ironic/doc/source/contributor/dev-quickstart.rst

32 KiB

Developer Quick-Start

This is a quick walkthrough to get you started developing code for Ironic. This assumes you are already familiar with submitting code reviews to an OpenStack project.

The gate currently runs the unit tests under Python 3.6 and Python 3.7. It is strongly encouraged to run the unit tests locally prior to submitting a patch.

Note

Do not run unit tests on the same environment as devstack due to conflicting configuration with system dependencies.

Note

This document is compatible with Python (3.7), Ubuntu (18.04) and Fedora (31). When referring to different versions of Python and OS distributions, this is explicitly stated.

Prepare Development System

System Prerequisites

The following packages cover the prerequisites for a local development environment on most current distributions. Instructions for getting set up with non-default versions of Python and on older distributions are included below as well.

  • Ubuntu/Debian:

    sudo apt-get install build-essential python-dev libssl-dev python-pip libmysqlclient-dev libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libpq-dev git git-review libffi-dev gettext ipmitool psmisc graphviz libjpeg-dev
  • RHEL7/CentOS7:

    sudo yum install python-devel openssl-devel python-pip mysql-devel libxml2-devel libxslt-devel postgresql-devel git git-review libffi-devel gettext ipmitool psmisc graphviz gcc libjpeg-turbo-devel

    If using RHEL and yum reports "No package python-pip available" and "No package git-review available", use the EPEL software repository. Instructions can be found at https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL/FAQ#howtouse.

  • Fedora:

    sudo dnf install python-devel openssl-devel python-pip mysql-devel libxml2-devel libxslt-devel postgresql-devel git git-review libffi-devel gettext ipmitool psmisc graphviz gcc libjpeg-turbo-devel

    Additionally, if using Fedora 23, redhat-rpm-config package should be installed so that development virtualenv can be built successfully.

  • openSUSE/SLE 12:

    sudo zypper install git git-review libffi-devel libmysqlclient-devel libopenssl-devel libxml2-devel libxslt-devel postgresql-devel python-devel python-nose python-pip gettext-runtime psmisc

    Graphviz is only needed for generating the state machine diagram. To install it on openSUSE or SLE 12, see https://software.opensuse.org/download.html?project=graphics&package=graphviz-plugins.

To run the tests locally, it is a requirement that your terminal emulator supports unicode with the en_US.UTF8 locale. If you use locale-gen to manage your locales, make sure you have enabled en_US.UTF8 in /etc/locale.gen and rerun locale-gen.

Python Prerequisites

If your distro has at least tox 1.8, use similar command to install python-tox package. Otherwise install this on all distros:

sudo pip install -U tox

You may need to explicitly upgrade virtualenv if you've installed the one from your OS distribution and it is too old (tox will complain). You can upgrade it individually, if you need to:

sudo pip install -U virtualenv

Running Unit Tests Locally

If you haven't already, Ironic source code should be pulled directly from git:

# from your home or source directory
cd ~
git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic
cd ironic

Running Unit and Style Tests

All unit tests should be run using tox. To run Ironic's entire test suite:

# to run the py3 unit tests, and the style tests
tox

To run a specific test or tests, use the "-e" option followed by the tox target name. For example:

# run the unit tests under py36 and also run the pep8 tests
tox -epy36 -epep8

You may pass options to the test programs using positional arguments. To run a specific unit test, this passes the desired test (regex string) to stestr:

# run a specific test for Python 3.6
tox -epy36 -- test_conductor

Debugging unit tests

In order to break into the debugger from a unit test we need to insert a breaking point to the code:

import pdb; pdb.set_trace()

Then run tox with the debug environment as one of the following:

tox -e debug
tox -e debug test_file_name
tox -e debug test_file_name.TestClass
tox -e debug test_file_name.TestClass.test_name

For more information see the oslotest documentation <user/features.html#debugging-with-oslo-debug-helper>.

Database Setup

The unit tests need a local database setup, you can use tools/test-setup.sh to set up the database the same way as setup in the OpenStack test systems.

Additional Tox Targets

There are several additional tox targets not included in the default list, such as the target which builds the documentation site. See the tox.ini file for a complete listing of tox targets. These can be run directly by specifying the target name:

# generate the documentation pages locally
tox -edocs

# generate the sample configuration file
tox -egenconfig

Exercising the Services Locally

In addition to running automated tests, sometimes it can be helpful to actually run the services locally, without needing a server in a remote datacenter.

If you would like to exercise the Ironic services in isolation within your local environment, you can do this without starting any other OpenStack services. For example, this is useful for rapidly prototyping and debugging interactions over the RPC channel, testing database migrations, and so forth.

Here we describe two ways to install and configure the dependencies, either run directly on your local machine or encapsulated in a virtual machine or container.

Step 1: Create a Python virtualenv

  1. If you haven't already downloaded the source code, do that first:

    cd ~
    git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic
    cd ironic
  2. Create the Python virtualenv:

    tox -evenv --notest --develop -r
  3. Activate the virtual environment:

    . .tox/venv/bin/activate
  4. Install the openstack client command utility:

    pip install python-openstackclient
  5. Install the baremetal client:

    pip install python-ironicclient

    Note

    You can install python-ironicclient from source by cloning the git repository and running pip install . while in the root of the cloned repository.

  6. Export some ENV vars so the client will connect to the local services that you'll start in the next section:

    export OS_AUTH_TYPE=none
    export OS_ENDPOINT=http://localhost:6385/

Next, install and configure system dependencies.

Step 2: Install System Dependencies Locally

This step will install MySQL on your local system. This may not be desirable in some situations (eg, you're developing from a laptop and do not want to run a MySQL server on it all the time). If you want to use SQLite, skip it and do not set the connection option.

  1. Install mysql-server:

    Ubuntu/Debian:

    sudo apt-get install mysql-server

    RHEL7/CentOS7:

    sudo yum install mariadb mariadb-server
    sudo systemctl start mariadb.service

    Fedora:

    sudo dnf install mariadb mariadb-server
    sudo systemctl start mariadb.service

    openSUSE/SLE 12:

    sudo zypper install mariadb
    sudo systemctl start mysql.service

    If using MySQL, you need to create the initial database:

    mysql -u root -pMYSQL_ROOT_PWD -e "create schema ironic"

    Note

    if you choose not to install mysql-server, ironic will default to using a local sqlite database. The database will then be stored in ironic/ironic.sqlite.

  2. Create a configuration file within the ironic source directory:

    # generate a sample config
    tox -egenconfig
    
    # copy sample config and modify it as necessary
    cp etc/ironic/ironic.conf.sample etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # disable auth since we are not running keystone here
    sed -i "s/#auth_strategy = keystone/auth_strategy = noauth/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # use the 'fake-hardware' test hardware type
    sed -i "s/#enabled_hardware_types = .*/enabled_hardware_types = fake-hardware/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # use the 'fake' deploy and boot interfaces
    sed -i "s/#enabled_deploy_interfaces = .*/enabled_deploy_interfaces = fake/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    sed -i "s/#enabled_boot_interfaces = .*/enabled_boot_interfaces = fake/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # enable both fake and ipmitool management and power interfaces
    sed -i "s/#enabled_management_interfaces = .*/enabled_management_interfaces = fake,ipmitool/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    sed -i "s/#enabled_power_interfaces = .*/enabled_power_interfaces = fake,ipmitool/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # change the periodic sync_power_state_interval to a week, to avoid getting NodeLocked exceptions
    sed -i "s/#sync_power_state_interval = 60/sync_power_state_interval = 604800/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # if you opted to install mysql-server, switch the DB connection from sqlite to mysql
    sed -i "s/#connection = .*/connection = mysql\+pymysql:\/\/root:MYSQL_ROOT_PWD@localhost\/ironic/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
    
    # use JSON RPC to avoid installing rabbitmq locally
    sed -i "s/#rpc_transport = oslo/rpc_transport = json-rpc/" etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local

Step 3: Start the Services

From within the python virtualenv, run the following command to prepare the database before you start the ironic services:

# initialize the database for ironic
ironic-dbsync --config-file etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local create_schema

Next, open two new terminals for this section, and run each of the examples here in a separate terminal. In this way, the services will not be run as daemons; you can observe their output and stop them with Ctrl-C at any time.

  1. Start the API service in debug mode and watch its output:

    cd ~/ironic
    . .tox/venv/bin/activate
    ironic-api -d --config-file etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local
  2. Start the Conductor service in debug mode and watch its output:

    cd ~/ironic
    . .tox/venv/bin/activate
    ironic-conductor -d --config-file etc/ironic/ironic.conf.local

Step 4: Interact with the running services

You should now be able to interact with ironic via the python client, which is present in the python virtualenv, and observe both services' debug outputs in the other two windows. This is a good way to test new features or play with the functionality without necessarily starting DevStack.

To get started, export the following variables to point the client at the local instance of ironic and disable the authentication:

export OS_AUTH_TYPE=none
export OS_ENDPOINT=http://127.0.0.1:6385

Then list the available commands and resources:

# get a list of available commands
openstack help baremetal

# get the list of drivers currently supported by the available conductor(s)
baremetal driver list

# get a list of nodes (should be empty at this point)
baremetal node list

Here is an example walkthrough of creating a node:

MAC="aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff"   # replace with the MAC of a data port on your node
IPMI_ADDR="1.2.3.4"       # replace with a real IP of the node BMC
IPMI_USER="admin"         # replace with the BMC's user name
IPMI_PASS="pass"          # replace with the BMC's password

# enroll the node with the fake hardware type and IPMI-based power and
# management interfaces. Note that driver info may be added at node
# creation time with "--driver-info"
NODE=$(baremetal node create \
       --driver fake-hardware \
       --management-interface ipmitool \
       --power-interface ipmitool \
       --driver-info ipmi_address=$IPMI_ADDR \
       --driver-info ipmi_username=$IPMI_USER \
       -f value -c uuid)

# driver info may also be added or updated later on
baremetal node set $NODE --driver-info ipmi_password=$IPMI_PASS

# add a network port
baremetal port create $MAC --node $NODE

# view the information for the node
baremetal node show $NODE

# request that the node's driver validate the supplied information
baremetal node validate $NODE

# you have now enrolled a node sufficiently to be able to control
# its power state from ironic!
baremetal node power on $NODE

If you make some code changes and want to test their effects, simply stop the services with Ctrl-C and restart them.

Step 5: Fixing your test environment

If you are testing changes that add or remove python entrypoints, or making significant changes to ironic's python modules, or simply keep the virtualenv around for a long time, your development environment may reach an inconsistent state. It may help to delete cached ".pyc" files, update dependencies, reinstall ironic, or even recreate the virtualenv. The following commands may help with that, but are not an exhaustive troubleshooting guide:

# clear cached pyc files
cd ~/ironic/ironic
find ./ -name '*.pyc' | xargs rm

# reinstall ironic modules
cd ~/ironic
. .tox/venv/bin/activate
pip uninstall ironic
pip install -e .

# install and upgrade ironic and all python dependencies
cd ~/ironic
. .tox/venv/bin/activate
pip install -U -e .

Deploying Ironic with DevStack

DevStack may be configured to deploy Ironic, setup Nova to use the Ironic driver and provide hardware resources (network, baremetal compute nodes) using a combination of OpenVSwitch and libvirt. It is highly recommended to deploy on an expendable virtual machine and not on your personal work station. Deploying Ironic with DevStack requires a machine running Ubuntu 16.04 (or later) or Fedora 24 (or later). Make sure your machine is fully up to date and has the latest packages installed before beginning this process.

The ironic-tempest-plugin is necessary if you want to run integration tests, the section Ironic with ironic-tempest-plugin tells the extra steps you need to enable it in DevStack.

Note

The devstack "demo" tenant is now granted the "baremetal_observer" role and thereby has read-only access to ironic's API. This is sufficient for all the examples below. Should you want to create or modify bare metal resources directly (ie. through ironic rather than through nova) you will need to use the devstack "admin" tenant.

Devstack will no longer create the user 'stack' with the desired permissions, but does provide a script to perform the task:

git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/devstack.git devstack
sudo ./devstack/tools/create-stack-user.sh

Switch to the stack user and clone DevStack:

sudo su - stack
git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/devstack.git devstack

Ironic

Create devstack/local.conf with minimal settings required to enable Ironic. An example local.conf that enables both direct and iscsi deploy interfaces </admin/interfaces/deploy> and uses the ipmi hardware type by default:

cd devstack
cat >local.conf <<END
[[local|localrc]]
# Credentials
ADMIN_PASSWORD=password
DATABASE_PASSWORD=password
RABBIT_PASSWORD=password
SERVICE_PASSWORD=password
SERVICE_TOKEN=password
SWIFT_HASH=password
SWIFT_TEMPURL_KEY=password

# Enable Ironic plugin
enable_plugin ironic https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic

# Disable nova novnc service, ironic does not support it anyway.
disable_service n-novnc

# Enable Swift for the direct deploy interface.
enable_service s-proxy
enable_service s-object
enable_service s-container
enable_service s-account

# Disable Horizon
disable_service horizon

# Disable Cinder
disable_service cinder c-sch c-api c-vol

# Swift temp URL's are required for the direct deploy interface
SWIFT_ENABLE_TEMPURLS=True

# Create 3 virtual machines to pose as Ironic's baremetal nodes.
IRONIC_VM_COUNT=3
IRONIC_BAREMETAL_BASIC_OPS=True
DEFAULT_INSTANCE_TYPE=baremetal

# Enable additional hardware types, if needed.
#IRONIC_ENABLED_HARDWARE_TYPES=ipmi,fake-hardware
# Don't forget that many hardware types require enabling of additional
# interfaces, most often power and management:
#IRONIC_ENABLED_MANAGEMENT_INTERFACES=ipmitool,fake
#IRONIC_ENABLED_POWER_INTERFACES=ipmitool,fake
# The 'ipmi' hardware type's default deploy interface is 'iscsi'.
# This would change the default to 'direct':
#IRONIC_DEFAULT_DEPLOY_INTERFACE=direct

# Change this to alter the default driver for nodes created by devstack.
# This driver should be in the enabled list above.
IRONIC_DEPLOY_DRIVER=ipmi

# The parameters below represent the minimum possible values to create
# functional nodes.
IRONIC_VM_SPECS_RAM=2048
IRONIC_VM_SPECS_DISK=10

# Size of the ephemeral partition in GB. Use 0 for no ephemeral partition.
IRONIC_VM_EPHEMERAL_DISK=0

# To build your own IPA ramdisk from source, set this to True
IRONIC_BUILD_DEPLOY_RAMDISK=False

VIRT_DRIVER=ironic

# By default, DevStack creates a 10.0.0.0/24 network for instances.
# If this overlaps with the hosts network, you may adjust with the
# following.
NETWORK_GATEWAY=10.1.0.1
FIXED_RANGE=10.1.0.0/24
FIXED_NETWORK_SIZE=256

# Log all output to files
LOGFILE=$HOME/devstack.log
LOGDIR=$HOME/logs
IRONIC_VM_LOG_DIR=$HOME/ironic-bm-logs

END

Ironic with ironic-tempest-plugin

Using the stack user, clone the ironic-tempest-plugin repository in the same directory you cloned DevStack:

git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic-tempest-plugin.git

An example local.conf that enables the ironic tempest plugin and Ironic can be found below. The TEMPEST_PLUGINS variable needs to have the absolute path to the ironic-tempest-plugin folder, otherwise the plugin won't be installed. Ironic will have enabled both direct and iscsi deploy interfaces </admin/interfaces/deploy> and uses the ipmi hardware type by default:

cd devstack
cat >local.conf <<END
[[local|localrc]]
# Credentials
ADMIN_PASSWORD=password
DATABASE_PASSWORD=password
RABBIT_PASSWORD=password
SERVICE_PASSWORD=password
SERVICE_TOKEN=password
SWIFT_HASH=password
SWIFT_TEMPURL_KEY=password

# Enable Ironic plugin
enable_plugin ironic https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic

# Disable nova novnc service, ironic does not support it anyway.
disable_service n-novnc

# Enable Swift for the direct deploy interface.
enable_service s-proxy
enable_service s-object
enable_service s-container
enable_service s-account

# Disable Horizon
disable_service horizon

# Disable Cinder
disable_service cinder c-sch c-api c-vol

# Swift temp URL's are required for the direct deploy interface
SWIFT_ENABLE_TEMPURLS=True

# Create 3 virtual machines to pose as Ironic's baremetal nodes.
IRONIC_VM_COUNT=3
IRONIC_BAREMETAL_BASIC_OPS=True
DEFAULT_INSTANCE_TYPE=baremetal

# Enable additional hardware types, if needed.
#IRONIC_ENABLED_HARDWARE_TYPES=ipmi,fake-hardware
# Don't forget that many hardware types require enabling of additional
# interfaces, most often power and management:
#IRONIC_ENABLED_MANAGEMENT_INTERFACES=ipmitool,fake
#IRONIC_ENABLED_POWER_INTERFACES=ipmitool,fake
# The 'ipmi' hardware type's default deploy interface is 'iscsi'.
# This would change the default to 'direct':
#IRONIC_DEFAULT_DEPLOY_INTERFACE=direct

# Change this to alter the default driver for nodes created by devstack.
# This driver should be in the enabled list above.
IRONIC_DEPLOY_DRIVER=ipmi

# The parameters below represent the minimum possible values to create
# functional nodes.
IRONIC_VM_SPECS_RAM=2048
IRONIC_VM_SPECS_DISK=10

# Size of the ephemeral partition in GB. Use 0 for no ephemeral partition.
IRONIC_VM_EPHEMERAL_DISK=0

# To build your own IPA ramdisk from source, set this to True
IRONIC_BUILD_DEPLOY_RAMDISK=False

VIRT_DRIVER=ironic

# By default, DevStack creates a 10.0.0.0/24 network for instances.
# If this overlaps with the hosts network, you may adjust with the
# following.
NETWORK_GATEWAY=10.1.0.1
FIXED_RANGE=10.1.0.0/24
FIXED_NETWORK_SIZE=256

# Log all output to files
LOGFILE=$HOME/devstack.log
LOGDIR=$HOME/logs
IRONIC_VM_LOG_DIR=$HOME/ironic-bm-logs
TEMPEST_PLUGINS="/opt/stack/ironic-tempest-plugin"

END

Note

Some tests may be skipped depending on the configuration of your environment, they may be reliant on a driver or a capability that you did not configure.

Deployment

Note

Git protocol requires access to port 9418, which is not a standard port that corporate firewalls always allow. If you are behind a firewall or on a proxy that blocks Git protocol, modify the enable_plugin line to use https:// instead of git:// and add GIT_BASE=https://opendev.org to the credentials:

GIT_BASE=https://opendev.org

# Enable Ironic plugin enable_plugin ironic https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic

Note

When the ipmi hardware type is used and IRONIC_IS_HARDWARE variable is false devstack will automatically set up VirtualBMC to control the power state of the virtual baremetal nodes.

Note

When running QEMU as non-root user (e.g. qemu on Fedora or libvirt-qemu on Ubuntu), make sure IRONIC_VM_LOG_DIR points to a directory where QEMU will be able to write. You can verify this with, for example:

# on Fedora

sudo -u qemu touch $HOME/ironic-bm-logs/test.log # on Ubuntu sudo -u libvirt-qemu touch $HOME/ironic-bm-logs/test.log

Note

To check out an in-progress patch for testing, you can add a Git ref to the enable_plugin line. For instance:

enable_plugin ironic https://opendev.org/openstack/ironic refs/changes/46/295946/15

For a patch in review, you can find the ref to use by clicking the "Download" button in Gerrit. You can also specify a different git repo, or a branch or tag:

enable_plugin ironic https://github.com/openstack/ironic stable/kilo

For more details, see the devstack plugin interface documentation.

Run stack.sh:

./stack.sh

Source credentials, create a key, and spawn an instance as the demo user:

. ~/devstack/openrc

# query the image id of the default cirros image
image=$(openstack image show $DEFAULT_IMAGE_NAME -f value -c id)

# create keypair
ssh-keygen
openstack keypair create --public-key ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub default

# spawn instance
openstack server create --flavor baremetal --image $image --key-name default testing

Note

Because devstack create multiple networks, we need to pass an additional parameter --nic net-id to the nova boot command when using the admin account, for example:

net_id=$(openstack network list | egrep "$PRIVATE_NETWORK_NAME"'[^-]' | awk '{ print $2 }')

openstack server create --flavor baremetal --nic net-id=$net_id --image $image --key-name default testing

You should now see a Nova instance building:

openstack server list --long
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+----------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+
| ID       | Name    | Status | Task State | Power State | Networks | Image Name | Image ID | Availability Zone | Host | Properties |
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+----------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+
| a2c7f812 | testing | BUILD  | spawning   | NOSTATE     |          | cirros-0.3 | 44d4092a | nova              |      |            |
| -e386-4a |         |        |            |             |          | .5-x86_64- | -51ac-47 |                   |      |            |
| 22-b393- |         |        |            |             |          | disk       | 51-9c50- |                   |      |            |
| fe1802ab |         |        |            |             |          |            | fd6e2050 |                   |      |            |
| d56e     |         |        |            |             |          |            | faa1     |                   |      |            |
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+----------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+

Nova will be interfacing with Ironic conductor to spawn the node. On the Ironic side, you should see an Ironic node associated with this Nova instance. It should be powered on and in a 'wait call-back' provisioning state:

baremetal node list
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+
| UUID                                 | Name   | Instance UUID                        | Power State | Provisioning State | Maintenance |
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+
| 9e592cbe-e492-4e4f-bf8f-4c9e0ad1868f | node-0 | None                                 | power off   | None               | False       |
| ec0c6384-cc3a-4edf-b7db-abde1998be96 | node-1 | None                                 | power off   | None               | False       |
| 4099e31c-576c-48f8-b460-75e1b14e497f | node-2 | a2c7f812-e386-4a22-b393-fe1802abd56e | power on    | wait call-back     | False       |
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+

At this point, Ironic conductor has called to libvirt (via virtualbmc) to power on a virtual machine, which will PXE + TFTP boot from the conductor node and progress through the Ironic provisioning workflow. One libvirt domain should be active now:

sudo virsh list --all
 Id    Name                           State
----------------------------------------------------
 2     node-2                         running
 -     node-0                         shut off
 -     node-1                         shut off

This provisioning process may take some time depending on the performance of the host system, but Ironic should eventually show the node as having an 'active' provisioning state:

baremetal node list
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+
| UUID                                 | Name   | Instance UUID                        | Power State | Provisioning State | Maintenance |
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+
| 9e592cbe-e492-4e4f-bf8f-4c9e0ad1868f | node-0 | None                                 | power off   | None               | False       |
| ec0c6384-cc3a-4edf-b7db-abde1998be96 | node-1 | None                                 | power off   | None               | False       |
| 4099e31c-576c-48f8-b460-75e1b14e497f | node-2 | a2c7f812-e386-4a22-b393-fe1802abd56e | power on    | active             | False       |
+--------------------------------------+--------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------+-------------+

This should also be reflected in the Nova instance state, which at this point should be ACTIVE, Running and an associated private IP:

openstack server list --long
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+---------------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+
| ID       | Name    | Status | Task State | Power State | Networks      | Image Name | Image ID | Availability Zone | Host | Properties |
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+---------------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+
| a2c7f812 | testing | ACTIVE | none       | Running     | private=10.1. | cirros-0.3 | 44d4092a | nova              |      |            |
| -e386-4a |         |        |            |             | 0.4, fd7d:1f3 | .5-x86_64- | -51ac-47 |                   |      |            |
| 22-b393- |         |        |            |             | c:4bf1:0:f816 | disk       | 51-9c50- |                   |      |            |
| fe1802ab |         |        |            |             | :3eff:f39d:6d |            | fd6e2050 |                   |      |            |
| d56e     |         |        |            |             | 94            |            | faa1     |                   |      |            |
+----------+---------+--------+------------+-------------+---------------+------------+----------+-------------------+------+------------+

The server should now be accessible via SSH:

ssh cirros@10.1.0.4
$

Running Tempest tests

After Deploying Ironic with DevStack <itp> with the ironic-tempest-plugin enabled, one might want to run integration tests against the running cloud. The Tempest project is the project that offers an integration test suite for OpenStack.

First, navigate to Tempest directory:

cd /opt/stack/tempest

To run all tests from the Ironic plugin, execute the following command:

tox -e all -- ironic

To limit the amount of tests that you would like to run, you can use a regex. For instance, to limit the run to a single test file, the following command can be used:

tox -e all -- ironic_tempest_plugin.tests.scenario.test_baremetal_basic_ops

Debugging Tempest tests

It is sometimes useful to step through the test code, line by line, especially when the error output is vague. This can be done by running the tests in debug mode and using a debugger such as pdb.

For example, after editing the test_baremetal_basic_ops file and setting up the pdb traces you can invoke the run_tempest.sh script in the Tempest directory with the following parameters:

./run_tempest.sh -N -d ironic_tempest_plugin.tests.scenario.test_baremetal_basic_ops
  • The -N parameter tells the script to run the tests in the local environment (without a virtualenv) so it can find the Ironic tempest plugin.
  • The -d parameter enables the debug mode, allowing it to be used with pdb.

For more information about the supported parameters see:

./run_tempest.sh --help

Note

Always be careful when running debuggers in time sensitive code, they may cause timeout errors that weren't there before.

OSProfiler Tracing in Ironic

OSProfiler is an OpenStack cross-project profiling library. It is being used among OpenStack projects to look at performance issues and detect bottlenecks. For details on how OSProfiler works and how to use it in ironic, please refer to OSProfiler Support Documentation.

Building developer documentation

If you would like to build the documentation locally, eg. to test your documentation changes before uploading them for review, run these commands to build the documentation set:

  • On your local machine:

    # activate your development virtualenv
    . .tox/venv/bin/activate
    
    # build the docs
    tox -edocs
    
    #Now use your browser to open the top-level index.html located at:
    
    ironic/doc/build/html/index.html
  • On a remote machine:

    # Go to the directory that contains the docs
    cd ~/ironic/doc/source/
    
    # Build the docs
    tox -edocs
    
    # Change directory to the newly built HTML files
    cd ~/ironic/doc/build/html/
    
    # Create a server using python on port 8000
    python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
    
    #Now use your browser to open the top-level index.html located at:
    
    http://your_ip:8000