Refactor snap to work with core18. (#73)

Refactor snap to work with core18.

Giving the snapcraft.yaml a base property helps tremendously with the
efficiency of the build process, and I believe that it puts us in a
better position to reliably support non Ubuntu distros going forward.

This also bases us on long supported bionic libraries, and gives us a
nice place to work from as we add Python 3 and Stein support, as well
as general polish and fixes.
This commit is contained in:
Pete Vander Giessen 2019-06-25 11:31:42 -04:00 committed by GitHub
parent 575a7ee54c
commit f45bfd913d
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
13 changed files with 718 additions and 56 deletions

16
.travis.yaml Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
dist: bionic
sudo: required
language: python
python:
- "2.7"
before_install:
- sudo apt -qq update
- sudo apt install -y petname
virtualenv:
system_site_packages: true
install:
- sudo snap install multipass --classic --beta
- sudo snap install snapcraft --classic
- snapcraft
script:
- tests/basic_test.sh

View File

@ -145,7 +145,8 @@ Answer the questions as follows:
<tr><td>cloud type:</td> <td><code>openstack</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>endpoint:</td> <td><code>http://10.20.20.1:5000/v3</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>cert path:</td> <td><code>none</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>region:</td> <td><code>userpass</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>auth type:</td> <td><code>userpass</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>region:</td> <td><code>microstack</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>region endpoint:</td> <td><code>http://10.20.20.1:5000/v3</code></td></tr>
<tr><td>add another region?:</td> <td><code>N</code></td></tr>
</table>

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@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
diff --git a/nova/virt/libvirt/host.py b/nova/virt/libvirt/host.py
index 65ae0ff2f1..b75adf9269 100644
--- a/lib/python2.7/site-packages/nova/virt/libvirt/host.py
+++ b/lib/python2.7/site-packages/nova/virt/libvirt/host.py
@@ -503,21 +503,25 @@ class Host(object):
libvirt_version = conn.getLibVersion()
if op(libvirt_version,
versionutils.convert_version_to_int(lv_ver)):
+ LOG.error("version check false because lv_ver too low")
return False
if hv_ver is not None:
hypervisor_version = conn.getVersion()
if op(hypervisor_version,
versionutils.convert_version_to_int(hv_ver)):
+ LOG.error("version check false because hv_ver too low")
return False
if hv_type is not None:
hypervisor_type = conn.getType()
if hypervisor_type != hv_type:
+ LOG.error("version check false because hv_type too low")
return False
return True
- except Exception:
+ except Exception as e:
+ LOG.exception("version check false because exception {}".format(e))
return False
def has_min_version(self, lv_ver=None, hv_ver=None, hv_type=None):

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@ -36,6 +36,8 @@ setup:
# TODO add local_settings.py
horizon-snap.conf.j2: "{snap_common}/etc/horizon/horizon.conf.d/horizon-snap.conf"
horizon-nginx.conf.j2: "{snap_common}/etc/nginx/snap/sites-enabled/horizon.conf"
libvirtd.conf.j2: "{snap_common}/libvirt/libvirtd.conf"
virtlogd.conf.j2: "{snap_common}/libvirt/virtlogd.conf"
chmod:
"{snap_common}/instances": 0755
entry_points:

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@ -0,0 +1,468 @@
# Master libvirt daemon configuration file
#
# For further information consult https://libvirt.org/format.html
#
# NOTE: the tests/daemon-conf regression test script requires
# that each "PARAMETER = VALUE" line in this file have the parameter
# name just after a leading "#".
#################################################################
#
# Network connectivity controls
#
# Flag listening for secure TLS connections on the public TCP/IP port.
# NB, must pass the --listen flag to the libvirtd process for this to
# have any effect.
#
# It is necessary to setup a CA and issue server certificates before
# using this capability.
#
# This is enabled by default, uncomment this to disable it
#listen_tls = 0
# Listen for unencrypted TCP connections on the public TCP/IP port.
# NB, must pass the --listen flag to the libvirtd process for this to
# have any effect.
#
# Using the TCP socket requires SASL authentication by default. Only
# SASL mechanisms which support data encryption are allowed. This is
# DIGEST_MD5 and GSSAPI (Kerberos5)
#
# This is disabled by default, uncomment this to enable it.
#listen_tcp = 1
# Override the port for accepting secure TLS connections
# This can be a port number, or service name
#
#tls_port = "16514"
# Override the port for accepting insecure TCP connections
# This can be a port number, or service name
#
#tcp_port = "16509"
# Override the default configuration which binds to all network
# interfaces. This can be a numeric IPv4/6 address, or hostname
#
# If the libvirtd service is started in parallel with network
# startup (e.g. with systemd), binding to addresses other than
# the wildcards (0.0.0.0/::) might not be available yet.
#
#listen_addr = "192.168.0.1"
# Flag toggling mDNS advertizement of the libvirt service.
#
# Alternatively can disable for all services on a host by
# stopping the Avahi daemon
#
# This is disabled by default, uncomment this to enable it
#mdns_adv = 1
# Override the default mDNS advertizement name. This must be
# unique on the immediate broadcast network.
#
# The default is "Virtualization Host HOSTNAME", where HOSTNAME
# is substituted for the short hostname of the machine (without domain)
#
#mdns_name = "Virtualization Host Joe Demo"
#################################################################
#
# UNIX socket access controls
#
# Set the UNIX domain socket group ownership. This can be used to
# allow a 'trusted' set of users access to management capabilities
# without becoming root.
#
# This is restricted to 'root' by default.
unix_sock_group = "sudo"
# Set the UNIX socket permissions for the R/O socket. This is used
# for monitoring VM status only
#
# Default allows any user. If setting group ownership, you may want to
# restrict this too.
# unix_sock_ro_perms = "0777"
# Set the UNIX socket permissions for the R/W socket. This is used
# for full management of VMs
#
# Default allows only root. If PolicyKit is enabled on the socket,
# the default will change to allow everyone (eg, 0777)
#
# If not using PolicyKit and setting group ownership for access
# control, then you may want to relax this too.
unix_sock_rw_perms = "0770"
# Set the UNIX socket permissions for the admin interface socket.
#
# Default allows only owner (root), do not change it unless you are
# sure to whom you are exposing the access to.
#unix_sock_admin_perms = "0700"
# Set the name of the directory in which sockets will be found/created.
unix_sock_dir = "{{ snap_common }}/run/libvirt"
#################################################################
#
# Authentication.
#
# - none: do not perform auth checks. If you can connect to the
# socket you are allowed. This is suitable if there are
# restrictions on connecting to the socket (eg, UNIX
# socket permissions), or if there is a lower layer in
# the network providing auth (eg, TLS/x509 certificates)
#
# - sasl: use SASL infrastructure. The actual auth scheme is then
# controlled from /etc/sasl2/libvirt.conf. For the TCP
# socket only GSSAPI & DIGEST-MD5 mechanisms will be used.
# For non-TCP or TLS sockets, any scheme is allowed.
#
# - polkit: use PolicyKit to authenticate. This is only suitable
# for use on the UNIX sockets. The default policy will
# require a user to supply their own password to gain
# full read/write access (aka sudo like), while anyone
# is allowed read/only access.
#
# Set an authentication scheme for UNIX read-only sockets
# By default socket permissions allow anyone to connect
#
# To restrict monitoring of domains you may wish to enable
# an authentication mechanism here
auth_unix_ro = "none"
# Set an authentication scheme for UNIX read-write sockets
# By default socket permissions only allow root. If PolicyKit
# support was compiled into libvirt, the default will be to
# use 'polkit' auth.
#
# If the unix_sock_rw_perms are changed you may wish to enable
# an authentication mechanism here
auth_unix_rw = "none"
# Change the authentication scheme for TCP sockets.
#
# If you don't enable SASL, then all TCP traffic is cleartext.
# Don't do this outside of a dev/test scenario. For real world
# use, always enable SASL and use the GSSAPI or DIGEST-MD5
# mechanism in /etc/sasl2/libvirt.conf
#auth_tcp = "sasl"
# Change the authentication scheme for TLS sockets.
#
# TLS sockets already have encryption provided by the TLS
# layer, and limited authentication is done by certificates
#
# It is possible to make use of any SASL authentication
# mechanism as well, by using 'sasl' for this option
#auth_tls = "none"
# Change the API access control scheme
#
# By default an authenticated user is allowed access
# to all APIs. Access drivers can place restrictions
# on this. By default the 'nop' driver is enabled,
# meaning no access control checks are done once a
# client has authenticated with libvirtd
#
#access_drivers = [ "polkit" ]
#################################################################
#
# TLS x509 certificate configuration
#
# Override the default server key file path
#
#key_file = "/etc/pki/libvirt/private/serverkey.pem"
# Override the default server certificate file path
#
#cert_file = "/etc/pki/libvirt/servercert.pem"
# Override the default CA certificate path
#
#ca_file = "/etc/pki/CA/cacert.pem"
# Specify a certificate revocation list.
#
# Defaults to not using a CRL, uncomment to enable it
#crl_file = "/etc/pki/CA/crl.pem"
#################################################################
#
# Authorization controls
#
# Flag to disable verification of our own server certificates
#
# When libvirtd starts it performs some sanity checks against
# its own certificates.
#
# Default is to always run sanity checks. Uncommenting this
# will disable sanity checks which is not a good idea
#tls_no_sanity_certificate = 1
# Flag to disable verification of client certificates
#
# Client certificate verification is the primary authentication mechanism.
# Any client which does not present a certificate signed by the CA
# will be rejected.
#
# Default is to always verify. Uncommenting this will disable
# verification - make sure an IP whitelist is set
#tls_no_verify_certificate = 1
# A whitelist of allowed x509 Distinguished Names
# This list may contain wildcards such as
#
# "C=GB,ST=London,L=London,O=Red Hat,CN=*"
#
# See the POSIX fnmatch function for the format of the wildcards.
#
# NB If this is an empty list, no client can connect, so comment out
# entirely rather than using empty list to disable these checks
#
# By default, no DN's are checked
#tls_allowed_dn_list = ["DN1", "DN2"]
# A whitelist of allowed SASL usernames. The format for username
# depends on the SASL authentication mechanism. Kerberos usernames
# look like username@REALM
#
# This list may contain wildcards such as
#
# "*@EXAMPLE.COM"
#
# See the POSIX fnmatch function for the format of the wildcards.
#
# NB If this is an empty list, no client can connect, so comment out
# entirely rather than using empty list to disable these checks
#
# By default, no Username's are checked
#sasl_allowed_username_list = ["joe@EXAMPLE.COM", "fred@EXAMPLE.COM" ]
# Override the compile time default TLS priority string. The
# default is usually "NORMAL" unless overridden at build time.
# Only set this is it is desired for libvirt to deviate from
# the global default settings.
#
#tls_priority="NORMAL"
#################################################################
#
# Processing controls
#
# The maximum number of concurrent client connections to allow
# over all sockets combined.
#max_clients = 5000
# The maximum length of queue of connections waiting to be
# accepted by the daemon. Note, that some protocols supporting
# retransmission may obey this so that a later reattempt at
# connection succeeds.
#max_queued_clients = 1000
# The maximum length of queue of accepted but not yet
# authenticated clients. The default value is 20. Set this to
# zero to turn this feature off.
#max_anonymous_clients = 20
# The minimum limit sets the number of workers to start up
# initially. If the number of active clients exceeds this,
# then more threads are spawned, up to max_workers limit.
# Typically you'd want max_workers to equal maximum number
# of clients allowed
#min_workers = 5
#max_workers = 20
# The number of priority workers. If all workers from above
# pool are stuck, some calls marked as high priority
# (notably domainDestroy) can be executed in this pool.
#prio_workers = 5
# Limit on concurrent requests from a single client
# connection. To avoid one client monopolizing the server
# this should be a small fraction of the global max_workers
# parameter.
#max_client_requests = 5
# Same processing controls, but this time for the admin interface.
# For description of each option, be so kind to scroll few lines
# upwards.
#admin_min_workers = 1
#admin_max_workers = 5
#admin_max_clients = 5
#admin_max_queued_clients = 5
#admin_max_client_requests = 5
#################################################################
#
# Logging controls
#
# Logging level: 4 errors, 3 warnings, 2 information, 1 debug
# basically 1 will log everything possible
# Note: Journald may employ rate limiting of the messages logged
# and thus lock up the libvirt daemon. To use the debug level with
# journald you have to specify it explicitly in 'log_outputs', otherwise
# only information level messages will be logged.
#log_level = 3
# Logging filters:
# A filter allows to select a different logging level for a given category
# of logs
# The format for a filter is one of:
# x:name
# x:+name
# where name is a string which is matched against the category
# given in the VIR_LOG_INIT() at the top of each libvirt source
# file, e.g., "remote", "qemu", or "util.json" (the name in the
# filter can be a substring of the full category name, in order
# to match multiple similar categories), the optional "+" prefix
# tells libvirt to log stack trace for each message matching
# name, and x is the minimal level where matching messages should
# be logged:
# 1: DEBUG
# 2: INFO
# 3: WARNING
# 4: ERROR
#
# Multiple filters can be defined in a single @filters, they just need to be
# separated by spaces.
#
# e.g. to only get warning or errors from the remote layer and only errors
# from the event layer:
#log_filters="3:remote 4:event"
# Logging outputs:
# An output is one of the places to save logging information
# The format for an output can be:
# x:stderr
# output goes to stderr
# x:syslog:name
# use syslog for the output and use the given name as the ident
# x:file:file_path
# output to a file, with the given filepath
# x:journald
# output to journald logging system
# In all case the x prefix is the minimal level, acting as a filter
# 1: DEBUG
# 2: INFO
# 3: WARNING
# 4: ERROR
#
# Multiple outputs can be defined, they just need to be separated by spaces.
# e.g. to log all warnings and errors to syslog under the libvirtd ident:
#log_outputs="3:syslog:libvirtd"
#
# Log debug buffer size:
#
# This configuration option is no longer used, since the global
# log buffer functionality has been removed. Please configure
# suitable log_outputs/log_filters settings to obtain logs.
#log_buffer_size = 64
##################################################################
#
# Auditing
#
# This setting allows usage of the auditing subsystem to be altered:
#
# audit_level == 0 -> disable all auditing
# audit_level == 1 -> enable auditing, only if enabled on host (default)
# audit_level == 2 -> enable auditing, and exit if disabled on host
#
#audit_level = 2
#
# If set to 1, then audit messages will also be sent
# via libvirt logging infrastructure. Defaults to 0
#
#audit_logging = 1
###################################################################
# UUID of the host:
# Host UUID is read from one of the sources specified in host_uuid_source.
#
# - 'smbios': fetch the UUID from 'dmidecode -s system-uuid'
# - 'machine-id': fetch the UUID from /etc/machine-id
#
# The host_uuid_source default is 'smbios'. If 'dmidecode' does not provide
# a valid UUID a temporary UUID will be generated.
#
# Another option is to specify host UUID in host_uuid.
#
# Keep the format of the example UUID below. UUID must not have all digits
# be the same.
# NB This default all-zeros UUID will not work. Replace
# it with the output of the 'uuidgen' command and then
# uncomment this entry
#host_uuid = "00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"
#host_uuid_source = "smbios"
###################################################################
# Keepalive protocol:
# This allows libvirtd to detect broken client connections or even
# dead clients. A keepalive message is sent to a client after
# keepalive_interval seconds of inactivity to check if the client is
# still responding; keepalive_count is a maximum number of keepalive
# messages that are allowed to be sent to the client without getting
# any response before the connection is considered broken. In other
# words, the connection is automatically closed approximately after
# keepalive_interval * (keepalive_count + 1) seconds since the last
# message received from the client. If keepalive_interval is set to
# -1, libvirtd will never send keepalive requests; however clients
# can still send them and the daemon will send responses. When
# keepalive_count is set to 0, connections will be automatically
# closed after keepalive_interval seconds of inactivity without
# sending any keepalive messages.
#
#keepalive_interval = 5
#keepalive_count = 5
#
# These configuration options are no longer used. There is no way to
# restrict such clients from connecting since they first need to
# connect in order to ask for keepalive.
#
#keepalive_required = 1
#admin_keepalive_required = 1
# Keepalive settings for the admin interface
#admin_keepalive_interval = 5
#admin_keepalive_count = 5
###################################################################
# Open vSwitch:
# This allows to specify a timeout for openvswitch calls made by
# libvirt. The ovs-vsctl utility is used for the configuration and
# its timeout option is set by default to 5 seconds to avoid
# potential infinite waits blocking libvirt.
#
#ovs_timeout = 5

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@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
# Master virtlogd daemon configuration file
#
#################################################################
#
# Logging controls
#
# Logging level: 4 errors, 3 warnings, 2 information, 1 debug
# basically 1 will log everything possible
#log_level = 3
log_level = 1
# Logging filters:
# A filter allows to select a different logging level for a given category
# of logs
# The format for a filter is one of:
# x:name
# x:+name
# where name is a string which is matched against source file name,
# e.g., "remote", "qemu", or "util/json", the optional "+" prefix
# tells libvirt to log stack trace for each message matching name,
# and x is the minimal level where matching messages should be logged:
# 1: DEBUG
# 2: INFO
# 3: WARNING
# 4: ERROR
#
# Multiple filter can be defined in a single @filters, they just need to be
# separated by spaces.
#
# e.g. to only get warning or errors from the remote layer and only errors
# from the event layer:
#log_filters="3:remote 4:event"
log_filters="1:qemu 3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:rpc"
# Logging outputs:
# An output is one of the places to save logging information
# The format for an output can be:
# x:stderr
# output goes to stderr
# x:syslog:name
# use syslog for the output and use the given name as the ident
# x:file:file_path
# output to a file, with the given filepath
# x:journald
# ouput to the systemd journal
# In all case the x prefix is the minimal level, acting as a filter
# 1: DEBUG
# 2: INFO
# 3: WARNING
# 4: ERROR
#
# Multiple output can be defined, they just need to be separated by spaces.
# e.g. to log all warnings and errors to syslog under the virtlogd ident:
#log_outputs="3:syslog:virtlogd"
#
log_outputs="1:file:{{ snap_common }}/log/libvirtd.log"
# The maximum number of concurrent client connections to allow
# over all sockets combined.
#max_clients = 1024
# Maximum file size before rolling over. Defaults to 2 MB
#max_size = 2097152
# Maximum number of backup files to keep. Defaults to 3,
# not including the primary active file
#max_backups = 3

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@ -19,7 +19,7 @@
# %CopyrightEnd%
#
ROOTDIR=$SNAP/usr/lib/erlang
BINDIR=$ROOTDIR/erts-7.3/bin
BINDIR=$ROOTDIR/erts-9.2/bin
EMU=beam
PROGNAME=`echo $0 | sed 's/.*\///'`
export EMU

14
snap/hooks/configure vendored
View File

@ -34,7 +34,9 @@ echo "Configuring RabbitMQ"
# Rabbitmq isn't always started when we run this. Wait for it to start.
while :;
do
grep "Starting broker... completed" ${SNAP_COMMON}/log/rabbitmq/startup_log && break
grep "Starting broker..." ${SNAP_COMMON}/log/rabbitmq/startup_log && \
grep "completed" ${SNAP_COMMON}/log/rabbitmq/startup_log && \
break
echo "waiting for rabbitmq to start" && sleep 1;
done
@ -63,5 +65,15 @@ openstack image show cirros || {
--public --container-format=bare --disk-format=qcow2 cirros
}
# Restart libvirt and virtlogd to get logging
# TODO: figure out why this doesn't Just Work initially
systemctl restart snap.microstack.*virt*
# Wait for horizon
while ! nc -z 10.20.20.1 80; do sleep 0.1; done;
# Restart Placement API
# Workaround for issue w/ base:core18, where the Placement API throws
# http 500s until it has been restarted.
# TODO: root cause and fix the problem.
systemctl restart snap.microstack.nova-uwsgi.service

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@ -1,9 +1,6 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
install -D $SNAP/var/snap/microstack/common/libvirt/libvirtd.conf $SNAP_COMMON/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
sed -i 's/unix_sock_group = "libvirtd"/unix_sock_group = "sudo"/' $SNAP_COMMON/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
# MySQL snapshot for speedy install
# snapshot is a mysql data dir with
# rocky keystone,nova,glance,neutron dbs.

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@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
if [ ! -f $SNAP_COMMON/libvirt/libvirtd.conf ]; then
install -D $SNAP/var/snap/microstack/common/libvirt/libvirtd.conf $SNAP_COMMON/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
sed -i 's/unix_sock_group = "libvirtd"/unix_sock_group = "sudo"/' $SNAP_COMMON/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
fi

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@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
name: microstack
version: rocky
base: core18
summary: OpenStack on your laptop.
description: |
Microstack gives you an easy way to develop and test OpenStack
@ -229,6 +230,9 @@ apps:
daemon: simple
environment:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH: $SNAP/lib:$SNAP/lib/$SNAPCRAFT_ARCH_TRIPLET:$SNAP/usr/lib:$SNAP/usr/lib/$SNAPCRAFT_ARCH_TRIPLET:$SNAP/usr/lib/$SNAPCRAFT_ARCH_TRIPLET/pulseaudio
virtlogd:
command: virtlogd
daemon: simple
virsh:
command: virsh
@ -315,7 +319,8 @@ parts:
openstack-projects:
plugin: python
python-version: python2
constraints: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openstack/requirements/stable/rocky/upper-constraints.txt
constraints:
- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openstack/requirements/stable/rocky/upper-constraints.txt
source: http://tarballs.openstack.org/keystone/keystone-stable-rocky.tar.gz
python-packages:
- libvirt-python
@ -333,6 +338,7 @@ parts:
- python-swiftclient
build-packages:
- gcc
- git
- libffi-dev
- libssl-dev
- libxml2-dev
@ -342,19 +348,17 @@ parts:
- conntrack
- coreutils
- haproxy
override-build: |
# Ensure libvirt is discovered from previous built part
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=$SNAPCRAFT_STAGE/lib/pkgconfig
snapcraftctl build
- libpython2.7
override-prime: |
snapcraftctl prime
# Uncomment the below line for better python-libvirt debugging output.
# patch --batch --forward --strip 1 --input ../project/patches/nova/nova_log_error.patch
# Now that everything is built, let's disable user site-packages
# as stated in PEP-0370
sed -i usr/lib/python2.7/site.py -e 's/^ENABLE_USER_SITE = None$/ENABLE_USER_SITE = False/'
# This is the last step, let's now compile all our pyc files.
# Ignore errors due to syntax issues in foobar python 2.
./usr/bin/python2.7 -m compileall . || true
keystone-config:
after: [openstack-projects]
plugin: dump
@ -448,7 +452,7 @@ parts:
openvswitch:
# TODO: figure out a better way to fetch the version
source: http://openvswitch.org/releases/openvswitch-2.10.1.tar.gz
source: http://openvswitch.org/releases/openvswitch-2.10.2.tar.gz
plugin: autotools
build-packages:
- libssl-dev
@ -522,15 +526,13 @@ parts:
done
snapcraftctl build
libxml2:
source: http://xmlsoft.org/sources/libxml2-2.9.4.tar.gz
plugin: autotools
# libvirt/qemu
qemu:
source: .
source-subdir: qemu-2.5+dfsg
source-subdir: qemu-2.11+dfsg
plugin: autotools
after:
- openstack-projects
stage-packages:
- seabios
- ipxe-qemu
@ -540,14 +542,14 @@ parts:
- libasound2
- libasyncns0
- libbluetooth3
- libboost-iostreams1.58.0
- libboost-random1.58.0
- libboost-system1.58.0
- libboost-thread1.58.0
- libboost-iostreams1.62.0
- libboost-random1.62.0
- libboost-system1.62.0
- libboost-thread1.62.0
- libcaca0
- libfdt1
- libflac8
- libiscsi2
- libiscsi7
- libjpeg-turbo8
- libnspr4
- libnss3
@ -567,6 +569,7 @@ parts:
- libxau6
- libxcb1
- libxdmcp6
- libxen-dev
- libxext6
build-packages:
- acpica-tools
@ -611,9 +614,12 @@ parts:
- --enable-system
- --target-list=x86_64-softmmu
override-build: |
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.5+dfsg.orig.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.5+dfsg-5ubuntu10.38.debian.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.5+dfsg-5ubuntu10.38.dsc
# Clean up old install
rm -R qemu-2.* || true
# Download sources and patch
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.11+dfsg.orig.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.11+dfsg-1ubuntu7.14.debian.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/q/qemu/qemu_2.11+dfsg-1ubuntu7.14.dsc
dpkg-source -x qemu_*.dsc
snapcraftctl build
organize:
@ -630,7 +636,8 @@ parts:
libvirt:
source: .
source-subdir: libvirt-1.3.1
source-subdir: libvirt-4.0.0
after: [openstack-projects, qemu]
plugin: autotools
build-packages:
- libxml2-dev
@ -648,19 +655,22 @@ parts:
- libpciaccess-dev
- libnl-3-dev
- libnl-route-3-dev
- libxml2-utils
- uuid-dev
- try: [libnuma-dev]
- python-all
- python-six
- wget
- dpkg-dev
- xsltproc
stage-packages:
- try: [dmidecode]
- dmidecode
- dnsmasq
- dnsmasq-utils
- ebtables
- libxml2
- libyajl2
- try: [libnuma1]
- libcurl3-gnutls
- libpcap0.8
- libpciaccess0
configflags:
- --with-qemu
@ -687,12 +697,15 @@ parts:
- DNSMASQ=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/usr/sbin/dnsmasq
- DMIDECODE=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/usr/sbin/dmidecode
- OVSVSCTL=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/bin/ovs-vsctl
- EBTABLES_PATH=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/sbin/ebtables
- IPTABLES_PATH=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/sbin/iptables
- IP6TABLES_PATH=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/sbin/ip6tables
override-build: |
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_1.3.1.orig.tar.gz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_1.3.1-1ubuntu10.25.debian.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_1.3.1-1ubuntu10.25.dsc
# Clean up old install
rm -R libvirt-4.0.* || true
# Download sources and patch
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_4.0.0.orig.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_4.0.0-1ubuntu8.10.debian.tar.xz
wget http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/libv/libvirt/libvirt_4.0.0-1ubuntu8.10.dsc
dpkg-source -x libvirt*.dsc
snapcraftctl build
organize:
@ -733,13 +746,13 @@ parts:
# Memcached Token Caching
memcached:
plugin: autotools
source: https://memcached.org/files/memcached-1.5.10.tar.gz
source: https://memcached.org/files/memcached-1.5.14.tar.gz
build-packages:
- libevent-dev
- gcc
- make
stage-packages:
- libevent-2.0-5
- libevent-2.1-6
override-build: |
./configure --prefix=$SNAPCRAFT_PART_INSTALL
make
@ -759,7 +772,7 @@ parts:
source: https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/bridge-utils/bridge-utils-1.6.tar.gz
plugin: autotools
iproute2:
source: https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/iproute2/iproute2-4.9.0.tar.gz
source: https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/iproute2/iproute2-4.20.0.tar.gz
plugin: autotools
build-packages:
- bison
@ -773,7 +786,8 @@ parts:
configflags:
- --disable-nftables
- --prefix=/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current
install: |
override-build: |
snapcraftctl build
cp --remove-destination $SNAPCRAFT_PART_INSTALL/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/sbin/xtables-multi \
$SNAPCRAFT_PART_INSTALL/snap/$SNAPCRAFT_PROJECT_NAME/current/bin/iptables-xml
organize:

View File

@ -1,22 +1,37 @@
#!/bin/bash
##############################################################################
#
# This is a "basic" test script for Microstack. It will install the
# microstack snap, spin up a test instance, and verify that the test
# instance is accessible, and can access the Internet.
#
# The multipass snap and the petname debian package must be installed
# on the host system in order to run this test.
#
# The basic test accepts two command line arguments:
#
# -u <channel> # First installs a released snap from the named
# # channel, in order to test basic upgrade functionality.
#
# -d <distro> # Specifies the distro of the multipass vm.
#
##############################################################################
# Configuration and checks
set -ex
# Command line args.
# Pass -u edge/candidate/stable to install
# microstack from the matching channel in the snap store before
# installing the locally built snap. This will help verify that we
# aren't breaking snaps in the wild with a change.
UPGRADE_FROM="none"
while getopts u: option
DISTRO=18.04
while getopts u:d: option
do
case "${option}"
in
u) UPGRADE_FROM=${OPTARG};;
d) DISTRO=${OPTARG};;
esac
done
# Dependencies. TODO: move these into a testing harness
command -v multipass > /dev/null || (echo "Please install multipass."; exit 1);
command -v petname > /dev/null || (echo "Please install petname."; exit 1);
if [ ! -f microstack_rocky_amd64.snap ]; then
@ -26,7 +41,13 @@ if [ ! -f microstack_rocky_amd64.snap ]; then
fi
MACHINE=$(petname)
DISTRO=18.04
# Setup
echo "++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++"
echo "++ Starting tests on $MACHINE. ++"
echo "++ Distro: $DISTRO ++"
echo "++ Upgrade from: $UPGRADE_FROM ++"
echo "++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++"
# Launch a machine and copy the snap to it.
multipass launch --cpus 2 --mem 16G $DISTRO --name $MACHINE
@ -41,6 +62,11 @@ fi
# Install the snap under test
multipass exec $MACHINE -- \
sudo snap install --classic --dangerous microstack*.snap
# Comment out the above and uncomment below to install the version of
# the snap from the store.
# TODO: add this as a flag.
#multipass exec $MACHINE -- \
# sudo snap install --classic --edge microstack
# Run microstack.launch
multipass exec $MACHINE -- /snap/bin/microstack.launch breakfast
@ -86,9 +112,10 @@ done;
# Cleanup
unset IP
echo "Completed tests. Tearing down $MACHINE."
echo "++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++"
echo "++ Completed tests. Tearing down $MACHINE. ++"
echo "++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++"
multipass stop $MACHINE
multipass delete $MACHINE
multipass purge # This is a little bit rude to do, but we assume that
# we can beat up on the test machine a bit.

30
tests/very-basic-test.sh Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
#!/bin/bash
##############################################################################
#
# This is a "very basic" test script for Microstack. It will install
# the microstack snap on a vm, and dump you into a shell on the vm for
# troubleshooting.
#
# The multipass snap and the petname debian package must be installed
# on the host system in order to run this test.
#
##############################################################################
set -ex
UPGRADE_FROM="none"
DISTRO=18.04
MACHINE=$(petname)
# Make a vm
multipass launch --cpus 2 --mem 16G $DISTRO --name $MACHINE
# Install the snap
multipass copy-files microstack_rocky_amd64.snap $MACHINE:
multipass exec $MACHINE -- \
sudo snap install --classic --dangerous microstack*.snap
# Drop the user into a snap shell, as root.
multipass exec $MACHINE -- \
sudo snap run --shell microstack.launch