OpenStack has settled (a very long time ago) on project to represent the container which has users. We should make tempest configs always use project versions of these names. This deprecates the old tenant versions of these names, and makes project version the prefered option. Change-Id: Ied68c0326cf891a4e6eb3db51dc5f43241e4b8d2
17 KiB
Tempest Coding Guide
- Step 1: Read the OpenStack Style Commandments http://docs.openstack.org/developer/hacking/
- Step 2: Read on
Tempest Specific Commandments
- [T102] Cannot import OpenStack python clients in tempest/api &
-
tempest/scenario tests
- [T104] Scenario tests require a services decorator
- [T105] Tests cannot use setUpClass/tearDownClass
- [T106] vim configuration should not be kept in source files.
- [T107] Check that a service tag isn't in the module path
- [T108] Check no hyphen at the end of rand_name() argument
- [T109] Cannot use testtools.skip decorator; instead use
-
decorators.skip_because from tempest-lib
- [T110] Check that service client names of GET should be consistent
- [T111] Check that service client names of DELETE should be consistent
- [T112] Check that tempest.lib should not import local tempest code
- [N322] Method's default argument shouldn't be mutable
Test Data/Configuration
- Assume nothing about existing test data
- Tests should be self contained (provide their own data)
- Clean up test data at the completion of each test
- Use configuration files for values that will vary by environment
Exception Handling
According to the The Zen of Python
the
Errors should never pass silently.
Tempest usually runs in
special environment (jenkins gate jobs), in every error or failure
situation we should provide as much error related information as
possible, because we usually do not have the chance to investigate the
situation after the issue happened.
In every test case the abnormal situations must be very verbosely explained, by the exception and the log.
In most cases the very first issue is the most important information.
Try to avoid using try
blocks in the test cases, as both
the except
and finally
blocks could replace
the original exception, when the additional operations leads to another
exception.
Just letting an exception to propagate, is not a bad idea in a test case, at all.
Try to avoid using any exception handling construct which can hide the errors origin.
If you really need to use a try
block, please ensure the
original exception at least logged. When the exception is logged you
usually need to raise
the same or a different exception
anyway.
Use of self.addCleanup
is often a good way to avoid
having to catch exceptions and still ensure resources are correctly
cleaned up if the test fails part way through.
Use the self.assert*
methods provided by the unit test
framework. This signals the failures early on.
Avoid using the self.fail
alone, its stack trace will
signal the self.fail
line as the origin of the error.
Avoid constructing complex boolean expressions for assertion. The
self.assertTrue
or self.assertFalse
without a
msg
argument, will just tell you the single boolean value,
and you will not know anything about the values used in the formula, the
msg
argument might be good enough for providing more
information.
Most other assert method can include more information by default. For
example self.assertIn
can include the whole set.
It is recommended to use testtools matcher for the more tricky assertions. You can implement your own specific matcher as well.
If the test case fails you can see the related logs and the information carried by the exception (exception class, backtrack and exception info). This and the service logs are your only guide to finding the root cause of flaky issues.
Test cases are independent
Every test_method
must be callable individually and MUST
NOT depends on, any other test_method
or
test_method
ordering.
Test cases MAY depend on commonly initialized resources/facilities,
like credentials management, testresources and so on. These facilities,
MUST be able to work even if just one test_method
is
selected for execution.
Service Tagging
Service tagging is used to specify which services are exercised by a particular test method. You specify the services with the tempest.test.services decorator. For example:
@services('compute', 'image')
Valid service tag names are the same as the list of directories in tempest.api that have tests.
For scenario tests having a service tag is required. For the api tests service tags are only needed if the test method makes an api call (either directly or indirectly through another service) that differs from the parent directory name. For example, any test that make an api call to a service other than nova in tempest.api.compute would require a service tag for those services, however they do not need to be tagged as compute.
Test fixtures and resources
Test level resources should be cleaned-up after the test execution. Clean-up is best scheduled using addCleanup which ensures that the resource cleanup code is always invoked, and in reverse order with respect to the creation order.
Test class level resources should be defined in the resource_setup method of the test class, except for any credential obtained from the credentials provider, which should be set-up in the setup_credentials method.
The test base class BaseTestCase defines Tempest framework for class level fixtures. setUpClass and tearDownClass are defined here and cannot be overwritten by subclasses (enforced via hacking rule T105).
Set-up is split in a series of steps (setup stages), which can be overwritten by test classes. Set-up stages are: - skip_checks - setup_credentials - setup_clients - resource_setup
Tear-down is also split in a series of steps (teardown stages), which are stacked for execution only if the corresponding setup stage had been reached during the setup phase. Tear-down stages are: - clear_credentials (defined in the base test class) - resource_cleanup
Skipping Tests
Skipping tests should be based on configuration only. If that is not possible, it is likely that either a configuration flag is missing, or the test should fail rather than be skipped. Using discovery for skipping tests is generally discouraged.
When running a test that requires a certain "feature" in the target cloud, if that feature is missing we should fail, because either the test configuration is invalid, or the cloud is broken and the expected "feature" is not there even if the cloud was configured with it.
Negative Tests
Newly added negative tests should use the negative test framework. First step is to create an interface description in a python file under tempest/api_schema/request/. These descriptions consists of two important sections for the test (one of those is mandatory):
- A resource (part of the URL of the request): Resources needed for a test must be created in setUpClass and registered with set_resource e.g.: cls.set_resource("server", server['id'])
- A json schema: defines properties for a request.
After that a test class must be added to automatically generate test scenarios out of the given interface description:
load_tests = test.NegativeAutoTest.load_tests
@test.SimpleNegativeAutoTest
class SampleTestNegativeTestJSON(<your base class>, test.NegativeAutoTest):
_service = 'compute'
_schema = <your schema file>
The class decorator SimpleNegativeAutoTest will automatically generate test cases out of the given schema in the attribute _schema.
All negative tests should be added into a separate negative test file. If such a file doesn't exist for the particular resource being tested a new test file should be added.
Test skips because of Known Bugs
If a test is broken because of a bug it is appropriate to skip the test until bug has been fixed. You should use the skip_because decorator so that Tempest's skip tracking tool can watch the bug status.
Example:
@skip_because(bug="980688")
def test_this_and_that(self):
...
Guidelines
- Do not submit changesets with only testcases which are skipped as they will not be merged.
- Consistently check the status code of responses in testcases. The earlier a problem is detected the easier it is to debug, especially where there is complicated setup required.
Parallel Test Execution
Tempest by default runs its tests in parallel this creates the possibility for interesting interactions between tests which can cause unexpected failures. Dynamic credentials provides protection from most of the potential race conditions between tests outside the same class. But there are still a few of things to watch out for to try to avoid issues when running your tests in parallel.
- Resources outside of a project scope still have the potential to conflict. This is a larger concern for the admin tests since most resources and actions that require admin privileges are outside of projects.
- Races between methods in the same class are not a problem because parallelization in tempest is at the test class level, but if there is a json and xml version of the same test class there could still be a race between methods.
- The rand_name() function from tempest.common.utils.data_utils should be used anywhere a resource is created with a name. Static naming should be avoided to prevent resource conflicts.
- If the execution of a set of tests is required to be serialized then locking can be used to perform this. See AggregatesAdminTest in tempest.api.compute.admin for an example of using locking.
Stress Tests in Tempest
Any tempest test case can be flagged as a stress test. With this flag
it will be automatically discovery and used in the stress test runs. The
stress test framework itself is a facility to spawn and control worker
processes in order to find race conditions (see
tempest/stress/
for more information). Please note that
these stress tests can't be used for benchmarking purposes since they
don't measure any performance characteristics.
Example:
@stresstest(class_setup_per='process')
def test_this_and_that(self):
...
This will flag the test test_this_and_that
as a stress
test. The parameter class_setup_per
gives control when the
setUpClass function should be called.
Good candidates for stress tests are:
- Scenario tests
- API tests that have a wide focus
Sample Configuration File
The sample config file is autogenerated using a script. If any changes are made to the config variables in tempest/config.py then the sample config file must be regenerated. This can be done running:
tox -egenconfig
Unit Tests
Unit tests are a separate class of tests in tempest. They verify tempest itself, and thus have a different set of guidelines around them:
- They can not require anything running externally. All you should need to run the unit tests is the git tree, python and the dependencies installed. This includes running services, a config file, etc.
- The unit tests cannot use setUpClass, instead fixtures and testresources should be used for shared state between tests.
Test Documentation
For tests being added we need to require inline documentation in the form of docstrings to explain what is being tested. In API tests for a new API a class level docstring should be added to an API reference doc. If one doesn't exist a TODO comment should be put indicating that the reference needs to be added. For individual API test cases a method level docstring should be used to explain the functionality being tested if the test name isn't descriptive enough. For example:
def test_get_role_by_id(self):
"""Get a role by its id."""
the docstring there is superfluous and shouldn't be added. but for a method like:
def test_volume_backup_create_get_detailed_list_restore_delete(self):
pass
a docstring would be useful because while the test title is fairly descriptive the operations being performed are complex enough that a bit more explanation will help people figure out the intent of the test.
For scenario tests a class level docstring describing the steps in the scenario is required. If there is more than one test case in the class individual docstrings for the workflow in each test methods can be used instead. A good example of this would be:
class TestVolumeBootPattern(manager.ScenarioTest):
"""
This test case attempts to reproduce the following steps:
* Create in Cinder some bootable volume importing a Glance image
* Boot an instance from the bootable volume
* Write content to the volume
* Delete an instance and Boot a new instance from the volume
* Check written content in the instance
* Create a volume snapshot while the instance is running
* Boot an additional instance from the new snapshot based volume
* Check written content in the instance booted from snapshot
"""
Test Identification with Idempotent ID
Every function that provides a test must have an
idempotent_id
decorator that is a unique
uuid-4
instance. This ID is used to complement the fully
qualified test name and track test functionality through refactoring.
The format of the metadata looks like:
@test.idempotent_id('585e934c-448e-43c4-acbf-d06a9b899997')
def test_list_servers_with_detail(self):
# The created server should be in the detailed list of all servers
...
Tempest-lib includes a check-uuid
tool that will test
for the existence and uniqueness of idempotent_id metadata for every
test. If you have tempest-lib installed you run the tool against Tempest
by calling from the tempest repo:
check-uuid
It can be invoked against any test suite by passing a package name:
check-uuid --package <package_name>
Tests without an idempotent_id
can be automatically
fixed by running the command with the --fix
flag, which
will modify the source package by inserting randomly generated uuids for
every test that does not have one:
check-uuid --fix
The check-uuid
tool is used as part of the tempest gate
job to ensure that all tests have an idempotent_id
decorator.
Branchless Tempest Considerations
Starting with the OpenStack Icehouse release Tempest no longer has any stable branches. This is to better ensure API consistency between releases because the API behavior should not change between releases. This means that the stable branches are also gated by the Tempest master branch, which also means that proposed commits to Tempest must work against both the master and all the currently supported stable branches of the projects. As such there are a few special considerations that have to be accounted for when pushing new changes to tempest.
1. New Tests for new features
When adding tests for new features that were not in previous releases of the projects the new test has to be properly skipped with a feature flag. Whether this is just as simple as using the @test.requires_ext() decorator to check if the required extension (or discoverable optional API) is enabled or adding a new config option to the appropriate section. If there isn't a method of selecting the new feature from the config file then there won't be a mechanism to disable the test with older stable releases and the new test won't be able to merge.
2. Bug fix on core project needing Tempest changes
When trying to land a bug fix which changes a tested API you'll have to use the following procedure:
- Propose change to the project, get a +2 on the change even with failing
- Propose skip on Tempest which will only be approved after the
corresponding change in the project has a +2 on change
- Land project change in master and all open stable branches (if required)
- Land changed test in Tempest
Otherwise the bug fix won't be able to land in the project.
3. New Tests for existing features
If a test is being added for a feature that exists in all the current releases of the projects then the only concern is that the API behavior is the same across all the versions of the project being tested. If the behavior is not consistent the test will not be able to merge.
API Stability
For new tests being added to Tempest the assumption is that the API being tested is considered stable and adheres to the OpenStack API stability guidelines. If an API is still considered experimental or in development then it should not be tested by Tempest until it is considered stable.