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Kata Containers tests

Note: This repo has been archived and the tests can now be found in the kata-containers repo.

This repository contains various types of tests and utilities (called "content" from now on) for testing the Kata Containers code repositories.

Getting the code

$ go get -d github.com/kata-containers/tests

Test Content

We provide several tests to ensure Kata-Containers run on different scenarios and with different container managers.

  1. Integration tests to ensure compatibility with:
  2. Stability tests
  3. Metrics
  4. VFIO

CI Content

This repository contains a number of scripts that run from under a "CI" (Continuous Integration) system.

Centralised scripts

The CI scripts in this repository are used to test changes to the content of this repository. These scripts are also used by the other Kata Containers code repositories.

The advantages of this approach are:

  • Functionality is defined once.

    • Easy to make changes affecting all code repositories centrally.
  • Assurance that all the code repositories are tested in this same way.

CI scripts also provide a convenient way for other Kata repositories to install software. The preferred way to use these scripts is to invoke make with the corresponding install- target. For example, to install CRI-O you would use:

$ make -C <path-to-this-repo> install-crio

Use make list-install-targets to retrieve all the available install targets.

CI setup

WARNING:

The CI scripts perform a lot of setup before running content under a CI. Some of this setup runs as the root user and could break your developer's system. See Developer Mode.

Controlling the CI

GitHub Actions

Kata Containers uses GitHub Actions in the Kata Containers repos. All those actions, apart from the one to test kata-deploy, are automatically triggered when a pull request is submitted. The trigger phrase for testing kata-deploy is /test_kata_deploy.

Jenkins

The Jenkins configuration and most documentation is kept in the CI repository. Jenkins is setup to trigger a CI run on all the slaves/nodes when a /test comment is added to a pull request. However, there are some specific comments that are defined for specific CI slaves/nodes which are defined in the Jenkins config.xml files in the <triggerPhase> XML element in the CI repository.

Specific Jenkins job triggers

Some jobs like a particular distro, feature or architecture can be triggered individually, the specific job triggers information can be found in the Community repository.

Detecting a CI system

The strategy to check if the tests are running under a CI system is to see if the CI variable is set to the value true. For example, in shell syntax:

if [ "$CI" = true ]; then
    : # Assumed to be running in a CI environment
else
    : # Assumed to NOT be running in a CI environment
fi

Display verbose failure details

By default, when scripts in this repository fail, they display an error message to stderr and return 1 (failure) to the shell. However, when called by the CI, the scripts will also dump a full stack trace and some environment details to stderr.

To force this behaviour outside of a CI environment, ensure the variable below is set:

export KATA_TEST_VERBOSE=true

Breaking Compatibility

In case the patch you submit breaks the CI because it needs to be tested together with a patch from another kata-containers repository, you have to specify which repository and which pull request it depends on.

Using a simple tag Depends-on: in your commit message will allow the CI to run properly. Notice that this tag is parsed from the latest commit of the pull request.

For example:

	Subsystem: Change summary

	Detailed explanation of your changes.

	Fixes: #nnn

	Depends-on:github.com/kata-containers/kata-containers#999

	Signed-off-by: <[email protected]>

In this example, we tell the CI to fetch the pull request 999 from the kata-containers repository and use that rather than the main branch when testing the changes contained in this pull request.

CLI tools

This repository contains a number of command line tools. They are used by the CI tests but may be useful for user to run stand alone.

Developer Mode

Developers need a way to run as much test content as possible locally, but as explained in CI Setup, running all the content in this repository could be dangerous.

The recommended approach to resolve this issue is to set the following variable to any non-blank value before using any content from this repository:

export KATA_DEV_MODE=true

Setting this variable has the following effects:

  • Disables content that might not be safe for developers to run locally.
  • Ignores the effect of the CI variable being set (for extra safety).

You should be aware that setting this variable provides a safe subset of functionality; it is still possible that PRs raised for code repositories will still fail under the automated CI systems since those systems are running all possible tests.

Write a new Unit Test

See the unit test advice documentation.

Run the Kata Containers tests

Requirements to run Kata Containers tests

You need to install the following to run Kata Containers tests:

Prepare an environment

The recommended method to set up Kata Containers is to use the official and latest stable release. You can find the official documentation to do this in the Kata Containers installation user guides.

To try the latest commits of Kata use the CI scripts, which build and install from the kata-containers repositories, with the following steps:

Warning: This may replace/delete packages and configuration that you already have. Please use these steps only on a testing environment.

Add the $GOPATH/bin directory to the PATH:

$ export PATH=${GOPATH}/bin:${PATH}

Clone the kata-container/tests repository:

$ go get -d github.com/kata-containers/tests

Go to the tests repo directory:

$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/kata-containers/tests

Execute the setup script:

$ export CI=true
$ export CI_JOB=CRI_CONTAINERD_K8S
$ .ci/setup.sh

In this case we are exporting the environment variables for the CRI_CONTAINERD_K8S Jenkins Job for more information of which CI_JOB needs to be used see the following https://github.com/kata-containers/tests/blob/main/.ci/ci_job_flags.sh.

Limitation: If the script fails for a reason and it is re-executed, it will execute all steps from the beginning and not from the failed step.

Run the tests

If you have already installed the Kata Containers packages and a container manager (i.e. Kubernetes), and you want to execute the content for all the tests, run the following:

$ export RUNTIME=kata-runtime
$ export KATA_DEV_MODE=true
$ sudo -E PATH=$PATH make test

You can also execute a single test suite. For example, if you want to execute the Kubernetes integration tests, run the following:

$ sudo -E PATH=$PATH make kubernetes

A list of available test suite make targets can be found by running the following:

$ make help

Running subsets of tests

Individual tests or subsets of tests can be selected to be run. The method of test selection depends on which type of test framework the test is written with. Most of the Kata Containers test suites are written using Bats files.

Running Bats based tests

The Bats based tests are shell scripts, starting with the line:

#!/usr/bin/env bats

This allows the Bats files to be executed directly. Before executing the file, ensure you have Bats installed. The Bats files should be executed from the root directory of the tests repository to ensure they can locate all other necessary components. An example of how a Bats test is run from the Makefile looks like:

kubernetes:
        bash -f .ci/install_bats.sh
        bash -f integration/kubernetes/run_kubernetes_tests.sh

Metrics tests

See the metrics documentation.

Kata Admission controller webhook

See the webhook documentation.

Using Vagrant to test your code changes

It is strongly recommended that you test your changes locally before opening a pull request as this can save people's time and CI resources. Because testing Kata Containers involve complex build and setup instructions, scripts on the .ci directory are created to ease and provide a reproducible process; but they are meant to run on CI environments that can be discarded after use. Therefore, developers have noticed dangerous side effects from running those scripts on a workstation or development environment.

That said, we provide in this repository a Vagrantfile which allows developers to use the vagrant tool to create a VM with the setup as close as as possible to the environments where CI jobs will run the tests. Thus, allowing to reproduce a CI job locally.

Your workstation must be capable of running VMs with:

  • 8GB of system memory
  • ~45GB and ~20GB of disk space for the VM images (Fedora and Ubuntu, respectively) on the Libvirt's storage pool

Currently it supports the creation of Fedora (32 and 35) and Ubuntu 20.04 VM, as shown on the table below. The Vagrantfile was tested on Fedora 33 and Ubuntu 20.04 hosts, and it is known to fail the boot of Fedora VM on Ubuntu host. If you have the need of testing on a different guest or it fails to work on your host's distro then please open an issue to let us know.

Host Fedora 32 guest Ubuntu 20.04 guest
Fedora 33 Yes Yes
Ubuntu 20.04 No Yes

Besides having vagrant installed in your host, it is needed the vagrant libvirt plug-in (Libvirt is the provider currently used), QEMU and rsync (needed to copy files between the host and guest).

For example, to install the required software on Fedora host:

$ sudo dnf install -y qemu-kvm libvirt vagrant vagrant-libvirt rsync

Note: ensure that you don't have Kata Container's built QEMU overwritten the distro's in your host, otherwise Vagrant will not work.

Use the vagrant up [fedora|ubuntu] command to bring up the VM. Vagrant is going to pull (unless cached) the base VM image, provision it and then bootstrap the Kata Containers environment (essentially by sourcing environment variables and running the .ci/setup.sh script). For example:

$ cd ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/kata-containers/tests
$ vagrant up fedora

The following repositories are automatically copied to the guest:

  • ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/kata-containers/tests
  • ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/kata-containers/kata-containers

If you want to reproduce a specific CI job, ensure that you have the CI_JOB environment variable exported on your host environment before you run vagrant up. For the possible CI_JOB values, see the .ci/ci_job_flags.sh file. For example, the following will setup the VM to run CRI-O + Kubernetes job:

$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/kata-containers/tests
$ export CI_JOB="CRIO_K8S"
$ vagrant up fedora

At this point, if everything went well, you have a fully functional environment with Kata Containers built and installed. To connect in the VM and run the tests:

$ vagrant ssh fedora
$ .ci/run.sh

In theory you could export CI_JOB with a different value and re-provision the same VM (vagrant provision [fedora|ubuntu]), however this is not recommended because our CI scripts are meant for a single-shot execution. So if you need to run a different job locally, you should destroy the VM with the vagrant destroy [fedora|ubuntu] command then start the process again.

The Vagrant configuration sometimes can get into inconsistent state. That may happen, for instance, when the domain on Libvirt was created by the framework but it thinks the box is not initialized yet. Also you may want to stop using Vagrant and you want to simply wipe out all Vagrant control files and resources from your workstation. For those purposes you should consider using the .ci/vagrant-cleaner.sh script; run .ci/vagrant-cleaner.sh -h for further information.