.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. .. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 .. (c) OPNFV, Huawei Technologies Co.,Ltd and others. ========================================= Conducting OVP NFVI Testing with Dovetail ========================================= Overview -------- This guide provides the instructions for the OVP Infrastructure testing. For the OVP VNF testing, please refer to the next section. The Dovetail testing framework for OVP consists of two major parts: the testing client which executes all test cases in a lab (vendor self-testing or a third party lab), and the server system which is hosted by the OVP administrator to store and view test results based on a web API. The following diagram illustrates this overall framework. .. image:: ../../../images/dovetail_online_mode.png :align: center :scale: 50% Within the tester's lab, the Test Host is the machine where Dovetail executes all automated test cases. As it hosts the test harness, the Test Host must not be part of the System Under Test (SUT) itself. The above diagram assumes that the tester's Test Host is situated in a DMZ, which has internal network access to the SUT and external access via the public Internet. The public Internet connection allows for easy installation of the Dovetail containers. A single compressed file that includes all the underlying results can be pulled from the Test Host and uploaded to the OPNFV OVP server. This arrangement may not be supported in some labs. Dovetail also supports an offline mode of installation which is illustrated in the next diagram. .. image:: ../../../images/dovetail_offline_mode.png :align: center :scale: 50% In the offline mode, the Test Host only needs to have access to the SUT via the internal network, but does not need to connect to the public Internet. This user guide will highlight differences between the online and offline modes of the Test Host. While it is possible to run the Test Host as a virtual machine, this user guide assumes it is a physical machine for simplicity. The rest of this guide will describe how to install the Dovetail tool as a Docker container image, go over the steps of running the OVP test suite, and then discuss how to view test results and make sense of them. Readers interested in using Dovetail for its functionalities beyond OVP testing, e.g. for in-house or extended testing, should consult the Dovetail developer's guide for additional information. Installing Dovetail -------------------- In this section, we describe the procedure to install Dovetail client tool on the Test Host. The Test Host must have network access to the management network with access rights to the Virtual Infrastructure Manager's API. Checking the Test Host Readiness ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Test Host must have network access to the Virtual Infrastructure Manager's API hosted in the SUT so that the Dovetail tool can exercise the API from the Test Host. It must also have ``ssh`` access to the Linux operating system of the compute nodes in the SUT. The ``ssh`` mechanism is used by some test cases to generate test events in the compute nodes. You can find out which test cases use this mechanism in the test specification document. We have tested the Dovetail tool on the following host operating systems. Other versions or distributions of Linux may also work, but community support may be more available on these versions. - Ubuntu 16.04.2 LTS (Xenial) or 14.04 LTS (Trusty) - CentOS-7-1611 - Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.3 - Fedora 24 or 25 Server Use of Ubuntu 16.04 is highly recommended, as it has been most widely employed during testing. Non-Linux operating systems, such as Windows and Mac OS, have not been tested and are not supported. If online mode is used, the tester should also validate that the Test Host can reach the public Internet. For example, .. code-block:: bash $ ping www.opnfv.org PING www.opnfv.org (50.56.49.117): 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 50.56.49.117: icmp_seq=0 ttl=48 time=52.952 ms 64 bytes from 50.56.49.117: icmp_seq=1 ttl=48 time=53.805 ms 64 bytes from 50.56.49.117: icmp_seq=2 ttl=48 time=53.349 ms ... Or, if the lab environment does not allow ping, try validating it using HTTPS instead. .. code-block:: bash $ curl https://www.opnfv.org ... Installing Prerequisite Packages on the Test Host ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The main prerequisite software for Dovetail is Docker. Dovetail does not work with Docker versions prior to 1.12.3. We have validated Dovetail with Docker 17.03 CE. Other versions of Docker later than 1.12.3 may also work, but community support may be more available on Docker 17.03 CE or greater. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker version Client: Version: 17.03.1-ce API version: 1.27 Go version: go1.7.5 Git commit: c6d412e Built: Mon Mar 27 17:10:36 2017 OS/Arch: linux/amd64 Server: Version: 17.03.1-ce API version: 1.27 (minimum version 1.12) Go version: go1.7.5 Git commit: c6d412e Built: Mon Mar 27 17:10:36 2017 OS/Arch: linux/amd64 Experimental: false If your Test Host does not have Docker installed, or Docker is older than 1.12.3, or you have Docker version other than 17.03 CE and wish to change, you will need to install, upgrade, or re-install in order to run Dovetail. If you need further assistance with Docker installation process, you should refer to the official Docker installation guide that is relevant to your Test Host's operating system. The above installation steps assume that the Test Host is in the online mode. For offline testing, use the following offline installation steps instead. For instance, download Docker static binaries and copy the tar file to the Test Host, such as for Ubuntu14.04, you may follow the following link: .. code-block:: bash https://github.com/meetyg/docker-offline-install Configuring the Test Host Environment ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Test Host needs a few environment variables set correctly in order to access the OpenStack API which is required to drive the Dovetail tests. For convenience and as a convention, we will also create a home directory for storing all Dovetail related config files and results files: .. code-block:: bash $ mkdir -p ${HOME}/dovetail $ export DOVETAIL_HOME=${HOME}/dovetail For example, here we set dovetail home directory to be ``${HOME}/dovetail``. Then create two directories named ``pre_config`` and ``images`` under this directory to store all Dovetail related config files and all test images respectively: .. code-block:: bash $ mkdir -p ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config $ mkdir -p ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images Setting up Primary Configuration File ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ At this point, you will need to consult your SUT (OpenStack) administrator to correctly set the configurations in a file named ``env_config.sh``. The OpenStack settings need to be configured such that the Dovetail client has all the necessary credentials and privileges to execute all test operations. If the SUT uses terms somewhat differently from the standard OpenStack naming, you will need to adjust this file accordingly. Create and edit the file ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config/env_config.sh`` so that all parameters are set correctly to match your SUT. Here is an example of what this file should contain. .. code-block:: bash $ cat ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config/env_config.sh # Project-level authentication scope (name or ID), admin project is recommended. export OS_PROJECT_NAME=admin # Authentication username, belongs to the project above, admin user is recommended. export OS_USERNAME=admin # Authentication password. Use your own password export OS_PASSWORD=xxxxxxxx # Authentication URL, one of the endpoints of keystone service. If this is v3 version, # there needs some extra variables as follows. export OS_AUTH_URL='http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:5000/v3' # Default is 2.0. If use keystone v3 API, this should be set as 3. export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3 # Domain name or ID containing the user above. # Command to check the domain: openstack user show export OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME=default # Domain name or ID containing the project above. # Command to check the domain: openstack project show export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME=default # Special environment parameters for https. # If using https + cacert, the path of cacert file should be provided. # The cacert file should be put at $DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config. export OS_CACERT=/path/to/pre_config/cacert.pem # If using https + no cacert, should add OS_INSECURE environment parameter. export OS_INSECURE=True # The name of a network with external connectivity for allocating floating # IPs. It is required that at least one Neutron network with the attribute # 'router:external=True' is pre-configured on the system under test. # This network is used by test cases to SSH into tenant VMs and perform # operations there. export EXTERNAL_NETWORK=xxx # Set an existing role used to create project and user for vping test cases. # Otherwise, it will create a role 'Member' to do that. export NEW_USER_ROLE=xxx # For XCI installer the following environment parameters should be added in # this file. Otherwise, those parameters could be ignored. export INSTALLER_TYPE=osa export DEPLOY_SCENARIO=os-nosdn-nofeature export XCI_FLAVOR=noha The OS_AUTH_URL variable is key to configure correctly, as the other admin services are collected from the identity service. HTTPS should be configured in the SUT so either OS_CACERT or OS_INSECURE should be uncommented. However, if SSL is disabled in the SUT, comment out both OS_CACERT and OS_INSECURE variables. Ensure the '/path/to/pre_config' directory in the above file matches the directory location of the cacert file for the OS_CACERT variable. The next three sections outline additional configuration files used by Dovetail. The tempest (tempest_conf.yaml) configuration file is required for executing all tempest test cases (e.g. functest.tempest.compute, functest.tempest.ipv6 ...) and functest.security.patrole. The HA (pod.yaml) configuration file is required for HA test cases and is also employed to collect SUT hardware info. The hosts.yaml is optional for hostname/IP resolution. Configuration for Running Tempest Test Cases (Mandatory) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The test cases in the test areas `tempest` and `security` are based on Tempest. A SUT-specific configuration of Tempest is required in order to run those test cases successfully. The corresponding SUT-specific configuration options must be supplied in the file ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/tempest_conf.yaml``. Create and edit file ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/tempest_conf.yaml``. Here is an example of what this file should contain. .. code-block:: bash compute: # The minimum number of compute nodes expected. # This should be no less than 2 and no larger than the compute nodes the SUT actually has. min_compute_nodes: 2 # Expected device name when a volume is attached to an instance. volume_device_name: vdb # One sub test case of functest.tempest.osinterop will be skipped if not provide this version. # The default range of microversion for tempest is [None - None]. # Test case functest.tempest.osinterop required the range to be [2.2 - latest]. max_microversion: 2.65 Use the listing above as a minimum to execute the mandatory test cases. If the optional BGPVPN Tempest API tests shall be run, Tempest needs to be told that the BGPVPN service is available. To do that, add the following to the ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/tempest_conf.yaml`` configuration file: .. code-block:: bash service_available: bgpvpn: True Configuration for Running HA Test Cases (Mandatory) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The HA test cases require OpenStack controller node info. It must include the node's name, role, ip, as well as the user and key_filename or password to login to the node. Users must create the file ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config/pod.yaml`` to store the info. For some HA test cases, they will log in the controller node 'node1' and kill the specific processes. The names of the specific processes may be different with the actual ones of the SUTs. The processes' names can also be changed with file ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config/pod.yaml``. This file is also used as a basis to collect SUT hardware information which is stored alongside results and uploaded to the OVP web portal. The SUT hardware information can be viewed within the 'My Results' view in the OVP web portal by clicking the SUT column 'info' link. In order to collect SUT hardware information holistically, ensure this file has an entry for each of the controller and compute nodes within the SUT. Below is a sample with the required syntax when password is employed by the controller. .. code-block:: bash nodes: - # This info of node0 is used only for one optional test case 'yardstick.ha.controller_restart'. # If you don't plan to test it, this Jumpserver node can be ignored. # This can not be changed and **must** be node0. name: node0 # This **must** be Jumpserver. role: Jumpserver # This is the instance IP of a node which has ipmitool installed. ip: xx.xx.xx.xx # User name of the user of this node. This user **must** have sudo privileges. user: root # Password of the user. password: root - # Almost all HA test cases are trying to login to a controller node named 'node1' # and then kill some processes running on it. # If you don't want to reset the attack node name for each test case, this # name can not be changed and **must** be node1. name: node1 # This **must** be controller. role: Controller # This is the instance IP of a controller node, which is the haproxy primary node ip: xx.xx.xx.xx # User name of the user of this node. This user **must** have sudo privileges. user: root # Password of the user. password: root process_info: - # For all HA test cases, there are 2 parameters, 'attack_process' and 'attack_host', # which support to be set by users instead of using the default values. # The 'attack_process' is the process name of one HA test case which it try to kill. # The 'attack_host' is the host name which the test case try to login and then kill # the process running on it. # Fllowing is 2 samples. # The default attack process of yardstick.ha.rabbitmq is 'rabbitmq-server'. # Here can be reset to 'rabbitmq'. testcase_name: yardstick.ha.rabbitmq attack_process: rabbitmq - # The default attack host for all HA test cases is 'node1'. # Here can be reset to any other node given in the section 'nodes'. testcase_name: yardstick.ha.glance_api attack_host: node2 Besides the 'password', a 'key_filename' entry can be provided to login to the controller node. Users need to create file ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/id_rsa`` to store the private key. A sample is provided below to show the required syntax when using a key file. .. code-block:: bash nodes: - name: node1 role: Controller ip: 10.1.0.50 user: root # Private ssh key for accessing the controller nodes. If a keyfile is # being used instead of password, it **must** be put under # $DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/ and named 'id_rsa'. key_filename: /home/dovetail/pre_config/id_rsa Under nodes, repeat entries for name, role, ip, user and password or key file for each of the controller/compute nodes that comprise the SUT. Use a '-' to separate each of the entries. Specify the value for the role key to be either 'Controller' or 'Compute' for each node. Under process_info, repeat entries for testcase_name, attack_host and attack_process for each HA test case. Use a '-' to separate each of the entries. The default attack host of all HA test cases is **node1**. The default attack processes of all HA test cases are list here: +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | Test Case Name | Attack Process Name | +===============================+=========================+ | yardstick.ha.cinder_api | cinder-api | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.database | mysql | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.glance_api | glance-api | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.haproxy | haproxy | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.keystone | keystone | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.neutron_l3_agent | neutron-l3-agent | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.neutron_server | neutron-server | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.nova_api | nova-api | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ | yardstick.ha.rabbitmq | rabbitmq-server | +-------------------------------+-------------------------+ Configuration of Hosts File (Optional) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If your SUT uses a hosts file to translate hostnames into the IP of OS_AUTH_URL, then you need to provide the hosts info in a file ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/hosts.yaml``. Create and edit file ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/pre_config/hosts.yaml``. Below is an example of what this file should contain. Note that multiple hostnames can be specified for each IP address, as shown in the generic syntax below the example. .. code-block:: bash $ cat ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/pre_config/hosts.yaml --- hosts_info: 192.168.141.101: - identity.endpoint.url - compute.endpoint.url : - - Installing Dovetail on the Test Host ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Dovetail project maintains a Docker image that has Dovetail test tools preinstalled. This Docker image is tagged with versions. Before pulling the Dovetail image, check the OPNFV's OVP web page first to determine the right tag for OVP testing. Online Test Host """""""""""""""" If the Test Host is online, you can directly pull Dovetail Docker image, then all other dependent docker images will automatically be downloaded. Also you can download other related VM images such as Ubuntu and Cirros images which are used by Dovetail for image creation and VM instantiation within the SUT. Following given the download url for each VM images. Cirros-0.4.0 and Ubuntu-16.04 are used by mandatory test cases, so they are the only 2 images **must** be downloaded before doing the test. There are also 2 other optional VM images, Ubuntu-14.04 and Cloudify-manager, which are used by optional test cases functest.vnf.vepc and functest.vnf.vims. If you don't plan to test these 2 test cases, you can skip downloading these 2 images. .. code-block:: bash $ wget -nc http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.4.0/cirros-0.4.0-x86_64-disk.img -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images $ wget -nc https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/releases/16.04/release/ubuntu-16.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images $ wget -nc https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/releases/14.04/release/ubuntu-14.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images $ wget -nc http://repository.cloudifysource.org/cloudify/19.01.24/community-release/cloudify-docker-manager-community-19.01.24.tar -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images $ sudo docker pull opnfv/dovetail:ovp-3.0.0 ovp-3.0.0: Pulling from opnfv/dovetail 324d088ce065: Pull complete 2ab951b6c615: Pull complete 9b01635313e2: Pull complete 04510b914a6c: Pull complete 83ab617df7b4: Pull complete 40ebbe7294ae: Pull complete d5db7e3e81ae: Pull complete 0701bf048879: Pull complete 0ad9f4168266: Pull complete d949894f87f6: Pull complete Digest: sha256:7449601108ebc5c40f76a5cd9065ca5e18053be643a0eeac778f537719336c29 Status: Downloaded newer image for opnfv/dovetail:ovp-3.0.0 Offline Test Host """"""""""""""""" If the Test Host is offline, you will need to first pull the Dovetail Docker image and all the dependent images that Dovetail uses, to a host that is online. The reason that you need to pull all dependent images is because Dovetail normally does dependency checking at run-time and automatically pulls images as needed, if the Test Host is online. If the Test Host is offline, then all these dependencies will need to be manually copied. The Docker images, Ubuntu and Cirros image below are necessary for all mandatory test cases. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker pull opnfv/dovetail:ovp-3.0.0 $ sudo docker pull opnfv/functest-smoke:hunter $ sudo docker pull opnfv/functest-healthcheck:hunter $ sudo docker pull opnfv/yardstick:opnfv-8.0.0 $ sudo docker pull opnfv/bottlenecks:8.0.1-latest $ wget -nc http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.4.0/cirros-0.4.0-x86_64-disk.img -P {ANY_DIR} $ wget -nc https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/releases/16.04/release/ubuntu-16.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images The other Docker images and test images below are only used by optional test cases. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker pull opnfv/functest-vnf:hunter $ wget -nc https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/releases/14.04/release/ubuntu-14.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img -P {ANY_DIR} $ wget -nc http://repository.cloudifysource.org/cloudify/19.01.24/community-release/cloudify-docker-manager-community-19.01.24.tar -P ${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images Once all these images are pulled, save the images, copy them to the Test Host, and then load the Dovetail image and all dependent images at the Test Host. At the online host, save the images with the command below. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker save -o dovetail.tar opnfv/dovetail:ovp-3.0.0 \ opnfv/functest-smoke:hunter opnfv/functest-healthcheck:hunter \ opnfv/functest-vnf:hunter \ opnfv/yardstick:opnfv-8.0.0 opnfv/bottlenecks:8.0.1-latest The command above creates a dovetail.tar file with all the images, which can then be copied to the Test Host. To load the Dovetail images on the Test Host execute the command below. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker load --input dovetail.tar Now check to see that all Docker images have been pulled or loaded properly. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker images REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE opnfv/dovetail ovp-3.0.0 4b68659da24d 22 hours ago 825MB opnfv/functest-smoke hunter c0253f6de153 3 weeks ago 556MB opnfv/functest-healthcheck hunter fb6d766e38e0 3 weeks ago 379MB opnfv/functest-vnf hunter 31466d52d155 21 hours ago 1.1GB opnfv/yardstick opnfv-8.0.0 189d7d9fbcb2 7 months ago 2.54GB opnfv/bottlenecks 8.0.1-latest 44c1b9fb25aa 5 hours ago 837MB After copying and loading the Dovetail images at the Test Host, also copy the test images (Ubuntu, Cirros and cloudify-manager) to the Test Host. - Copy image ``cirros-0.4.0-x86_64-disk.img`` to ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images/``. - Copy image ``ubuntu-14.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img`` to ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images/``. - Copy image ``ubuntu-16.04-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img`` to ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images/``. - Copy image ``cloudify-docker-manager-community-19.01.24.tar`` to ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/images/``. Starting Dovetail Docker ------------------------ Regardless of whether you pulled down the Dovetail image directly online, or loaded it from a static image tar file, you are now ready to run Dovetail. Use the command below to create a Dovetail container and get access to its shell. .. code-block:: bash $ sudo docker run --privileged=true -it \ -e DOVETAIL_HOME=$DOVETAIL_HOME \ -v $DOVETAIL_HOME:$DOVETAIL_HOME \ -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \ opnfv/dovetail: /bin/bash The ``-e`` option sets the DOVETAIL_HOME environment variable in the container and the ``-v`` options mounts files from the test host to the destination path inside the container. The latter option allows the Dovetail container to read the configuration files and write result files into DOVETAIL_HOME on the Test Host. The user should be within the Dovetail container shell, once the command above is executed. Running the OVP Test Suite ---------------------------- All or a subset of the available tests can be executed at any location within the Dovetail container prompt. You can refer to :ref:`cli-reference` for the details of the CLI. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --testsuite The ``--testsuite`` option is used to control the set of tests intended for execution at a high level. For the purposes of running the OVP test suite, the test suite name follows the following format, ``ovp.``. The latest and default test suite is ovp.2019.12. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run This command is equal to .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --testsuite ovp.2019.12 Without any additional options, the above command will attempt to execute all mandatory and optional test cases with test suite ovp.2019.12. To restrict the breadth of the test scope, it can also be specified using options ``--mandatory`` or ``--optional``. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --mandatory Also there is a ``--testcase`` option provided to run a specified test case. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --testcase functest.tempest.osinterop Dovetail allows the user to disable strict API response validation implemented by Nova Tempest tests by means of the ``--no-api-validation`` option. Usage of this option is only advisable if the SUT returns Nova API responses that contain additional attributes. For more information on this command line option and its intended usage, refer to :ref:`dovetail-exemption_process_api_response_validation`. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --testcase functest.tempest.osinterop --no-api-validation By default, during test case execution, the respective feature is responsible to decide what flavor is going to use for the execution of each test scenario which is under of its umbrella. In parallel, there is also implemented a mechanism in order for the extra specs in flavors of executing test scenarios to be hugepages instead of the default option. This is happening if the name of the scenario contains the substring "ovs". In this case, the flavor which is going to be used for the running test case has 'hugepage' characteristics. Taking the above into consideration and having in mind that the DEPLOY_SCENARIO environment parameter is not used by dovetail framework (the initial value is 'unknown'), we set as input, for the features that they are responsible for the test case execution, the DEPLOY_SCENARIO environment parameter having as substring the feature name "ovs" (e.g. os-nosdn-ovs-ha). Note for the users: - if their system uses DPDK, they should run with ``--deploy-scenario `` (e.g. os-nosdn-ovs-ha) - this is an experimental feature .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --testcase functest.tempest.osinterop --deploy-scenario os-nosdn-ovs-ha By default, results are stored in local files on the Test Host at ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/results``. Each time the 'dovetail run' command is executed, the results in the aforementioned directory are overwritten. To create a singular compressed result file for upload to the OVP portal or for archival purposes, the tool provides an option ``--report``. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --report If the Test Host is offline, ``--offline`` should be added to support running with local resources. Otherwise, it will try to download resources online during the run time. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --offline Below is an example of running one test case and the creation of the compressed result file on the Test Host. .. code-block:: bash $ dovetail run --offline --testcase functest.vping.userdata --report 2019-12-04 07:31:13,156 - run - INFO - ================================================ 2019-12-04 07:31:13,157 - run - INFO - Dovetail compliance: ovp.2019.12! 2019-12-04 07:31:13,157 - run - INFO - ================================================ 2019-12-04 07:31:13,157 - run - INFO - Build tag: daily-master-0c9184e6-1668-11ea-b1cd-0242ac110002 2019-12-04 07:31:13,610 - run - INFO - >>[testcase]: functest.vping.userdata 2019-12-04 07:31:13,612 - dovetail.test_runner.DockerRunner - WARNING - There is no hosts file /home/ovp/pre_config/hosts.yaml. This may cause some issues with domain name resolution. 2019-12-04 07:31:14,587 - dovetail.test_runner.DockerRunner - INFO - Get hardware info of all nodes list in file /home/ovp/pre_config/pod.yaml ... 2019-12-04 07:31:14,587 - dovetail.test_runner.DockerRunner - INFO - Hardware info of all nodes are stored in file /home/dovetail/results/all_hosts_info.json. 2019-12-04 07:31:14,612 - dovetail.container.Container - WARNING - There is no hosts file /home/ovp/pre_config/hosts.yaml. This may cause some issues with domain name resolution. 2019-12-04 07:32:13,804 - dovetail.report.Report - INFO - Results have been stored with files: ['/home/ovp/results/functest_results.txt']. 2019-12-04 07:32:13,808 - dovetail.report.Report - INFO - Dovetail Report Version: 2019.12 Build Tag: daily-master-0c9184e6-1668-11ea-b1cd-0242ac110002 Test Date: 2019-12-04 07:32:13 UTC Duration: 60.20 s Pass Rate: 100.00% (1/1) vping: pass rate 100.00% -functest.vping.userdata PASS When test execution is complete, a tar file with all result and log files is written in ``$DOVETAIL_HOME`` on the Test Host. An example filename is ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/logs_20191204_0732.tar.gz``. The file is named using a timestamp that follows the convention 'YearMonthDay_HourMinute'. In this case, it was generated at 07:32 on December 4th, 2019. This tar file is used for uploading the logs and results to the OVP portal. Making Sense of OVP Test Results ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When a tester is performing trial runs, Dovetail stores results in local files on the Test Host by default within directory ``$DOVETAIL_HOME/results``. * Log file: dovetail.log * Review the dovetail.log to see if all important information has been captured * In default mode without DEBUG. * Adding option ``-d/--debug`` to change the mode to be DEBUG. * Result file: results.json * Review the results.json to see all results data including criteria for PASS or FAIL. * Tempest and security test cases * Can see the log details in ``tempest_logs/functest.tempest.XXX.html`` and ``security_logs/functest.security.XXX.html`` respectively, which has the passed, skipped and failed test cases results. * This kind of files need to be opened with a web browser. * The skipped test cases are accompanied with the reason tag for the users to see why these test cases skipped. * The failed test cases have rich debug information for the users to see why these test cases failed. * Vping test cases * Its log is stored in ``vping_logs/functest.vping.XXX.log``. * HA test cases * Its log is stored in ``ha_logs/yardstick.ha.XXX.log``. * Stress test cases * Its log is stored in ``stress_logs/bottlenecks.stress.XXX.log``. * VNF test cases * Its log is stored in ``vnf_logs/functest.vnf.XXX.log``. OVP Portal Web Interface ------------------------ The OVP portal is a public web interface for the community to collaborate on results and to submit results for official OPNFV compliance verification. The portal can be used as a resource by users to navigate and inspect results more easily than by manually inspecting the log files. The portal also allows users to share results in a private manner until they are ready to submit results for peer community review. * Web Site URL * https://nfvi-verified.lfnetworking.org * Sign In / Sign Up Links * Accounts are exposed through Linux Foundation. * If you already have a Linux Foundation ID, you can sign in directly with your ID. * If you do not have a Linux Foundation ID, you can sign up for a new one using 'Sign Up'. * My Results Tab * This is the primary view where most of the workflow occurs. * This page lists all results uploaded by you after signing in. * Following the two steps below, the results are uploaded and in status 'private'. * Obtain results tar file located at ``${DOVETAIL_HOME}/``, e.g. ``logs_20180105_0858.tar.gz``. * Use the *Choose File* button where a file selection dialog allows you to choose your result file from the hard-disk. Then click the *Upload result* button and see a results ID once your upload succeeds. * Results are remaining in status 'private' until they are submitted for review. * Use the *Operation* column drop-down option *submit to review*, to expose results to OPNFV community peer reviewers. Use the *withdraw submit* option to reverse this action. * Results status are changed to be 'review' after submit to review. * Use the *View Reviews* to find the review status including reviewers' names and the outcome. * The administrator will approve the results which have got 2 positive outcome from 2 reviewers. Then the status will be changed to be 'verified'. * Use the *Operation* column drop-down option *share with* to share results with other users by supplying either the login user ID or the email address associated with the share target account. The result is exposed to the share target but remains private otherwise. * Profile Tab * This page shows your account info after you sign in. * There are 3 different roles: administrator, user and reviewer. Updating Dovetail or a Test Suite --------------------------------- Follow the instructions in section `Installing Dovetail on the Test Host`_ and `Running the OVP Test Suite`_ by replacing the docker images with new_tags: .. code-block:: bash sudo docker pull opnfv/dovetail: sudo docker pull opnfv/functest: sudo docker pull opnfv/yardstick: sudo docker pull opnfv/bottlenecks: This step is necessary if dovetail software or the OVP test suite have updates.