Rename the function to `describe_os()`. We do no actual detection, nor
verification here. That is, the return value of this function is in no
way guaranteed to be a valid runner. That is, error-handling needs to
be done in the caller. Make this clear by renaming the function.
Note: Currently, in case no runner exists for the OS, we end up with:
execv(...) failed: No such file or directory
This needs to be fixed in the future.
|
||
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| os-release | ||
| pipelines | ||
| sources_tests/org.osbuild.files | ||
| stages_tests | ||
| testing-rpms | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| __init__.py | ||
| osbuildtest.py | ||
| README.md | ||
| test_assemblers.py | ||
| test_boot.py | ||
| test_objectstore.py | ||
| test_osbuild.py | ||
| test_osrelease.py | ||
| test_sources.py | ||
| test_stageinfo.py | ||
| test_stages.py | ||
Setup
To run the tests in vagrant virtual machine, please follow this tutorial: https://developer.fedoraproject.org/tools/vagrant/vagrant-libvirt.html
(run also sudo systemctl start libvirtd)
Using Vagrant
To start a Vagrant box by hand, run vagrant up in this directory. To stop and remove all volumes run vagrant destroy again in this directory.
Troubleshooting
In case you accidentally deleted .vagrant directory, you can use some of these commands in order to get rid of running instance:
$ virsh list # this should display test_default
$ virsh managedsave-remove test_default
$ virsh undefine test_default
# or using vagrant cli tool
$ vagrant global-status
$ vagrant destroy <id>
$ vagrant global-status --prune