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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH OSSTEST] README: Add some core concepts and terminology



I should have said this yesterday on the docs day, but: Ping

On Mon, 2014-01-20 at 13:20 +0000, Ian Campbell wrote:
> ---
>  README | 202 
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
>  1 file changed, 201 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
> 
> diff --git a/README b/README
> index 29c9d45..60379c4 100644
> --- a/README
> +++ b/README
> @@ -1,3 +1,197 @@
> +Introduction
> +============
> +
> +OSStest is the Xen Project automated test infrastructure.
> +
> +Terminology
> +===========
> +
> +"flight":
> +
> +    Each run of osstest is referred to as a "flight". Each flight is
> +    given a unique ID (a number or name).
> +
> +"job":
> +
> +    Each flight consists of one or more "jobs". These are a sequence
> +    of test steps run in order and correspond to a column in the test
> +    report grid. They have names like "build-amd64" or
> +    "test-amd64-amd64-pv". A job can depend on the output of another
> +    job in the flight -- e.g. most test-* jobs depend on one or more
> +    build-* jobs.
> +
> +"step":
> +
> +    Each job consists of multiple "steps" which is an individual test
> +    operation, such as "build the hypervisor", "install a guest",
> +    "start a guest", "migrate a guest", etc. A step corresponds to a
> +    cell in the results grid. A given step can be reused in multiple
> +    different jobs, e.g. the "xen build" step is used in several
> +    different build-* jobs. This reuse can be seen in the rows of the
> +    results grid.
> +
> +"runvar":
> +
> +    A runvar is a named textual variable associated with each job in a
> +    given flight. They serve as both the inputs and outputs to the
> +    job.
> +
> +    For example a Xen build job may have input runvars "tree_xen" (the
> +    tree to clone) and "revision_xen" (the version to test). As output
> +    it sets "path_xendist" which is the path to the tarball of the
> +    resulting binary.
> +
> +    As a further example a test job may have an input runvar
> +    "xenbuildjob" which specifies which build job produced the binary
> +    to be tested. The "xen install" step can then read this runvar in
> +    order to find the binary to install.
> +
> +    Other runvars also exist covering things such as:
> +
> +        * constraints on which machines in the test pool a job can be
> +          run on (e.g. the architecure, the need for a particular
> +          processor class, the presence of SR-IOV etc).
> +
> +        * the parameters of the guest to test (e.g. distro, PV vs HVM
> +          etc).
> +
> +Operation
> +=========
> +
> +A flight is constructed by the "make-flight" script.
> +
> +"make-flight" will allocate a new flight number, create a set of jobs
> +with input runvars depending on the configuration (e.g. branch/version
> +to test).
> +
> +A flight is run by the "mg-execute-flight" script, which in turn calls
> +"sg-execute-flight". "sg-execute-flight" then spawns an instance of
> +"sg-run-job" for each job in the flight.
> +
> +"sg-run-job" encodes various recipes (sequences of steps) which are
> +referenced by each job's configuration. It then runs each of these in
> +turn, taking into account the prerequisites etc, by calling the
> +relevant "ts-*" scripts.
> +
> +When running in standalone mode it is possible to run any of these
> +steps by hand, ("mg-execute-flight", "sg-run-job", "ts-*") although
> +you will need to find the correct inputs (some of which are documented
> +below) and perhaps take care of prerequisites yourself (e.g. running
> +"./sg-run-job test-armhf-armhf-xl" means you must have done
> +"./sg-runjob build-armhf" and "build-armhf-pvops" first.
> +
> +Results
> +=======
> +
> +For flights run automatically by the infrastructure an email report is
> +produced. For most normal flights this is mailed to the xen-devel
> +mailing list. The report for flight 24438 can be seen at
> +
> +    http://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2014-01/msg01614.html
> +
> +The report will link to a set of complete logs. Since these are
> +regularly expired due to space constraints the logs for flight 24438
> +have been archived to
> +
> +    http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/osstest-output-example/24438/
> +
> +NB: to save space any files larger than 100K have been replaced with a
> +placeholder.
> +
> +The results grid contains an overview of the flight's execution.
> +
> +The results for each job are reached by clicking the header of the
> +column in the results grid which will lead to reports such as:
> +
> +    
> http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/osstest-output-example/24438/test-amd64-amd64-xl/info.html
> +    
> http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/osstest-output-example/24438/build-amd64/info.html
> +
> +The job report contains all of the logs and build outputs associated
> +with this job.
> +
> +The logs for a step are reached by clicking the individual cells of
> +the results grid, or by clicking the list of steps on the job
> +report. In either case this will lead to a report such as
> +
> +    
> http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/osstest-output-example/24438/test-amd64-amd64-xl/4.ts-xen-install.log
> +
> +Additional details (e.g. serial logs, guest cfg files, etc) will be
> +available in the complete logs associated with the containing job.
> +
> +The runvars are listed in the results page for the job as "Test
> +control variables". e.g. See the end of:
> +
> +    
> http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/osstest-output-example/24438/test-amd64-amd64-xl/info.html
> +
> +In order to find the binaries which went into a test job you should
> +consult the results page for that job and find the relevant build
> +job. e.g.
> +
> +    
> http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~xensrcts/logs/24438/test-amd64-amd64-xl/info.html
> +
> +lists "xenbuildjob" as "build-amd64". Therefore the input binaries are
> +found at
> +
> +    
> http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~xensrcts/logs/24438/build-amd64/info.html
> +
> +which is linked from the top of the relevant column in the overview
> +grid.
> +
> +Script Naming Conventions
> +=========================
> +
> +Most of the scripts follow a naming convention:
> +
> +ap-*:   Adhoc push scripts
> +
> +cr-*:   Cron scripts
> +
> +cri-*:  Cron scripts (internal)
> +
> +cs-*:   Control Scripts
> +
> +mg-*:   Management scripts
> +
> +ms-*:   Management Services
> +
> +sg-*:   ?
> +
> +ts-*:   Test Step scripts.
> +
> +Jobs
> +====
> +
> +The names of jobs follow some common patterns:
> +
> +    build-$ARCH
> +
> +        Build Xen for $ARCH
> +
> +    build-$ARCH-xend
> +
> +        Build Xen for $ARCH, with xend enabled
> +
> +    build-$ARCH-pvops
> +
> +        Build an upstream ("pvops") kernel for $ARCH
> +
> +build-$ARCH-oldkern
> +
> +        Build the old "linux-2.6.18-xen" tree for $ARCH
> +
> +test-$XENARCH-$DOM0ARCH-<CASE>
> +
> +        A test <CASE> running a $XENARCH hypervisor with a $DOM0ARCH
> +        dom0.
> +
> +        Some tests also have a -$DOMUARCH suffix indicating the
> +        obvious thing.
> +
> +NB: $ARCH (and $XENARCH etc) are Debian arch names, i386, amd64, armhf.
> +
> +Standalone Mode
> +===============
> +
>  To run osstest in standalone mode:
>  
>   - You need to install
> @@ -18,7 +212,7 @@ To run osstest in standalone mode:
>     gives you the "branch" consisting of tests run for the xen-unstable
>     push gate.  You need to select a job.  The list of available jobs
>     is that shown in the publicly emailed test reports on xen-devel, eg
> -     http://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2013-08/msg02529.html
> +     http://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2014-01/msg01614.html
>  
>     If you don't want to repro one of those and don't know how to
>     choose a job, choose one of
> @@ -26,6 +220,12 @@ To run osstest in standalone mode:
>  
>   - Run ./standalone-reset
>  
> +   This will call "make-flight" for you to create a flight targetting
> +   xen-unstable (this can be adjusted by passing parameters to
> +   standalone-reset). By default the flight identifier is
> +   "standalone". standalone-reset will also make sure that certain
> +   bits of static data are available (e.g. Debian installer images)
> +
>   - Then you can run
>        ./sg-run-job <job>
>     to run that job on the default host.  NB in most cases this will



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