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Having to prepare RPMs in advance separately from the tests that use
them severely limits our ability to test various cases and to iterate
quickly when creating tests.
Add a new `build_rpm` function which can basically build the RPM on the
fly and update the yum repo afterwards. It makes it trivial to test
things like package updates:
build_rpm foo 1.0 1
<stuff>
build_rpm foo 1.0 2
<stuff>
The RPMs are all created inside the temporary test directory and thus
cleaned up on exit.
I'm doing this in a separate commit because it's the most important diff
of the transition and might be easy to lose in the larger diff where we
move all the tests to make use of this.
Closes: #854
Approved by: cgwalters
There are a few different use cases here. First, for layering new packages,
there's no good reason for us to force a reboot. Second, we want some support
for cherry-picking security updates and allowing admins to restart services. Finally,
at some point we should offer support for entirely replacing the running tree
if that's what the user wants.
Until now we've been very conservative, but there's a spectrum here. In
particular, this patch changes things so we push a rollback before we start
doing anything live. I think in practice, many use cases would be totally fine
with doing most changes live, and falling back to the rollback if something went
wrong.
This initial code drop *only* supports live layering of new packages. However,
a lot of the base infrastructure is laid for future work.
For now, this will be classified as an experimental feature, hence `ex livefs`.
Part of: https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/issues/639Closes: #652
Approved by: jlebon
I need to build ostree from git too. So now my workflow is:
```
export insttree=/srv/walters/tmp/rootfs
cd ostree
make && make install DESTDIR=${insttree}
cd rpm-ostree
make && make install DESTDIR=${insttree}
env VMCHECK_INSTTREE=${insttree} make vmoverlay
```
Closes: #705
Approved by: jlebon
1. Don't require an ssh-config
In the case of redhat-ci, the VMs are already fully configured for the
system (injected in the hosts file, host key accepted, etc...). So
there's no need to have an ssh-config there. In general, it should be
acceptable to run the vmcheck suite against a resolvable host without
having to create an ssh-config for it.
2. Make the host name configurable
Rather than hardcoding "vmcheck" as the hostname, allow overridding it
by specifying a VM env var directly. We also prepare the various scripts
to make use of the $VM variable whenever host-specific dirs/files are
created so that parallel runs won't step on each other.
Closes: #675
Approved by: cgwalters
While reading a recent conversation about GPG checking at treecompose
time, I had a sudden thought - were we actually doing verification
client side? Turned out, we aren't. That happens as part of
`dnf_transaction_commit()` which we don't use.
That function verifies every package at one go, but for us I think it's better
to do it before "importing". We shouldn't have untrusted bits that we've
unpacked (they might have suid binaries, for one thing).
This is an embarassing problem, but it's worth emphasizing that everyone should
be retrieving repodata at a minimum over TLS, which sets a baseline. On RHEL, we
already do pinned TLS, and there are discussions about extending that elsewhere.
See: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1422157Closes: #656
Approved by: jlebon
On the first call to vmsync/vmoverlay, we do an immediate vm_ssh_wait()
to check if we have a live VM. However, we don't necessarily have a
working rpm-ostree in there if we're hacking on stuff. It gets annoying
to wait for the timeout there.
Let's just work around that by instead only calling status if we got
there through vm_reboot_cmd(), which is most likely when we're most
interested in the status output anyway.
Closes: #645
Approved by: cgwalters
Currently we push for a model where the initramfs is
generated (in non-hostonly mode), and merely replicated.
However, to support a few unfortunate corner cases like dm-multipath which wants
to inject a config file into the initramfs, we need to support regenerating it
client side too.
Down the line, we'll need this to support overriding the kernel too.
This changes things in the core to add the concept of an "empty"
`RpmOstreeContext`. I initially tried skipping it, but that was too much
duplication. We still want all of the core ostree-related logic that lives in
that code too.
The treespec bits barfed if the spec didn't have a `tree/packages` key. It was
simplest to change that to allow it - and because that was the only case where
we errored out in parsing, I dropped the error handling.
There was another place in the upgrader that now needed to be fixed to handle
transitioning from just regenerating initramfs to not.
Closes: #574
Approved by: jlebon
Many projects do this, and it really helps debugging to know the
exact hash.
(Of course this is broken in traditional rpm builds from a tarball,
and rpmdistro-gitoverlay injects it into the Version field,
but it will help me for vmcheck debugging)
Closes: #584
Approved by: jlebon
Working on initramfs, I hit a subtle issue with the fact that
I was trying to "redeploy", but with the origin file changed
during the process.
Previously, it was a bit unclear which parts of the upgrader logic are operating
on the *new* origin versus the "original origin".
The package layering code in the upgrader explicitly carries a delta on top in
the "add/remove" hash sets, which means it isn't visible to
`rpmostree_origin_is_locally_assembled()`.
Whereas for initramfs, I set a new origin. This broke things since we were
expecting to find a parent commit, but the original origin wasn't locally
assembled.
When looking more at this, I realized there's a far simpler model -
rather than keeping track of commit + origin, and using the origin
to try to determine whether or not the commit is layered, we can
keep track of `base_revision` and `final_revision`, and the latter
is only set if we're doing layering.
The diff speaks for itself here - a lot of fragile logic looking at the origin
drops away.
The next step here is probably to drop away the package layering hash sets, but
I'm trying to not change everything at once.
Closes: #579
Approved by: jlebon
First try to log in, and if we fail, retry with SSH debugging,
so we have a better idea what might be going wrong. This helped
me figure out that vmcheck's `-o User=root` assumption wasn't
working with my vagrant setup.
Closes: #560
Approved by: jlebon
Unsurprisingly, rebooting machines that are running in OpenStack is
not as reliable or as fast as a local VM, which is what vmcheck was
originally written for and tested against.
Replace the:
sleep 2 # give time for port to go down
which is rife with raciness, with a stronger boot_id-based check to
ensure we're in a new boot. Run "sync" before rebooting which sometimes
helps (though I didn't fully investigate why or whether it always helps,
there's probably something more subtle going on underneath). Increase
the timeout to 120s.
Closes: #543
Approved by: cgwalters
This is just the final bit required to make sure the vagrant and
non-vagrant paths can work happily together. It's mostly minor fixes,
though the most major change which also affects vagrant is that we now
sync to the root home dir, rather than ~vagrant.
Closes: #524
Approved by: cgwalters
My development environment is now using "pet" docker containers.
I use VMs for testing things that require that (like rpm-ostree).
This patch builds on work from @jlebon in
https://github.com/projectatomic/rpm-ostree/pull/509
to rework `vmcheck` such that it can work on any `ssh-config`. By
default we expect this to be Vagrant.
However, I go a lot farther and delete the `vmbuild` code that was
trying to do builds in a container on the target VM. I think this is
still worth pursuing at some point, but for now I think it's
reasonable to assume that the rpm-ostree developer audience uses Linux
as their host workstation and hence has containers.
(There's another important point here in that for developing lower
level things like rpm-ostree, there's a strong push to make the VM
disposable and not a pet)
Closes: #516
Approved by: jlebon
We further split libvm from vagrant. It no longer does 'vagrant
ssh-config'. Instead, it always assumes that an ssh-config is provided.
We now have complete separation of libvm from vagrant.
We change the ansible provisioner as follows:
- Allow passing in a VAGRANT_BOX env var to override the default
CentOS box.
- No longer assume that the root user account is unlocked and has a
valid 'vagrant' password. This worked for the centos box but isn't
sure to work on every box. Instead, we now just run ansible as the
default vagrant user, and during provisioning set up the root
account and generate an ssh-config so that libvm can connect
directly as root.
- No longer build the buildimg during provisioning. This actually
stopped working a while ago since the default rsync is disabled. We
can just let the buildimg get created on the first compilation. In
practice, the bigger issue isn't creating the buildimg, but being
able to easily update the host and buildimg pkgs.
Closes: #516
Approved by: jlebon
- Rename test-layering.sh to test-layering-basic.sh and make it test
both pkg-add and pkg-remove.
- Add test-layering-relayer.sh, which verifies that pkgs are properly
relayered during the creation of new deployments (e.g. upgrades,
rebases, deploys).
- Add test-layering-rpmdb.sh, which verifies that packages respect the
rpm requirements before being overlayed.
Closes: #371
Approved by: cgwalters
We now make the test harness handle restoring the VM to the original
state. The wonderful thing about ostree here is that it's a perfect
shoo-in for this. We make a 'backup' of the current ref, and just have
to make sure that the VM is back on that ref after running each test.
This will allow us to write tests without worrying as much about
cleaning up in the event of an error.
Closes: #360
Approved by: cgwalters
This is a preliminary package layering test which simply installs the
foo package and verifies that it functions properly. A bunch of
primitives are added to libvm.sh to facilitate this and future tests.
Closes: #344
Approved by: cgwalters
This is a very simple test harness inspired by the atomic one. It's a
simple bash script that sets up a permanent ssh connection to the host
and runs the test scripts. Also add a "demo" test-basic.sh test to make
sure that it works.
Closes: #344
Approved by: cgwalters