RHEL 8.3 is GA so we can run the ostree test here. This is a first step
to remove the RHEL 8.3 testing pipeline.
8.3 GA also ships a different version of composer-cli, therefore a slight
adjustment was needed.
Previous commits introduces a new way to generate all X.509 certificates
needed for testing. This commit reuses the same method for auth tests.
This has two benefits:
1) The new code generates certificates with Subject Alternative Name which
means we can use it on systems with Go 1.15 (Fedora 33, RHEL 8.4).
2) The new code generates much saner certificates.
The certificate generation is based on work by Lars Karlitski in our osbuild
CA. The server and client certs now contains Subject Alternative Name making
Python's request module and Go 1.15 happy (they deprecated certificates
without SAN).
Several reasons why we want to switch to the certificate generation:
1) The pre-generated certificates are not documented. If someone wants
to inspect them, he must know the right openssl incantation. This way,
you are able to see what's inside the certificates in a plain text.
2) The pre-generated certificates are going to expire at one point and
someone will be surprised.
3) Shipping private keys in RPMs is iffy. I know, it's just for testing but
still...
4) Auth tests are generating their own certificates. To achieve consistency,
we have two options:
a) Ship also all certificates for auth tests. That's extra 8 ones or
something like that.
b) Generate all certificates on fly. This commit does that.
5) The setup introduced by this commit is very similar to the one in our CA
making the test environment very similar to what's running in production.
tl;dr: I think this is a good step forward.
The Koji test in Github actions was always a bit quick and dirty solution.
I think it's much nicer solution to run it on Schutzbot.
Therefore, this commit moves the koji_test.go to a new osbuild-koji-tests
executable. This new test isn't run in the base test suite as one would
anticipate but inside the koji.sh test. This is needed because
osbuild-koji-tests requires a running koji instance. This might change
in the future but I think it works for now.
This was introduced in osbuild 23, so we also need to bump the dependency
in the spec file and also the submodule.
The test is also modified and a typo in its name is fixed.
We have the same thing for AWS. The AWS target also specifies under what name
should be the image available in EC2.
As requested by Brew maintainers Tomáš Kopeček and Lubomír Sedlář.
osbuild runs directly on the host, there's no intermediate container,
therefore we should set the container type to none.
As suggested by Brew maintainers Tomáš Kopeček and Lubomír Sedlář.
From Koji Content Generator Metadata[1]:
"maven, win, or image: Legacy build type names which appear at this level
instead of inside typeinfo."
=> see, it's legacy
"typeinfo: A map whose entries are the names of the build types used for
this build, which are free form maps containing type-specific information
for this build."
=> struct{} is used for typeinfo.image because the docs says it should contain
"a free form map", null apparently isn't an option.
[1]: https://docs.pagure.org/koji/content_generator_metadata/
As suggested by the Brew maintainers Tomáš Kopeček and Lubomír Sedlář.
The test package should be self-contained and contain all the configuration
necessary for a known-good test run (minus secrets). This moves repo
overrides from the test orchestration into the test package.
We want all the external sources (including boot isos and repositories) to
be pinned by their content hash, and never use anything that is not strictly
defined. This moves us in the right direction, but we still have some tests
to update to use these shipped repos rather than official mirrors.
One remaining challenge is that we must make sure all our test runners have
access to the RHEL snapshots, which is not currently the case for the runners
in EC2, but a solution is in the works.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Attempt to clarify the structure of our tests. Each test case is now
encapsulated in a script in `test/cases`. Each of these scripts should
be runnable on a pristine machine and be independent of each other. It
is up to the test-orchestractor to decide if they should be run
consequtively instance, or in parallel on separate instances. Each
script can execute several tests and call whatever helper binaries
is desired. However, each case should be assumed to always run as one.
We no longer release into F31, and the right specfile was anyway not
being tested.
This allows us to remove a workaround that updates the VMs during
deploy, and other fedora-31 specific hacks.
`run_{base,image}_tests.sh` are osbuild-composer-specific, and should
live in the `-test` subpackage, rather than as part of the testing
infratructure.
This is not a functional change.
Yesterday, I spent more hours than I would like to admit debugging tests that
was failing because the Fedora cloud base image has only 4 GB disk space.
This commit adds a note for the future me.
Jenkins doesn't support two pipelines in one file. We had two and it caused
an exception in Jenkins marking all builds as failed even though all stages
passed successfully.
As this pipeline isn't used for anything right now (see #976), it's safe to
delete it.
Fixes#1032
Add an additional integration test, which builds a fedora-32 image via
the newly moved composer API.
This adds a new certificate for clients to authenticate, with
CN=client.osbuild.org.
Also stop allowing certificates with `CN=worker.osbuild.org` in the
`osbuild-composer.toml` used in tests and amend `osbuild-auth-tests` to
use `CN=client.osbuild.org` for accessing the koji API.
Heavily based on an earlier version of this test in `test/cmd/aws.sh` by
Sanne Raymaekers.
Base these on https://osbuild.org/rpmrepo.
Install those repository files when deploying in schutzbot and include
them in tools/deploy/test for local testing.
Also remove copying overrides from deploy.sh, because it copied the
wrong files. We probably want to add this back properly in the future.
This removes the osbuild-composer-cloud package, binary, systemd units,
the (unused) test binary, and the (only-run-on-RHEL) test in aws.sh.
Instead, move the cloud API into the main package, using the same
socket as the koji API, osbuild-composer-api.socket. Expose it next to
the koji API on route `/api/composer/v1`.
This is a backwards incompatible change, but only of the -cloud parts,
which have been marked as subject to change.
Instead, call it osbuild-composer-api.socket, but provide a symlink for
backwards compatibility. Change `schutzbot/provision.sh` to only enable
osbuild-composer-api.socket.
In the future, this new socket is the only API socket, which provides
both the "cloud" API and the one for koji.
This means that the koji API is always enabled.
s3cmd from pip doesn't work with Python 3.9. Fortunately, s3cmd in Fedora has
a downstream patch to fix it.
See rhbz#1884607 and https://github.com/s3tools/s3cmd/pull/1137
Fedora 33 ships the new API so let's do the switch now.
But... this would break older Fedoras because they only have the old API,
right?
We have the following options:
1) Ship xmlrpc compat package to Fedora 33+. This would mean that we delay the API switch till F32 EOL. This would be the most elegant solution, yet it has two issues: a) We will surely not be able to deliver the compat package before F33 Final Freeze. b) It's an extra and annoying work.
2) Downstream patch. No.
3) Use build constraints and have two versions of our code for both different
API.
I chose solution #3. It has an issue though:
%gobuild macro already passes -tags argument to go build. Therefore the
following line fails because it's not possible to use -tags more than once:
%gobuild -tags kolo_xmlrpc_oldapi ...
Therefore I had to come up with manual tinkering with the build constraints
in the spec file. This is pretty ugly but I like that:
1) Go code is actually clean, no weird magic is happening there.
2) We can still ship our software to Fedora/RHEL as we used to
(no downstream patches)
3) All downstreams can use the upstream spec file directly.
Note that this doesn't affect RHEL in any way as it uses vendored libraries.
Fedora 33 ships kolo/xmlrpc with a different API. This commit extracts the
affected code so we can use build flags in the future allowing us to use
both API versions.