| ============================= |
| Tempest Test Plugin Interface |
| ============================= |
| |
| Tempest has an external test plugin interface which enables anyone to integrate |
| an external test suite as part of a tempest run. This will let any project |
| leverage being run with the rest of the tempest suite while not requiring the |
| tests live in the tempest tree. |
| |
| Creating a plugin |
| ================= |
| |
| Creating a plugin is fairly straightforward and doesn't require much additional |
| effort on top of creating a test suite using tempest-lib. One thing to note with |
| doing this is that the interfaces exposed by tempest are not considered stable |
| (with the exception of configuration variables which ever effort goes into |
| ensuring backwards compatibility). You should not need to import anything from |
| tempest itself except where explicitly noted. If there is an interface from |
| tempest that you need to rely on in your plugin it likely needs to be migrated |
| to tempest-lib. In that situation, file a bug, push a migration patch, etc. to |
| expedite providing the interface in a reliable manner. |
| |
| Plugin Cookiecutter |
| ------------------- |
| |
| In order to create the basic structure with base classes and test directories |
| you can use the tempest-plugin-cookiecutter project:: |
| |
| > pip install -U cookiecutter && cookiecutter https://git.openstack.org/openstack/tempest-plugin-cookiecutter |
| |
| Cloning into 'tempest-plugin-cookiecutter'... |
| remote: Counting objects: 17, done. |
| remote: Compressing objects: 100% (13/13), done. |
| remote: Total 17 (delta 1), reused 14 (delta 1) |
| Unpacking objects: 100% (17/17), done. |
| Checking connectivity... done. |
| project (default is "sample")? foo |
| testclass (default is "SampleTempestPlugin")? FooTempestPlugin |
| |
| This would create a folder called ``foo_tempest_plugin/`` with all necessary |
| basic classes. You only need to move/create your test in |
| ``foo_tempest_plugin/tests``. |
| |
| Entry Point |
| ----------- |
| |
| Once you've created your plugin class you need to add an entry point to your |
| project to enable tempest to find the plugin. The entry point must be added |
| to the "tempest.test_plugins" namespace. |
| |
| If you are using pbr this is fairly straightforward, in the setup.cfg just add |
| something like the following:: |
| |
| [entry_points] |
| tempest.test_plugins = |
| plugin_name = module.path:PluginClass |
| |
| Plugin Class |
| ============ |
| |
| To provide tempest with all the required information it needs to be able to run |
| your plugin you need to create a plugin class which tempest will load and call |
| to get information when it needs. To simplify creating this tempest provides an |
| abstract class that should be used as the parent for your plugin. To use this |
| you would do something like the following:: |
| |
| from tempest.test_discover import plugins |
| |
| class MyPlugin(plugins.TempestPlugin): |
| |
| Then you need to ensure you locally define all of the methods in the abstract |
| class, you can refer to the api doc below for a reference of what that entails. |
| |
| Also, note eventually this abstract class will likely live in tempest-lib, when |
| that migration occurs a deprecation shim will be added to tempest so as to not |
| break any existing plugins. But, when that occurs migrating to using tempest-lib |
| as the source for the abstract class will be prudent. |
| |
| Abstract Plugin Class |
| --------------------- |
| |
| .. autoclass:: tempest.test_discover.plugins.TempestPlugin |
| :members: |
| |
| Plugin Structure |
| ================ |
| While there are no hard and fast rules for the structure a plugin, there are |
| basically no constraints on what the plugin looks like as long as the 2 steps |
| above are done. However, there are some recommended patterns to follow to make |
| it easy for people to contribute and work with your plugin. For example, if you |
| create a directory structure with something like:: |
| |
| plugin_dir/ |
| config.py |
| plugin.py |
| tests/ |
| api/ |
| scenario/ |
| services/ |
| client.py |
| |
| That will mirror what people expect from tempest. The file |
| |
| * **config.py**: contains any plugin specific configuration variables |
| * **plugin.py**: contains the plugin class used for the entry point |
| * **tests**: the directory where test discovery will be run, all tests should |
| be under this dir |
| * **services**: where the plugin specific service clients are |
| |
| Additionally, when you're creating the plugin you likely want to follow all |
| of the tempest developer and reviewer documentation to ensure that the tests |
| being added in the plugin act and behave like the rest of tempest. |
| |
| Dealing with configuration options |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Historically Tempest didn't provide external guarantees on its configuration |
| options. However, with the introduction of the plugin interface this is no |
| longer the case. An external plugin can rely on using any configuration option |
| coming from Tempest, there will be at least a full deprecation cycle for any |
| option before it's removed. However, just the options provided by Tempest |
| may not be sufficient for the plugin. If you need to add any plugin specific |
| configuration options you should use the ``register_opts`` and |
| ``get_opt_lists`` methods to pass them to Tempest when the plugin is loaded. |
| When adding configuration options the ``register_opts`` method gets passed the |
| CONF object from tempest. This enables the plugin to add options to both |
| existing sections and also create new configuration sections for new options. |
| |
| Using Plugins |
| ============= |
| |
| Tempest will automatically discover any installed plugins when it is run. So by |
| just installing the python packages which contain your plugin you'll be using |
| them with tempest, nothing else is really required. |
| |
| However, you should take care when installing plugins. By their very nature |
| there are no guarantees when running tempest with plugins enabled about the |
| quality of the plugin. Additionally, while there is no limitation on running |
| with multiple plugins it's worth noting that poorly written plugins might not |
| properly isolate their tests which could cause unexpected cross interactions |
| between plugins. |
| |
| Notes for using plugins with virtualenvs |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| When using a tempest inside a virtualenv (like when running under tox) you have |
| to ensure that the package that contains your plugin is either installed in the |
| venv too or that you have system site-packages enabled. The virtualenv will |
| isolate the tempest install from the rest of your system so just installing the |
| plugin package on your system and then running tempest inside a venv will not |
| work. |
| |
| Tempest also exposes a tox job, all-plugin, which will setup a tox virtualenv |
| with system site-packages enabled. This will let you leverage tox without |
| requiring to manually install plugins in the tox venv before running tests. |