***************** Integration tests ***************** .. contents:: Topics The Ansible integration Test system. Tests for playbooks, by playbooks. Some tests may require credentials. Credentials may be specified with `credentials.yml`. Some tests may require root. Quick Start =========== It is highly recommended that you install and activate the ``argcomplete`` python package. It provides tab completion in ``bash`` for the ``ansible-test`` test runner. Configuration ============= Making your own version of ``integration_config.yml`` can allow for setting some tunable parameters to help run the tests better in your environment. Some tests (e.g. cloud) will only run when access credentials are provided. For more information about supported credentials, refer to ``credentials.template``. Prerequisites ============= The tests will assume things like hg, svn, and git are installed and in path. (Complete list pending) Non-destructive Tests ===================== These tests will modify files in subdirectories, but will not do things that install or remove packages or things outside of those test subdirectories. They will also not reconfigure or bounce system services. .. note:: Running integration tests within Docker To protect your system from any potential changes caused by integration tests, and to ensure the a sensible set of dependencies are available we recommend that you always run integration tests with the ``--docker`` option. See the `list of supported docker images `_ for options. .. note:: Avoiding pulling new Docker images: Use the ``--docker-no-pull`` option to avoid pulling the latest container image. This is required when using custom local images that are not available for download. Run as follows for all POSIX platform tests executed by our CI system:: test/runner/ansible-test integration --docker fedora25 -v posix/ci/ You can select specific tests as well, such as for individual modules:: test/runner/ansible-test integration -v ping By installing ``argcomplete`` you can obtain a full list by doing:: test/runner/ansible-test integration Destructive Tests ================= These tests are allowed to install and remove some trivial packages. You will likely want to devote these to a virtual environment, such as Docker. They won't reformat your filesystem:: test/runner/ansible-test integration --docker fedora25 -v destructive/ Windows Tests ============= These tests exercise the ``winrm`` connection plugin and Windows modules. You'll need to define an inventory with a remote Windows 2008 or 2012 Server to use for testing, and enable PowerShell Remoting to continue. Running these tests may result in changes to your Windows host, so don't run them against a production/critical Windows environment. Enable PowerShell Remoting (run on the Windows host via Remote Desktop):: Enable-PSRemoting -Force Define Windows inventory:: cp inventory.winrm.template inventory.winrm ${EDITOR:-vi} inventory.winrm Run the Windows tests executed by our CI system:: test/runner/ansible-test windows-integration -v windows/ci/ Tests in Docker containers ========================== If you have a Linux system with Docker installed, running integration tests using the same Docker containers used by the Ansible continuous integration (CI) system is recommended. .. note: Docker on non-Linux:: Using Docker Engine to run Docker on a non-Linux host is not recommended. Some tests may fail, depending on the image used for testing. Using the ``--docker-privileged`` option may resolve the issue. Running Integration Tests ------------------------- To run all CI integration test targets for POSIX platforms in a Ubuntu 16.04 container:: test/runner/ansible-test integration -v posix/ci/ --docker You can also run specific tests or select a different Linux distribution. For example, to run tests for the ``ping`` module on a Ubuntu 14.04 container:: test/runner/ansible-test integration -v ping --docker ubuntu1404 Container Images ---------------- Python 2 ```````` Most container images are for testing with Python 2: - centos6 - centos7 - fedora24 - fedora25 - opensuse42.1 - opensuse42.2 - ubuntu1204 - ubuntu1404 - ubuntu1604 Python 3 ```````` To test with Python 3 use the following images: - ubuntu1604py3 Cloud Tests =========== See the :doc:`testing_integration_legacy` page for more information. Network Tests ============= This page details the specifics around testing Ansible Networking modules. .. important:: Network testing requirements for Ansible 2.4 Starting with Ansible 2.4, all network modules MUST include corresponding unit tests to defend functionality. The unit tests must be added in the same PR that includes the new network module, or extends functionality. Integration tests, although not required, are a welcome addition. How to do this is explained in the rest of this document. Network integration tests can be ran by doing:: cd test/integration ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook network-all.yaml .. note:: * To run the network tests you will need a number of test machines and suitably configured inventory file. A sample is included in ``test/integration/inventory.network`` * As with the rest of the integration tests, they can be found grouped by module in ``test/integration/targets/MODULENAME/`` To filter a set of test cases set ``limit_to`` to the name of the group, generally this is the name of the module:: ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook -i inventory.network network-all.yaml -e "limit_to=eos_command" To filter a singular test case set the tags options to eapi or cli, set limit_to to the test group, and test_cases to the name of the test:: ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook -i inventory.network network-all.yaml --tags="cli" -e "limit_to=eos_command test_case=notequal" Writing network integration tests --------------------------------- Test cases are added to roles based on the module being testing. Test cases should include both cli and API test cases. Cli test cases should be added to ``test/integration/targets/modulename/tests/cli`` and API tests should be added to ``test/integration/targets/modulename/tests/eapi``, or ``nxapi``. In addition to positive testing, negative tests are required to ensure user friendly warnings & errors are generated, rather than backtraces, for example: .. code-block: yaml - name: test invalid subset (foobar) eos_facts: provider: "{{ cli }}" gather_subset: - "foobar" register: result ignore_errors: true - assert: that: # Failures shouldn't return changes - "result.changed == false" # It's a failure - "result.failed == true" # Sensible Failure message - "'Subset must be one of' in result.msg" Conventions ``````````` - Each test case should generally follow the pattern: setup —> test —> assert —> test again (idempotent) —> assert —> teardown (if needed) -> done This keeps test playbooks from becoming monolithic and difficult to troubleshoot. - Include a name for each task that is not an assertion. (It's OK to add names to assertions too. But to make it easy to identify the broken task within a failed test, at least provide a helpful name for each task.) - Files containing test cases must end in `.yaml` Adding a new Network Platform ````````````````````````````` A top level playbook is required such as ``ansible/test/integration/eos.yaml`` which needs to be references by ``ansible/test/integration/network-all.yaml`` Where to find out more ====================== If you'd like to know more about the plans for improving testing Ansible then why not join the `Testing Working Group `_.