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The compose tests are expensive; each run involves running
all the `%post` scripts and `dracut` etc. This is definitely
a source of timeouts in CCI.
Remove `test-boot-location-modules.sh` - it's the default
now and is used by FCOS. Add dedicated script where we can
test all these things by default after a `cosa build`.
This aims to move the compose tests to only cover bits *not*
in cosa like the non-unified-core path.
Now that `cosa build-fast` writes to `.cosa`, teach our
test suite to pick that up by default. We don't anymore
support non-CoreOS (i.e. non-Ignition) hosts for our test
suite, so making this more CoreOS specific is fine.
Then use the "standard" COSA_DIR as a way to find the target
cosa dir in the e2e CI.
Now that `ci/installdeps.sh` gracefully exits if run as non-root,
we can fold the cargo bits into the our build scripts and avoid
invoking both of them.
However, now we need to split test deps to separate file because
we won't have `cargo` in the main cosa pod. This also fixes a FIXME.
Steal the `grep` invocation from cosa and make it a declarative
text file so we can have comments per package etc.
We lost this at some point during the CI re-shuffle. We need to
constrain cargo builds too to respect our CPU allocation.
This doesn't totally keep all jobs under 5 since e.g. we could have 5
make jobs and 5 cargo codegen builds going at once, but I think as long
as it's not something ridiculous like 40, it should be fine. Otherwise
we'll tighten it more.
We're running them in Prow now and we're hitting capacity
issues in CentOS CI. Bigger picture, the "just build and unit test"
stuff runs in any cluster, so let's save our bare metal capacity
for our compose/VM testing.
Since we need to set HOME and PATH, let's do that in a central
place rather than scattering it around by having all of
our entrypoint scripts source the `libbuild.sh` shell "library".
Move the CoreOS CI entrypoint into a script like the others.
The way this tries to replace the system Rust is hacky and
actually I realized belatedly I may have broken it recently; basically
`installdeps.sh` re-adds the system one, and it's hard to be sure
with our current buildsystem we're using the newer one from `$PATH`.
What we really want to do here is use a CentOS8 buildroot,
which will automatically enforce this in a better way along
with solving other problems. But right now we've broken
that because libdnf requires a too-new libmodulemd.
So let's just rely on the Fedora rust for now.
Let's do a build with clang as a cleanly separate context
instead of serially; and also do it unconditionally. This
is prep for turning on more `-Werror` flow in both cases,
and also using clang `scan-build` in CI.
I think we did this at some point, but then stopped.
Prep for https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/pull/2413
because we'll need a full build of the C++ side too in order
to `cargo test`.
I started writing a comment about why we run autotools twice,
then decided that was *much* uglier than extracting the binding
rules to a separate `Makefile`. But I forgot to go back
and remove the first part, so do that now and fix up the comment.
cxx.rs (aka cxxbridge) and cbindgen are
both generating source code. Since the last release
we've introduced the former, and we need to ensure
that the generated cxx.rs source ends up in release tarballs
the same way as the cbindgen code.
Rationalize and clean up the binding infrastructure.
Drop support for the vendored cbindgen which we
weren't actually using:
Closes: https://github.com/coreos/rpm-ostree/issues/2392
Move the cxx-rs and cbindgen bits into the same place,
and update our CoreOS CI build to use a separate `Makefile.bindings`
that just generates the code, so our CI still "works like"
a main Koji RPM build.
We need to cleanly split off "test dependencies" that we
install inside the cosa pod from builds (where we won't
have `cargo`) from the build time where we use the cosa
buildroot image.
Prep for using https://cxx.rs
We need this for https://cxx.rs
While we're here:
- Add some more comments/links
- Since the Rust bits are now at the toplevel, we can explicitly
invoke `cargo`
- And since we can do that, use the `+` syntax to specify the
toolchain explicitly
I think we should have done this as soon as it was clear that
Rust was sticking and not just an optional thing.
Reasons to make this change now:
- More clear that Rust is going to be the majority of code in the future
- `cargo build` and `cargo test` in a fresh git clone Just Work
- Paves the way for using `cargo` to build C/C++ instead of Automake
We lost this during the transition from PAPR to CoreOS CI. We don't have
a lot of new tests there since new unit tests tend to be in Rust, though
we should still run what we do have.
Repurpose the `rust` branch to more generically run all unit tests
and not just the Rust ones. It still also checks that compilation
against the MSRV works fine.
In the scenario where ostree is in the fcos overrides but *not*
bodhi, *and* a new test requires it, our CI will fail.
We aren't hard requiring the latest ostree right now.
The default `_NPROCESSORS_ONLN` heuristic we have isn't cgroups aware.
So it thinks it has e.g. 40 CPUs when running in a k8s pod. This can
then blow through our allocated resource limits.
Declare some modest amount of RAM and CPU resources and override `make`
parallelism.
This matches what ostree does in
https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/pull/2151.
I think the `fork` errors CI is hitting might be due to more stringent
memory limit enforcements in OCP4. Let's be more explicit and actually
request 2G of RAM. We can adjust from there.
(One related thing is CPU requests; it's possible we might need to also
make that explicit and in turn adjust the `_smp_mflags` RPM macro, since
the default is unlikely to be k8s/cgroups-aware.)
The CoreOS CI shared lib sets `HOME` to the workspace:
a81bfab789
and there's no easy way for it to detect when `HOME` is correctly set:
8574f04d96853d5fdef3
For now, just work around this until we have a cleaner solution. (Though
it makes sense overall to uses `$HOME` anyway instead of hardcoding
`/root`).
Switch to the "installed" model introduced by:
https://github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/pull/1441
It's hard to support running tests *both* from the srcdir
and installed; in this case because we have a symlink that needs
to be followed, which kola knows how to do from the srcdir
but not when installed. Let's establish a new convention of
`tests/kolainst`. In our case we follow the symlink manually
for now.
That bit will be cleaned up when we eventually switch entirely
to kola tests.
Right now, rebuilding ostree into the continuous tag is manual, so we've
only been doing it when necessary to fast-track something e.g. for
rpm-ostree or cosa (see [1] for the long-term goal).
Which means when finding an ostree to use to override in our CI-built
FCOS, we should just let dnf find whatever the latest version is, even
if it's just from the regular Fedora repos.
[1] https://github.com/packit-service/packit/issues/264
We haven't been consistent about doing this; I personally
think rustfmt is a big aggressive with the line wrapping
but eh, consistency is more important.
And heh so I tried to `git push --set-upstream cgwalters` and
that failed because there was an already extant `rustfmt`
branch from a while ago...looking at that code it got lost
in the CI refactoring - we're not running `build-check.sh`
at the moment.
Move the rustfmt bits into `codestyle.sh` which is closer
to where it should be anyways.
The current `rpm-ostree-2020.1-1.fc31.x86_64` in Fedora
was [built with a truly ancient libostree](https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org//packages/rpm-ostree/2020.1/1.fc31/data/logs/x86_64/root.log)
because Fedora's build system is weird and only adds packages
released after "gold" into the buildroot via an override
that times out.
This actively breaks things because rpm-ostree isn't
detecting the read-only sysroot.
Let's bump our hard requirement.
Mostly minor tweaks to adapt to the new custom steps. We have a pretty
involved pipeline here so we don't actually use the higher-level steps
like `fcosBuild`.
We need `cargo` in our `PATH` and we already do the `PATH=...` dance in
`ci/msrv.sh`. This only worked before because we were inadvertedly
re-installing cargo when calling `ci/build.sh`, which was fixed in the
previous commit.
Build FCOS and run vmcheck in the same container, since it's only used
for that anyway right now. The main advantage is that we save time
provisioning another container and not having to stash and unstash the
FCOS image.
Also, since the compose tests don't actually need to wait for the FCOS
image, start running them in parallel with the FCOS + vmcheck branch.
Again, a lot going on here, but essentially, we adapt the compose tests
to run either privileged or fully unprivileged via supermin, just like
cosa.
I actually got more than halfway through this initially using `cosa
build` directly for testing. But in the end, we simply need more
flexibility than that. We want to be able to manipulate exactly how
rpm-ostree is called, and cosa is very opinionated about this (and may
also change from under us in the future).
(Another big difference for example is that cosa doesn't care about
non-unified mode, whereas we *need* to have coverage for this until we
fully kill it.)
Really, the most important bit we want from there is the
unprivileged-via-supermin bits. So we copy and adapt that here. One
obvious improvement then is sharing this code more easily (e.g. a
`cosa runasroot` or something?)
However, we still use the FCOS manifest (frozen at a specific tag). It's
a realistic example, and because of the lockfiles and pool, we get good
reproducibility.
There's a lot going on here, but essentially:
1. We change the `vmcheck` model so that it always operates on an
immutable base image. It takes that image and dynamically launches a
separate VM for each test using `kola spawn`. This means we can drop
a lot of hacks around re-using the same VMs.
2. Following from 1., `vmoverlay` now takes as input a base image,
overlays the built rpm-ostree bits, then creates a new base image. Of
course, we don't have to do this in CI, because we build FCOS with
the freshly built RPMs (so it uses `SKIP_VMOVERLAY=1`). `vmoverlay`
then will be more for the developer case where one doesn't want to
iterate via `cosa build` to test rpm-ostree changes. I say "will"
because the functionality doesn't exist yet; I'd like to enhance
`cosa dev-overlay` to do this. (Note `vmsync` should still works just
as before too.)
3. `vmcheck` can be run without building the tree first, as
`tests/vmcheck.sh`. The `make vmcheck` target still exists though for
finger compatibility and better meshing with `vmoverlay` in the
developer case.
What's really nice about using kola spawn is that it takes care of a lot
of things for us, such as the qemu command, journal and console
gathering, and SSH.
Similarly to the compose testsuites, we're using parallel here to run
multiple vmcheck tests at once. (On developer laptops, we cap
parallelism at `$(nproc) - 1`).
That way, anyone can easily download the latest built RPMs from master
or a specific PR. This isn't a replacement for automated builds in Koji
though since it's not multi-arch.
Also fetch the tags so that the NEVRA derived from `git describe` is
nicer.
Jenkins is tricky: it does an initial checkout, merges the PR head into
the target branch, then creates the pod. Once in the pod, we do a
`checkout scm` which *also* merges the PR head into the target branch.
However, the `change.GIT_COMMIT` variable we get from that is set to the
SHA of the first merge, not the second one. Which... yeah is super
confusing since we explicitly assign `change` from that `checkout scm`
operation. So that's probably a valid bug.
This was then throwing off `ci-commitmessage-submodules.sh` since it
didn't find the merge commit in the graph.
Anyway, not going to spend more time on this. Let's just not pass any
commit at all. The git range `origin/master..HEAD` already does what we
want (go through all the commits in HEAD *not* in master).
This is an experiment in using Jenkins pipelines for our CI. See similar
initiatives in coreos-assembler[1] and fedora-coreos-config[2].
For now, this only does the following testing:
- checks commit for unintended submodule bumps
- checks the minimum Rust version
- builds RPMs
- builds FCOS (with the new RPMs both for executing the build
itself, as well as included in the built OS)
There are dummy placeholders for where we'd actually run the vmcheck
and the compose testsuites. Let's address those trickier parts as
follow-ups.
[1] https://github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/pull/667
[2] https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-config/pull/131Closes: #1899
Approved by: cgwalters