- working for GitHub and similar Markdown engines |
4 years ago | |
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| bench | ||
| hosts | ||
| integration | ||
| lib | ||
| regression | ||
| setup | ||
| soak | ||
| tests | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README.md | ||
| all.yml | ||
| ansible.cfg | ||
| ara_env.py | ||
| compare_output_test.py | ||
| mitogen_ansible_playbook.py | ||
| requirements.txt | ||
| run_ansible_playbook.py | ||
README.md
tests/ansible Directory
This is an an organically growing collection of integration and regression tests used for development and end-user bug reports.
It will be tidied up over time, meanwhile, the playbooks here are a useful demonstrator for what does and doesn't work.
Preparation
run_ansible_playbook.py
This is necessary to set some environment variables used by future tests, as there appears to be no better way to inject them into the top-level process environment before the Mitogen connection process forks.
Running Everything
ANSIBLE_STRATEGY=mitogen_linear ./run_ansible_playbook.py all.yml
hosts/ and common-hosts
To support running the tests against a dev machine that has the requisite user accounts, the the default inventory is a directory containing a 'localhost' file that defines 'localhost' to be named 'target' in Ansible inventory, and a symlink to 'common-hosts', which defines additional targets that all derive from 'target'.
This allows ansible_tests.sh to reuse the common-hosts definitions while
replacing localhost as the test target by creating a new directory that
similarly symlinks in common-hosts.
There may be a better solution for this, but it works fine for now.