Close transport used to wait for user input, otherwise all further tests
would fail on cleanup (FD leak detected). This in practice is only
useful when using wait_on_fail decorator without --failfast option.
The main use case for this function is to create qrexec services in VMs.
Since qrexec now require service scripts to be executable, make
create_remote_file() adjust permissions.
If any test-* VMs remains from previous test run, there are removed
before test. self.app doesn't exist at this point, so don't require it
in self.remove_vms().
Move this functionality from our custom runner (qubes.tests.run),
into base test class. This is very useful for correlating logs, so lets
have it with nose2 runner too.
Prevent starting a VM while it's being removed. Something could try to
start a VM just after it's being killer but before removing it (Whonix
example from previous commit is real-life case). The window specifically
is between kill() call and removing it from collection
(`del app.domains[vm.qid]`). Grab a startup_lock for the whole operation
to prevent it.
Allow to manual inspect test environment after test fails. This is
similar to --do-not-clean option we had in R3.2.
The decorator should be used only while debugging and should never be
applied to the code committed into repository.
Xenial environment has much newer GTK/Glib. For those test to run, few
more changes are needed:
- relevant GTK packages installed
- X server running (otherwise GTK terminate the process on module
import...)
- enable system side packages in virtualenv set by travis
Pool setup/destroy may be a time consuming operation, allow them to be
asynchronous. Fortunately add_pool and remove_pool are used only through
Admin API, so the change does not require modification of other
components.
First boot of whonix-ws based VM take extended period of time, because
a lot of files needs to be copied to private volume. This takes even
more time, when verbose logging through console is enabled. Extend the
timeout for that.
Cleanup VMs in template reverse topological order, not network one.
Network can be set to None to break dependency, but template can't. For
netvm to be changed, kill VMs first (kill doesn't check network
dependency), so netvm change will not trigger side effects (runtime
change, which could fail).
This fixes cleanup for tests creating custom templates - previously
order was undefined and if template was tried removed before its child
VMs, it fails. All the relevant files were removed later anyway, but it
lead to python objects leaks.
First unregister the domain from collection, and only then call
remove_from_disk(). Removing it from collection prevent further calls
being made to it. Or if anything else keep a reference to it (for
example as a netvm), then abort the operation.
Additionally this makes it unnecessary to take startup lock when
cleaning it up in tests.
Searching based on class is used in many tests, searching by class, not
only by name in wait_for_window will allow to reduce code duplication.
While at it, improve it additionally:
- avoid active waiting for window and use `xdotool search --sync` instead
- return found window id
- add wait_for_window_coro() for use where coroutine is needed
- when waiting for window to disappear, check window id once and wait
for that particular window to disappear (avoid xdotool race
conditions on window enumeration)
Besides reducing code duplication, this also move various xdotool
imperfections handling into one place.
Allow removing VMs based on multiple prefixes at once. Removing them
separately doesn't handle all the dependencies (default_netvm, netvm)
correctly. This is needed for backup compatibility tests, where VMs are
created with `test-` prefix and `disp-tests-`. Additionally backup code
will create `disp-no-netvm`, which also may need to be removed.
If QUBES_TEST_TEMPLATES or QUBES_TEST_LOAD_ALL is set, create testcases
on modules import, instead of waiting until `load_tests` is called.
The `QUBES_TEST_TEMPLATES` doesn't require `qubes.xml` access, so it
should be safe to do regardless of the environment. The
`QUBES_TEST_LOAD_ALL` force loading tests (and reading `qubes.xml`)
regardless.
This is useful for test runners not supporting load_tests protocol. Or
with limited support - for example both default `unittest` runner and
`nose2` can either use load_tests protocol _or_ select individual tests.
Setting any of those variable allow to run a single test with those
runners.
With this feature used together load_tests protocol, tests could be
registered twice. Avoid this by not listing already defined test classes
in create_testcases_for_templates (according to load_tests protocol,
those should already be registered).
Allow easily list templates to be tested, without enumerating all the
test classes. This is especially useful with nose2 runner which can't
use load tests protocol _and_ select subset of tests.
If any object is leaked, QubesTestCase.cleanup_gc() raises an exception,
which have leaked objects list referenced in its traceback. This happens
after cleanup_traceback(), so isn't cleaned, causing cleanup_gc() fail
for all the further tests in the same test run.
Avoid this, by dropping list just before checking if any object is
leaked.
System tests are fragile for any object leaks, especially those holding
open files. Instead of wrapping all tests with try/finally removing
those local variables (as done in qubes.tests.integ.backup for example),
apply generic solution: clean all traceback objects from local
variables. Those aren't used to generate text report by either test
runner (qubes.tests.run and nose2). If one wants to break into debugger
and inspect tracebacks interactively, needs to comment out call to
cleanup_traceback.
Before waiting for remaining tasks on event loop (including libvirt
events), make sure all destroyed objects are really destroyed. This is
especially important for libvirt connections, which gets cleaned up only
when appropriate destructor (__del__) register a cleanup callback and it
gets called by the loop.