QA/Mozmill Test Automation/On Demand Update Testing/Documentation
System Prep
Things in this section should be done to configure the system.
- Check for a functioning heartbeat emitter. Run one if unsure.
- Set up listeners on all desired platforms, grouped with a common cluster name.
Heartbeat Emitter
- Generates traffic to keep Pulse connections from being automatically closed.
- Must be running -somewhere- on the internet. Can be anywhere.
- Fine to run more than one. If you're not sure, boot one.
Usage
./heartbeat_emitter.py
Options/Behavior
No other requirements. It will print out local time every time a heartbeat is sent, so you can diagnose time of any server failures or freezes.
Release Listener
- Listens for a release request and automatically runs the correct script
- Run one per platform. Make sure a heartbeat has been set up.
Usage
./release_listener.py --help Usage: release_listener.py [options] cluster platform Launches a listener for the on-demand testing system. The listener will only respond to requests for the specified cluster. The listener will respond to requests for either the specified platform or for all platforms. Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -u UPDATE_SCRIPT, --update=UPDATE_SCRIPT update test script to run [default: ./release_update.py] -f FUNCTIONAL_SCRIPT, --functional=FUNCTIONAL_SCRIPT functional test script to run [default: ./release_bft.py] -d, --debug print out extra debug information on ignored messages
Sample command lines
./release_listener.py qa-foobar mac
This runs a listener in the qa-foobar cluster, platform set to mac.
Options/Behavior
- Internally, our clusters are the hostnames of the Mac Pro that groups the platform VMs.
- Platform must exactly match one of platform specifiers used in the staging (and thus, usually the config file, see blow). Otherwise, it's an arbitrary string.
- --update will redefine which test script is called for update requests. The default accomodates our internal systems.
- --functional will redefine which test script is called for functional requests. Again, the default accomodates our internal systems.
- --debug lets you know when things are ignored due to platform/cluster mismatches. This can be very noisy, but it's useful when you have no idea why something isn't responding.
Release Prep
The things in this section should be done on a per-release basis, prior to the release.
- Create a configuration file for release staging.
- If update testing, pre-stage the release.
Configuration File
Sample File
; Example configuration for an update test-run [testrun] ; Application to test application=firefox ; Type of test, could be update or bft script=update ; Destination folder builds will be saved to directory=3.6.20 ; One section per platform tests are being run on: ; ; Section name is the specific OS listener platform, one of: ; win2000, winxp, vista, win7, win7_64, linux, linux_64, mac ; ; platform key refers to the binary's platform on ftp, one of: ; linux, linux64, mac, mac64, win32, win64 ; ; Rest of keys are test matrix for that OS, as: ; version=locale1 locale2 locale3 [win7] platform=win32 3.6.18=en-US de 3.6=en-US fi [winxp] platform=win32 3.6.18=en-US fr 3.6=en-US it [mac] platform=mac 3.6.19=en-US de 3.6.18=en-US ja-JP-mac 3.6=en-US fr [linux] platform=linux 3.6.18=en-US pl 3.6=en-US en-GB
Usage
Create the file as in template above.
Do note the difference between the OS platform specifiers (section names) and the binary platform specifiers (platform keys). For example, win7_64 (Windows 7 64-bit OS) could be set up to run either win32 or win64 binary packages.
The OS specifiers must correspond to the "platform" given as a command-line parameter when launching the release listeners, above. While this is arbitrary, the ones given as possibilities in the example above are the ones we use for our release listeners.