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path: root/tests/integration_tests/modules/test_user_events.py
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2021-12-15Adopt Black and isort (SC-700) (#1157)James Falcon
Applied Black and isort, fixed any linting issues, updated tox.ini and CI.
2021-09-17Set Azure to apply networking config every BOOT (#1023)James Falcon
In #1006, we set Azure to apply networking config every BOOT_NEW_INSTANCE because the BOOT_LEGACY option was causing problems applying networking the second time per boot. However, BOOT_NEW_INSTANCE is also wrong as Azure needs to apply networking once per boot, during init-local phase.
2021-09-15Integration test upgrades for the 21.3-1 SRU (#1001)James Falcon
* Update test_combined.py to allow either valid LXD subplatform * Split jinja templated tests into separate module as they can be more fragile * Move checks for warnings and tracebacks into dedicated utility function. This allows us to work around persistent and expected tracebacks/warnings on particular clouds. * Update test_upgrade.py to allow either valid Azure datasource. /var/lib/waagent or a mounted device are both valid. * Add specificity to test_ntp_servers.py Clouds will often specify their own ntp servers in the ntp configuration files, so make the tests manually specify their own. * Account for additional keys on system in test_ssh_keysfiles.py * Update tests to account for invalid cache test_user_events.py and test_version_change.py both have tests that assume we will have valid ds cache when rebooting. In test_user_events.py, subsequent boots should block applying network on boot if boot event is denied. However, if the cache is invalid, it is valid to apply networking config that boot. In test_version_change.py no cache found won't trigger the expected debug log. Additionally, the pickle used for that test on an older release triggered an unexpected issue that took a different error path. * Ignore bionic in hotplug tests (LP: #1942247) On Bionic, we traceback when attempting to detect the hotplugged device in the updated metadata. This is because Bionic is specifically configured not to provide network metadata. See LP: #1942247 for more details. * Fix date used in test_final_message. In test_final_message, we ensured the variable substitution works as expected. For $timestamp, we compared against the current date. It's possible for the host date to be massively different from the client date, so obtain date on client rather than host. * Remove module success from lp1813396 test. Module may fail unrelatedly (in this case apt-get update is failing), but the test should still pass. * Skip testing events if network is disabled * Ensure we install expected version of cloud-init As part of test setup, we can install cloud-init from various sources, including PROPOSED, PPAs, etc. We were never checking that this install completes successfully, and on OCI, it wasn't completing successfully because of apt locking issues. Code has been updated to retry, and then fail loudly if we can't complete the install. * Remove ubuntu-azure-fips metapkg which mandates FIPS-flavour kernel In test_lp1835584.py * Update test_user_events.py to account for Azure behavior since Azure has a separate service to clear the pickled metadata every boot * Change failure to warning in test_upgrade.py if initial boot errors If there's already a pre-existing cause for warnings or tracebacks, that shouldn't cause the new version to fail. * Add retry to test_random_passwords_emitted_to_serial_console It's possible we haven't retrieved the entire log when the call returns, so retry a few times if the output isn't empty.
2021-05-13Allow user control over update events (#834)James Falcon
Control is currently limited to boot events, though this should allow us to more easily incorporate HOTPLUG support. Disabling 'instance-first-boot' is not supported as we apply networking config too early in boot to have processed userdata (along with the fact that this would be a pretty big foot-gun). The concept of update events on datasource has been split into supported update events and default update events. Defaults will be used if there is no user-defined update events, but user-defined events won't be supplied if they aren't supported. When applying the networking config, we now check to see if the event is supported by the datasource as well as if it is enabled. Configuration looks like: updates: network: when: ['boot']