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* Cirrus: Migrate PAPR testing of F28 to CirrusChris Evich2018-12-14
| | | | | | | | | | | Since the most recent TWO versions of Fedora are officially supported upstream, both need to be tested. Implement the concept of a 'prior' Fedora release in both base-image and cache-image production. Utilize the produced cache-image to test libpod. Remove F28 testing from PAPR. Much thanks to @baude @giuseppe for help with this. Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
* Cirrus: Document and codify base-image productionChris Evich2018-12-06
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | A number of images required for future testing are not present in GCE. Importing them is a long proscribed process prone to errors and complications. Improve this situation by documenting, and encoding the majority of the steps required. Due to the required complexity, these are clearly identified as 'semi-automated'. This means a discerning eye is sometimes needed to address unforeseen problems (networking issues, format or packaging changes, etc). Nevertheless, having these steps in writing, will reduce current and future maintenance burden while supporting future testing needs of RHEL, Fedora and Fedora Atomic Host. Also: * Add necessary configuration, scripts, and Makefile updates needed to prepare RHEL, Fedora, & FAH cloud images for use in GCE. This is a complex, multi-step process where the cloud image is booted un a local user-mod qemu-kvm instance, where it can be modified. From there, it's converted into a specific format, and imported into GCE. Lastly, the imported raw disk data is made available as a GCE VM image. Note: As of this commit, the RHEL base-image builds (CentOS has native image), however neither RHEL or CentOS cache-images build correctly. * Left testing on FAH disabled, the GCE/Cirrus integration needs needs more work. Specifically, the python3-based google startup script service throws a permission-denied (as root) when trying to create a temp. directory. Did not investigate further, though manually running the startup script does allow the libpod tests to start running. * Enabled Fedora 29 image to execute tests and general use. * Utilize the standardized F28-based container image for gating of more the intensive unit and integration testing. Update documentation to reflect this as the standard platform for these checks. Rename tasks with shorter names and to better reflect their purpose. * Cirrus: Trim unnecessary env vars before testing since the vast majority are only required for orchestration purposes. Since most are defined within `.cirrus.yml`, it's a good place to store the list of undesirables. Since each of the cirrus-scripts runs in it's own shell, unsetting these near the end will have no consequence. Also trim down the number of calls to show_env_vars() Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
* Cirrus: Use Makefile for image-buildingChris Evich2018-12-06
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The packer tool takes JSON as input for the details of producing VM images to be used for PR CI-testing. JSON is not a very human-friendly format, without support for comments and frequently containing lots of duplicate data. Fix this by using a Makefile + simple python one-liner to convert from a human-friendly YAML format into packer-native JSON. This allows use of anchors/aliases to reduce duplication, and allows inline comments for easier maintainability. This also allows separating the 'test' action from the 'build' action, for earlier and better syntax problem detection. Lastly, there are some minor ``lib.sh`` and ``integration_test.sh`` updates to support future work, and slightly improve the build and test environments. Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
* Add configuration for Cirrus-CIChris Evich2018-10-04
Testing podman requires exercising on a full-blown VM. The current containerized-approach is complicated, and mostly a band-aid over shortcomings in the other CI systems. Namely, we want: * To pre-build environments with dependencies to reduce the setup time needed for testing. * The ability to verify the pre-built environments are working before utilizing them for further testing. * A simple, single set of flexible automation instructions to reduce maintenance burden. * Ease of environment reproduction across clouds or locally, for debugging failures. This change leverages Cirrus-CI + Packer + collection of shell scripts to realize all of the above. Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>