========================= Project Testing Interface ========================= OpenStack has a lot of projects. For each project, the OpenStack CI system needs to be able to perform a lot of tasks. If each project has a slightly different way to accomplish those tasks, it makes the management of a consistent testing infrastructure very difficult to deal with. Additionally, because of the high volume of development changes and testing, the testing infrastructure has to be able to pre-cache artifacts that are normally fetched over the internet. To that end, each project should support a consistent interface for driving tests and other necessary tasks. The following tasks are required for every project. Every project must: - Execute tests - Enforce code style - Generate a code coverage report - Generate a source tarball - Generate documentation - Generate releasenotes The following are other common tasks, which may not be relevant for every project: - Enforce code coverage - Generate a release artifact - Publish a release artifact - Import translation strings - Export translation strings Tools and approaches vary by language, please choose which language is relevant to you. .. _pti-documentation: Documentation ------------- OpenStack has decided to standardize on using Sphinx for project documentation, regardless of programming language. .. note:: The use of sphinx for documentation is intended for documentation that is not written inside of docstrings or code comments. Languages, such as Go, that natively support a system for documenting the code through code comments, should use those native systems. Sphinx is intended to be used for documentation that is not written inline with the code. To support documentation generation, projects should: * Have sphinx documentation source in ``doc/source`` * List python dependencies needed for documentation in ``doc/requirements.txt`` * List distro package pre-reqs for dependencies in ``bindep.txt`` using the ``doc`` tag. * Depend on ``openstackdocstheme`` for documentation and configure it to be used in ``doc/source/conf.py``. Assuming requirements have been properly installed as indicated by ``doc/requirements.txt`` and ``bindep.txt``, the following command should work with no additional setup and should result in the documentation being emitted into ``doc/build``. .. code-block:: bash sphinx-build -b html doc/source doc/build Language specific instructions supplement these and are in addition to them. Release Notes ------------- OpenStack uses `reno `_ for generating release notes regardless of programming language. To support releasenotes generation, projects should: * Have releasenotes documentation source in ``releasenotes/`` * Configure ``openstackdocstheme`` to be used in ``releasenotes/source/conf.py``. * Optionally list distro package pre-reqs for dependencies in ``bindep.txt`` using the ``releasenotes`` tag. Assuming requirements have been properly installed, the following command should work with no additional setup and should result in the releasenotes being emitted into ``releasenotes/build/html``. .. code-block:: bash sphinx-build -a -E -W -d releasenotes/build/doctrees -b html \ releasenotes/source releasenotes/build/html Language specific instructions supplement these and are in addition to them. Linux Distributions ------------------- The following operating systems are the most popular when deploying OpenStack: - Ubuntu (`latest LTS`_) - CentOS (`latest stable`_) .. note:: The CentOS distribution is derived from the sources of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). In reality, RHEL is more popular than CentOS but we can't use this platform on upstream gates, so we rely on CentOS. Each project should run some functional tests on these platforms so we make sure OpenStack works with distros used in production. The scope of these functional tests are discussed for every project, and may adjust their coverage depending of resources and support investment. These tests are run by using existing tooling, which comes with a reasonable expectation that it's viable on the indicated distributions. Sometimes, these distributions might not support all dependencies required by new features in OpenStack. Development of these features should not be blocked, though it has to be documented in project release notes, and some tests might have to be skipped on these distributions. .. _latest LTS: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases .. _latest stable: https://www.centos.org/download/ .. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 :glob: pti/*