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Matthew Treinisha970d652015-03-11 15:39:24 -04001.. _tempest-configuration:
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Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -05003Tempest Configuration Guide
4===========================
5
Matthew Treinishf640f662015-03-11 15:13:30 -04006This guide is a starting point for configuring tempest. It aims to elaborate
7on and explain some of the mandatory and common configuration settings and how
8they are used in conjunction. The source of truth on each option is the sample
9config file which explains the purpose of each individual option.
10
11Lock Path
12---------
13
14There are some tests and operations inside of tempest that need to be
15externally locked when running in parallel to prevent them from running at
16the same time. This is a mandatory step for configuring tempest and is still
17needed even when running serially. All that is needed to do this is:
18
19 #. Set the lock_path option in the oslo_concurrency group
20
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -050021Auth/Credentials
22----------------
23
24Tempest currently has 2 different ways in configuration to provide credentials
25to use when running tempest. One is a traditional set of configuration options
26in the tempest.conf file. These options are in the identity section and let you
27specify a regular user, a global admin user, and a alternate user set of
28credentials. (which consist of a username, password, and project/tenant name)
29These options should be clearly labelled in the sample config file in the
30identity section.
31
32The other method to provide credentials is using the accounts.yaml file. This
33file is used to specify an arbitrary number of users available to run tests
34with. You can specify the location of the file in the
35auth section in the tempest.conf file. To see the specific format used in
36the file please refer to the accounts.yaml.sample file included in tempest.
37Currently users that are specified in the accounts.yaml file are assumed to
38have the same set of roles which can be used for executing all the tests you
39are running. This will be addressed in the future, but is a current limitation.
40Eventually the config options for providing credentials to tempest will be
41deprecated and removed in favor of the accounts.yaml file.
42
Matthew Treinish7909e122015-04-15 15:43:50 -040043Keystone Connection Info
44^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
45In order for tempest to be able to talk to your OpenStack deployment you need
46to provide it with information about how it communicates with keystone.
47This involves configuring the following options in the identity section:
48
49 #. auth_version
50 #. uri
51 #. uri_v3
52
53The *auth_version* option is used to tell tempest whether it should be using
54keystone's v2 or v3 api for communicating with keystone. (except for the
55identity api tests which will test a specific version) The 2 uri options are
56used to tell tempest the url of the keystone endpoint. The *uri* option is used
57for keystone v2 request and *uri_v3* is used for keystone v3. You want to ensure
58that which ever version you set for *auth_version* has its uri option defined.
59
60
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -050061Credential Provider Mechanisms
62^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
63
64Tempest currently also has 3 different internal methods for providing
65authentication to tests. Tenant isolation, locking test accounts, and
66non-locking test accounts. Depending on which one is in use the configuration
67of tempest is slightly different.
68
69Tenant Isolation
70""""""""""""""""
71Tenant isolation was originally create to enable running tempest in parallel.
72For each test class it creates a unique set of user credentials to use for the
73tests in the class. It can create up to 3 sets of username, password, and
74tenant/project names for a primary user, an admin user, and an alternate user.
75To enable and use tenant isolation you only need to configure 2 things:
76
77 #. A set of admin credentials with permissions to create users and
78 tenants/projects. This is specified in the identity section with the
79 admin_username, admin_tenant_name, and admin_password options
80 #. To enable tenant_isolation in the auth section with the
81 allow_tenant_isolation option.
82
Matthew Treinish0fd69e42015-03-06 00:40:51 -050083This is also the currently the default credential provider enabled by tempest,
84due to it's common use and ease of configuration.
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -050085
Matthew Treinish4fae4722015-04-16 21:03:54 -040086It is worth pointing out that depending on your cloud configuration you might
87need to assign a role to each of the users created Tempest's tenant isolation.
88This can be set using the *tempest_roles* option. It takes in a list of role
89names each of which will be assigned to each of the users created by tenant
90isolation. This option will not have any effect when set and tempest is not
91configured to use tenant isolation.
92
93
Matthew Treinish93299852015-04-24 09:58:18 -040094Locking Test Accounts (aka accounts.yaml or accounts file)
95""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -050096For a long time using tenant isolation was the only method available if you
97wanted to enable parallel execution of tempest tests. However this was
98insufficient for certain use cases because of the admin credentials requirement
99to create the credential sets on demand. To get around that the accounts.yaml
100file was introduced and with that a new internal credential provider to enable
101using the list of credentials instead of creating them on demand. With locking
102test accounts each test class will reserve a set of credentials from the
103accounts.yaml before executing any of its tests so that each class is isolated
104like in tenant isolation.
105
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -0500106To enable and use locking test accounts you need do a few things:
107
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -0500108 #. Create a accounts.yaml file which contains the set of pre-existing
109 credentials to use for testing. To make sure you don't have a credentials
110 starvation issue when running in parallel make sure you have at least 2
Matthew Treinishfc7cd8f2015-03-30 11:51:55 -0400111 times the number of worker processes you are using to execute tempest
112 available in the file. (if running serially the worker count is 1)
Matthew Treinish0fd69e42015-03-06 00:40:51 -0500113
114 You can check the sample file packaged in tempest for the yaml format
liuchenhongaa4aa692015-06-10 12:18:42 +0800115 #. Provide tempest with the location of your accounts.yaml file with the
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -0500116 test_accounts_file option in the auth section
117
Fei Long Wang7fee7872015-05-12 11:36:49 +1200118 #. Set allow_tenant_isolation = False in the auth group
119
Matthew Treinish93299852015-04-24 09:58:18 -0400120It is worth pointing out that each set of credentials in the accounts.yaml
121should have a unique tenant. This is required to provide proper isolation
122to the tests using the credentials, and failure to do this will likely cause
123unexpected failures in some tests.
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -0500124
Matthew Treinish93299852015-04-24 09:58:18 -0400125
126Non-locking test accounts (aka credentials config options)
127""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
Matthew Treinish57092132015-04-21 14:21:35 -0400128When Tempest was refactored to allow for locking test accounts, the original
129non-tenant isolated case was converted to internally work similarly to the
130accounts.yaml file. This mechanism was then called the non-locking test accounts
131provider. To use the non-locking test accounts provider you can specify the sets
132of credentials in the configuration file like detailed above with following 9
133options in the identity section:
Matthew Treinishbc1b15b2015-02-20 15:56:07 -0500134
135 #. username
136 #. password
137 #. tenant_name
138 #. admin_username
139 #. admin_password
140 #. admin_tenant_name
141 #. alt_username
142 #. alt_password
143 #. alt_tenant_name
144
Atsushi SAKAI0a183b82015-07-28 21:52:17 +0900145And in the auth section:
Fei Long Wang7fee7872015-05-12 11:36:49 +1200146
147 #. allow_tenant_isolation = False
148 #. comment out 'test_accounts_file' or keep it as empty
149
Matthew Treinish57092132015-04-21 14:21:35 -0400150It only makes sense to use it if parallel execution isn't needed, since tempest
151won't be able to properly isolate tests using this. Additionally, using the
152traditional config options for credentials is not able to provide credentials to
153tests which requires specific roles on accounts. This is because the config
154options do not give sufficient flexibility to describe the roles assigned to a
155user for running the tests. There are additional limitations with regard to
156network configuration when using this credential provider mechanism, see the
157`Networking`_ section below.
Matthew Treinish2b7f0482015-04-10 12:49:01 -0400158
Matthew Treinish7909e122015-04-15 15:43:50 -0400159Compute
160-------
161
162Flavors
163^^^^^^^
164For tempest to be able to create servers you need to specify flavors that it
165can use to boot the servers with. There are 2 options in the tempest config
166for doing this:
167
168 #. flavor_ref
169 #. flavor_ref_alt
170
171Both of these options are in the compute section of the config file and take
172in the flavor id (not the name) from nova. The *flavor_ref* option is what will
173be used for booting almost all of the guests, *flavor_ref_alt* is only used in
174tests where 2 different sized servers are required. (for example a resize test)
175
176Using a smaller flavor is generally recommended, when larger flavors are used
177the extra time required to bring up servers will likely affect total run time
178and probably require tweaking timeout values to ensure tests have ample time to
179finish.
180
181Images
182^^^^^^
183Just like with flavors, tempest needs to know which images to use for booting
184servers. There are 2 options in the compute section just like with flavors:
185
186 #. image_ref
187 #. image_ref_alt
188
189Both options are expecting an image id (not name) from nova. The *image_ref*
190option is what what will be used for booting the majority of servers in tempest.
191*image_ref_alt* is used for tests that require 2 images such as rebuild. If 2
192images are not available you can set both options to the same image_ref and
193those tests will be skipped.
194
195There are also options in the scenario section for images:
196
197 #. img_file
198 #. img_dir
199 #. aki_img_file
200 #. ari_img_file
201 #. ami_img_file
202 #. img_container_format
203 #. img_disk_format
204
205however unlike the other image options these are used for a very small subset
206of scenario tests which are uploading an image. These options are used to tell
207tempest where an image file is located and describe it's metadata for when it's
208uploaded.
209
210The behavior of these options is a bit convoluted (which will likely be fixed
211in future versions). You first need to specify *img_dir*, which is the directory
212tempest will look for the image files in. First it will check if the filename
213set for *img_file* could be found in *img_dir*. If it is found then the
214*img_container_format* and *img_disk_format* options are used to upload that
215image to glance. However if it's not found tempest will look for the 3 uec image
216file name options as a fallback. If neither is found the tests requiring an
217image to upload will fail.
218
219It is worth pointing out that using `cirros`_ is a very good choice for running
220tempest. It's what is used for upstream testing, they boot quickly and have a
221small footprint.
222
223.. _cirros: https://launchpad.net/cirros
224
Matthew Treinish2b7f0482015-04-10 12:49:01 -0400225Networking
226----------
227OpenStack has a myriad of different networking configurations possible and
228depending on which of the 2 network backends, nova-network or neutron, you are
229using things can vary drastically. Due to this complexity Tempest has to provide
230a certain level of flexibility in it's configuration to ensure it will work
231against any cloud. This ends up causing a large number of permutations in
232Tempest's config around network configuration.
233
234
235Enabling Remote Access to Created Servers
236^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
237When Tempest creates servers for testing, some tests require being able to
238connect those servers. Depending on the configuration of the cloud, the methods
239for doing this can be different. In certain configurations it is required to
240specify a single network with server create calls. Accordingly, Tempest provides
241a few different methods for providing this information in configuration to try
242and ensure that regardless of the clouds configuration it'll still be able to
243run. This section covers the different methods of configuring Tempest to provide
244a network when creating servers.
245
246Fixed Network Name
247""""""""""""""""""
248This is the simplest method of specifying how networks should be used. You can
249just specify a single network name/label to use for all server creations. The
250limitation with this is that all tenants/projects and users must be able to see
251that network name/label if they were to perform a network list and be able to
252use it.
253
254If no network name is assigned in the config file and none of the below
255alternatives are used, then Tempest will not specify a network on server
256creations, which depending on the cloud configuration might prevent them from
257booting.
258
259To set a fixed network name simply do:
260
261 #. Set the fixed_network_name option in the compute group
262
263In the case that the configured fixed network name can not be found by a user
264network list call, it will be treated like one was not provided except that a
265warning will be logged stating that it couldn't be found.
266
267
268Accounts File
269"""""""""""""
270If you are using an accounts file to provide credentials for running Tempest
271then you can leverage it to also specify which network should be used with
272server creations on a per tenant/project and user pair basis. This provides
273the necessary flexibility to work with more intricate networking configurations
274by enabling the user to specify exactly which network to use for which
275tenants/projects. You can refer to the accounts.yaml sample file included in
276the tempest repo for the syntax around specifying networks in the file.
277
278However, specifying a network is not required when using an accounts file. If
279one is not specified you can use a fixed network name to specify the network to
280use when creating servers just as without an accounts file. However, any network
281specified in the accounts file will take precedence over the fixed network name
282provided. If no network is provided in the accounts file and a fixed network
283name is not set then no network will be included in create server requests.
284
285If a fixed network is provided and the accounts.yaml file also contains networks
286this has the benefit of enabling a couple more tests which require a static
287network to perform operations like server lists with a network filter. If a
288fixed network name is not provided these tests are skipped. Additionally, if a
289fixed network name is provided it will serve as a fallback in case of a
290misconfiguration or a missing network in the accounts file.
291
292
293With Tenant Isolation
294"""""""""""""""""""""
295With tenant isolation enabled and using nova-network then nothing changes. Your
296only option for configuration is to either set a fixed network name or not.
297However, in most cases it shouldn't matter because nova-network should have no
298problem booting a server with multiple networks. If this is not the case for
299your cloud then using an accounts file is recommended because it provides the
300necessary flexibility to describe your configuration. Tenant isolation is not
301able to dynamically allocate things as necessary if neutron is not enabled.
302
303With neutron and tenant isolation enabled there should not be any additional
304configuration necessary to enable Tempest to create servers with working
305networking, assuming you have properly configured the network section to work
306for your cloud. Tempest will dynamically create the neutron resources necessary
307to enable using servers with that network. Also, just as with the accounts
308file, if you specify a fixed network name while using neutron and tenant
309isolation it will enable running tests which require a static network and it
310will additionally be used as a fallback for server creation. However, unlike
311accounts.yaml this should never be triggered.
Matthew Treinish3220cad2015-04-15 16:25:48 -0400312
Matthew Treinish2219d382015-04-24 10:33:04 -0400313However, there is an option *create_isolated_networks* to disable tenant
314isolation's automatic provisioning of network resources. If this option is
315used you will have to either rely on there only being a single/default network
316available for the server creation, or use *fixed_network_name* to inform
317Tempest which network to use.
318
Matthew Treinishf96ab3a2015-04-15 19:11:31 -0400319Configuring Available Services
320------------------------------
321OpenStack is really a constellation of several different projects which
322are running together to create a cloud. However which projects you're running
323is not set in stone, and which services are running is up to the deployer.
324Tempest however needs to know which services are available so it can figure
325out which tests it is able to run and certain setup steps which differ based
326on the available services.
327
328The *service_available* section of the config file is used to set which
329services are available. It contains a boolean option for each service (except
330for keystone which is a hard requirement) set it to True if the service is
331available or False if it is not.
332
333Service Catalog
334^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
335Each project which has its own REST API contains an entry in the service
336catalog. Like most things in OpenStack this is also completely configurable.
337However, for tempest to be able to figure out the endpoints to send REST API
338calls for each service to it needs to know how that project is defined in the
339service catalog. There are 3 options for each service section to accomplish
340this:
341
342 #. catalog_type
343 #. endpoint_type
344 #. region
345
346Setting *catalog_type* and *endpoint_type* should normally give Tempest enough
347information to determine which endpoint it should pull from the service
348catalog to use for talking to that particular service. However, if you're cloud
349has multiple regions available and you need to specify a particular one to use
350a service you can set the *region* option in that service's section.
351
352It should also be noted that the default values for these options are set
353to what devstack uses. (which is a de facto standard for service catalog
354entries) So often nothing actually needs to be set on these options to enable
355communication to a particular service. It is only if you are either not using
356the same *catalog_type* as devstack or you want Tempest to talk to a different
357endpoint type instead of publicURL for a service that these need to be changed.
358
359
Matthew Treinish3220cad2015-04-15 16:25:48 -0400360Service feature configuration
361-----------------------------
362
363OpenStack provides its deployers a myriad of different configuration options
364to enable anyone deploying it to create a cloud tailor-made for any individual
365use case. It provides options for several different backend type, databases,
366message queues, etc. However, the downside to this configurability is that
367certain operations and features aren't supported depending on the configuration.
368These features may or may not be discoverable from the API so the burden is
369often on the user to figure out what the cloud they're talking to supports.
370Besides the obvious interoperability issues with this it also leaves Tempest
371in an interesting situation trying to figure out which tests are expected to
372work. However, Tempest tests do not rely on dynamic api discovery for a feature
373(assuming one exists). Instead Tempest has to be explicitly configured as to
374which optional features are enabled. This is in order to prevent bugs in the
375discovery mechanisms from masking failures.
376
377The service feature-enabled config sections are how Tempest addresses the
378optional feature question. Each service that has tests for optional features
379contains one of these sections. The only options in it are boolean options
380with the name of a feature which is used. If it is set to false any test which
381depends on that functionality will be skipped. For a complete list of all these
382options refer to the sample config file.
383
384
385API Extensions
386^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
387The service feature-enabled sections often contain an *api-extensions* option
388(or in the case of swift a *discoverable_apis* option) this is used to tell
389tempest which api extensions (or configurable middleware) is used in your
390deployment. It has 2 valid config states, either it contains a single value
391"all" (which is the default) which means that every api extension is assumed
392to be enabled, or it is set to a list of each individual extension that is
393enabled for that service.