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author | Claire McQuin <claire@getchef.com> | 2014-08-12 16:53:03 -0700 |
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committer | Claire McQuin <claire@getchef.com> | 2014-08-13 09:21:20 -0700 |
commit | eebc41691763fcea0a5d60b6712630ac8e9c15d1 (patch) | |
tree | 578b4643870f2fb5caf68848d45df969f214316a /kitchen-tests | |
parent | 730a41775850f22bf76cc60ce31065d2bfc6b3fe (diff) | |
download | chef-eebc41691763fcea0a5d60b6712630ac8e9c15d1.tar.gz |
Add test instructions and contributing information.
Diffstat (limited to 'kitchen-tests')
-rw-r--r-- | kitchen-tests/README.md | 124 |
1 files changed, 78 insertions, 46 deletions
diff --git a/kitchen-tests/README.md b/kitchen-tests/README.md index e5b205c1b6..2d03b19b62 100644 --- a/kitchen-tests/README.md +++ b/kitchen-tests/README.md @@ -1,57 +1,89 @@ # End-To-End Testing for Chef Client +Here we seek to provide end-to-end testing of Chef Client through cookbooks which +exercise many of the available resources, providers, and common patterns. The cookbooks +here are designed to ensure certain capabilities remain functional with updates +to the client code base. -The goal is to provide end-to-end testing of `chef-client` and tools which ship -with it. To accomplish this, we use Test Kitchen with the `chef-solo` provisioner -to download Chef source code from GitHub, locally create and install the chef -gem from the source code, and run functional tests. Currently, these tests can -be run locally on your machine, or on Travis when you submit a pull request. +## Getting started +All the gems needed to run these tests can be installed with Bundler. -## Testing -### On your local machine -By default, Test Kitchen uses the [kitchen-vagrant](https://github.com/test-kitchen/kitchen-vagrant) -driver plugin to create local kitchen instances and installs Chef based on your -latest commit to `github.com/opscode/chef`. Currently, for this to work you'll -need to ensure that your latest commit has been pushed to GitHub. If you want to -download Chef from a different commit, modify the `branch` line under -`provisioner` to have that commit's SHA. For example, it may look something like this: - -```(yaml) -# spec/e2e/.kitchen.yml ---- -provisioner: - name: chef_solo - branch: c8a54df7ca24f1482a701d5f39879cdc6c836f8a - github: "github.com/opscode/chef" - require_chef_omnibus: true - -platforms: - - name: ubuntu-12.04 - driver_plugin: vagrant +```shell +chef/kitchen-tests$ bundle install ``` -`branch` accepts any valid git reference. -When you're ready to test, execute the following lines (this assumes your current -working directory is the head of the chef source code, e.g. mine is`~/oc/chef/`): +To ensure everything is working properly, and to see which platforms can have tests +executed on them, run +```shell +chef/kitchen-tests$ bundle exec kitchen list ``` -$ pwd -~/oc/chef -$ cd spec/e2e -$ bundle install -$ bundle exec kitchen test + +You should see output similar to + +```shell +Instance Driver Provisioner Last Action +webapp-ubuntu-1204 Vagrant ChefSolo <Not Created> ``` -To change what Test Kitchen runs, modify your `spec/e2e/.kitchen.yml`. -### On Travis -By default, Test Kitchen uses the [kitchen-ec2](https://github.com/test-kitchen/kitchen-ec2) -driver plugin to create kitchen instances on EC2 and installs Chef based on the -latest pushed commit to your pull request on `github.com/opscode/chef`. That is, -Travis installs Chef from the branch and commit it's testing. Travis runs automatically -every time you publish your commits to a pull request, so please disable Test Kitchen -in Travis (by commenting out the appropriate lines in your `.travis.yml`) or push -new commits to your PR infrequently. +## Testing +We use Test Kitchen to build instances, test client code, and destroy instances. If +you are unfamiliar with Test Kitchen we recommend checking out the [tutorial](http://kitchen.ci/) +along with the `kitchen-vagrant` [driver documentation](https://github.com/test-kitchen/kitchen-vagrant). +Test Kitchen is configured to manipulate instances using [Vagrant](http://www.vagrantup.com/) +when testing locally, and [Amazon EC2](http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/) when testing +pull requests on [Travis CI](https://travis-ci.com). + +### Commands +Kitchen instances are led through a series of states. The instance states, and the actions +taken to transition into each state, are in order: +* `destroy`: Delete all information for and terminate one or more instances. + * This is equivalent to running `vagrant destroy` to stop and delete a Vagrant machine. +* `create`: Start one or more instances. + * This is equivalent to running `vagrant up --no-provision` to start a Vagrant instance. +* `converge`: Use a provisioner to configure one or more instances. + * By default, Test Kitchen is configured to use the `ChefSolo` provisioner which: + * Prepares local files for transfer, + * Installs the latest release of Chef Omnibus, + * Downloads Chef Client source code from the prescribed GitHub repository and reference, + * Builds and installs a `chef` gem from the downloaded source, + * Runs `chef-client`. +* `setup`: Prepare to run automated tests. Installs `busser` and related gems on one or more instances. +* `verify`: Run automated tests on one or more instances. + +When transitioning between states, actions for any and all intermediate states will performed. +Executing the `create` then the `verify` commands is equivalent to executing `create`, `converge`, +`setup`, and `verify` one-by-one and in order. The only exception is `destroy`, which will +immediately transfer that machine's state to destroyed. + +The `test` command takes one or more instances through all the states, in order: `destroy`, `create`, +`converge`, `setup`, `verify`, `destroy`. + +To see a list of available commands, type `bundle exec kitchen help`. To see more information +about a particular command, type `bundle exec kitchen help <command>`. + +### Configuring your tests +Test Kitchen is configured for local testing in the `.kitchen.yml` file which resides in this directory. +You will need to configure the provisioner before running the tests. + +The provisioner can be configured to pull client source code from a GitHub repository using any +valid Git reference. You are encouraged to modify any of these settings, but please return them +to their original values before submitting a pull request for review (unless, of course, your +changes are enhancements to the default provisioner settings). + +By default, the provisioner is configured to pull your most recent commit to `opscode/chef`. You +can change this by modifying the `github` and `branch` provisioner options: +* `github`: Set this to `"<your_username>/<your_chef_repo>"`. The default is `"opscode/chef"`. +* `branch`: This can be any valid git reference (e.g., branch name, tag, or commit SHA). If omitted, it defaults to `master`. + +The branch you choose must be accessible on GitHub. You cannot use a local commit at this time. -To change what Test Kitchen runs, modify your `spec/e2e/.kitchen.travis.yml`. +### Testing pull requests +These end-to-end tests are also configured to run with Travis on EC2 instances when you submit a pull request +to `opscode/chef`. Kitchen is configured to pull chef client source code from the branch it is testing. There +is no need to modify `.kitchen.travis.yml` unless you are contributing tests. -**IMPORTANT: Do not modify any of the values in the matrix under `env`!** These are carefully -configured so that Travis can use EC2 and Test Kitchen. +## Contributing +We would love to fill out our end-to-end testing coverage! If you have cookbooks and tests that you would +like to see become a part of client testing, we encourage you to submit a pull request with your additions. +We request that you do not add platforms to `.kitchen.travis.yml`. Please file a request to add a +platform under [Issues](https://github.com/opscode/chef/issues). |