- The CNF Tests image
The CNF tests image is a containerized version of the CNF conformance test suite. It's intended to be run against a cluster where all the components required for running CNF workloads are installed.
This include:
- Targeting a machine config pool to which the machines to be tested belong to
- Enabling sctp via machine config
- Enabling xt_u32 via machine config
- Having the Performance Addon Operator installed
- Having the SR-IOV operator installed
- Having the PTP operator installed
- Enabling the contain-mount-namespace mode via machine config
The test entrypoint is /usr/bin/test-run.sh
. It runs both a "setup" test set and the real conformance test suite.
The bare minimum requirement is to provide it a kubeconfig file and it's related $KUBECONFIG environment variable, mounted through a volume.
Assuming the kubeconfig file is in the current folder, the command for running the test suite is:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
This allows your kubeconfig file to be consumed from inside the running container.
As part of the performance test suite, you have the latency test available that by default disabled. To enable the latency test, you should provide a set of additional environment variables.
- LATENCY_TEST_RUN - should be true, if you want to run the latency test(default false).
- LATENCY_TEST_RUNTIME - how long do you want to run the
oslat
binary(default 5m). - OSLAT_MAXIMUM_LATENCY - what the maximum latency do you expect to have during the
oslat
run, the value should be greater than 0(default -1, that means the latency check will not run).
The command to running the test suite with the latency test:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e LATENCY_TEST_RUN=true -e LATENCY_TEST_RUNTIME=600 -e OSLAT_MAXIMUM_LATENCY=20 quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
To run only the configuration, and the latency test, you should provide the ginkgo.focus
parameter, and
the environment variable that contains the name of the performance profile that should be tested:
docker run --rm -v $KUBECONFIG:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig -e LATENCY_TEST_RUN=true -e LATENCY_TEST_RUNTIME=600 -e OSLAT_MAXIMUM_LATENCY=20 -e PERF_TEST_PROFILE=<performance_profile_name> quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh -ginkgo.focus="\[performance\]\[config\]|\[performance\]\ Latency\ Test"
Some tests require a pre-existing machine config pool to append their changes to. This needs to be created on the cluster before running the tests.
The default worker pool is worker-cnf
and can be created with the following manifest:
apiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
kind: MachineConfigPool
metadata:
name: worker-cnf
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: worker-cnf
spec:
machineConfigSelector:
matchExpressions:
- {
key: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role,
operator: In,
values: [worker-cnf, worker],
}
paused: false
nodeSelector:
matchLabels:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf: ""
The worker pool name can be overridden via the ROLE_WORKER_CNF
variable.
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e ROLE_WORKER_CNF=custom-worker-pool quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
Please note that currently not all tests run selectively on the nodes belonging to the pool.
The tests can use a different image in the test. There are two images used by the tests that can be changed using the following environment variables.
# CNF_TESTS_IMAGE
# DPDK_TESTS_IMAGE
For example, to change the CNF_TESTS_IMAGE
with a custom registry run the following command
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e CNF_TESTS_IMAGE="custom-cnf-tests-image:latests" quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
The test suite is built upon the ginkgo bdd framework. This means that it accept parameters for filtering or skipping tests.
To filter a set of tests, the -ginkgo.focus parameter can be added:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh -ginkgo.focus="performance|sctp"
There is a particular test ([sriov] SCTP integration
) that requires both SR-IOV and SCTP. Given the selective nature of the focus parameter, that test is triggered by only placing the sriov
matcher. If the tests are executed against a cluster where SR-IOV is installed but SCTP is not, adding the -ginkgo.skip=SCTP
parameter will make the tests to skip it.
The set of available features to filter are:
- performance
- sriov
- ptp
- sctp
- xt_u32
- dpdk
- container-mount-namespace
A detailed list of the tests can be found here.
To run in dry-run mode:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh -ginkgo.dryRun -ginkgo.v
The CNF tests image support running tests in a disconnected cluster, meaning a cluster that is not able to reach outer registries.
This is done in two steps: performing the mirroring, and instructing the tests to consume the images from a custom registry.
A mirror
executable is shipped in the image to provide the input required by oc to mirror the images needed to run the tests to a local registry.
The following command
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/mirror -registry my.local.registry:5000/ | oc image mirror -f -
can be run from an intermediate machine that has access both to the cluster and to quay.io over the Internet.
Then follow the instructions above about overriding the registry used to fetch the images.
This is done by setting the IMAGE_REGISTRY environment variable:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e IMAGE_REGISTRY="my.local.registry:5000/" -e CNF_TESTS_IMAGE="custom-cnf-tests-image:latests" quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
OpenShift Container Platform provides a built in container image registry which runs as a standard workload on the cluster.
The instructions are based on the official OpenShift documentation about exposing the registry.
Gain external access to the registry by exposing it with a route:
oc patch configs.imageregistry.operator.openshift.io/cluster --patch '{"spec":{"defaultRoute":true}}' --type=merge
Fetch the registry endpoint:
REGISTRY=$(oc get route default-route -n openshift-image-registry --template='{{ .spec.host }}')
Create a namespace for exposing the images:
oc create ns cnftests
Make that imagestream available to all the namespaces used for tests. This is required to allow the tests namespaces to fetch the images from the cnftests imagestream.
oc policy add-role-to-user system:image-puller system:serviceaccount:sctptest:default --namespace=cnftests
oc policy add-role-to-user system:image-puller system:serviceaccount:cnf-features-testing:default --namespace=cnftests
oc policy add-role-to-user system:image-puller system:serviceaccount:performance-addon-operators-testing:default --namespace=cnftests
oc policy add-role-to-user system:image-puller system:serviceaccount:dpdk-testing:default --namespace=cnftests
oc policy add-role-to-user system:image-puller system:serviceaccount:sriov-conformance-testing:default --namespace=cnftests
Retrieve the docker secret name and auth token:
SECRET=$(oc -n cnftests get secret | grep builder-docker | awk {'print $1'}
TOKEN=$(oc -n cnftests get secret $SECRET -o jsonpath="{.data['\.dockercfg']}" | base64 -d | jq '.["image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000"].auth')
Write a dockerauth.json
like:
echo "{\"auths\": { \"$REGISTRY\": { \"auth\": $TOKEN } }}" > dockerauth.json
Do the mirroring:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/mirror -registry $REGISTRY/cnftests | oc image mirror --insecure=true -a=$(pwd)/dockerauth.json -f -
Run the tests:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e IMAGE_REGISTRY=image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/cnftests quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
The mirror command tries to mirror the u/s images by default. This can be overridden by passing a file with the following format to the image:
[
{
"registry": "public.registry.io:5000",
"image": "imageforcnftests:4.5"
},
{
"registry": "public.registry.io:5000",
"image": "imagefordpdk:4.5"
}
]
And by passing it to the mirror command, for example saving it locally as images.json
.
With the following command, the local path is mounted in /kubeconfig
inside the container and that can be passed to the mirror command.
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/mirror --registry "my.local.registry:5000/" --images "/kubeconfig/images.json" | oc image mirror -f -
The tests need to perform an environment configuration every time they are executed. This involves items such as creating Sriov Node Policies, Performance Profiles or PtpProfiles. Allowing the tests to configure an already configured cluster may affect the functionality of the cluster. Also changes to configuration items such as Sriov Node Policy might result in the environment being temporarily unavailable until the configuration change is processed.
Discovery mode allows to validate the functionality of a cluster without altering its configuration. Existing environment configuration will be used for the tests. The tests will attempt to find the configuration items needed, and use those items to execute the tests. If resources needed to run a specific test are not found, the test will be skipped (providing an appropriate message to the user). After the tests are finished, no cleanup of the preconfigured configuration items is done, and the test environment can immediately be used for another test run.
Some configuration items are still created by the tests. These are specific items needed for a test to run, such as for example a Sriov Network. These configuration items are created in custom namespaces and are cleaned up after the tests are executed.
An additional bonus is a reduction in test run times. As the configuration items are already there, no time is needed for environment configuration and stabilization.
Note: The validation step is performed even when running in discovery mode. This means that if a test run is meant to validate a given feature but the feature is not installed, the whole suite will fail, on par with regular mode. As an example, if the SR-IOV operator is not deployed on the cluster, but discovery mode is ran to validate SR-IOV (or all the features, including SR-IOV), the whole suite will fail. To overcome this, the test must filter only the features available on the cluster.
To enable discovery mode the tests must be instructed by setting the DISCOVERY_MODE
environemnt variable as follows:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig:Z -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e DISCOVERY_MODE=true quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
Most SRIOV test require the following resources:
- SriovNetworkNodePolicy
- at least one one with the resource specified by SriovNetworkNodePolicy being allocatable (a resource count of at least 5 is considered sufficient)
Some tests have additional requirements:
- an unused device on the node with available policy resource (with link state DOWN and not a bridge slave)
- a SriovNetworkNodePolicy with a MTU value of 9000
The DPDK related tests require:
- a PerformanceProfile
- a SRIOV policy
- a node with resources available for the SRIOV policy and available with the PerformanceProfile node selector
- a slave PtpConfig (ptp4lOpts="-s" ,phc2sysOpts="-a -r")
- a node with a label matching the slave PtpConfig
- SriovNetworkNodePolicy
- a node matchin both the SriovNetworkNodePolicy and a MachineConfig which enables SCTP
- a node with a MachineConfig which enables XT_U32
Various tests have different requirements. Some of them:
- a PerformanceProfile
- a PerformanceProfile having more than one CPU (profile.Spec.CPU.Isolated) allocated
- a PerformanceProfile having profile.Spec.RealTimeKernel.Enabled == true
- a node with no hugepages usage
- a node with a MachineConfig which enables container-mount-namespace mode
The nodes on which the tests will be executed can limited by means of specifying a NODES_SELECTOR
environment variable. Any resources created by the test will then be limited to the specified nodes.
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig:Z -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e NODES_SELECTOR=node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
Temporary objects (such as namespaces, pods, ..) are deleted when the suite finishes.
As a side effect, all the network policies / ptp configurations starting with "test-" are deleted.
The tests have two kind of outputs
A junit compliant xml is produced by passing the --junit
parameter together with the path where the report is dumped:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -v $(pwd)/junitdest:/path/to/junit -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh --junit /path/to/junit
A report with informations about the cluster state (and resources) for troubleshooting can be produced by passing the --report
parameter together with the path where the report is dumped:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -v $(pwd)/reportdest:/path/to/report -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh --report /path/to/report
When executing podman as non root (and non privileged) mounting paths may fail with "permission denied" errors. In order to make it work, :Z
needs to be appended to the volumes creation (like -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig:Z
) in order to allow podman to do the proper selinux relabelling (more details here).
The tests in the suite are compatible with OpenShift 4.4, except the following ones:
[test_id:28466][crit:high][vendor:[email protected]][level:acceptance] Should contain configuration injected through openshift-node-performance profile
[test_id:28467][crit:high][vendor:[email protected]][level:acceptance] Should contain configuration injected through the openshift-node-performance profile
Skipping them can be done by adding the -ginkgo.skip "28466|28467" parameter
The resource needed by the dpdk tests are higher than those required by the performance test suite. To make the execution quicker, the performance profile used by tests can be overridden using one that serves also the dpdk test suite.
To do that, a profile like the following one can be mounted inside the container, and the performance tests can be instructed to deploy it.
apiVersion: performance.openshift.io/v1
kind: PerformanceProfile
metadata:
name: performance
spec:
cpu:
isolated: "4-15"
reserved: "0-3"
hugepages:
defaultHugepagesSize: "1G"
pages:
- size: "1G"
count: 4
node: 0
realTimeKernel:
enabled: true
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf: ""
To override the performance profile used, the manifest must be mounted inside the container and the tests must be instructed by setting the PERFORMANCE_PROFILE_MANIFEST_OVERRIDE
as follows:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig:Z -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e PERFORMANCE_PROFILE_MANIFEST_OVERRIDE=/kubeconfig/manifest.yaml quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
When not running in discovery mode, the suite cleans up all the artifacts / configurations created. This includes the performance profile.
When deleting the performance profile, the machine config pool is modified, and this includes nodes rebooting. After a new iteration, a new profile will be created. This causes long test cycles between runs.
To make it quicker, a CLEAN_PERFORMANCE_PROFILE="false"
can be set to instruct the tests not to clean the performance profile. In this way the next iteration won't need to create it and wait for it to be applied.
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig:Z -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig -e CLEAN_PERFORMANCE_PROFILE="false" quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests /usr/bin/test-run.sh
Running tests on a single node cluster causes some limitations to be imposed:
- longer timeouts for certain tests
- some tests requiring multiple nodes are skipped
The longer timeouts concern mostly SRIOV and SCTP tests. Reconfiguration requiring node reboots cause a reboot of the whole environment including the openshift control plane, and hence takes longer to complete. Some PTP tests requiring a master and a slave node are skipped. No additional configuration is needed for this, the tests will check for the number of nodes at startup and adjust the tests behavior accordingly.
The cluster must be reached from within the container. One thing to verify that is by running:
docker run -v $(pwd)/:/kubeconfig -e KUBECONFIG=/kubeconfig/kubeconfig quay.io/openshift-kni/cnf-tests oc get nodes
If this does not work, it may be for several reason, spanning across dns, mtu size, firewall to mention some.
Depending on the feature, running the test suite might have different impact on the cluster.
In general, only the sctp
tests do not change the cluster configuration. All the other features have impacts on the configuration in a way or another.
SCTP tests just run different pods on different nodes to check connectivity. The impacts on the cluster are related to running simple pods on two nodes.
XT_U32 tests just run pods on different nodes to check iptables rule that utilize xt_u32. The impacts on the cluster are related to running simple pods on two nodes.
SR-IOV tests require changes in the SR-IOV network configuration, and SR-IOV tests create and destroy different types of configuration.
This may have an impact if existing SR-IOV network configurations are already installed on the cluster, because there may be conflicts depending on the priority of such configurations.
At the same time, the result of the tests may be affected by already existing configurations.
PTP tests apply a ptp configuration to a set of nodes of the cluster. As per SR-IOV, this may conflict with any existing PTP configuration already in place, with unpredictable results.
Performance tests apply a performance profile to the cluster. The effect of this is changes in the node configuration, reserving CPUs, allocating memory hugepages, setting the kernel packages to be realtime.
If an existing profile named performance
is already available on the cluster, the tests do not deploy it.
DPDK relies on both performance
and SR-IOV
features, so the test suite both configure a performance profile
and SR-IOV
networks, so the impacts are the same described above.
The validation test for container-mount-namespace mode only checks that the appropriate MachineConfig objects are present and active, and has no additional impact on the node.
After running the test suite, all the dangling resources are cleaned up.
- DPDK_TEST_NAMESPACE - dpdk tests namespace override
- SCTP_TEST_NAMESPACE - sctp tests namespace override
- XT_U32_TEST_NAMESPACE - xt-u32 tests namespace override
- PERFORMANCE_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE - performance operator namespace override
- SRIOV_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE - sriov operator namespace override
- PTP_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE - ptp operator namespace override
- DISCOVERY_MODE - discover mode switch
- NODES_SELECTOR - selector for limiting the nodes on which tests are executed
- SRIOV_WAITING_TIME - timout in minutes for sriov configuration to become stable before each sriov tests
- PERF_TEST_PROFILE - performance profile name override
- ROLE_WORKER_CNF - cnf tests worker pool override
- SCTPTEST_HAS_NON_CNF_WORKERS - no cnf worker in sctp tests, some sctp tests will be skipped if enabled
- XT_U32TEST_HAS_NON_CNF_WORKERS - no cnf worker in xt_u32 tests, some xt_u32 tests will be skipped if enabled
- CLEAN_PERFORMANCE_PROFILE - disable performance profile cleanup for faster tests
- PERFORMANCE_PROFILE_MANIFEST_OVERRIDE - performance profile manifest override