Ceph is a distributed object, block, and file storage platform
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Yuri Weinstein 9825d85965 Merge pull request #115 from dachary/wip-erasure-code-workloads
erasure-code: do not schedule lrc workloads just yet
2014-08-30 09:45:16 -07:00
clusters kcephfs/thrash: add standby mds 2014-07-31 21:22:09 -07:00
config_options added config_options to enable adding ceph config file entries to ceph-deploy task 2014-08-28 18:48:40 -07:00
debug turn on mds & client debugging 2013-10-15 12:05:28 -07:00
distros Add centos/rhel7 to distros 'all' folder. 2014-08-20 10:27:05 -07:00
erasure-code erasure-code: add various erasure-code workloads 2014-08-30 11:17:56 +02:00
fs xfs: enable sloppy crc 2013-10-02 13:30:13 -07:00
machine_types set boto timeout, too, for s3tests 2014-08-22 15:28:58 -07:00
overrides ceph config data goes in conf, not config 2013-04-26 11:25:14 -07:00
rgw_pool_type added a test with erasure_code_profile parameters 2014-08-20 22:27:04 -07:00
suites erasure-code: do not schedule lrc workloads just yet 2014-08-30 18:31:50 +02:00
tasks Added dmcrypt option and ability to choose same or different disk for ceph journal 2014-08-28 18:21:30 -07:00
.gitignore gitignore: ignore vim temp files 2014-08-21 23:09:00 +01:00
README README: update for new flexible structure. 2013-08-28 11:30:25 -07:00

ceph-qa-suite
-------------

clusters/    - some predefined cluster layouts
suites/      - set suite

The suites directory has a hierarchical collection of tests.  This can be
freeform, but generally follows the convention of

  suites/<test suite name>/<test group>/...

A test is described by a yaml fragment.

A test can exist as a single .yaml file in the directory tree.  For example:

 suites/foo/one.yaml
 suites/foo/two.yaml

is a simple group of two tests.

A directory with a magic '+' file represents a test that combines all
other items in the directory into a single yaml fragment.  For example:

 suites/foo/bar/+
 suites/foo/bar/a.yaml
 suites/foo/bar/b.yaml
 suites/foo/bar/c.yaml

is a single test consisting of a + b + c.

A directory with a magic '%' file represents a test matrix formed from
all other items in the directory.  For example,

 suites/baz/%
 suites/baz/a.yaml
 suites/baz/b/b1.yaml
 suites/baz/b/b2.yaml
 suites/baz/c.yaml
 suites/baz/d/d1.yaml
 suites/baz/d/d2.yaml

is a 4-dimensional test matrix.  Two dimensions (a, c) are trivial (1
item), so this is really 2x2 = 4 tests, which are

  a + b1 + c + d1
  a + b1 + c + d2
  a + b2 + c + d1
  a + b2 + c + d2

Symlinks are okay.

The teuthology code can be found in https://github.com/ceph/teuthology.git