8.3 KiB
Nova Style Commandments
- Step 1: Read the OpenStack Style Commandments https://docs.openstack.org/hacking/latest/
- Step 2: Read on
Nova Specific Commandments
- [N307]
nova.db
imports are not allowed innova/virt/*
- [N309] no db session in public API methods (disabled) This enforces
a guideline defined in
oslo.db.sqlalchemy.session
- [N310] timeutils.utcnow() wrapper must be used instead of direct calls to datetime.datetime.utcnow() to make it easy to override its return value in tests
- [N311] importing code from other virt drivers forbidden Code that needs to be shared between virt drivers should be moved into a common module
- [N312] using config vars from other virt drivers forbidden Config parameters that need to be shared between virt drivers should be moved into a common module
- [N313] capitalize help string Config parameter help strings should have a capitalized first letter
- [N316] Change assertTrue(isinstance(A, B)) by optimal assert like assertIsInstance(A, B).
- [N317] Change assertEqual(type(A), B) by optimal assert like assertIsInstance(A, B)
- [N319] Validate that debug level logs are not translated.
- [N320] Setting CONF.* attributes directly in tests is forbidden. Use self.flags(option=value) instead.
- [N322] Method's default argument shouldn't be mutable
- [N323] Ensure that the _() function is explicitly imported to ensure proper translations.
- [N324] Ensure that jsonutils.%(fun)s must be used instead of json.%(fun)s
- [N325] str() and unicode() cannot be used on an exception. Remove use or use six.text_type()
- [N326] Translated messages cannot be concatenated. String should be included in translated message.
- [N327] Do not use xrange(). xrange() is not compatible with Python 3. Use range() or six.moves.range() instead.
- [N332] Check that the api_version decorator is the first decorator on a method
- [N334] Change assertTrue/False(A in/not in B, message) to the more specific assertIn/NotIn(A, B, message)
- [N335] Check for usage of deprecated assertRaisesRegexp
- [N336] Must use a dict comprehension instead of a dict constructor with a sequence of key-value pairs.
- [N337] Don't import translation in tests
- [N338] Change assertEqual(A in B, True), assertEqual(True, A in B), assertEqual(A in B, False) or assertEqual(False, A in B) to the more specific assertIn/NotIn(A, B)
- [N339] Check common raise_feature_not_supported() is used for v2.1 HTTPNotImplemented response.
- [N340] Check nova.utils.spawn() is used instead of greenthread.spawn() and eventlet.spawn()
- [N341] contextlib.nested is deprecated
- [N342] Config options should be in the central location
nova/conf/
- [N343] Check for common double word typos
- [N344] Python 3: do not use dict.iteritems.
- [N345] Python 3: do not use dict.iterkeys.
- [N346] Python 3: do not use dict.itervalues.
- [N348] Deprecated library function os.popen()
- [N349] Check for closures in tests which are not used
- [N350] Policy registration should be in the central location
nova/policies/
- [N351] Do not use the oslo_policy.policy.Enforcer.enforce() method.
- [N352] LOG.warn is deprecated. Enforce use of LOG.warning.
- [N353] Validate that context objects is not passed in logging calls.
- [N355] Enforce use of assertTrue/assertFalse
- [N356] Enforce use of assertIs/assertIsNot
- [N357] Use oslo_utils.uuidutils or uuidsentinel(in case of test cases) to generate UUID instead of uuid4().
- [N358] Return must always be followed by a space when returning a value.
- [N359] Check for redundant import aliases.
- [N360] Yield must always be followed by a space when yielding a value.
- [N361] Check for usage of deprecated assertRegexpMatches and assertNotRegexpMatches
- [N362] Imports for privsep modules should be specific. Use "import nova.privsep.path", not "from nova.privsep import path". This ensures callers know that the method they're calling is using priviledge escalation.
- [N363] Disallow
(not_a_tuple)
because you meant(a_tuple_of_one,)
. - [N364] Check non-existent mock assertion methods and attributes.
- [N365] Check misuse of assertTrue/assertIsNone.
Creating Unit Tests
For every new feature, unit tests should be created that both test and (implicitly) document the usage of said feature. If submitting a patch for a bug that had no unit test, a new passing unit test should be added. If a submitted bug fix does have a unit test, be sure to add a new one that fails without the patch and passes with the patch.
For more information on creating unit tests and utilizing the testing
infrastructure in OpenStack Nova, please read
nova/tests/unit/README.rst
.
Running Tests
The testing system is based on a combination of tox and stestr. The
canonical approach to running tests is to simply run the command
tox
. This will create virtual environments, populate them
with dependencies and run all of the tests that OpenStack CI systems
run. Behind the scenes, tox is running stestr run
, but is
set up such that you can supply any additional stestr arguments that are
needed to tox. For example, you can run:
tox -- --analyze-isolation
to cause tox to tell stestr to
add --analyze-isolation to its argument list.
Python packages may also have dependencies that are outside of tox's ability to install. Please refer to Development Quickstart for a list of those packages on Ubuntu, Fedora and Mac OS X.
To run a single or restricted set of tests, pass a regex that matches
the class name containing the tests as an extra tox
argument; e.g. tox -- TestWSGIServer
(note the
double-hypen) will test all WSGI server tests from
nova/tests/unit/test_wsgi.py
;
-- TestWSGIServer.test_uri_length_limit
would run just that
test, and -- TestWSGIServer|TestWSGIServerWithSSL
would run
tests from both classes.
It is also possible to run the tests inside of a virtual environment
you have created, or it is possible that you have all of the
dependencies installed locally already. In this case, you can interact
with the stestr command directly. Running stestr run
will
run the entire test suite. stestr run --concurrency=1
will
run tests serially (by default, stestr runs tests in parallel). More
information about stestr can be found at: http://stestr.readthedocs.io/
Since when testing locally, running the entire test suite on a
regular basis is prohibitively expensive, the
tools/run-tests-for-diff.sh
script is provided as a
convenient way to run selected tests using output from
git diff
. For example, this allows running only the test
files changed/added in the working tree:
tools/run-tests-for-diff.sh
However since it passes its arguments directly to
git diff
, tests can be selected in lots of other
interesting ways, e.g. it can run all tests affected by a single commit
at the tip of a given branch:
tools/run-tests-for-diff.sh mybranch^!
or all those affected by a range of commits, e.g. a branch containing a whole patch series for a blueprint:
tools/run-tests-for-diff.sh gerrit/master..bp/my-blueprint
It supports the same -HEAD
invocation syntax as
flake8wrap.sh
(as used by the fast8
tox
environment):
tools/run-tests-for-diff.sh -HEAD
By default tests log at INFO
level. It is possible to
make them log at DEBUG
level by exporting the
OS_DEBUG
environment variable to True
.
Building Docs
Normal Sphinx docs can be built via the setuptools
build_sphinx
command. To do this via tox
,
simply run tox -e docs
, which will cause a virtualenv with
all of the needed dependencies to be created and then inside of the
virtualenv, the docs will be created and put into doc/build/html.
Building a PDF of the Documentation
If you'd like a PDF of the documentation, you'll need LaTeX and ImageMagick installed, and additionally some fonts. On Ubuntu systems, you can get what you need with:
apt-get install texlive-full imagemagick
Then you can use the build_latex_pdf.sh
script in tools/
to take care of both the sphinx latex generation and the latex
compilation. For example:
tools/build_latex_pdf.sh
The script must be run from the root of the Nova repository and it'll copy the output pdf to Nova.pdf in that directory.