Commit Graph

10 Commits (467d2ebecdb1b9da1c4294aaa0ebcf085c5d5db0)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Clay 1939f6c412 Fix ansible-test invocation of pytest. 6 years ago
Jordan Borean 7b774117ab
ansible-test: set ulimit to enforce consistent test environment (#46652)
* ansible-test: set ulimit to enforce consistent test environment

* fixed santiy issue
6 years ago
Matt Clay ac492476e5
Bug fixes and cleanup for ansible-test. (#45991)
* Remove unused imports.
* Clean up ConfigParser usage in ansible-test.
* Fix bare except statements in ansible-test.
* Miscellaneous cleanup from PyCharm inspections.
* Enable pylint no-self-use for ansible-test.
* Remove obsolete pylint ignores for Python 3.7.
* Fix shellcheck issuers under newer shellcheck.
* Use newer path for ansible-test.
* Fix issues in code-smell tests.
6 years ago
Matt Clay 45b5685037 Add python.py coverage injector for ansible-test.
This can be used to run Python scripts from the repository with the
correct interpreter and allow collection of code coverage.

Useful for testing contrib inventory scripts.
6 years ago
Toshio Kuratomi 52449cc01a AnsiballZ improvements
Now that we don't need to worry about python-2.4 and 2.5, we can make
some improvements to the way AnsiballZ handles modules.

* Change AnsiballZ wrapper to use import to invoke the module
  We need the module to think of itself as a script because it could be
  coded as:

      main()

  or as:

      if __name__ == '__main__':
          main()

  Or even as:

      if __name__ == '__main__':
          random_function_name()

  A script will invoke all of those.  Prior to this change, we invoked
  a second Python interpreter on the module so that it really was
  a script.  However, this means that we have to run python twice (once
  for the AnsiballZ wrapper and once for the module).  This change makes
  the module think that it is a script (because __name__ in the module ==
  '__main__') but it's actually being invoked by us importing the module
  code.

  There's three ways we've come up to do this.
  * The most elegant is to use zipimporter and tell the import mechanism
    that the module being loaded is __main__:
    * 5959f11c9d/lib/ansible/executor/module_common.py (L175)
    * zipimporter is nice because we do not have to extract the module from
      the zip file and save it to the disk when we do that.  The import
      machinery does it all for us.
    * The drawback is that modules do not have a __file__ which points
      to a real file when they do this.  Modules could be using __file__
      to for a variety of reasons, most of those probably have
      replacements (the most common one is to find a writable directory
      for temporary files.  AnsibleModule.tmpdir should be used instead)
      We can monkeypatch __file__ in fom AnsibleModule initialization
      but that's kind of gross.  There's no way I can see to do this
      from the wrapper.

  * Next, there's imp.load_module():
    * https://github.com/abadger/ansible/blob/340edf7489/lib/ansible/executor/module_common.py#L151
    * imp has the nice property of allowing us to set __name__ to
      __main__ without changing the name of the file itself
    * We also don't have to do anything special to set __file__ for
      backwards compatibility (although the reason for that is the
      drawback):
    * Its drawback is that it requires the file to exist on disk so we
      have to explicitly extract it from the zipfile and save it to
      a temporary file

  * The last choice is to use exec to execute the module:
    * https://github.com/abadger/ansible/blob/f47a4ccc76/lib/ansible/executor/module_common.py#L175
    * The code we would have to maintain for this looks pretty clean.
      In the wrapper we create a ModuleType, set __file__ on it, read
      the module's contents in from the zip file and then exec it.
    * Drawbacks: We still have to explicitly extract the file's contents
      from the zip archive instead of letting python's import mechanism
      handle it.
    * Exec also has hidden performance issues and breaks certain
      assumptions that modules could be making about their own code:
      http://lucumr.pocoo.org/2011/2/1/exec-in-python/

  Our plan is to use imp.load_module() for now, deprecate the use of
  __file__ in modules, and switch to zipimport once the deprecation
  period for __file__ is over (without monkeypatching a fake __file__ in
  via AnsibleModule).

* Rename the name of the AnsiBallZ wrapped module
  This makes it obvious that the wrapped module isn't the module file that
  we distribute.  It's part of trying to mitigate the fact that the module
  is now named __main)).py in tracebacks.

* Shield all wrapper symbols inside of a function
  With the new import code, all symbols in the wrapper become visible in
  the module.  To mitigate the chance of collisions, move most symbols
  into a toplevel function.  The only symbols left in the global namespace
  are now _ANSIBALLZ_WRAPPER and _ansiballz_main.

revised porting guide entry

Integrate code coverage collection into AnsiballZ.

ci_coverage
ci_complete
6 years ago
Troy Murray 15ce7c5bab change OS X to macOS (#41294)
* change OS X to macOS

<!--- Your description here -->

+label: docsite_pr

* Update all Mac OS X references to be macOS

* Drop extra Mac
7 years ago
Matt Clay dfd19a812f Miscellaneous bug fixes for ansible-test.
- Overhauled coverage injector to fix issues with non-local tests.
- Updated integration tests to work with the new coverage injector.
- Fix concurrency issue by using random temp files for delegation.
- Fix handling of coverage files from root user.
- Fix handling of coverage files without arcs.
- Make sure temp copy of injector is world readable and executable.
8 years ago
Matt Clay fcac261eef Run unit tests in isolation w/ coverage support. 8 years ago
Adrian Likins 47a7cb733a use log attribute %(process)d instead of os.getpid (#18691) 8 years ago
Matt Clay 6bbd92e422 Initial ansible-test implementation. (#18556) 8 years ago