on 04/17/2013 21:21, Eyal Edri wrote:
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Zhou Zheng Sheng" <zhshzhou(a)linux.vnet.ibm.com>
> To: "infra" <infra(a)ovirt.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 12:44:18 PM
> Subject: Need help to setup an slave for VDSM functional tests
>
> Hi,
>
> I got a Jenkins power user account. I want to configure a job to run
> VDSM functional tests on a Fedora 18 slave. The functional tests need
> some prerequisites that can not be done in Jenkins, for example,
> installing dependency packages (git, python-pep8, pyflakes, autoconf,
> gcc...), configuring sudo (Jenkins needs root privilege to
> install/start/stop VDSM), configuring glusterfs. Since the functional
> tests actually install VDSM on the slave's OS, the slave is better to be
> a virtual machine.
i believe the current f18 slaves already have those, if not please open a ticket/email to
infra.
Great!
>
> In all, to run VDSM functional tests, we need a VM that is ready to
> build and install VDSM. There are already some slaves running jobs for
> building VDSM and unit tests, the environment is almost the same for
> functional tests. The VM slave needs not be online all the time. There
> is a Jenkins plugin named "libvirt slave", it can start the VM when the
> job is triggered, and shutdown it when it's idle for some time. I do not
> have the privilege to install that plugin. Could you install libvirt
> slave plugin as well?
we currently don't have ability to start/stop vms or launching any non-amazon vms as
slaves.
(we're working on adding new vms on ovirt-engine instance, which will give us more
flexibility with that).
is shutting down the vm part of the test?
Thanks Eyal! The functional tests install VDSM rpms, start/stop
services, add/delete iSCSI LUNs and NFS exports, and if we want to do
glusterfs tests, selinux must be turned off. These actions needs root
privilege. If we give Jenkins slave process these privilege, it results
some security wholes in the slave OS, so I think we'd better run the
tests in a VM slave on demand, and shutdown when idle. As you said, we
do not have the ability to start VMs, so I think if the slave is behind
a NAT and can not be accessed from the public network, we can give the
Jenkins slave process those privileges. Otherwise I have to investigate
some other means to run functional tests safely. I tried libvirt-sandbox
but it seems very complicated to configure a system to run VDSM in
libvirt-sandbox. What do you think?
--
Thanks and best regards!
Zhou Zheng Sheng / 周征晟
E-mail: zhshzhou(a)linux.vnet.ibm.com
Telephone: 86-10-82454397