da3bb61f1f
Now we have more documents for plugins on stable release, support and their testing policy. Let's prepare a index page for it will be easy for plugins maintainer. Also renaming the stable support policy section to have a clear name. Adding redirect links for moved documents. Change-Id: I17a9a6e0e88605a0ee5047678d6ed168c31396ec
498 lines
21 KiB
ReStructuredText
498 lines
21 KiB
ReStructuredText
Tempest Coding Guide
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====================
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- Step 1: Read the OpenStack Style Commandments
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https://docs.openstack.org/hacking/latest/
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- Step 2: Read on
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Tempest Specific Commandments
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-----------------------------
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- [T102] Cannot import OpenStack python clients in tempest/api &
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tempest/scenario tests
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- [T104] Scenario tests require a services decorator
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- [T105] Tests cannot use setUpClass/tearDownClass
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- [T107] Check that a service tag isn't in the module path
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- [T108] Check no hyphen at the end of rand_name() argument
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- [T109] Cannot use testtools.skip decorator; instead use
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decorators.skip_because from tempest.lib
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- [T110] Check that service client names of GET should be consistent
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- [T111] Check that service client names of DELETE should be consistent
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- [T112] Check that tempest.lib should not import local tempest code
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- [T113] Check that tests use data_utils.rand_uuid() instead of uuid.uuid4()
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- [T114] Check that tempest.lib does not use tempest config
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- [T115] Check that admin tests should exist under admin path
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- [N322] Method's default argument shouldn't be mutable
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- [T116] Unsupported 'message' Exception attribute in PY3
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- [T117] Check negative tests have ``@decorators.attr(type=['negative'])``
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applied.
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It is recommended to use ``tox -eautopep8`` before submitting a patch.
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Test Data/Configuration
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-----------------------
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- Assume nothing about existing test data
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- Tests should be self contained (provide their own data)
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- Clean up test data at the completion of each test
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- Use configuration files for values that will vary by environment
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Supported OpenStack Components
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------------------------------
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Tempest's :ref:`library` and :ref:`plugin interface <tempest_plugin>` can be
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leveraged to support integration testing for virtually any OpenStack component.
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However, Tempest only offers **in-tree** integration testing coverage for the
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following components:
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* Cinder
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* Glance
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* Keystone
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* Neutron
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* Nova
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* Swift
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Historically, Tempest offered in-tree testing for other components as well, but
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since the introduction of the `External Plugin Interface`_, Tempest's in-tree
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testing scope has been limited to the projects above. Integration tests for
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projects not included above should go into one of the
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`relevant plugin projects`_.
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.. _External Plugin Interface: https://specs.openstack.org/openstack/qa-specs/specs/tempest/implemented/tempest-external-plugin-interface.html
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.. _relevant plugin projects: https://docs.openstack.org/tempest/latest/plugins/plugin-registry.html#detected-plugins
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Exception Handling
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------------------
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According to the ``The Zen of Python`` the
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``Errors should never pass silently.``
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Tempest usually runs in special environment (jenkins gate jobs), in every
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error or failure situation we should provide as much error related
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information as possible, because we usually do not have the chance to
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investigate the situation after the issue happened.
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In every test case the abnormal situations must be very verbosely explained,
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by the exception and the log.
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In most cases the very first issue is the most important information.
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Try to avoid using ``try`` blocks in the test cases, as both the ``except``
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and ``finally`` blocks could replace the original exception,
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when the additional operations leads to another exception.
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Just letting an exception to propagate, is not a bad idea in a test case,
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at all.
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Try to avoid using any exception handling construct which can hide the errors
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origin.
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If you really need to use a ``try`` block, please ensure the original
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exception at least logged. When the exception is logged you usually need
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to ``raise`` the same or a different exception anyway.
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Use of ``self.addCleanup`` is often a good way to avoid having to catch
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exceptions and still ensure resources are correctly cleaned up if the
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test fails part way through.
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Use the ``self.assert*`` methods provided by the unit test framework.
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This signals the failures early on.
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Avoid using the ``self.fail`` alone, its stack trace will signal
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the ``self.fail`` line as the origin of the error.
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Avoid constructing complex boolean expressions for assertion.
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The ``self.assertTrue`` or ``self.assertFalse`` without a ``msg`` argument,
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will just tell you the single boolean value, and you will not know anything
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about the values used in the formula, the ``msg`` argument might be good enough
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for providing more information.
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Most other assert method can include more information by default.
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For example ``self.assertIn`` can include the whole set.
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It is recommended to use testtools `matcher`_ for the more tricky assertions.
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You can implement your own specific `matcher`_ as well.
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.. _matcher: https://testtools.readthedocs.org/en/latest/for-test-authors.html#matchers
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If the test case fails you can see the related logs and the information
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carried by the exception (exception class, backtrack and exception info).
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This and the service logs are your only guide to finding the root cause of flaky
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issues.
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Test cases are independent
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--------------------------
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Every ``test_method`` must be callable individually and MUST NOT depends on,
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any other ``test_method`` or ``test_method`` ordering.
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Test cases MAY depend on commonly initialized resources/facilities, like
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credentials management, testresources and so on. These facilities, MUST be able
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to work even if just one ``test_method`` is selected for execution.
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Service Tagging
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---------------
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Service tagging is used to specify which services are exercised by a particular
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test method. You specify the services with the ``tempest.common.utils.services``
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decorator. For example:
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``@utils.services('compute', 'image')``
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Valid service tag names are the same as the list of directories in tempest.api
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that have tests.
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For scenario tests having a service tag is required. For the API tests service
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tags are only needed if the test method makes an API call (either directly or
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indirectly through another service) that differs from the parent directory
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name. For example, any test that make an API call to a service other than Nova
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in ``tempest.api.compute`` would require a service tag for those services,
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however they do not need to be tagged as ``compute``.
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Test Attributes
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---------------
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Tempest leverages `test attributes`_ which are a simple but effective way of
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distinguishing between different "types" of API tests. A test can be "tagged"
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with such attributes using the ``decorators.attr`` decorator, for example::
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@decorators.attr(type=['negative'])
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def test_aggregate_create_aggregate_name_length_less_than_1(self):
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[...]
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These test attributes can be used for test selection via regular expressions.
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For example, ``(?!.*\[.*\bslow\b.*\])(^tempest\.scenario)`` runs all the tests
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in the ``scenario`` test module, *except* for those tagged with the ``slow``
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attribute (via a negative lookahead in the regular expression). These
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attributes are used in Tempest's ``tox.ini`` as well as Tempest's Zuul job
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definitions for specifying particular batches of Tempest test suites to run.
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.. _test attributes: https://testtools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/for-test-authors.html?highlight=attr#test-attributes
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Negative Attribute
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``type='negative'`` attribute is used to signify that a test is a negative
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test, which is a test that handles invalid input gracefully. This attribute
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should be applied to all negative test scenarios.
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This attribute must be applied to each test that belongs to a negative test
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class, i.e. a test class name ending with "Negative.*" substring.
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Slow Attribute
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``type='slow'`` attribute is used to signify that a test takes a long time
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to run, relatively speaking. This attribute is usually applied to
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:ref:`scenario tests <scenario_field_guide>`, which involve a complicated
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series of API operations, the total runtime of which can be relatively long.
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This long runtime has performance implications on `Zuul`_ jobs, which is why
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the ``slow`` attribute is leveraged to run slow tests on a selective basis,
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to keep total `Zuul`_ job runtime down to a reasonable time frame.
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.. _Zuul: https://docs.openstack.org/infra/zuul/
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Smoke Attribute
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``type='smoke'`` attribute is used to signify that a test is a so-called
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smoke test, which is a type of test that tests the most vital OpenStack
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functionality, like listing servers or flavors or creating volumes. The
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attribute should be sparingly applied to only the tests that sanity-check the
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most essential functionality of an OpenStack cloud.
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Test fixtures and resources
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---------------------------
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Test level resources should be cleaned-up after the test execution. Clean-up
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is best scheduled using ``addCleanup`` which ensures that the resource cleanup
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code is always invoked, and in reverse order with respect to the creation
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order.
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Test class level resources should be defined in the ``resource_setup`` method
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of the test class, except for any credential obtained from the credentials
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provider, which should be set-up in the ``setup_credentials`` method.
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Cleanup is best scheduled using ``addClassResourceCleanup`` which ensures that
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the cleanup code is always invoked, and in reverse order with respect to the
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creation order.
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In both cases - test level and class level cleanups - a wait loop should be
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scheduled before the actual delete of resources with an asynchronous delete.
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The test base class ``BaseTestCase`` defines Tempest framework for class level
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fixtures. ``setUpClass`` and ``tearDownClass`` are defined here and cannot be
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overwritten by subclasses (enforced via hacking rule T105).
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Set-up is split in a series of steps (setup stages), which can be overwritten
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by test classes. Set-up stages are:
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- ``skip_checks``
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- ``setup_credentials``
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- ``setup_clients``
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- ``resource_setup``
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Tear-down is also split in a series of steps (teardown stages), which are
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stacked for execution only if the corresponding setup stage had been
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reached during the setup phase. Tear-down stages are:
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- ``clear_credentials`` (defined in the base test class)
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- ``resource_cleanup``
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Skipping Tests
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--------------
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Skipping tests should be based on configuration only. If that is not possible,
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it is likely that either a configuration flag is missing, or the test should
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fail rather than be skipped.
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Using discovery for skipping tests is generally discouraged.
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When running a test that requires a certain "feature" in the target
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cloud, if that feature is missing we should fail, because either the test
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configuration is invalid, or the cloud is broken and the expected "feature" is
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not there even if the cloud was configured with it.
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Negative Tests
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--------------
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Error handling is an important aspect of API design and usage. Negative
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tests are a way to ensure that an application can gracefully handle
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invalid or unexpected input. However, as a black box integration test
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suite, Tempest is not suitable for handling all negative test cases, as
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the wide variety and complexity of negative tests can lead to long test
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runs and knowledge of internal implementation details. The bulk of
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negative testing should be handled with project function tests.
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All negative tests should be based on `API-WG guideline`_ . Such negative
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tests can block any changes from accurate failure code to invalid one.
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.. _API-WG guideline: https://specs.openstack.org/openstack/api-wg/guidelines/http.html#failure-code-clarifications
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If facing some gray area which is not clarified on the above guideline, propose
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a new guideline to the API-WG. With a proposal to the API-WG we will be able to
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build a consensus across all OpenStack projects and improve the quality and
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consistency of all the APIs.
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In addition, we have some guidelines for additional negative tests.
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- About BadRequest(HTTP400) case: We can add a single negative tests of
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BadRequest for each resource and method(POST, PUT).
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Please don't implement more negative tests on the same combination of
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resource and method even if API request parameters are different from
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the existing test.
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- About NotFound(HTTP404) case: We can add a single negative tests of
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NotFound for each resource and method(GET, PUT, DELETE, HEAD).
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Please don't implement more negative tests on the same combination
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of resource and method.
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The above guidelines don't cover all cases and we will grow these guidelines
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organically over time. Patches outside of the above guidelines are left up to
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the reviewers' discretion and if we face some conflicts between reviewers, we
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will expand the guideline based on our discussion and experience.
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Test skips because of Known Bugs
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--------------------------------
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If a test is broken because of a bug it is appropriate to skip the test until
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bug has been fixed. You should use the ``skip_because`` decorator so that
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Tempest's skip tracking tool can watch the bug status.
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Example::
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@skip_because(bug="980688")
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def test_this_and_that(self):
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...
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Guidelines
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----------
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- Do not submit changesets with only testcases which are skipped as
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they will not be merged.
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- Consistently check the status code of responses in testcases. The
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earlier a problem is detected the easier it is to debug, especially
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where there is complicated setup required.
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Parallel Test Execution
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-----------------------
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Tempest by default runs its tests in parallel this creates the possibility for
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interesting interactions between tests which can cause unexpected failures.
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Dynamic credentials provides protection from most of the potential race
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conditions between tests outside the same class. But there are still a few of
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things to watch out for to try to avoid issues when running your tests in
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parallel.
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- Resources outside of a project scope still have the potential to conflict. This
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is a larger concern for the admin tests since most resources and actions that
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require admin privileges are outside of projects.
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- Races between methods in the same class are not a problem because
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parallelization in Tempest is at the test class level, but if there is a json
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and xml version of the same test class there could still be a race between
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methods.
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- The rand_name() function from tempest.lib.common.utils.data_utils should be
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used anywhere a resource is created with a name. Static naming should be
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avoided to prevent resource conflicts.
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- If the execution of a set of tests is required to be serialized then locking
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can be used to perform this. See usage of ``LockFixture`` for examples of
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using locking.
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Sample Configuration File
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-------------------------
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The sample config file is autogenerated using a script. If any changes are made
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to the config variables in tempest/config.py then the sample config file must be
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regenerated. This can be done running::
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tox -e genconfig
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Unit Tests
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----------
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Unit tests are a separate class of tests in Tempest. They verify Tempest
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itself, and thus have a different set of guidelines around them:
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1. They can not require anything running externally. All you should need to
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run the unit tests is the git tree, python and the dependencies installed.
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This includes running services, a config file, etc.
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2. The unit tests cannot use setUpClass, instead fixtures and testresources
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should be used for shared state between tests.
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.. _TestDocumentation:
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Test Documentation
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------------------
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For tests being added we need to require inline documentation in the form of
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docstrings to explain what is being tested. In API tests for a new API a class
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level docstring should be added to an API reference doc. If one doesn't exist
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a TODO comment should be put indicating that the reference needs to be added.
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For individual API test cases a method level docstring should be used to
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explain the functionality being tested if the test name isn't descriptive
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enough. For example::
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def test_get_role_by_id(self):
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"""Get a role by its id."""
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the docstring there is superfluous and shouldn't be added. but for a method
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like::
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def test_volume_backup_create_get_detailed_list_restore_delete(self):
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pass
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a docstring would be useful because while the test title is fairly descriptive
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the operations being performed are complex enough that a bit more explanation
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will help people figure out the intent of the test.
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For scenario tests a class level docstring describing the steps in the scenario
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is required. If there is more than one test case in the class individual
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docstrings for the workflow in each test methods can be used instead. A good
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example of this would be::
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class TestServerBasicOps(manager.ScenarioTest):
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"""The test suite for server basic operations
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This smoke test case follows this basic set of operations:
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* Create a keypair for use in launching an instance
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* Create a security group to control network access in instance
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* Add simple permissive rules to the security group
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* Launch an instance
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* Perform ssh to instance
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* Verify metadata service
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* Verify metadata on config_drive
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* Terminate the instance
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"""
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Test Identification with Idempotent ID
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--------------------------------------
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Every function that provides a test must have an ``idempotent_id`` decorator
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that is a unique ``uuid-4`` instance. This ID is used to complement the fully
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qualified test name and track test functionality through refactoring. The
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format of the metadata looks like::
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@decorators.idempotent_id('585e934c-448e-43c4-acbf-d06a9b899997')
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def test_list_servers_with_detail(self):
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# The created server should be in the detailed list of all servers
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...
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Tempest.lib includes a ``check-uuid`` tool that will test for the existence
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and uniqueness of idempotent_id metadata for every test. If you have
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Tempest installed you run the tool against Tempest by calling from the
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Tempest repo::
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check-uuid
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It can be invoked against any test suite by passing a package name::
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check-uuid --package <package_name>
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Tests without an ``idempotent_id`` can be automatically fixed by running
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the command with the ``--fix`` flag, which will modify the source package
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by inserting randomly generated uuids for every test that does not have
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one::
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check-uuid --fix
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The ``check-uuid`` tool is used as part of the Tempest gate job
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to ensure that all tests have an ``idempotent_id`` decorator.
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Branchless Tempest Considerations
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---------------------------------
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Starting with the OpenStack Icehouse release Tempest no longer has any stable
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branches. This is to better ensure API consistency between releases because
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the API behavior should not change between releases. This means that the stable
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branches are also gated by the Tempest master branch, which also means that
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proposed commits to Tempest must work against both the master and all the
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currently supported stable branches of the projects. As such there are a few
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special considerations that have to be accounted for when pushing new changes
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to Tempest.
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1. New Tests for new features
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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When adding tests for new features that were not in previous releases of the
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projects the new test has to be properly skipped with a feature flag. This can
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be just as simple as using the ``@utils.requires_ext()`` or
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``testtools.skipUnless`` decorators to check if the required extension (or
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discoverable optional API) or feature is enabled or can be as difficult as
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adding a new config option to the appropriate section. If there isn't a method
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of selecting the new **feature** from the config file then there won't be a
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mechanism to disable the test with older stable releases and the new test
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won't be able to merge.
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Introduction of a new feature flag requires specifying a default value for
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the corresponding config option that is appropriate in the latest OpenStack
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release. Because Tempest is branchless, the feature flag's default value will
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need to be overridden to a value that is appropriate in earlier releases
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in which the feature isn't available. In DevStack, this can be accomplished
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by modifying Tempest's `lib installation script`_ for previous branches
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(because DevStack is branched).
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.. _lib installation script: https://opendev.org/openstack/devstack/src/branch/master/lib/tempest
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2. Bug fix on core project needing Tempest changes
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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When trying to land a bug fix which changes a tested API you'll have to use the
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following procedure::
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1. Propose change to the project, get a +2 on the change even with failing
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2. Propose skip on Tempest which will only be approved after the
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corresponding change in the project has a +2 on change
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3. Land project change in master and all open stable branches (if required)
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4. Land changed test in Tempest
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Otherwise the bug fix won't be able to land in the project.
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Handily, `Zuul's cross-repository dependencies
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<https://docs.openstack.org/infra/zuul/user/gating.html#cross-project-dependencies>`_.
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can be leveraged to do without step 2 and to have steps 3 and 4 happen
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"atomically". To do that, make the patch written in step 1 to depend (refer to
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Zuul's documentation above) on the patch written in step 4. The commit message
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for the Tempest change should have a link to the Gerrit review that justifies
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that change.
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3. New Tests for existing features
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If a test is being added for a feature that exists in all the current releases
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of the projects then the only concern is that the API behavior is the same
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across all the versions of the project being tested. If the behavior is not
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consistent the test will not be able to merge.
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API Stability
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-------------
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For new tests being added to Tempest the assumption is that the API being
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tested is considered stable and adheres to the OpenStack API stability
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guidelines. If an API is still considered experimental or in development then
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it should not be tested by Tempest until it is considered stable.
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