Treat outputs like we treat trees: store them in the object store. This
simplifies using osbuild and allows returning a cached version if one is
available.
This makes the `--output` parameter redundant. Remove it.
The best practice for creating a pipeline should be to include at least
one level of build-pipelines. This makes sure that the tools used to
generate the target image are well-defined.
In principle one could add several layers, though in pracite, one would
hope that the envinment used to build the buildroot does not affect the
final image (and as we anyway cannot recurr indefinitely, we fall back
to simply using the host system in this case).
This only makes sense, if the contents of the host system truly does not
affect the generated image, and as such we do not include any information
about the host when computing the hash that identifies a pipeline.
In fact, any image could be used in its place, as long as the required
tools are present. This commit takes advantage of that fact. Rather than
run a pipeline with the host as the build root, take a second pipeline
to generate the buildroot, but do not include this when computing the
pipeline id (so it is different from simply editing the original JSON).
This is necessary so we can use the same pipelines on significantly
different host systems (run with different --bulid-pipeline arguments).
In particular, it allows our test pipelines that generate f30 images
to be run unmodified on Travis (which runs Ubuntu).
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Make sure we test the version of osbuild in the current checkout,
rather than the system instance.
Also default to using in-place directories for the object store
and output images. Using a tmpfs does not scale, especially on
CI infrastructue with limited memory.
The behavior can still be overridden by the environment variable,
as before, only the default changes.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Let the image be responsible for running its own test, and simply
listen for the output from the testsuite.
Hook this up with a standard f30 image that contains a simple boot
test case, using systemctl to verify that all services started
correctly.
This replaces the old web-server test, giving similar functionality.
The reason for the change is twofold: this way the tests are fully
specificed in the pipeline, so easier to reproduce. Moreover, this
is less intrusive, as the test does not require network support in
the image.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
The testing script is getting too big and not very well organized. In
this commit a new module `integration_tests` is introduced that contains
parts of the original testing script split into multiple files. The
content should be the same, the only difference is that now you can run
the tests by invoking `python3 -m test`.