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tools/run-container is like tools/run-centos, but currently supports
the following images from lxc-images
opensuse/42.3
centos/6
centos/7
ubuntu/16.04
debian/10
debian/sid
Also here is to make installation via zypper in tools/read-dependencies
not prompt user.
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When we moved some tests to live under cloudinit/ we inadvertantly
failed to change all things that would run nose to include that
directory.
This changes all the 'nose' invocations to consistently run with
tests/unittests and cloudinit/.
Also, it works around, more correctly this time, a python2.6-ism with
the following code:
with assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
sys.exit(2)
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This changes tools/run-centos to collect up your git working directory
via 'git' commands rather than just collecting the whole directory.
The reason for this is that even a clean tree that has had tox run
on it might have up to 400M of data in it.
It adds a '--dirty' flag to run-centos to collect up local changes.
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During continuous integration tests, we're seeing quite a lot of
unreliablity when running 'yum install'. The change here is to move to
re-trying a run of 'yum install --downloadonly' for 10 times or until
it succeeds. Then afterwards, running yum install from the cache.
This seems safer in general than just re-trying an install operation,
since we are specifically affected by the download phase failing.
Also present are some flake8 fixes to tools/read-dependencies.
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Per centos documentation using the fastestmirror plugin is effective at
finding the fastest mirror, unless you are behind a proxy. In that case
you should disable it. Therefore, in our tests if we are setting the proxy
we should also disable the fastestmirror plugin.
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If you ran tools/run-centos without an argument it would fail due
to 'set -u' like:
./tools/run-centos: line 266: 1: unbound variable
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read-dependencies now takes --test-distro param to indicate we want to install
all system package depenencies to allow for testing and building for our
continous integration environment. It allows us to install all needed deps on
a fresh system with:
python3 ./tools/read-dependencies --distro ubuntu --test-distro [--dry-run].
Additionally read-dependencies now looks at what version of python is running
the script (py2 vs p3) and opts to install python 2 or 3 system deps
respectively. This behavior can still be overridden with
python3 ./tools/read-dependencies ... --python-version 2.
There are also some distro-specific packaging and test dependencies, like
devscripts, tox and libssl-dev on debian or ubuntu. Those pkg dependencies
have now been broken out from common pkg deps to avoid trying to install them
on centos/redhat/suse.
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These changes are all in an effort to get tools/run-centos using
read-dependencies rather than the 'setup-centos' script with a separate
set of dependencies listed.
- tools/read-dependencies: support taking multiple --requirements
options. This allows run-centos to get both test and build
dependencies. Ultimately, I think it might be nicer for
read-dependencies to take a list of "goals" (build, test, run or
test-tox) rather than having the caller need to know to provide
multiple --requirements.
- packages/pkg-deps.json: drop the version on the sudo package.
centos 6 has newer (1.8.6p3) version than listed, so its not a problem.
- test_handler_disk_setup.py: a test case here was using assertLogs
which is not present in the version of unittest2 that is available in
centos 6 epel. We just adjust it to use with_logs = True.
- tools/run-cents:
- improve usage with example
- add 'inside_as_cd' to provide the dir you want to cd first to.
- avoid the intermediate tarball on disk in the container.
- add 'prep' subcommand and use it to install pre-dependencies.
- use read-dependencies.
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The added 'run-centos' does:
- Creates centos 6 or 7 lxd container
* Sets http_proxy variable for yum if set locally
* Creates centos user
- Push local tree
* Tar's up working directory
* Pushes to container and untars
- Installs pip and yum dependencies
- As user centos it can then based on flags:
* runs unittests
* run ./packages/brpm
* run ./packages/brpm --srpm
* artifact the built *.rpm
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