On 29 April 2018 at 10:18, Sandro Bonazzola <sbonazzo(a)redhat.com> wrote:
2018-04-29 7:58 GMT+02:00 Barak Korren <bkorren(a)redhat.com>:
>
>
> On 27 April 2018 at 19:51, Sandro Bonazzola <sbonazzo(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>> I tried to run ovirt-system-tests_manual job for testing some new centos
>> builds and I've the feeling it doesn't work.
>>
>> In
http://jenkins.ovirt.org/job/ovirt-system-tests_manual/2650/
>> I added custom repo:
https://cbs.centos.org/
>> repos/virt7-ovirt-common-testing/x86_64/os/ which contains ansible
>> 2.5.2 but I can't see it installed on the hosts and engine, I see only
>> 2.5.1 installed.
>>
>
> repoman and hence OST does not support repos only direct package URLs,
> web directories that can be recursed into if you add the 'rec:' prefix or
> jenkins jobs if they are either on
jenkins.ovirt.org or you add the
> 'jenkins:' prefix.
>
right, so yum repos can be added by rec:<yum repo> being the example below
a web directory with rpm included in the Packages sub-directory
>
>
>
>> In
http://jenkins.ovirt.org/job/ovirt-system-tests_manual/2651/
>> I added custom build:
http://cbs.centos.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=22569
>> which contains openvswitch 2.9.0-4. Looks like it has been installed on
>> the engine but not on the hosts. maybe network suite doesn't use it, but
>> looks weird.
>>
>
> If it was installed on the engine it means that its available in the
> localrepo, perhaps the hosts arn't using it? (that would be a bug in the
> suit).
>
>
>>
>> in
http://jenkins.ovirt.org/job/ovirt-system-tests_manual/2652/
>> I added custom repos:
>>
https://cbs.centos.org/repos/virt7-kvm-common-testing/x86_64/os/
>>
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/cr/x86_64/
>>
>> for testing new qemu-kvm-ev 2.10 and CentOS 7.5 beta
>> but looks like qemu-kvm-ev 2.9 is used instead.
>>
>> Am I doing it wrong or is the manual job broken?
>>
>
> Again, yum repos are not supported by repoman.
>
I'll push a fix for this, there's no reason for not supporting yum repos
but supporting recursive web directories, being a yum repo a web directory
to be recursed if including repodata directory.
That cannot be so easily fixed - some yum repos indeed have all RPMs in
directories under a common top-level one, that that is not mandatory
though, the metadate files can point to all kinds of places, including
completely different hosts. Additionally there is no guarantee that every
RPM in the repo directoy would actually be listed in in the MD files.
Bottom line - yum support should be based on actual reading of the MD
files, not just assuming it is a web dir that all RPMs are nested inside.
>
>
>>
>> --
>>
>> SANDRO BONAZZOLA
>>
>> ASSOCIATE MANAGER, SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, EMEA ENG VIRTUALIZATION R&D
>>
>> Red Hat EMEA <
https://www.redhat.com/>
>>
>> sbonazzo(a)redhat.com
>> <
https://red.ht/sig>
>> <
https://redhat.com/summit>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> Infra(a)ovirt.org
>>
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>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Barak Korren
> RHV DevOps team , RHCE, RHCi
> Red Hat EMEA
>
redhat.com | TRIED. TESTED. TRUSTED. |
redhat.com/trusted
>
--
SANDRO BONAZZOLA
ASSOCIATE MANAGER, SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, EMEA ENG VIRTUALIZATION R&D
Red Hat EMEA <
https://www.redhat.com/>
sbonazzo(a)redhat.com
<
https://red.ht/sig>
<
https://redhat.com/summit>
--
Barak Korren
RHV DevOps team , RHCE, RHCi
Red Hat EMEA
redhat.com | TRIED. TESTED. TRUSTED. |
redhat.com/trusted