the test: - - .. code-block:: shell-session - - $ tox -e citest -- run -verbose \ - --os-name <release target> \ - --test modules/your_test.yaml \ - [--deb <build of cloud-init>] - - -Platforms -========= - -EC2 ---- -To run on the EC2 platform it is required that the user has an AWS credentials -configuration file specifying his or her access keys and a default region. -These configuration files are the standard that the AWS cli and other AWS -tools utilize for interacting directly with AWS itself and are normally -generated when running ``aws configure``: - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ cat $HOME/.aws/credentials - [default] - aws_access_key_id = <KEY HERE> - aws_secret_access_key = <KEY HERE> - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ cat $HOME/.aws/config - [default] - region = us-west-2 - - -Azure Cloud ------------ - -To run on Azure Cloud platform users login with Service Principal and export -credentials file. Region is defaulted and can be set in -``tests/cloud_tests/platforms.yaml``. The Service Principal credentials are -the standard authentication for Azure SDK to interact with Azure Services: - -Create Service Principal account or login - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ az ad sp create-for-rbac --name "APP_ID" --password "STRONG-SECRET-PASSWORD" - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ az login --service-principal --username "APP_ID" --password "STRONG-SECRET-PASSWORD" - -Export credentials - -.. code-block:: shell-session - - $ az ad sp create-for-rbac --sdk-auth > $HOME/.azure/credentials.json - -.. code-block:: json - - { - "clientId": "<Service principal ID>", - "clientSecret": "<Service principal secret/password>", - "subscriptionId": "<Subscription associated with the service principal>", - "tenantId": "<The service principal's tenant>", - "activeDirectoryEndpointUrl": "https://login.microsoftonline.com", - "resourceManagerEndpointUrl": "https://management.azure.com/", - "activeDirectoryGraphResourceId": "https://graph.windows.net/", - "sqlManagementEndpointUrl": "https://management.core.windows.net:8443/", - "galleryEndpointUrl": "https://gallery.azure.com/", - "managementEndpointUrl": "https://management.core.windows.net/" - } - -Set region in platforms.yaml - -.. code-block:: yaml - - azurecloud: - enabled: true - region: West US 2 - vm_size: Standard_DS1_v2 - storage_sku: standard_lrs - tag: ci - - -Architecture -============ - -The following section outlines the high-level architecture of the -integration process. - -Overview --------- -The process flow during a complete end-to-end LXD-backed test. - -1. Configuration - * The back end and specific distro releases are verified as supported - * The test or tests that need to be run are determined either by - directory or by individual yaml - -2. Image Creation - * Acquire the request LXD image - * Install the specified cloud-init package - * Clean the image so that it does not appear to have been booted - * A snapshot of the image is created and reused by all tests - -3. Configuration - * For each test, the cloud-config is injected into a copy of the - snapshot and booted - * The framework waits for ``/var/lib/cloud/instance/boot-finished`` - (up to 120 seconds) - * All default commands are ran and output collected - * Any commands the user specified are executed and output collected - -4. Verification - * The default commands are checked for any failures, errors, and - warnings to validate basic functionality of cloud-init completed - successfully - * The user generated unit tests are then ran validating against the - collected output - -5. Results - * If any failures were detected the test suite returns a failure - * Results can be dumped in yaml format to a specified file using the - ``-r <result_file_name>.yaml`` option - -Configuring the Test Suite --------------------------- - -Most of the behavior of the test suite is configurable through several yaml -files. These control the behavior of the test suite's platforms, images, and -tests. The main config files for platforms, images and test cases are -``platforms.yaml``, ``releases.yaml`` and ``testcases.yaml``. - -Config handling -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -All configurable parts of the test suite use a defaults + overrides system -for managing config entries. All base config items are dictionaries. - -Merging is done on a key-by-key basis, with all keys in the default and -override represented in the final result. If a key exists both in -the defaults and the overrides, then the behavior depends on the type of data -the key refers to. If it is atomic data or a list, then the overrides will -replace the default. If the data is a dictionary then the value will be the -result of merging that dictionary from the default config and that -dictionary from the overrides. - -Merging is done using the function -``tests.cloud_tests.config.merge_config``, which can be examined for more -detail on config merging behavior. - -The following demonstrates merge behavior: - -.. code-block:: yaml - - defaults: - list_item: - - list_entry_1 - - list_entry_2 - int_item_1: 123 - int_item_2: 234 - dict_item: - subkey_1: 1 - subkey_2: 2 - subkey_dict: - subsubkey_1: a - subsubkey_2: b - - overrides: - list_item: - - overridden_list_entry - int_item_1: 0 - dict_item: - subkey_2: false - subkey_dict: - subsubkey_2: 'new value' - - result: - list_item: - - overridden_list_entry - int_item_1: 0 - int_item_2: 234 - dict_item: - subkey_1: 1 - subkey_2: false - subkey_dict: - subsubkey_1: a - subsubkey_2: 'new value' - - -Image Config ------------- - -Image configuration is handled in ``releases.yaml``. The image configuration -controls how platforms locate and acquire images, how the platforms should -interact with the images, how platforms should detect when an image has -fully booted, any options that are required to set the image up, and -features that the image supports. - -Since settings for locating an image and interacting with it differ from -platform to platform, there are 4 levels of settings available for images on -top of the default image settings. The structure of the image config file -is: - -.. code-block:: yaml - - default_release_config: - default: - ... - <platform>: - ... - <platform>: - ... - - releases: - <release name>: - <default>: - ... - <platform>: - ... - <platform>: - ... - - -The base config is created from the overall defaults and the overrides for -the platform. The overrides are created from the default config for the -image and the platform specific overrides for the image. - -System Boot -^^^^^^^^^^^ - -The test suite must be able to test if a system has fully booted and if -cloud-init has finished running, so that running collect scripts does not -race against the target image booting. This is done using the -``system_ready_script`` and ``cloud_init_ready_script`` image config keys. - -Each of these keys accepts a small bash test statement as a string that must -return 0 or 1. Since this test statement will be added into a larger bash -statement it must be a single statement using the ``[`` test syntax. - -The default image config provides a system ready script that works for any -systemd based image. If the image is not systemd based, then a different -test statement must be provided. The default config also provides a test -for whether or not cloud-init has finished which checks for the file -``/run/cloud-init/result.json``. This should be sufficient for most systems -as writing this file is one of the last things cloud-init does. - -The setting ``boot_timeout`` controls how long, in seconds, the platform -should wait for an image to boot. If the system ready script has not -indicated that the system is fully booted within this time an error will be -raised. - -Feature Flags -^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -Not all test cases can work on all images due to features the test case -requires not being present on that image. If a test case requires features -in an image that are not likely to be present across all distros and -platforms that the test suite supports, then the test can be skipped -everywhere it is not supported. - -Feature flags, which are names for features supported on some images, but -not all that may be required by test cases. Configuration for feature flags -is provided in ``releases.yaml`` under the ``features`` top level key. The -features config includes a list of all currently defined feature flags, -their meanings, and a list of feature groups. - -Feature groups are groups of features that many images have in common. For -example, the ``Ubuntu_specific`` feature group includes features that -should be present across most Ubuntu releases, but may or may not be for -other distros. Feature groups are specified for an image as a list under -the key ``feature_groups``. - -An image's feature flags are derived from the features groups that that -image has and any feature overrides provided. Feature overrides can be -specified under the ``features`` key which accepts a dictionary of -``{<feature_name>: true/false}`` mappings. If a feature is omitted from an -image's feature flags or set to false in the overrides then the test suite -will skip any tests that require that feature when using that image. - -Feature flags may be overridden at run time using the ``--feature-override`` -command line argument. It accepts a feature flag and value to set in the -format ``<feature name>=true/false``. Multiple ``--feature-override`` -flags can be used, and will all be applied to all feature flags for images -used during a test. - -Setup Overrides -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -If an image requires some of the options for image setup to be used, then it -may specify overrides for the command line arguments passed into setup -image. These may be specified as a dictionary under the ``setup_overrides`` -key. When an image is set up, the arguments that control how it is set up -will be the arguments from the command line, with any entries in -``setup_overrides`` used to override these arguments. - -For example, images that do not come with cloud-init already installed -should have ``setup_overrides: {upgrade: true}`` specified so that in the -event that no additional setup options are given, cloud-init will be -installed from the image's repos before running tests. Note that if other -options such as ``--deb`` are passed in on the command line, these will -still work as expected, since apt's policy for cloud-init would prefer the -locally installed deb over an older version from the repos. - -Platform Specific Options -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -There are many platform specific options in image configuration that allow -platforms to locate images and that control additional setup that the -platform may have to do to make the image usable. For information on how -these work, please consult the documentation for that platform in the -integration testing suite and the ``releases.yaml`` file for examples. - -Error Handling --------------- - -The test suite makes an attempt to run as many tests as possible even in the -event of some failing so that automated runs collect as much data as -possible. In the event that something goes wrong while setting up for or -running a test, the test suite will attempt to continue running any tests -which have not been affected by the error. - -For example, if the test suite was told to run tests on one platform for two -releases and an error occurred setting up the first image, all tests for -that image would be skipped, and the test suite would continue to set up -the second image and run tests on it. Or, if the system does not start -properly for one test case out of many to run on that image, that test case -will be skipped and the next one will be run. - -Note that if any errors occur, the test suite will record the failure and -where it occurred in the result data and write it out to the specified -result file. - -Results -------- - -The test suite generates result data that includes how long each stage of -the test suite took and which parts were and were not successful. This data -is dumped to the log after the collect and verify stages, and may also be -written out in yaml format to a file. If part of the setup failed, the -traceback for the failure and the error message will be included in the -result file. If a test verifier finds a problem with the collected data -from a test run, the class, test function and test will be recorded in the -result data. - -Exit Codes -^^^^^^^^^^ - -The test suite counts how many errors occur throughout a run. The exit code -after a run is the number of errors that occurred. If the exit code is -non-zero then something is wrong either with the test suite, the -configuration for an image, a test case, or cloud-init itself. - -Note that the exit code does not always directly correspond to the number -of failed test cases, since in some cases, a single error during image setup -can mean that several test cases are not run. If run is used, then the exit -code will be the sum of the number of errors in the collect and verify -stages. - -Data Dir -^^^^^^^^ - -When using run, the collected data is written into a temporary directory. In -the event that all tests pass, this directory is deleted, but if a test -fails or an error occurs, this data will be left in place, and a message -will be written to the log giving the location of the data. |