refstack-client is a command line utility that allows you to execute Tempest test runs based on configurations you specify. When finished running Tempest it can send the passed test data to a RefStack API server.
Environment setup
We've created an "easy button" for Ubuntu, Centos, RHEL and openSuSe.
Make sure you have git installed
Get the refstack client: git clone https://github.com/openstack/refstack-client
Go into the refstack-client directory: cd refstack-client
Run the "easy button" setup: ./setup_env
Options:
- -c option allows to specify SHA of commit or branch in Tempest repository which will be installed.
- -t option allows to specify tag in Tempest repository which will be installed. For example: execute ./setup_env -t tags/3 to install Tempest tag-3.
- By default, Tempest will be installed from commit 551e1a9701e7e2b3edf6d49a2eaa62b7ab2435ad (11 September 2015).
Usage
Prepare a tempest configuration file that is customized to your cloud environment.
Go into the refstack-client directory.
cd ~/refstack-client
Source to use the correct Python environment.
source .venv/bin/activate
Validate your setup by running a short test.
- ./refstack-client test -c -v
- tempest.api.identity.admin.v2.test_roles
or
- ./refstack-client test -c -v
- tempest.api.identity.v2.test_token
Run tests.
To run the entire API test set:
./refstack-client test -c -v
To run only those tests specified in a DefCore defined test file:
./refstack-client test -c -v --test-list
For example:
./refstack-client test -c ~/tempest.conf -v --test-list https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openstack/defcore/master/2015.05/2015.05.required.txt
This will run only the test cases listed in 2015.05.required.txt.
Note:
Adding the -v option will show the Tempest test result output.
Adding the --upload option will have your test results be uploaded to the default RefStack API server or the server specified by --url.
Adding the --test-list option will allow you to specify the file path or URL of a test list text file. This test list should contain specific test cases that should be tested. Tests lists passed in using this argument will be normalized with the current Tempest evironment to eliminate any attribute mismatches.
Adding the --url option will allow you to change where test results should be uploaded.
Adding the -r option with a string will prefix the JSON result file with the given string (e.g. -r my-test will yield a result file like my-test-0.json ).
Adding -- enables you to pass arbitary arguments to the Tempest runner. After the first --, all other subsequent arguments will be passed to the Tempest runner as is. This is mainly used for quick verification of the target test cases. (e.g. -- tempest.api.identity.v2.test_token)
Use ./refstack-client test --help for the full list of arguments.
Upload your results.
If you previously ran a test with refstack-client without the --upload option, you can upload your results to a RefStack API server by using the following command:
./refstack-client upload
The results file is a JSON file generated by refstack-client when a test has completed. This is saved in .tempest/.testrepository. When you use the upload command, you can also override the RefStack API server uploaded to with the --url option.
Alternatively, you can use the upload-subunit command to upload results using an existing subunit file. This requires that you pass in the Keystone endpoint URL for the cloud that was tested to generate the subunit data:
./refstack-client upload-subunit --keystone-endpoint http://some.url:5000/v3
Note:
Adding -i option will upload test results with a digital signature. For signing, refstack-client uses private RSA keys. The OpenSSH format of RSA keys is supported, so you can just use your SSH key ~/.ssh/id-rsa or generate a new one with ssh-keygen -b 4096. For now, signed test results can be considered private.
List uploaded test set.
You can list previously uploaded data from a RefStack API server by using the following command:
./refstack-client list --url
Tempest Hacking
By default, refstack-client installs Tempest into the .tempest directory. If you're interested in working with Tempest directly for debugging or configuration, you can activate a working Tempest environment by switching to that directory and using the installed dependencies.
cd .tempest
run tempest with ./run_tempest.sh -V ` or `source ./.venv/bin/activate and run tests manually with testr.
This will make the entire Tempest environment available for you to run, including the run_tempest script and testr.
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