Anne,

Thank you for the information, I was unaware those existed. It appears some of 
the things we are discussing here are already described in those pages.

Aaron

On Oct 20, 2011, at 9:15 AM, Anne Gentle wrote:

Hi Aaron and all -

Just wanted to make you aware of testing wiki pages that exist already:

http://wiki.openstack.org/SmallTestingGuide

http://wiki.openstack.org/TestGuide

If you look at the info for these pages you can see who has worked on them, for 
example see http://wiki.openstack.org/TestGuide?action=info for all the writers 
on the page. I'm just listed at the bottom as the last editor.

Looks like there's work at standardizing vocabulary there.

Anne


On Thu, Oct 20, 2011 at 6:53 AM, Aaron Lee 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Adding dependancies between tests is going to create a maintenance and 
communication headache later. If the test requires a specific state to run, 
that state should be setup, or asserted within that test.

We need to set up a wiki page that gives us a glossary of testing terms. It 
seems like everyone here has a different definition of "framework", "test", 
"suite", "functional", and "integration". I think we need to make sure we are 
expecting the same things from this project, and that we all don't just agree 
to run in different directions. I'll set this up when I get in to the office.

I strongly agree with your point about not making the official integration 
suite dependent on a single implementation. Yesterday Daryl was talking about 
making sure the tests were extensible enough that anyone could keep a separate 
set(s) of tests around for extensions or their custom configuration. This 
should not be a problem, if we make the configuration and client easy enough to 
use, and the inclusion of additional tests into the project could be handled 
with git submodules. If we keep the tests separated in this way it would not be 
hard to keep the main suite down to a minimum "does it work, can be run on a 
live system" set of tests, and have separate submodules for twisting, torquing, 
breaking, or whatever other mayhem we want to cause on a test system.

Aaron

On Oct 19, 2011, at 10:48 PM, Joseph Heck wrote:

Fair enough; let me outline the goals I'm pursuing:

In the integration tests, I'm looking for a suite of tests that are relatively 
agnostic to the implementation of the components of OpenStack, and which 
interact with OpenStack through the API's (and potentially nova-* swift-* 
command line).

I have a hardware environment that I want to "burn down and rebuild" on a 
regular basis (i.e. PXE boot and clean-slate the stuff), installing and 
configuring OpenStack from the trunk branches (or a release branch if we're at 
milestone time) and run test that use these systems together:
 - the integration authorization, authentication (keystone) with nova and swift
 - using glance in conjunction with swift
 - using glance in conjunction with nova
 - working the dashboard and it's UI mechanisms that interacts with everything 
else behind it through the keystone "endpoints" service catalog

I'm hoping that this framework would allow for supporting any number of 
installs - whether it's Fedora & GridDynamics RPMs, Ubuntu+KVM, or interesting 
and random variations on the themes. It's especially important to me that we 
can have this framework run, and expect to pass, against any OpenStack setup as 
we get into Quantum and Melange improvements over the Essex timeframe, which 
will be heavily reliant on deployment specific choices (Cisco vs. OpenVSwitch 
vs. whatever else might come available).

I'd prefer the test suite not choose or show preference to a specific install, 
or at the very minimum support identifying tests specific to an install (i.e. 
to highlight the interesting delta's that have grown in between Xen and KVM 
installations) - and be something that anyone can set up and run (since I don't 
want to expect any one entity to be responsible for having all the various 
OpenStack flavors).

My own personal aim is to have a stable back-end environment that I can run 
Selenium or equivalent tests against the dashboard that will in turn work 
everything else. This means having the environment in a known state to start 
with, and I'm expecting that a whole suite of these tests might well be very 
time consuming to run - up to a couple of hours.

My intention is to actually have multiple "swim lanes" of these hardware 
environments (I do already) and to automate the burn-down, install, 
configuration, and testing of those environments. I would like the "testing" 
portion of this to be consistent - and I'm looking to the OpenStack Integration 
Tests to be the basis for that - and to which we'll be submitting back tests 
working the Dashboard as it goes forward.

Something to note - (kind of buried in: 
http://wiki.openstack.org/openstack-integration-test-suites). The proboscis 
library (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/proboscis) for Nose is a NoseTest running 
that allows the annotation of tests with dependencies and groups, inspired by 
TestNG and maintiained by Tim Simpson @ rackspace.

I haven't written much with it yet, but would like to suggestion that tests 
could be organized with this to allow for dependencies and grouping to allow 
parallel execution where appropriate.

I've been currently generating functional tests using Lettuce (with a httplib2 
based webdriver), and while I like it from a BDD perspective, I'm finding it 
more time consuming to generate the tests (as I end up messing with the DSL 
more than writing tests) today.

-joe

On Oct 19, 2011, at 8:25 PM, Daryl Walleck wrote:
Interesting analysis. I see a few issues though. I don't think that running 
tests in serial is a realistic option with a functional/integration test suite 
of significant size, given the time needed to create the resources needed for 
testing. We could, but the time needed to execute the suite and get feedback in 
a useful period of time would be prohibitive. If tests are self sufficient and 
create or intelligently share resources, parallelization should be doable.

I've heard the idea of forced test dependencies several times, which adds its 
own set of problems. Independent and flexible grouping/execution of tests is 
something I've relied on quite a bit in the past when troubleshooting. I'd also 
be concerned about the stability and reliability of the tests if each relies on 
the state generated by the tests before it. If test 4 out of 100 fails, that 
means the results of the 96 tests would either be false positives, or if all 
test dependent execution ends at that point numerous test cases would not be 
executed, possible hiding other issues until the first issue is resolved.

I also get the impression that I think we all may be fairly far apart about 
what it is that we each want from a testing framework (and even to some degree 
of what components make up a framework). It might be useful to take a step back 
and discuss what it is that we want from this test suite and what it should 
accomplish. For example, my understanding is that this suite will likely grow 
to hundreds, if not into the thousands of tests, which in my mind significantly 
changes how I would design the suite.

Daryl

On Oct 19, 2011, at 7:26 PM, Joseph Heck wrote:

What you've described is a great unit testing framework, but with integration 
testing you need recognition that some tests are dependent of specific system 
state - and therefore can not be run blindly in parallel.

Some can, just not all - and often the most expedient way to get a system in a 
known state is to "walk it there" through sequences of tests.

I believe we essentially already have this framework in place with the 
openstack-integration-tests repo and the proposed (but not yet implemented) set 
of tests using proboscis to enable dependencies and grouping in those tests.

-joe

On Oct 19, 2011, at 5:00 PM, "Ngo, Donald (HP Cloud Services : QA)" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

My wish list for our proposed framework:


-        Create XML JUnit style run reports

-        Run tests in parallel

-        Should be able to run out of the box with little configuration (a 
single configuration file, everything in one place)

-        Run through standard runner like Nosetest (i.e. nosetests /Kong or 
nosetests /YourSuite). This will allow the suites to easily integrate in each 
company’s framework.

-        Tests framework should support drop and run using reflection as a way 
to identify tests to run

Thanks,

Donald

From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
[mailto:openstack-bounces+donald.ngo<mailto:openstack-bounces%2Bdonald.ngo>[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Brebner, Gavin
Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2011 10:39 AM
To: Daryl Walleck; Rohit Karajgi
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Openstack] [QA] openstack-integration-tests


My 2c

To me, the end-customer facing part of the Openstack solution is in many ways 
the set of libraries and tools customers are likely to use – as such testing 
with them
is essential. If there’s a bug that can be only exposed through some obscure 
API call that isn’t readily available through one of the usual libraries, it 
mostly will be of
only minor importance as it will be rarely if ever get used, whereas e.g. a bug 
in a library that causes data corruption will not be good for Openstack no 
matter
how correct things are from the endpoint in. The whole solution needs to work; 
this is complex as we don’t necessarily control all the libraries, and can’t 
test everything
with every possible library, so we have to do the best we can to ensure we 
catch errors as early as possible e.g. via direct API testing for unit tests / 
low level
functional tests. Testing at multiple levels is required, and the art is in 
selecting how much effort to put at each level.

Re. framework we need a wide range of capabilities, hence keep it simple and 
flexible. One thing I’d really like to see would be a means to express 
parallelism – e.g. for
chaos monkey type tests, race conditions, realistic stress runs and so on. 
Support for tests written in any arbitrary language is also required. I can 
write all
this myself, but would love a framework to handle it for me, and leave me to 
concentrate on mimicking what I think our end customers are likely to do.

Gavin

From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
[mailto:openstack-bounces+gavin.brebner<mailto:openstack-bounces%2Bgavin.brebner>[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Daryl Walleck
Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2011 6:27 PM
To: Rohit Karajgi
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Openstack] [QA] openstack-integration-tests

Hi Rohit,

I'm glad to see so much interest in getting testing done right. So here's my 
thoughts. As far as the nova client/euca-tools portion, I think we absolutely 
need a series of tests that validate that these bindings work correctly. As a 
nice side effect they do test their respective APIs, which is good. I think 
duplication of testing between these two bindings and even what I'm envisioning 
as the "main" test suite is necessary, as we have to verify at least at a high 
level that they work correctly.

My thoughts for our core testing is that those would the ones that do not use 
language bindings. I think this is where the interesting architectural work can 
be done. Test framework is a very loose term that gets used a lot, but to me a 
framework includes:


  *   The test runner and it's capabilities
  *   How the test code is structured to assure 
maintainability/flexibility/ease of code re-use
  *   Any utilities provided to extend or ease the ability to test

I think we all have a lot of good ideas about this, it's just a matter of 
consolidating that and choosing one direction to go forward with.

Daryl

On Oct 19, 2011, at 9:58 AM, Rohit Karajgi wrote:

Hello Stackers,

I was at the design summit and the sessions that were ‘all about QA’ and had 
shown my interest in supporting this effort. Sorry I could not be present at 
the first QA IRC meeting due to a vacation.
I had a chance to eavesdrop at the meeting log and Nachi-san also shared his 
account of the outcome with me. Thanks Nachi!

Just a heads up to put some of my thoughts on ML before today’s meeting.
I had a look at the various (7 and counting??) test frameworks out there to 
test OpenStack API.
Jay, Gabe and Tim put up a neat wiki 
(http://wiki.openstack.org/openstack-integration-test-suites) to compare many 
of these.

I looked at Lettuce<https://github.com/gabrielfalcao/lettuce> and felt it was 
quite effective. It’s incredibly easy to write tests once the wrappers over the 
application are setup. Easy as in “Given a ttylinux image create a Server” 
would be how a test scenario would be written in a typical .feature file, 
(which is basically a list of test scenarios for a particular feature) in a 
natural language. It has nose support, and there’s some neat 
documentation<http://lettuce.it/index.html> too. I was just curious if anyone 
has already tried out Lettuce with OpenStack? From the ODS, I think the Grid 
Dynamics guys already have their own implementation. It would be great if one 
of you guys join the meeting and throw some light on how you’ve got it to work.
Just for those who may be unaware, Soren’s branch 
openstack-integration-tests<https://github.com/openstack/openstack-integration-tests>
 is actually a merge of Kong and Stacktester.

The other point I wanted to have more clarity on was on using both novaclient 
AND httplib2 to make the API requests. Though <wwkeyboard> did mention issues 
regarding spec bug proliferation into the client, how can we best utilize this 
dual approach and avoid another round of duplicate test cases. Maybe we target 
novaclient first and then the use httplib2 to fill in gaps? After-all 
novaclient does call httplib2 internally.

I would like to team up with Gabe and others for the unified test runner task. 
Please chip me in if you’re doing some division of labor there.

Thanks!
Rohit

(NTT)
From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
[mailto:openstack-bounces+rohit.karajgi<mailto:openstack-bounces%2Brohit.karajgi>[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Gabe Westmaas
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2011 9:22 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [Openstack] [QA] openstack-integration-tests

I'd like to try to summarize and propose at least one next step for the content 
of the openstack-integration-tests git repository.  Note that this is only 
about the actual tests themselves, and says absolutely nothing about any gating 
decisions made in other sessions.

First, there was widespread agreement that in order for an integration suite to 
be run in the openstack jenkins, it should be included in the community github 
repository.

Second, it was agreed that there is value in having tests in multiple 
languages, especially in the case where those tests add value beyond the base 
language.  Examples of this may include testing using another set of bindings, 
and therefore testing the API.  Using a testing framework that just takes a 
different approach to testing.  Invalid examples include implanting the exact 
same test in another language simply because you don't like python.

Third, it was agreed that there is value in testing using novaclient as well as 
httplib2.  Similarly that there is value in testing both XML and JSON.

Fourth, for black box tests, any fixture setup that a suite of tests requires 
should be done via script that is close to but not within that suite – we want 
tests to be as agnostic to an implementation of openstack as possible, and 
anything you cannot do from the the API should not be inside the tests.

Fifth, there are suites of white box tests – we understand there can be value 
here, but we aren't sure how to approach that in this project, definitely more 
discussion needed here.  Maybe we have a separate directory for holding white 
and black box tests?

Sixth, no matter what else changes, we must maintain the ability to run a 
subset of tests through a common runner.  This can be done via command line or 
configuration, whichever makes the most sense.  I'd personally lean towards 
configuration with the ability to override on the command line.

If you feel I mischaracterized any of the agreements, please feel free to say 
so.

Next, we want to start moving away from the multiple entry points to write 
additional tests.  That means taking inventory of the tests that are there now, 
and figuring out what they are testing, and how we run them, and then working 
to combine what makes sense, into a directory structure that makes sense.  As 
often as possible, we should make sure the tests can be run in the same way.  I 
started a little wiki to start collecting information.  I think a short 
description of the general strategy of each suite and then details about the 
specific tests in that suite would be useful.

http://wiki.openstack.org/openstack-integration-test-suites

Hopefully this can make things a little easier to start contributing.

Gabe
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