OpenStack Testing (Tempest) of an existing cloud
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Ken'ichi Ohmichi a7a14f127f Verify os-migration API response attributes
Now most attributes of Nova v2/v3 APIs are not checked in Tempest,
and this patch adds some tests which check these attributes to block
the backward incompatibility change in the future.

This patch adds the checks of v2/v3 os-migration API responses.

The response body of the API is the below:
 {
   "migrations": [
     {
       "id": 1,
       "status": "finished",
       "instance_uuid": "e9e4fdd7-f956-44ff-bfeb-d654a96ab3a2",
       "source_node": "localhost-dev",
       "source_compute": "localhost-dev",
       "dest_node": "localhost-dev",
       "dest_compute": "localhost-dev",
       "dest_host": "192.168.11.100",
       "old_instance_type_id": 6,
       "new_instance_type_id": 2,
       "created_at": "2014-03-18T00:14:49.000000",
       "updated_at": "2014-03-18T00:15:15.000000"
     }
   ]
 }

Partially implements blueprint nova-api-attribute-test

Change-Id: I21b7f55aa3310424f9c200c60a77e305af44cb48
2014-04-23 10:52:50 +09:00
doc/source Switch over to oslosphinx 2014-02-14 18:16:53 +01:00
etc Up the default timeout for stack builds 2014-04-15 11:18:02 -04:00
tempest Verify os-migration API response attributes 2014-04-23 10:52:50 +09:00
tools remove n-sch from the watch list 2014-04-10 07:26:09 -04:00
.coveragerc Introduce .coveragerc 2014-03-28 08:16:22 +09:00
.gitignore Introduce .coveragerc 2014-03-28 08:16:22 +09:00
.gitreview Update .gitreview with new project name. 2011-11-30 10:59:36 -08:00
.mailmap Update mailmap for Joe Gordon 2013-10-28 10:21:08 +00:00
.testr.conf Add config fixture support to unit tests 2014-03-25 20:14:17 +00:00
HACKING.rst Update documentation for negative testing 2014-03-26 10:08:42 +01:00
LICENSE Add License to Tempest. 2012-04-12 16:04:36 +02:00
openstack-common.conf Merge "Sync config file generator from oslo" 2013-11-08 02:10:19 +00:00
README.rst Add a note about python2.6 support to the README 2014-02-13 14:35:38 -05:00
requirements.txt Updated from global requirements 2014-04-11 04:18:07 +00:00
run_tempest.sh Mildly wound the interlopers 2014-02-19 16:17:32 +00:00
run_tests.sh Merge "Mildly wound the interlopers" 2014-02-27 00:39:53 +00:00
setup.cfg Fix author information 2014-02-24 19:19:22 +09:00
setup.py Update to latest pbr 2013-10-24 14:21:19 +00:00
test-requirements.txt Switch over to oslosphinx 2014-02-14 18:16:53 +01:00
tox.ini Make heat-slow job run in parallel 2014-04-03 14:06:32 -04:00

Tempest - The OpenStack Integration Test Suite

This is a set of integration tests to be run against a live OpenStack cluster. Tempest has batteries of tests for OpenStack API validation, Scenarios, and other specific tests useful in validating an OpenStack deployment.

Design Principles ----------Tempest Design Principles that we strive to live by.

  • Tempest should be able to run against any OpenStack cloud, be it a one node devstack install, a 20 node lxc cloud, or a 1000 node kvm cloud.
  • Tempest should be explicit in testing features. It is easy to auto discover features of a cloud incorrectly, and give people an incorrect assessment of their cloud. Explicit is always better.
  • Tempest uses OpenStack public interfaces. Tests in Tempest should only touch public interfaces, API calls (native or 3rd party), public CLI or libraries.
  • Tempest should not touch private or implementation specific interfaces. This means not directly going to the database, not directly hitting the hypervisors, not testing extensions not included in the OpenStack base. If there is some feature of OpenStack that is not verifiable through standard interfaces, this should be considered a possible enhancement.
  • Tempest strives for complete coverage of the OpenStack API and common scenarios that demonstrate a working cloud.
  • Tempest drives load in an OpenStack cloud. By including a broad array of API and scenario tests Tempest can be reused in whole or in parts as load generation for an OpenStack cloud.
  • Tempest should attempt to clean up after itself, whenever possible we should tear down resources when done.
  • Tempest should be self testing.

Quickstart

To run Tempest, you first need to create a configuration file that will tell Tempest where to find the various OpenStack services and other testing behavior switches.

The easiest way to create a configuration file is to copy the sample one in the etc/ directory :

$> cd $TEMPEST_ROOT_DIR
$> cp etc/tempest.conf.sample etc/tempest.conf

After that, open up the etc/tempest.conf file and edit the configuration variables to match valid data in your environment. This includes your Keystone endpoint, a valid user and credentials, and reference data to be used in testing.

Note

If you have a running devstack environment, tempest will be automatically configured and placed in /opt/stack/tempest. It will have a configuration file already set up to work with your devstack installation.

Tempest is not tied to any single test runner, but testr is the most commonly used tool. After setting up your configuration file, you can execute the set of Tempest tests by using testr :

$> testr run --parallel

To run one single test :

$> testr run --parallel tempest.api.compute.servers.test_servers_negative.ServersNegativeTestJSON.test_reboot_non_existent_server

Alternatively, you can use the run_tempest.sh script which will create a venv and run the tests or use tox to do the same.

Configuration

Detailed configuration of tempest is beyond the scope of this document. The etc/tempest.conf.sample attempts to be a self documenting version of the configuration.

The sample config file is auto generated using the script: tools/generate_sample.sh

The most important pieces that are needed are the user ids, openstack endpoints, and basic flavors and images needed to run tests.

Common Issues

Tempest was originally designed to primarily run against a full OpenStack deployment. Due to that focus, some issues may occur when running Tempest against devstack.

Running Tempest, especially in parallel, against a devstack instance may cause requests to be rate limited, which will cause unexpected failures. Given the number of requests Tempest can make against a cluster, rate limiting should be disabled for all test accounts.

Additionally, devstack only provides a single image which Nova can use. For the moment, the best solution is to provide the same image uuid for both image_ref and image_ref_alt. Tempest will skip tests as needed if it detects that both images are the same.

Unit Tests

Tempest also has a set of unit tests which test the tempest code itself. These tests can be run by specifing the test discovery path:

$> OS_TEST_PATH=./tempest/tests testr run --parallel

By setting OS_TEST_PATH to ./tempest/tests it specifies that test discover should only be run on the unit test directory. The default value of OS_TEST_PATH is OS_TEST_PATH=./tempest/test_discover which will only run test discover on the tempest suite.

Alternatively, you can use the run_tests.sh script which will create a venv and run the unit tests. There are also the py26, py27, or py33 tox jobs which will run the unit tests with the corresponding version of python.

Python 2.6

Tempest can be run with Python 2.6 however the unit tests and the gate currently only run with Python 2.7, so there are no guarantees about the state of tempest when running with Python 2.6. Additionally, to enable testr to work with tempest using python 2.6 the discover module from the unittest-ext project has to be patched to switch the unittest.TestSuite to use unittest2.TestSuite instead. See:

https://code.google.com/p/unittest-ext/issues/detail?id=79