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Voxpupuli Acceptance Gem

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This is a helper Gem to acceptance test the various Vox Pupuli Puppet modules using beaker. This Gem provides common functionality for all beaker based acceptance testing. The aim is to reduce the boiler plate and need for modulesync.

Usage

Add the voxpupuli-acceptance Gem to your Gemfile:

gem 'voxpupuli-acceptance'

In your spec/spec_helper_acceptance.rb

require 'voxpupuli/acceptance/spec_helper_acceptance'

configure_beaker

Running tests

This module provides rake helpers. It prefers puppetlabs_spec_helper but falls back to beaker-rspec. Commonly invoked as:

To do so, in your Rakefile

require 'voxpupuli/acceptance/rake'

It can then be invoked as:

BEAKER_SETFILE=centos7-64 bundle exec rake beaker

To list all known setfiles, you can run bundle exec setfiles. That command is provided by puppet_metadata, it will parse the local metadata.json and generate a list of supported setfiles based on the supported operating systems in the module.

Other common environment variables:

  • BEAKER_HYPERVISOR defaults to docker, can be set to vagrant_libvirt or vagrant (using VirtualBox)
  • BEAKER_DESTROY can be set to no to avoid destroying the box after completion. Useful to inspect failures. Another common value is onpass which deletes it only when the tests pass.
  • BEAKER_PROVISION can be set to no to reuse a box. Note that the box must exist already. See BEAKER_DESTROY. Known to be broken with beaker-docker.
  • BEAKER_SETFILE is used to point to a setfile containing definitions. To avoid storing large YAML files in all repositories, beaker-hostgenerator is used to generate them on the fly when the file is not present.
  • BEAKER_PUPPET_COLLECTION defines the puppet collection that will be configured, defaults to puppet. When set to none, no repository will be configured and distro package naming is assumed. When set to preinstalled, it assumes the OS is already set up with a collection but it still ensures puppet-agent is installed.
  • BEAKER_PUPPET_PACKAGE_NAME optional env var to set the puppet agent package name. If not set, the package name will be determined using puppet_metadata.

Since it's still plain RSpec, it is also possible to call an individual test file:

BEAKER_SETFILE=centos7-64 bundle exec rspec spec/acceptance/my_test.rb

Hypervisors

By default the Docker hypervisor is used. This can be changed with BEAKER_HYPERVISOR.

Docker

The easiest way to debug in a Docker container is to open a shell:

docker exec -it -u root ${container_id_or_name} bash

Vagrant

To use Vagrant, use:

BEAKER_HYPERVISOR=vagrant

To use vagrant-libvirt, use:

BEAKER_HYPERVISOR=vagrant_libvirt

The Vagrantfile for the created virtual machines will be in .vagrant/beaker_vagrant_files. From there you can use vagrant ssh as you normally would.

Customizing host configuration

Per host configuration

It is possible to use Puppet to set up an acceptance node. By default spec/setup_acceptance_node.pp is used if it exists. This can be changed. Use false to disable this behavior even if the file exists.

RSpec.configure do |c|
  c.setup_acceptance_node = File.join('spec', 'setup_acceptance_node.pp')
end

This acceptance node setup script runs once per host once all other configuration is done.

It is also possible to do per host configuration by providing a block:

require 'voxpupuli/acceptance/spec_helper_acceptance'

configure_beaker do |host|
  if fact_on(host, 'os.name') == 'CentOS'
    install_package(host, 'epel-release')
  end
end

This block is executed after all host configuration is done except applying the acceptance node script.

Installing Puppet Modules

Metadata

By default the module uses beaker-module_install_helper. Its approach is copying the module and then install every dependency as listed in the module's metadata.json. This is a slow process and if the latest modules aren't accepted, it can lead to problems.

# This is the default
configure_beaker(modules: :metadata)

Fixtures

An alternative is to use the fixtures:

configure_beaker(modules: :fixtures)

This will switch to use puppet-modulebuilder on all modules present in spec/fixtures/modules. This is faster, but more importantly it also allows using git versions of modules. No dependency resolution is done and it is up to the module developer to ensure it's a correct set. It is also up to the module developer to ensure the fixtures are checked out before beaker runs.

# In Rakefile
task :beaker => "spec_prep"

None

It's also possible to skip module installation altogether, giving the module developer complete freedom to handle this.

configure_beaker(modules: nil)

Environment variables to facts

It can be useful to provide facts via environment variables. A possible use is run the test suite with version 1.0 and 1.1. Often it's much easier to run the entire suite with version 1.0 and run it with 1.1 in a complete standalone fashion.

Voxpupuli-acceptance converts all environment variables starting with BEAKER_FACTER_ and stores them in /etc/facter/facts.d/voxpupuli-acceptance-env.json on the target machine. All environment variables are converted to lowercase.

Given following spec_helper_acceptance.rb is used:

require 'voxpupuli/acceptance/spec_helper_acceptance'

MANIFEST = <<PUPPET
class { 'mymodule':
  version => fact('mymodule_version'),
}
PUPPET

configure_beaker do |host|
  apply_manifest_on(host, MANIFEST, catch_failures: true)
end

Then it can be tested with:

BEAKER_FACTER_MYMODULE_VERSION=1.0 bundle exec rake beaker
BEAKER_FACTER_MYMODULE_VERSION=1.1 bundle exec rake beaker

Many CI systems make it easy to build a matrix with this.

If no environment variables are present, the file is removed. It is not possible to store structured facts.

This behavior can be disabled altogether:

RSpec.configure do |c|
  c.suite_configure_facts_from_env = false
end

Hiera

In many acceptance tests it's useful to override some defaults. For example, configure_repository should default to false in the module but is always on in acceptance tests. Hiera is a good tool for this and using beaker-hiera it's easy and on by default.

To use this, create spec/acceptance/hieradata and use it as a regular Hiera data directory. It can be changed as follows. The defaults are shown:

RSpec.configure do |c|
  c.suite_hiera = true
  c.suite_hiera_data_dir = File.join('spec', 'acceptance', 'hieradata')
  c.suite_hiera_hierachy = [
    {
      name: "Per-node data",
      path: 'fqdn/%{facts.networking.fqdn}.yaml',
    },
    {
      name: 'OS family version data',
      path: 'family/%{facts.os.family}/%{facts.os.release.major}.yaml',
    },
    {
      name: 'OS family data',
      path: 'family/%{facts.os.family}.yaml',
    },
    {
      name: 'Common data',
      path: 'common.yaml',
    },
  ]
end

Shared examples

Some RSpec shared examples are shipped by default. These make it easier to write tests.

An idempotent resource

Often you want to test some manifest is idempotent. This means applying a manifest and ensuring there are no failures. It then applies again and ensures no changes were made.

describe 'myclass' do
  it_behaves_like 'an idempotent resource' do
    let(:manifest) do
      <<-PUPPET
      include myclass
      PUPPET
    end
  end
end

Examples

In modules there's the convention to have an examples directory. It's actually great to test these in acceptance. For this a shared example is available:

describe 'my example' do
  it_behaves_like 'the example', 'my_example.pp'
end

For this `examples/my_example.pp' must exist and contain valid Puppet code. It then uses the idempotent resource shared example.

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