787bb33606
Adjust the fixtures used by the functional tests so they use placement database and web fixtures defined by placement code. To avoid making redundant changes, the solely placement- related unit and functional tests are removed, but the placement code itself is not (yet). openstack-placement is required by the functional tests. It is not added to test-requirements as we do not want unit tests to depend on placement in any way, and we enforce this by not having placement in the test env. The concept of tox-siblings is used to ensure that the placement requirement will be satisfied correctly if there is a depends-on. To make this happen, the functional jobs defined in .zuul.yaml are updated to require openstack/placement. tox.ini has to be updated to use a envdir that is the same name as job. Otherwise the tox siblings role in ansible cannot work. The handling of the placement fixtures is moved out of nova/test.py into the functional tests that actually use it because we do not want unit tests (which get the base test class out of test.py) to have anything to do with placement. This requires adjusting some test files to use absolute import. Similarly, a test of the comparison function for the api samples tests is moved into functional, because it depends on placement functionality, TestUpgradeCheckResourceProviders in unit.cmd.test_status is moved into a new test file: nova/tests/functional/test_nova_status.py. This is done because it requires the PlacementFixture, which is only available to functional tests. A MonkeyPatch is required in the test to make sure that the right context managers are used at the right time in the command itself (otherwise some tables do no exist). In the test itself, to avoid speaking directly to the placement database, which would require manipulating the RequestContext objects, resource providers are now created over the API. Co-Authored-By: Balazs Gibizer <balazs.gibizer@ericsson.com> Change-Id: Idaed39629095f86d24a54334c699a26c218c6593 |
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api-guide/source | ||
api-ref/source | ||
devstack | ||
doc | ||
etc/nova | ||
gate | ||
nova | ||
playbooks/legacy | ||
releasenotes | ||
tools | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitreview | ||
.mailmap | ||
.stestr.conf | ||
.zuul.yaml | ||
CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
HACKING.rst | ||
LICENSE | ||
MAINTAINERS | ||
README.rst | ||
babel.cfg | ||
bindep.txt | ||
lower-constraints.txt | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
test-requirements.txt | ||
tox.ini |
README.rst
Team and repository tags
OpenStack Nova
OpenStack Nova provides a cloud computing fabric controller, supporting a wide variety of compute technologies, including: libvirt (KVM, Xen, LXC and more), Hyper-V, VMware, XenServer, OpenStack Ironic and PowerVM.
Use the following resources to learn more.
API
To learn how to use Nova's API, consult the documentation available online at:
For more information on OpenStack APIs, SDKs and CLIs in general, refer to:
Operators
To learn how to deploy and configure OpenStack Nova, consult the documentation available online at:
In the unfortunate event that bugs are discovered, they should be reported to the appropriate bug tracker. If you obtained the software from a 3rd party operating system vendor, it is often wise to use their own bug tracker for reporting problems. In all other cases use the master OpenStack bug tracker, available at:
Developers
For information on how to contribute to Nova, please see the contents of the CONTRIBUTING.rst.
Any new code must follow the development guidelines detailed in the HACKING.rst file, and pass all unit tests.
Further developer focused documentation is available at:
Other Information
During each Summit and Project Team Gathering, we agree on what the whole community wants to focus on for the upcoming release. The plans for nova can be found at: