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Brian Jarrett 98be1df5d1 Remove db locks and use random db names for tests
Removed database locks against the database openstack_citest and
implemented random name generation for new databases created just
for persistence testing.
Once the locks were removed, using 'template1' as the initial db
for postgres connections was problematic, because postgres refuses
to create databases when there are multiple connections to
'template1'.  Switched to using 'postgres' as an initial db to use.
Changed _reset_database to _init_db since we are always working
with a brand new database, and removed the 'drop database' before
a 'create database.
Added a _remove_db method to remove the database once testing was
finished.

Change-Id: Iaf1c101df9c268da48db7432bcbc0467f6486bcd
Closes-Bug: 1327469
2014-08-12 14:23:22 -06:00
2013-11-22 11:25:03 +04:00
2014-01-07 18:10:43 +00:00
2014-02-07 20:45:32 +00:00
2013-09-17 13:27:27 -07:00
2013-05-07 10:49:44 -07:00
2013-07-07 21:46:32 -07:00
2014-01-02 10:38:15 -08:00
2014-05-01 12:43:52 +00:00
2014-07-17 09:05:48 +02:00

TaskFlow

A library to do [jobs, tasks, flows] in a highly available, easy to understand and declarative manner (and more!) to be used with OpenStack and other projects.

Join us

Testing and requirements

Requirements

Because TaskFlow has many optional (pluggable) parts like persistence backends and engines, we decided to split our requirements into two parts: - things that are absolutely required by TaskFlow (you can't use TaskFlow without them) are put to requirements.txt; - things that are required by some optional part of TaskFlow (you can use TaskFlow without them) are put to optional-requirements.txt; if you want to use the feature in question, you should add that requirements to your project or environment; - as usual, things that required only for running tests are put to test-requirements.txt.

Tox.ini

Our tox.ini file describes several test environments that allow to test TaskFlow with different python versions and sets of requirements installed.

To generate the tox.ini file, use the toxgen.py script by first installing toxgen and then provide that script as input the tox-tmpl.ini file to generate the final tox.ini file.

For example:

$ toxgen.py -i tox-tmpl.ini -o tox.ini

Developer documentation

We also have sphinx documentation in docs/source.

To build it, run:

$ python setup.py build_sphinx
Description
RETIRED, further work has moved to Debian project infrastructure
Readme 4.8 MiB