libtaskotron is a library for running automated tasks as part of the Taskotron system. The initial objective is (but is not limited to) automating selected package checks in Fedora.
The project is not yet to be considered stable - the features contained are generally functional but we will likely continue to make major changes in how libtaskotron works.
For more information and API documentation, please look at Taskotron project page.
Please direct questions and comments to either #fedora-qa on freenode or the qa-devel mailing list.
Please consider whether you really need a libtaskotron development environment. Maybe you simply want to develop tests using libtaskotron? In that case, please follow libtaskotron install instructions instead. If you really want to develop libtaskotron itself, please continue.
For the moment, libtaskotron can't be fully installed by either pip or rpm and needs a bit of both for now.
On your Fedora system, install the necessary packages:
sudo dnf install \ createrepo \ gcc \ git \ koji \ libtaskotron-config \ mash \ python-doit \ python-hawkey \ python-pip \ python-rpmfluff \ python-virtualenv \ rpm-build \ rpm-python \ testcloud
If you have not yet cloned the repository, do it now:
git clone https://pagure.io/taskotron/libtaskotron.git cd libtaskotron
Then, set up the virtualenv:
virtualenv --system-site-packages env_taskotron source env_taskotron/bin/activate pip install -r requirements.txt
Finally, you should install libtaskotron, so that you don't need to specify the full path for the taskotron runner every time you want to run it. You can either use a standard installation, if you want to just use this project:
pip install .
Or, if you intend to work on this project, you can install it in the editable mode. This way you don't need to reinstall the project every time you make some changes to it, the code changes are reflected immediately:
pip install -e .
Before running any task, you also need to manually create a few required
directories. First, create a taskotron
group if you don't have it already,
and add your user to it (you'll need to re-login afterwards):
getent group taskotron || sudo groupadd taskotron sudo usermod -aG taskotron <user>
Now create the directories with proper permissions:
sudo install -d -m 775 -g taskotron /var/tmp/taskotron /var/log/taskotron \ /var/cache/taskotron /var/lib/taskotron /var/lib/taskotron/artifacts \ /var/lib/taskotron/images
The libtaskotron-config
package installs config files with default values
into /etc/taskotron
. If you need to change those default values, you can
either change the files in /etc/taskotron
or you can create config files
inside your checkout with:
cp conf/taskotron.yaml.example conf/taskotron.yaml cp conf/yumrepoinfo.conf.example conf/yumrepoinfo.conf
The configuration files in conf/
take precedence over anything in /etc
,
so make sure that you're editing the correct file if you create local copies.
In the development environment, it's also useful to have taskotron-generated
files automatically cleaned up, so that they don't occupy disk space in vain.
There is a tmpfiles.d template prepared for you, look into conf/tmpfiles.d
.
A relatively simple example task is rpmlint.
The task requires the rpmlint tool to be installed, so be sure to run:
sudo dnf install rpmlint
To run that task against a koji build with NVR <nvr>
for some arch
<arch>
, do the following:
git clone https://bitbucket.org/fedoraqa/task-rpmlint.git runtask -i <nvr> -t koji_build -a <arch> task-rpmlint/runtask.yml
This will download the <nvr>
from koji into a temp directory under
/var/tmp/taskotron/
, run rpmlint on the downloaded rpms and print output in
YAML format to stdout.
Example:
runtask -i htop-2.0.2-1.fc24 -t koji_build -a x86_64 task-rpmlint/runtask.yml
When executing the task on the local machine is not desirable, you can use the disposable client feature - a new virtual machine is spawned from a base image and the task is executed in the VM.
Note: you need to setup Testcloud first refer to Setting up Testcloud
To use the feature, just add --libvirt
parameter to the runtask command:
runtask --libvirt -i htop-2.0.2-1.fc24 -t koji_build -a x86_64 task-rpmlint/runtask.yml
By default, a base image defined by the imageurl
option in taskotron.yaml
config file is used. You can provide your own base image by changing the
imageurl
value (use file://
URL to point to a local file).
We also provide updated base images at https://tflink.fedorapeople.org/taskotron/taskotron-cloud/images/ (note that the image needs to be uncompressed before use).
If you store these images in /var/lib/taskotron/images
, adhere to their
naming conventions and set force_imageurl=False
in taskotron.yaml
,
we will find the latest one available automatically for you and you don't need
to update the imageurl
option regularly.
Configure ssh key for Testcloud to use (the private key must be passwordless).
Edit ~/.config/testcloud/settings.py
or /etc/testcloud/settings.py
and
insert the respective public key in the place of the $SSH PUBKEY HERE$
string:
USER_DATA = """#cloud-config users: - default - name: root password: %s chpasswd: { expire: False } ssh-authorized-keys: - $SSH PUBKEY HERE$ """
You can run the included test suite of unit and functional tests. From the root checkout directory, execute:
py.test testing/
to run unit tests, or:
py.test --functional testing/
to run both unit and functional tests (recommended). Make sure to use the virtualenv-provided version of py.test, not the system one, otherwise you'll encounter import errors.
You can also see a test coverage of the code, just run:
py.test --functional --cov-report=term-missing --cov=libtaskotron testing/
A nice HTML-based representation is available if you use --cov-report=html
parameter instead.
If you write new tests, be sure to run this to see whether the code is sufficiently covered by your tests.
Libtaskotron's documentation is written in reStructuredText and built using Sphinx.
The documentation is easy to build if you have followed the instructions to set up a development environment.
To actually build the documentation:
doit builddocs
There are several development related tasks which are at least somewhat automated using doit.
After either installing the doit package (python-doit
, python3-doit
) or
via pip (pip install doit
), you can see a list of available tasks and a short
description of those tasks by running doit list
. Some of the available tasks
are:
buildsrpm
takes a snapshot of current git repo and uses the in-repo spec file to build a matching srpm in thebuilds/<version>
directory. Note that if a snapshot already exists for a given version, a new snapshot will not be generated until the existing one is deleted.chainbuild
uses mockchain and the existing COPR repo to build a noarch binary rpm from the latest srpm.builddocs
builds documentation from current git sources
By default, the tool is pretty quiet but if you would like to see more verbose
output, add --verbosity 2
to the doit command and all stdout/stderr output
will be shown.