* New commit: "Acceptance test x86_cpu_model_versions: use default
vm", needed to normalize the use of the machine type tags
* Added a lot of leniency to the test setup (and reliability to the
test/job), canceling the test if there are any failures while
downloading/preparing the boot images.
* Made use of Avocado's data drainer a regular feature (dropped the
commit with RFC) and squashed it.
* Bumped pycdlib version to 1.8.0
* Dropped explicit "--enable-slirp=git" (added on v5) to Travis CI
configure line, as the default configuration on Travis CI now
results in user networking capabilities.
Changes from v5:
================
* Added explicit "--enable-slirp=git" to Travis CI configure line, as
these tests depend on "-netdev user" like networking.
* Bumped Fedora to most recently released version (30).
* Changed "checksum" parameter to 'sha256' and use the same hashes as
provided by the Fedora project (instead of using Avocado's default
sha1 and compute and use a different hash value).
* New commit: Add "boot_linux" test for aarch64 and virt machine type
* New commit: [RFC]: use Avocado data drainer for console logging
Changes from v4:
================
* New commit "Acceptance tests: use relative location for tests"
* New commit "Acceptance tests: keep a stable reference to the QEMU build dir"
* Pinned the Fedora 29 image by adding a checksum. The goal is to
never allow more than one component to change at a time (the one
allowed to change is QEMU itself). Updates to the image should be
manual. (Based on comments from Cornelia)
* Moved the downloading of the Fedora 29 cloud image to the test
setUp() method, canceling the test if the image can not be
downloaded.
* Removed the ":avocado: enable" tag, given that Avocado versions
68.0 and later operate on a "recursive by default" manner, that
is able to correctly identify this as an Avocado test.
Changes from v3:
================
* New patch "Acceptance tests: depend on qemu-img"
Known Issues on v3 (no longer applicable):
==========================================
* A recent TCG performance regression[1] affects this test in a
number of ways:
- The test execution may timeout by itself
- The generation of SSH host keys in the guest's first boot is also
affected (possibly also a timeout)
- The cloud-init "phone home" feature attempts to read the host keys
and fails, causing the test to timeout and fail
These are not observed anymore once the fix[2] is applied.
[1] - https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2019-02/msg00338.html
[2] - https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2019-02/msg01129.html
Changes from v2:
================
* Updated the tag to include the "arch:" key, in a similar fashion as to
the tests in the "Acceptance Tests: target architecture support":
- https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2019-02/msg00369.html
* Renamed the test method name to test_x86_64_pc, again, similarly to the
boot_linux_console.py tests in the series mentioned before.
* Set the machine type explicitly, again similarly to the
boot_linux_console.py tests in the series mentioned before.
* Added messages after the launch of the VM, to let test runners know
the test know waits for a boot confirmation from the the guest (Eduardo).
* Updated commit message to reflect the fact that this version does
not allow for parameterization of the guest OS, version, etc.
* Dropped the RFC prefix on patch "RFC: Acceptance tests: add the
build directory to the system PATH"
* Changed the comments on "RFC: Acceptance tests: add the build
directory to the system PATH" to make it clear the addition of a
the build directory to the PATH may influence other utility code.
Changes from v1:
================
* The commit message was adjusted, removing the reference to the
avocado.utils.vmimage encoding issue on previous Avocado versions
(<= 64.0) and the fix that would (and was) included in Avocado
version 65.0.
* Effectively added pycdlib==1.6.0 to the requirements.txt file,
added on a56931eef3, and adjusted the commit message was also
to reflect that.
* Updated the default version of the guest OS, from Fedora 28 to 29.
Besides possible improvements in the (virtual) hardware coverage,
it brings a performance improvement in the order of 20% to the
test.
* Removed all direct parameters usage. Because some parameters and
its default values implemented in the test would prevent it from
running on some environments. Example: the "accel" parameter had a
default value of "kvm", which would prevent this test, that boots a
x86_64 OS, from running on a host arch different than x86_64. I
recognize that it's desirable to make tests reusable and
parameterized (that was the reason for the first version doing so),
but the mechanism to be used to define the architectures that a
given test should support is still an open issue, and has been
discussed in other threads. I'll follow up those discussions with
a proposal, and until then, removing those aspects from this test
implementation seemed to be the best option. A caveat: this test
currently adds the same tag (x86_64) and follows other assumptions
made on "boot_linux_console.py", that is, that a x86_64 target
binary will be used to run it. If a user is in an environment that
does not have a x86_64 target binary, it could filter those tests
out with: "avocado run --filter-by-tags='-x86_64' tests/acceptance".
* Removed most arguments to the QEMU command line for pretty much the
same reasons described above, and by following the general
perception that I could grasp from other discussions that QEMU
defaults should preferrably be used. This test, as well as others,
can and should be extended later to allow for different test
scenarios by passing well documented parameter values. That is,
they should respect well-known parameters such as "accel" mentioned
above, so that the same test can run with KVM or TCG.
* Changed the value of the memory argument to 1024, which based on
my experimentations and observations is the minimum amount of RAM
for the Fedora 29 cloud image to sucessfully boot on QEMU. I know
there's no such thing as a "one size fits all", specially for QEMU,
but this makes me wonder wether a x86_64 machine type shouldn't
have its default_ram_size bumped to a number practical enough to
run modern operating systems.
* Added a new patch "RFC: Acceptance tests: add the build directory
to the system PATH", which is supposed to gather feedback on how to
enable the use of built binaries, such as qemu-img, to code used by
the test code. The specific situation here is that the vmimage,
part of the avocado.utils libraries, makes use of qemu-img to create
snapshot files. Even though we could require qemu-img to be installed
as a dependency of tests, system wide, it actually goes against the
goal of testing all QEMU things from the source/build tree. This
became aparent with tests running on environments such as Travis CI,
which don't necessarily have qemu-img available elsewhere.
Cleber Rosa (8):
Acceptance test x86_cpu_model_versions: use default vm
Acceptance tests: introduce utility method for tags unique vals
Acceptance tests: use avocado tags for machine type
Acceptance tests: use relative location for tests
Acceptance tests: keep a stable reference to the QEMU build dir
Acceptance tests: add the build directory to the system PATH
Acceptance tests: depend on qemu-img
Acceptance test: add "boot_linux" tests
docs/devel/testing.rst | 18 +++
tests/Makefile.include | 4 +-
tests/acceptance/avocado_qemu/__init__.py | 32 +++-
tests/acceptance/boot_linux.py | 175 +++++++++++++++++++++
tests/acceptance/boot_linux_console.py | 19 +--
tests/acceptance/cpu_queries.py | 2 +-
tests/acceptance/linux_initrd.py | 2 +-
tests/acceptance/linux_ssh_mips_malta.py | 5 -
tests/acceptance/machine_m68k_nextcube.py | 21 +--
tests/acceptance/machine_sparc_leon3.py | 3 +-
tests/acceptance/ppc_prep_40p.py | 3 -
tests/acceptance/x86_cpu_model_versions.py | 137 +++++++++-------
tests/requirements.txt | 1 +
13 files changed, 308 insertions(+), 114 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 tests/acceptance/boot_linux.py