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227 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
227 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
Integration tests
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=================
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The ansible integration system.
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Tests for playbooks, by playbooks.
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Some tests may require credentials. Credentials may be specified with `credentials.yml`.
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Tests should be run as root.
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Quick Start
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===========
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To get started quickly using Docker containers for testing,
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see [Tests in Docker containers](#tests-in-docker-containers).
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Configuration
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=============
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Making your own version of `integration_config.yml` can allow for setting some
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tunable parameters to help run the tests better in your environment. Some
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tests (e.g. cloud) will only run when access credentials are provided. For
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more information about supported credentials, refer to `credentials.template`.
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Prerequisites
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=============
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The tests will assume things like hg, svn, and git are installed and in path.
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(Complete list pending)
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Non-destructive Tests
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=====================
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These tests will modify files in subdirectories, but will not do things that install or remove packages or things
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outside of those test subdirectories. They will also not reconfigure or bounce system services.
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Run as follows:
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make non_destructive
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You can select specific tests with the --tags parameter.
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TEST_FLAGS="--tags test_vars_blending" make
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Destructive Tests
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=================
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These tests are allowed to install and remove some trivial packages. You will likely want to devote these
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to a virtual environment. They won't reformat your filesystem, however :)
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make destructive
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Cloud Tests
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===========
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Cloud tests exercise capabilities of cloud modules (e.g. ec2_key). These are
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not 'tests run in the cloud' so much as tests that leverage the cloud modules
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and are organized by cloud provider.
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In order to run cloud tests, you must provide access credentials in a file
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named `credentials.yml`. A sample credentials file named
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`credentials.template` is available for syntax help.
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Provide cloud credentials:
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cp credentials.template credentials.yml
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${EDITOR:-vi} credentials.yml
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Run the tests:
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make cloud
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*WARNING* running cloud integration tests will create and destroy cloud
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resources. Running these tests may result in additional fees associated with
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your cloud account. Care is taken to ensure that created resources are
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removed. However, it is advisable to inspect your AWS console to ensure no
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unexpected resources are running.
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Windows Tests
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=============
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These tests exercise the winrm connection plugin and Windows modules. You'll
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need to define an inventory with a remote Windows 2008 or 2012 Server to use
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for testing, and enable PowerShell Remoting to continue.
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Running these tests may result in changes to your Windows host, so don't run
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them against a production/critical Windows environment.
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Enable PowerShell Remoting (run on the Windows host via Remote Desktop):
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Enable-PSRemoting -Force
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Define Windows inventory:
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cp inventory.winrm.template inventory.winrm
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${EDITOR:-vi} inventory.winrm
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Run the tests:
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make test_winrm
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Tests in Docker containers
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==========================
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If you have a Linux system with Docker installed, running integration tests using the same Docker containers used by
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the Ansible continuous integration (CI) system is recommended.
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> Using Docker Engine to run Docker on a non-Linux host is not recommended. Some tests, such as those that manage
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> services or use local SSH connections are known to fail in such an environment. For best results, install Docker on a
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> full Linux distribution such as Ubuntu, running on real hardware or in a virtual machine.
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## Running Integration Tests
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To run all integration test targets with the default settings in a Centos 7 container, run `make integration` from the repository root.
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You can also run specific tests or select a different Linux distribution.
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For example, to run the test `test_ping` from the non_destructive target on a Ubuntu 14.04 container:
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- go to the repository root
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- and execute `make integration IMAGE=ansible/ansible:ubuntu1404 TARGET=non_destructive TEST_FLAGS='--tags test_ping'`
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## Container Images
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Use the prefix `ansible/ansible:` with the image names below.
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> Running `make integration` will automatically download the container image you have specified, if it is not already
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> available. However, you will be responsible for keeping the container images up-to-date using `docker pull`.
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### Python 2
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Most container images are for testing with Python 2:
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- centos6
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- centos7
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- fedora-rawhide
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- fedora23
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- opensuseleap
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- ubuntu1204 (requires `PRIVILEGED=true`)
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- ubuntu1404 (requires `PRIVILEGED=true`)
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- ubuntu1604
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### Python 3
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To test with Python 3 you must set `PYTHON3=1` and use the following images:
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- ubuntu1604py3
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## Additional Options
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There are additional environment variables that can be used. A few of the more useful ones:
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- `KEEP_CONTAINERS=onfailure` - Containers will be preserved if tests fail.
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- `KEEP_CONTAINERS=1` - Containers will always be preserved.
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- `SHARE_SOURCE=1` - Changes to source from the host or container will be shared between host and container.
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_**CAUTION:** Files created by the container will be owned by root on the host._
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Network Tests
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=============
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```
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$ ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook network-all.yaml
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```
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*NOTE* To run the network tests you will need a number of test machines and sutabily configured inventory file, a sample is included in `test/integration/inventory.network`
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To filter a set of test cases set `limit_to` to the name of the group, generally this is the name of the module:
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```
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$ ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook -i inventory.network all.yaml -e "limit_to=eos_command"
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```
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To filter a singular test case set the tags options to eapi or cli, set limit_to to the test group,
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and test_cases to the name of the test:
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```
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$ ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH=targets ansible-playbook -i inventory.network network-all.yaml --tags="cli" -e "limit_to=eos_command test_case=notequal"
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```
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## Contributing Test Cases
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Test cases are added to roles based on the module being testing. Test cases
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should include both `cli` and `eapi` test cases. Cli test cases should be
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added to `targets/modulename/tests/cli` and eapi tests should be added to
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`targets/modulename/tests/eapi`.
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In addition to positive testing, negative tests are required to ensure user friendly warnings & errors are generated, rather than backtraces, for example:
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```yaml
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- name: test invalid subset (foobar)
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eos_facts:
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provider: "{{ cli }}"
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gather_subset:
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- "foobar"
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register: result
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ignore_errors: true
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- assert:
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that:
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# Failures shouldn't return changes
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- "result.changed == false"
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# It's a failure
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- "result.failed == true"
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# Sensible Failure message
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- "'Subset must be one of' in result.msg"
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```
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### Conventions
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- Each test case should generally follow the pattern:
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>setup —> test —> assert —> test again (idempotent) —> assert —> -teardown (if needed) -> done
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This keeps test playbooks from becoming monolithic and difficult to
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troubleshoot.
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- Include a name for each task that is not an assertion. (It's OK to add names
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to assertions too. But to make it easy to identify the broken task within a failed
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test, at least provide a helpful name for each task.)
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- Files containing test cases must end in `.yaml`
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### Adding a new Network Platform
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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`
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