These are automated bots and tools that work on Cockpit. This includes updating operating system images, testing changes, releasing Cockpit and more.
In order to test Cockpit-related projects, they are staged into an operating
system image. These images are tracked in the images
directory.
These well known image names are expected to contain no .
characters and have no file name extension.
For managing these images:
- image-download: Download test images
- image-upload: Upload test images
- image-create: Create test machine images
- image-customize: Generic tool to install packages, upload files, or run commands in a test machine image
For debugging the images:
- ./vm-run: Run a test machine image
- ./vm-reset: Remove all overlays from image-customize, image-prepare, etc from test/images/
In case of qemu-system-x86_64: -netdev bridge,br=cockpit1,id=bridge0: bridge helper failed
error, please allow qemu-bridge-helper
to access the bridge settings.
To check when images will automatically be refreshed by the bots use the image-trigger tool:
$ ./image-trigger -vd
The bots automatically run the tests as needed on pull requests and branches. To check when and where tests will be run, use the tests-scan tool:
$ ./tests-scan -vd
As eslint looks for additional configurations, eslintrc.(json|yaml) files, in
parent directories, it is recommended to have "root": true
in the eslint
configuration of any project which is using eslint and is tested through
cockpit-bots.
A number of machines are watching our GitHub repository and are executing tests for pull requests as well as making new images.
Most of this happens automatically, but you can influence their actions with the tests-trigger utility in this directory.
You need a GitHub token in ~/.config/github-token. You can create one for your account at
https://github.com/settings/tokens
When generating a new personal access token, the scope only needs to encompass public_repo (or repo if you're accessing a private repo).
If you want to run the "fedora-testing" testsuite again for pull request #1234 of cockpit-project/cockpit, run tests-trigger like so:
$ ./tests-trigger --repo cockpit-project/cockpit 1234 fedora-testing
You can also invoke bots/tests/trigger from any project checkout, in which case
you don't need the explicit --repo
-- it will default to the GitHub origin of
the current directory's project.
If you want to run all tests on pull request #1234 that has been
opened by someone who is not in our white-list, run tests-trigger
with -f
:
$ ./tests-trigger -f [...]
Of course, you should make sure that the pull request is proper and doesn't execute evil code during tests.
Test images are refreshed automatically once per week, and even if the last refresh has failed, the machines wait one week before trying again.
If you want the machines to refresh the fedora-testing image immediately, run image-trigger like so:
$ ./image-trigger fedora-testing
If as part of some new feature you need to change the content of some or all images, you can ask the machines to create those images.
If you want to have a new fedora-testing image for pull request #1234, add a bullet point to that pull request's description like so, and add the "bot" label to the pull request.
* [ ] image-refresh fedora-testing
The machines will post comments to the pull request about their progress and at the end there will be links to commits with the new images. You can then include these commits into the pull request in any way you like.
If you are certain about the changes to the images, it is probably a good idea to make a dedicated pull request just for the images. That pull request can then hopefully be merged to master faster. If instead the images are created on the main feature pull request and sit there for a long time, they might cause annoying merge conflicts.