rpm-ostree/tests
Jonathan Lebon 752368eb5b rebase: allow rebasing to a local branch
This is a follow-up to commit 77acf62. There, we added support for
rebasing from a local branch to another local branch. But in testing,
it's also really useful to be able to rebase from a remote-based refspec
to a local branch. We allow this here by slightly expanding the syntax
of allowed refspecs.

Now, we can use rpm-ostree all the time rather than fallback to `ostree
admin deploy`, which isn't pkg-aware.

Closes: #764
Approved by: cgwalters
2017-05-05 21:01:26 +00:00
..
check rebase: allow rebasing to a local branch 2017-05-05 21:01:26 +00:00
common core: Ignore %pretrans 2017-05-01 18:07:06 +00:00
compose-tests compose: Delete /usr/etc/passwd- (and the other variants) 2017-03-20 16:35:17 +00:00
composedata compose: fix bad baseurl 2017-01-21 15:27:11 +00:00
gpghome daemon: start with one commit only when resolving versions 2016-12-24 12:28:48 +00:00
manual db: Remove query parameter to diff 2015-04-23 16:30:18 -04:00
utils ci: Build ostree from git temporarily 2017-03-27 16:35:43 +00:00
vmcheck ci: Use FAHC for build container 2017-05-01 19:10:05 +00:00
compose core: add RPMOSTREE_USE_CACHED_METADATA 2017-01-08 21:05:06 +00:00
README.md tests: Add ./tests/compose 2016-12-06 19:05:05 +00:00

Tests are divided into three groups:

  • Tests in the check directory are non-destructive and uninstalled. Some of the tests require root privileges. Use make check to run these.

  • The composecheck tests currently require uid 0 capabilities - the default in Docker, or you can run them via a user namespace. They are non-destructive, but are installed.

    To use them, you might do a make && sudo make install inside a Docker container.

    Then invoke ./tests/compose. Alternatively of course, you can simply run the tests on a host system or in an existing container, without doing a build.

    Note: This is intentionally not a Makefile target because it doesn't require building and doesn't use uninstalled binaries.

  • Tests in the vmcheck directory are oriented around using Vagrant. Use make vmcheck to run them. See also HACKING.md in the top directory.

The common directory contains files used by multiple tests. The utils directory contains helper utilities required to run the tests.