tacker/TESTING.rst
Nguyen Hai b6638333f6 Trivial: Update HACKING.rst with stestr
The HACKING.rst testing section is updated a bit to point out
that we use stestr now instead of testr.

This patch also removes the nose testing.

Change-Id: I70c2f3e3d87fb447a15977e851554f562f21c796
2018-08-07 16:20:40 +09:00

3.6 KiB

Testing Tacker

Overview

The unit tests are meant to cover as much code as possible and should be executed without the service running. They are designed to test the various pieces of the tacker tree to make sure any new changes don't break existing functionality.

The functional tests are intended to validate actual system interaction. Mocks should be used sparingly, if at all. Care should be taken to ensure that existing system resources are not modified and that resources created in tests are properly cleaned up.

Development process

It is expected that any new changes that are proposed for merge come with tests for that feature or code area. Ideally any bugs fixes that are submitted also have tests to prove that they stay fixed! In addition, before proposing for merge, all of the current tests should be passing.

Running unit tests with tox

Before submitting a patch for review you should always ensure all test pass; a tox run is triggered by the Zuul gate executed on gerrit for each patch pushed for review.

With this mechanism you can either run the tests in the standard environment or create a virtual environment to run them in.

By default after running all of the tests, any pep8 errors found in the tree will be reported.

Note that the tests can use a database, see tools/tests-setup.sh on how the databases are set up in the OpenStack CI environment.

Tacker, like other OpenStack projects, uses tox for managing the virtual environments for running test cases. It uses stestr for managing the running of the test cases.

Tox handles the creation of a series of virtualenvs that target specific versions of Python (2.7, 3.5, etc). stestr handles the parallel execution of series of test cases as well as the tracking of long-running tests and other things.

Running unit tests is as easy as executing this in the root directory of the Tacker source code:

tox

For more information on the standard Tox-based test infrastructure used by OpenStack and how to do some common test/debugging procedures with stestr, see at: https://governance.openstack.org/tc/reference/pti/python.html

Running individual tests

For running individual test modules or cases, you just need to pass the dot-separated path to the module you want as an argument to it.

For executing a specific test case, specify the name of the test case class separating it from the module path with a colon.

For example, the following would run only the TestVNFMPlugin tests from tacker/tests/unit/vm/test_plugin.py:

$ ./tox tacker.tests.unit.vm.test_plugin:TestVNFMPlugin

Debugging

It's possible to debug tests in a tox environment:

$ tox -e venv -- python -m testtools.run [test module path]

Tox-created virtual environments (venv's) can also be activated after a tox run and reused for debugging:

$ tox -e venv
$ . .tox/venv/bin/activate
$ python -m testtools.run [test module path]

Tox packages and installs the tacker source tree in a given venv on every invocation, but if modifications need to be made between invocation (e.g. adding more pdb statements), it is recommended that the source tree be installed in the venv in editable mode:

# run this only after activating the venv
$ pip install --editable .

Editable mode ensures that changes made to the source tree are automatically reflected in the venv, and that such changes are not overwritten during the next tox run.