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.
Load integration tests from outside of core-admin repository, through
entry points.
Create wrapper for VM object to keep very basic compatibility with tests
written for core2. This means if test use only basic functionality
(vm.start(), vm.run()), the same test will work for both core2 and
core3. This is especially important for app-* repositories, where the
same version serves multiple Qubes branches.
This also hides asyncio usage from tests writer.
See QubesOS/qubes-issues#1800 for details on original feature.
Test base functions of dom0 module (creating VM, setting property) and
configuring system inside of VM (through DispVM). The later is done for
each available template (the process use salt installed in that
template, not copied from dom0).
QubesOS/qubes-issues#3316
If domain got removed during the tests (for example DispVM), vm.close()
wouldn't be called in cleanup and some file descriptors will be
leaked. Add event handler for cleaning this up. Do not use close()
method here, because it is destructive, but the object may still be used
by the test.
- Use proper features/services names (updates proxy test).
- Fix logic error in wait_for_window.
- Fix test for qvm-sync-clock (first sync clockvm, then dom0), also fix
cleanup (unset clockvm before removing it)
- More fixes for asyncio usage
The most important change is doing vm.close() when removing domain -
this means it wouldn't be cleaned later by iterating over app.domains.
Other changes include removing VMs in the right order, regarding netvm
dependency (otherwise killing or removing may fail). And one more
missing coroutine handling (in shutdown_and_wait).
Recently libvirt removed support for changing event implementation.
Therefore we have to use a single, global one and we check if it is
empty between tests.
This is because .tearDown() is not executed if the exception occurs in
setUp() [for example self.skipTest() raises an exception]. The lower
levels of .tearDown() being executed are critical to not leaking file
descriptors.
Add auto_cleanup property, which remove DispVM after its shutdown
- this is to unify DispVM handling - less places needing special
handling after DispVM shutdown.
New DispVM inherit all settings from respective AppVM. Move this from
classmethod `DispVM.from_appvm()`, to DispVM constructor. This unify
creating new DispVM with any other VM class.
Notable exception are attached devices - because only one running VM can
have a device attached, this would prevent second DispVM started from
the same AppVM. If one need DispVM with some device attached, one can
create DispVM with auto_cleanup=False. Such DispVM will still not have
persistent storage (as any other DispVM).
Tests included.
QubesOS/qubes-issues#2974
Remove some more references to objects holding (possibly indirectly)
reference to libvirt connection:
- local variables in tearDown function
- running Admin API calls (especially admin.Events)
- vmm._libvirt_conn directly, in case some reference to Qubes()
is still there
- any instance attribute that is an object from 'qubes' python package
(instead of just those descending from BaseVM)
- do not create new Qubes() instance for removing VMs - if we already
have one in self.app
Then trigger garbage collector to really cleanup those objects (and
close relevant file descriptors). It's important do do this before
closing event loop, because some of descructors may try to use it (for
example remove registered handlers).
When tearDownClass is executed, event loop is already closed. Since no
test really need it right now, drop support for test class-wide VMs and
convert those methods back to instance methods.
Also put coroutines (vm.remove_from_disk, vm.kill) onto event loop.
Changed the inheritance hierarchy:
1. Renamed `SystemTestsMixin` to `SystemTestCase`
2. `SystemTestCase` is a child of `QubesTestCase`
3. All classes extending the prior `SystemTestsMixin` now just extend `object`