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Jay Pipes7f757632011-12-02 15:53:32 -05001Tempest - The OpenStack Integration Test Suite
2==============================================
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -05003
Sean Dagueb56052b2013-05-21 17:57:41 -04004This is a set of integration tests to be run against a live OpenStack
5cluster. Tempest has batteries of tests for OpenStack API validation,
6Scenarios, and other specific tests useful in validating an OpenStack
7deployment.
8
Sean Daguea26454d2013-11-01 18:09:55 -04009Design Principles
Matthew Treinish077a5632014-06-04 11:43:10 -040010-----------------
Sean Daguea26454d2013-11-01 18:09:55 -040011Tempest Design Principles that we strive to live by.
12
13- Tempest should be able to run against any OpenStack cloud, be it a
14 one node devstack install, a 20 node lxc cloud, or a 1000 node kvm
15 cloud.
16- Tempest should be explicit in testing features. It is easy to auto
17 discover features of a cloud incorrectly, and give people an
18 incorrect assessment of their cloud. Explicit is always better.
19- Tempest uses OpenStack public interfaces. Tests in Tempest should
20 only touch public interfaces, API calls (native or 3rd party),
Matthew Treinish464d2872015-04-29 12:23:01 -040021 or libraries.
Sean Daguea26454d2013-11-01 18:09:55 -040022- Tempest should not touch private or implementation specific
23 interfaces. This means not directly going to the database, not
24 directly hitting the hypervisors, not testing extensions not
25 included in the OpenStack base. If there is some feature of
26 OpenStack that is not verifiable through standard interfaces, this
27 should be considered a possible enhancement.
28- Tempest strives for complete coverage of the OpenStack API and
29 common scenarios that demonstrate a working cloud.
30- Tempest drives load in an OpenStack cloud. By including a broad
31 array of API and scenario tests Tempest can be reused in whole or in
32 parts as load generation for an OpenStack cloud.
33- Tempest should attempt to clean up after itself, whenever possible
34 we should tear down resources when done.
zhangfengc53e4e12015-08-21 04:09:08 +000035- Tempest should be self-testing.
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050036
37Quickstart
38----------
39
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040040To run Tempest, you first need to create a configuration file that will tell
41Tempest where to find the various OpenStack services and other testing behavior
42switches. Where the configuration file lives and how you interact with it
43depends on how you'll be running Tempest. There are 2 methods of using Tempest.
44The first, which is a newer and recommended workflow treats Tempest as a system
45installed program. The second older method is to run Tempest assuming your
46working dir is the actually Tempest source repo, and there are a number of
47assumptions related to that. For this section we'll only cover the newer method
48as it is simpler, and quicker to work with.
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050049
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040050#. You first need to install Tempest this is done with pip, after you check out
51 the Tempest repo you simply run something like::
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050052
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040053 $ pip install tempest
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050054
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040055 This can be done within a venv, but the assumption for this guide is that
56 the Tempest cli entry point will be in your shell's PATH.
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050057
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040058#. Installing Tempest will create a /etc/tempest dir which will contain the
59 sample config file packaged with Tempest. The contents of /etc/tempest will
60 be copied to all local working dirs, so if there is any common configuration
61 you'd like to be shared between anyone setting up local Tempest working dirs
62 it's recommended that you copy or rename tempest.conf.sample to tempest.conf
63 and make those changes to that file in /etc/tempest
Justin Shepherd0d9bbd12011-08-11 12:57:44 -050064
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040065#. Setup a local working Tempest dir. This is done using the tempest init
66 command::
Jay Pipes7f757632011-12-02 15:53:32 -050067
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040068 tempest init cloud-01
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -040069
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040070 works the same as::
Attila Fazekas58d23302013-07-24 10:25:02 +020071
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040072 mkdir cloud-01 && cd cloud-01 && tempest init
Daryl Wallecke36f6232012-03-06 00:21:45 -060073
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040074 This will create a new directory for running a single Tempest configuration.
75 If you'd like to run Tempest against multiple OpenStack deployments the idea
76 is that you'll create a new working directory for each to maintain separate
77 configuration files and local artifact storage for each.
Attila Fazekas58d23302013-07-24 10:25:02 +020078
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040079#. Then cd into the newly created working dir and also modify the local
80 config files located in the etc/ subdir created by the ``tempest init``
81 command. Tempest is expecting a tempest.conf file in etc/ so if only a
82 sample exists you must rename or copy it to tempest.conf before making
83 any changes to it otherwise Tempest will not know how to load it.
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -040084
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040085#. Once the configuration is done you're now ready to run Tempest. This can
86 be done with testr directly or any `testr`_ based test runner, like
87 `ostestr`_. For example, from the working dir running::
Matthew Treinishb17460e2013-09-17 17:04:03 +000088
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040089 $ ostestr --regex '(?!.*\[.*\bslow\b.*\])(^tempest\.(api|scenario|thirdparty))'
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -040090
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040091 will run the same set of tests as the default gate jobs.
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -040092
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -040093.. _testr: https://testrepository.readthedocs.org/en/latest/MANUAL.html
94.. _ostestr: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/os-testr/
nayna-patelddb489c2012-11-13 22:06:45 +000095
Daryl Wallecke36f6232012-03-06 00:21:45 -060096Configuration
97-------------
98
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +010099Detailed configuration of Tempest is beyond the scope of this
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -0400100document see :ref:`tempest-configuration` for more details on configuring
zhangfengc53e4e12015-08-21 04:09:08 +0000101Tempest. The etc/tempest.conf.sample attempts to be a self-documenting version
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -0400102of the configuration.
Sean Dagueb56052b2013-05-21 17:57:41 -0400103
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -0400104You can generate a new sample tempest.conf file, run the following
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +0100105command from the top level of the Tempest directory:
Masayuki Igawaac401c72014-11-18 15:28:46 +0900106
107 tox -egenconfig
Matthew Treinish6eb05852013-11-26 15:28:12 +0000108
Sean Dagueb56052b2013-05-21 17:57:41 -0400109The most important pieces that are needed are the user ids, openstack
Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -0400110endpoint, and basic flavors and images needed to run tests.
Matthew Treinisha7c7f9f2014-01-13 18:20:50 +0000111
112Unit Tests
113----------
114
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +0100115Tempest also has a set of unit tests which test the Tempest code itself. These
Atsushi SAKAI0a183b82015-07-28 21:52:17 +0900116tests can be run by specifying the test discovery path::
Matthew Treinisha7c7f9f2014-01-13 18:20:50 +0000117
118 $> OS_TEST_PATH=./tempest/tests testr run --parallel
119
120By setting OS_TEST_PATH to ./tempest/tests it specifies that test discover
121should only be run on the unit test directory. The default value of OS_TEST_PATH
122is OS_TEST_PATH=./tempest/test_discover which will only run test discover on the
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +0100123Tempest suite.
Matthew Treinisha7c7f9f2014-01-13 18:20:50 +0000124
125Alternatively, you can use the run_tests.sh script which will create a venv and
Matthew Treinish3460aaa2015-05-11 22:18:00 -0400126run the unit tests. There are also the py27 and py34 tox jobs which will run
127the unit tests with the corresponding version of python.
Matthew Treinishaf37dc92014-02-13 14:35:38 -0500128
129Python 2.6
130----------
131
Matthew Treinishd28dd7b2015-02-23 11:52:33 -0500132Starting in the kilo release the OpenStack services dropped all support for
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +0100133python 2.6. This change has been mirrored in Tempest, starting after the
134tempest-2 tag. This means that proposed changes to Tempest which only fix
Matthew Treinishd28dd7b2015-02-23 11:52:33 -0500135python 2.6 compatibility will be rejected, and moving forward more features not
Joe H. Rahme00a75422015-03-16 17:46:24 +0100136present in python 2.6 will be used. If you're running your OpenStack services
137on an earlier release with python 2.6 you can easily run Tempest against it
Matthew Treinishd28dd7b2015-02-23 11:52:33 -0500138from a remote system running python 2.7. (or deploy a cloud guest in your cloud
139that has python 2.7)
Matthew Treinish3460aaa2015-05-11 22:18:00 -0400140
141Python 3.4
142----------
143
144Starting during the Liberty release development cycle work began on enabling
145Tempest to run under both Python 2.7 and Python 3.4. Tempest strives to fully
146support running with Python 3.4. A gating unit test job was added to also run
147Tempest's unit tests under Python 3.4. This means that the Tempest code at
148least imports under Python 3.4 and things that have unit test coverage will
zhangfengc53e4e12015-08-21 04:09:08 +0000149work on Python 3.4. However, because large parts of Tempest are self-verifying
Matthew Treinish3460aaa2015-05-11 22:18:00 -0400150there might be uncaught issues running on Python 3.4. So until there is a gating
151job which does a full Tempest run using Python 3.4 there isn't any guarantee
152that running Tempest under Python 3.4 is bug free.
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -0400153
154Legacy run method
155-----------------
156
157The legacy method of running Tempest is to just treat the Tempest source code
158as a python unittest repository and run directly from the source repo. When
159running in this way you still start with a Tempest config file and the steps
160are basically the same except that it expects you know where the Tempest code
161lives on your system and requires a bit more manual interaction to get Tempest
162running. For example, when running Tempest this way things like a lock file
163directory do not get generated automatically and the burden is on the user to
164create and configure that.
165
166To start you need to create a configuration file. The easiest way to create a
167configuration file is to generate a sample in the ``etc/`` directory ::
168
169 $> cd $TEMPEST_ROOT_DIR
170 $> oslo-config-generator --config-file \
171 tools/config/config-generator.tempest.conf \
172 --output-file etc/tempest.conf
173
174After that, open up the ``etc/tempest.conf`` file and edit the
175configuration variables to match valid data in your environment.
176This includes your Keystone endpoint, a valid user and credentials,
177and reference data to be used in testing.
178
179.. note::
180
181 If you have a running devstack environment, Tempest will be
182 automatically configured and placed in ``/opt/stack/tempest``. It
183 will have a configuration file already set up to work with your
184 devstack installation.
185
186Tempest is not tied to any single test runner, but `testr`_ is the most commonly
187used tool. Also, the nosetests test runner is **not** recommended to run Tempest.
188
189After setting up your configuration file, you can execute the set of Tempest
190tests by using ``testr`` ::
191
192 $> testr run --parallel
193
Matthew Treinish828734a2015-07-06 15:43:46 -0400194To run one single test serially ::
195
196 $> testr run tempest.api.compute.servers.test_servers_negative.ServersNegativeTestJSON.test_reboot_non_existent_server
197
198Alternatively, you can use the run_tempest.sh script which will create a venv
199and run the tests or use tox to do the same. Tox also contains several existing
200job configurations. For example::
201
202 $> tox -efull
203
204which will run the same set of tests as the OpenStack gate. (it's exactly how
205the gate invokes Tempest) Or::
206
207 $> tox -esmoke
208
209to run the tests tagged as smoke.