mirror of https://github.com/ceph/ceph
499 lines
20 KiB
ReStructuredText
499 lines
20 KiB
ReStructuredText
==================================================
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`Teuthology` -- The Ceph integration test runner
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==================================================
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The Ceph project needs automated tests. Because Ceph is a highly
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distributed system, and has active kernel development, its testing
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requirements are quite different from e.g. typical LAMP web
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applications. Nothing out there seemed to handle our requirements,
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so we wrote our own framework, called `Teuthology`.
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Overview
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========
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Teuthology runs a given set of Python functions (`tasks`), with an SSH
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connection to every host participating in the test. The SSH connection
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uses `Paramiko <http://www.lag.net/paramiko/>`__, a native Python
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client for the SSH2 protocol, and this allows us to e.g. run multiple
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commands inside a single SSH connection, to speed up test
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execution. Tests can use `gevent <http://www.gevent.org/>`__ to
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perform actions concurrently or in the background.
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Build
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=====
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Teuthology is not meant to be distributed as a library, therefore we depend
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on the pinned dependencies listed in ``requirements.txt``, the ``setup.py``
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will not list any and will only be there to install the package entry points
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(a.k.a teuthology's scripts).
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Bootstrap for Ubuntu Systems
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----------------------------
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A ``boostrap`` script is provided for automated builds/execution of teuthology
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itself. You can run it directly **only if you are using Ubuntu**.
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Teuthology uses several Python packages that are not in the standard
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library. To make the dependencies easier to get right, we use a
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`virtualenv` to manage them. To get started, ensure you have the
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``virtualenv`` and ``pip`` programs installed; e.g. on Debian/Ubuntu::
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sudo apt-get install python-dev python-virtualenv python-pip libevent-dev libmysqlclient-dev python-libvirt
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and then run::
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./bootstrap
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MacOS X
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-------
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.. note:: These instructions assume you are using `homebrew <http://brew.sh/>`_
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As always, create a ``virtualenv`` specific to teuthology and make sure it
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is activated before proceeding (location doesn't matter, we use an example
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location)::
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mkdir ~/.virtualenvs
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virtualenv --system-site-packages ~/.virtualenvs/teuthology
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source ~/.virtualenvs/teuthology/bin/activate
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Install the system dependencies::
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brew install libvirt mysql libevent
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Make sure you are able to import ``libvirt`` without error::
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python -c "import libvirt"
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If python can't find libvirt yet, you may need to do the following:
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cd /Library/Python/{pyversion}/site-packages
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sudo ln -s /usr/local/Cellar/libvirt/{version}/lib/python{pyversion}/site-packages/* .
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Finally, install the teuthology package and ``requirements.txt``::
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python setup.py develop
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pip install -r requirements.txt
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Generic install
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---------------
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These instructions should help get teuthology installed properly in
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a system that is not OSX or Debian-based.
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Install all the system dependencies needed:
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* mysql client
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* libevent
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* libvirt (with the Python bindings)
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Install Python packaging tools:
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* pip
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* virtualenv
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In some cases, depending on the OS, you will need a python development package
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with some build helpers that are required to build packages. In Ubuntu, this is
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the ``python-dev`` package.
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With a dedicated ``virtualenv`` activated, install the teuthology package and
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``requirements.txt``::
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python setup.py develop
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pip install -r requirements.txt
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Test configuration
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==================
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An integration test run takes three items of configuration:
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- ``targets``: what hosts to run on; this is a dictionary mapping
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hosts to ssh host keys, like:
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"username@hostname.example.com: ssh-rsa long_hostkey_here"
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- ``roles``: how to use the hosts; this is a list of lists, where each
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entry lists all the roles to be run on a single host; for example, a
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single entry might say ``[mon.1, osd.1]``
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- ``tasks``: how to set up the cluster and what tests to run on it;
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see below for examples
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The format for this configuration is `YAML <http://yaml.org/>`__, a
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structured data format that is still human-readable and editable.
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For example, a full config for a test run that sets up a three-machine
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cluster, mounts Ceph via ``ceph-fuse``, and leaves you at an interactive
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Python prompt for manual exploration (and enabling you to SSH in to
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the nodes & use the live cluster ad hoc), might look like this::
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roles:
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- [mon.0, mds.0, osd.0]
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- [mon.1, osd.1]
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- [mon.2, client.0]
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targets:
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ubuntu@host07.example.com: ssh-rsa host07_ssh_key
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ubuntu@host08.example.com: ssh-rsa host08_ssh_key
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ubuntu@host09.example.com: ssh-rsa host09_ssh_key
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tasks:
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- install:
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- ceph:
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- ceph-fuse: [client.0]
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- interactive:
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The number of entries under ``roles`` and ``targets`` must match.
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Note the colon after every task name in the ``tasks`` section.
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The ``install`` task needs to precede all other tasks.
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The listed targets need resolvable hostnames. If you do not have a DNS server
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running, you can add entries to ``/etc/hosts``. You also need to be able to SSH
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in to the listed targets without passphrases, and the remote user needs to have
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passwordless `sudo` access. Note that the ssh keys at the end of the
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``targets`` entries are the public ssh keys for the hosts. On Ubuntu, these
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are located at /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub
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If you'd save the above file as ``example.yaml``, you could run
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teuthology on it by saying::
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./virtualenv/bin/teuthology example.yaml
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You can also pass the ``-v`` option, for more verbose execution. See
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``teuthology --help`` for more.
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Multiple config files
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---------------------
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You can pass multiple files as arguments to teuthology. Each one
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will be read as a config file, and their contents will be merged. This
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allows you to e.g. share definitions of what a "simple 3 node cluster"
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is. The source tree comes with ``roles/3-simple.yaml``, so we could
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skip the ``roles`` section in the above ``example.yaml`` and then
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run::
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./virtualenv/bin/teuthology roles/3-simple.yaml example.yaml
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Reserving target machines
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-------------------------
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Before locking machines will work, you must create a .teuthology.yaml
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file in your home directory that sets a lock_server, i.e.::
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lock_server: http://host.example.com:8080/lock
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Teuthology automatically locks nodes for you if you specify the
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``--lock`` option. Without this option, you must specify machines to
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run on in a ``targets.yaml`` file, and lock them using
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teuthology-lock.
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Note that the default owner of a machine is ``USER@HOST``.
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You can override this with the ``--owner`` option when running
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teuthology or teuthology-lock.
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With teuthology-lock, you can also add a description, so you can
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remember which tests you were running on them. This can be done when
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locking or unlocking machines, or as a separate action with the
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``--update`` option. To lock 3 machines and set a description, run::
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./virtualenv/bin/teuthology-lock --lock-many 3 --desc 'test foo'
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If machines become unusable for some reason, you can mark them down::
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./virtualenv/bin/teuthology-lock --update --status down machine1 machine2
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To see the status of all machines, use the ``--list`` option. This can
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be restricted to particular machines as well::
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./virtualenv/bin/teuthology-lock --list machine1 machine2
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Tasks
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=====
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A task is a Python module in the ``teuthology.task`` package, with a
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callable named ``task``. It gets the following arguments:
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- ``ctx``: a context that is available through the lifetime of the
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test run, and has useful attributes such as ``cluster``, letting the
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task access the remote hosts. Tasks can also store their internal
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state here. (TODO beware namespace collisions.)
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- ``config``: the data structure after the colon in the config file,
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e.g. for the above ``ceph-fuse`` example, it would be a list like
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``["client.0"]``.
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Tasks can be simple functions, called once in the order they are
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listed in ``tasks``. But sometimes, it makes sense for a task to be
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able to clean up after itself; for example, unmounting the filesystem
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after a test run. A task callable that returns a Python `context
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manager
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<http://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html#typecontextmanager>`__
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will have the manager added to a stack, and the stack will be unwound
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at the end of the run. This means the cleanup actions are run in
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reverse order, both on success and failure. A nice way of writing
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context managers is the ``contextlib.contextmanager`` decorator; look
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for that string in the existing tasks to see examples, and note where
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they use ``yield``.
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Further details on some of the more complex tasks such as install or workunit
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can be obtained via python help. For example::
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>>> import teuthology.task.workunit
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>>> help(teuthology.task.workunit)
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displays a page of more documentation and more concrete examples.
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Some of the more important / commonly used tasks include:
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* ``chef``: Run the chef task.
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* ``install``: by default, the install task goes to gitbuilder and installs the
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results of the latest build. You can, however, add additional parameters to
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the test configuration to cause it to install any branch, SHA, archive or
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URL. The following are valid parameters.
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- ``branch``: specify a branch (bobtail, cuttlefish...)
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- ``flavor``: specify a flavor (next, unstable...). Flavors can be thought of
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as subsets of branches. Sometimes (unstable, for example) they may have a
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predefined meaning.
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- ``project``: specify a project (ceph, samba...)
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- ``sha1``: install the build with this sha1 value.
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- ``tag``: specify a tag/identifying text for this build (v47.2, v48.1...)
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* ``ceph``: Bring up Ceph
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* ``overrides``: override behavior. Typically, this includes sub-tasks being
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overridden. Sub-tasks can nest further information. For example, overrides
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of install tasks are project specific, so the following section of a yaml
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file would cause all ceph installation to default into using the cuttlefish
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branch::
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overrides:
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install:
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ceph:
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branch: cuttlefish
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* ``workunit``: workunits are a way of grouping tasks and behavior on targets.
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* ``sequential``: group the sub-tasks into a unit where the sub-tasks run
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sequentially as listed.
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* ``parallel``: group the sub-tasks into a unit where the sub-task all run in
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parallel.
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Sequential and parallel tasks can be nested. Tasks run sequentially if not
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specified.
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The above list is a very incomplete description of the tasks available on
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teuthology. The teuthology/task subdirectory contains all the python files
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that implement tasks.
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Many of these tasks are used to run shell scripts that are defined in the
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ceph/ceph-qa-suite.
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Troubleshooting
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===============
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Sometimes when a bug triggers, instead of automatic cleanup, you want
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to explore the system as is. Adding a top-level::
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interactive-on-error: true
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as a config file for teuthology will make that possible. With that
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option, any *task* that fails, will have the ``interactive`` task
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called after it. This means that before any cleanup happens, you get a
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chance to inspect the system -- both through Teuthology and via extra
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SSH connections -- and the cleanup completes only when you choose so.
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Just exit the interactive Python session to continue the cleanup.
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Note that this only catches exceptions *between* the tasks. If a task
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calls multiple subtasks, e.g. with ``contextutil.nested``, those
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cleanups *will* be performed. Later on, we can let tasks communicate
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the subtasks they wish to invoke to the top-level runner, avoiding
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this issue.
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Test Sandbox Directory
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======================
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Teuthology currently places most test files and mount points in a
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sandbox directory, defaulting to ``/home/$USER/cephtest``. To change
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the location of the sandbox directory, the following option can be
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specified in ``$HOME/.teuthology.yaml``::
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test_path: <directory>
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VIRTUAL MACHINE SUPPORT
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=======================
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Teuthology also supports virtual machines, which can function like
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physical machines but differ in the following ways:
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VPSHOST:
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--------
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A new entry, vpshost, has been added to the teuthology database of
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available machines. For physical machines, this value is null. For
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virtual machines, this entry is the name of the physical machine that
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that virtual machine resides on.
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There are fixed "slots" for virtual machines that appear in the teuthology
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database. These slots have a machine type of vps and can be locked like
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any other machine. The existence of a vpshost field is how teuthology
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knows whether or not a database entry represents a physical or a virtual
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machine.
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The following needs to be set in ~/.libvirt/libvirt.conf in order to get the
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right virtual machine associations for the Inktank lab::
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uri_aliases = [
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'mira001=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira001.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira003=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira003.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira004=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira004.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira006=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira006.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira007=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira007.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira008=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira008.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira009=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira009.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira010=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira010.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira011=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira011.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira013=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira013.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira014=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira014.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira015=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira015.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira017=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira017.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira018=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira018.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'mira020=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@mira020.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi01=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi01.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi02=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi02.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi03=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi03.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi04=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi04.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi05=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi05.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi06=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi06.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi07=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi07.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'vercoi08=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@vercoi08.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'senta01=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@senta01.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'senta02=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@senta02.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'senta03=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@senta03.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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'senta04=qemu+ssh://ubuntu@senta04.front.sepia.ceph.com/system?no_tty',
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]
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DOWNBURST:
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----------
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When a virtual machine is locked, downburst is run on that machine to install a
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new image. This allows the user to set different virtual OSes to be installed
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on the newly created virtual machine. Currently the default virtual machine is
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ubuntu (precise). A different vm installation can be set using the
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``--os-type`` option in ``teuthology.lock``.
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When a virtual machine is unlocked, downburst destroys the image on the
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machine.
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Temporary yaml files are used to downburst a virtual machine. A typical
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yaml file will look like this::
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downburst:
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cpus: 1
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disk-size: 30G
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distro: centos
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networks:
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- {source: front}
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ram: 4G
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These values are used by downburst to create the virtual machine.
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HOST KEYS:
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----------
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Because teuthology reinstalls a new machine, a new hostkey is generated. After
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locking, once a connection is established to the new machine,
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``teuthology-lock`` with the ``--list`` or ``--list-targets`` options will
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display the new keys. When vps machines are locked using the ``--lock-many``
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option, a message is displayed indicating that ``--list-targets`` should be run
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later.
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CEPH-QA-CHEF:
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-------------
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Once teuthology starts after a new vm is installed, teuthology
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checks for the existence of ``/ceph-qa-ready``. If this file is not
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present, ``ceph-qa-chef`` is run when teuthology first comes up.
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ASSUMPTIONS:
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------------
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It is assumed that downburst is on the user's ``$PATH``.
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Test Suites
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===========
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Most of the current teuthology test suite execution scripts automatically
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download their tests from the master branch of the appropriate github
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repository. People who want to run experimental test suites usually modify the
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download method in the ``teuthology/task`` script to use some other branch or
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repository. This should be generalized in later teuthology releases.
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Teuthology QA suites can be found in ``src/ceph-qa-suite``. Make sure that this
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directory exists in your source tree before running the test suites.
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Each suite name is determined by the name of the directory in ``ceph-qa-suite``
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that contains that suite. The directory contains subdirectories and yaml files,
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which, when assembled, produce valid tests that can be run. The test suite
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application generates combinations of these files and thus ends up running a
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set of tests based off the data in the directory for the suite.
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To run a suite, enter::
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./schedule_suite.sh <suite> <ceph> <kernel> <email> <flavor> <teuth> <mtype> <template>
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where:
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* ``suite``: the name of the suite (the directory in ceph-qa-suite).
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* ``ceph``: ceph branch to be used.
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* ``kernel``: version of the kernel to be used.
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* ``email``: email address to send the results to.
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* ``flavor``: flavor of the test
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* ``teuth``: version of teuthology to run
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* ``mtype``: machine type of the run
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* ``templates``: template file used for further modifying the suite (optional)
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For example, consider::
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schedule_suite.sh rbd wip-fix cuttlefish bob.smith@foo.com master cuttlefish plana
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The above command runs the rbd suite using wip-fix as the ceph branch, a
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straight cuttlefish kernel, and the master flavor of cuttlefish teuthology. It
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will run on plana machines.
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In order for a queued task to be run, a teuthworker thread on
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``teuthology.front.sepia.ceph.com`` needs to remove the task from the queue.
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On ``teuthology.front.sepia.ceph.com``, run ``ps aux | grep teuthology-worker``
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to view currently running tasks. If no processes are reading from the test
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version that you are running, additonal teuthworker tasks need to be started.
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To start these tasks: * copy your build tree to ``/home/teuthworker`` on
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``teuthology.front.sepia.ceph.com``. * Give it a unique name (in this example,
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xxx) * start up some number of worker threads (as many as machines you are
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testing with, there are 60 running for the default queue)::
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/home/virtualenv/bin/python
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/var/lib/teuthworker/xxx/virtualenv/bin/teuthworker
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/var/lib/teuthworker/archive --tube xxx
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--log-dir /var/lib/teuthworker/archive/worker_logs
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|
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Note: The threads on teuthology.front.sepia.ceph.com are started via
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~/teuthworker/start.sh. You can use that file as a model for your
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own threads, or add to this file if you want your threads to be
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|
more permanent.
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|
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Once the suite completes, an email message is sent to the users specified, and
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|
a large amount of information is left on ``teuthology.front.sepia.ceph.com`` in
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|
``/var/lib/teuthworker/archive``.
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|
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This is symbolically linked to /a for convenience. A new directory is created
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|
whose name consists of a concatenation of the date and time that the suite was
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|
started, the name of the suite, the ceph branch tested, the kernel used, and
|
|
the flavor. For every test run there is a directory whose name is the pid
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|
number of the pid of that test. Each of these directory contains a copy of the
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|
``teuthology.log`` for that process. Other information from the suite is
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|
stored in files in the directory, and task-specific yaml files and other logs
|
|
are saved in the subdirectories.
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|
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|
These logs are also publically available at
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|
``http://qa-proxy.ceph.com/teuthology/``.
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