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okurz, 2022-03-22 12:33
Where to contribute: Restrict "entrance level issue" to open issues only as closed don't really help interested persons

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# Introduction
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This is the organisation wiki for the **openQA Project**.
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The source code is hosted in the [os-autoinst github project](http://github.com/os-autoinst/), especially [openQA itself](http://github.com/os-autoinst/openQA) and the main backend [os-autoinst](http://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst)
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If you are interested in the tests for SUSE/openSUSE products take a look into the [openqatests](https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqatests) project.
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If you are looking for entry level issues to contribute to please look into the section [[Wiki#Where-to-contribute|Where to contribute]]
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{{toc}}
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# Organisational
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## ticket workflow
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The following ticket statuses are used together and their meaning is explained:
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* *New*: No one has worked on the ticket (e.g. the ticket has not been properly refined) or no one is feeling responsible for the work on this ticket.
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* *Workable*: The ticket has been refined and is ready to be picked.
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* *In Progress*: Assignee is actively working on the ticket.
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* *Resolved*: The complete work on this issue is done and the according issue is supposed to be fixed as observed (Should be updated together with a link to a merged pull request or also a link to an production openQA showing the effect)
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* *Feedback*: Further work on the ticket is blocked by open points or is awaiting for the feedback to proceed. Sometimes also used to ask Assignee about progress on inactivity.
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* *Blocked*: Further work on the ticket is blocked by some external dependency (e.g. bugs, not implemented features). There should be a link to another ticket, bug, trello card, etc. where it can be seen what the ticket is blocked by.
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* *Rejected*: The issue is considered invalid, should not be done, is considered out of scope.
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* *Closed*: As this can be set only by administrators it is suggested to not use this status.
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It is good practice to update the status together with a comment about it, e.g. a link to a pull request or a reason for reject.
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## ticket categories
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* *Concrete Bugs*: Regressions, crashes, error messages
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* *Feature requests*: Ideas or wishes for extension, enhancement, improvement
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* *Organisational*: Organisational tasks within the project(s), not directly code related
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* *Support*: Support of users, usage problems, questions
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Please avoid the use of other, deprecated categories
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Suggestion by *okurz*: I recommend to avoid the word "bug" in our categories because of the usual "is it a bug or a feature" struggle. Instead I suggest to strictly define "Regressions & Crashes" to clearly separate "it used to work in before" from "this was never part of requirements" for Features. Any ticket of this category also means that our project processes missed something so we have points for improvements, e.g. extend things to look out for in code review.
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## Epics and Sagas
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[epic]s and [saga]s belong to the "coordination" tracker, project contributors are not required to follow this convention but the tracker may be changed automagically in the future: http://mailman.suse.de/mailman/private/qa-sle/2020-October/002722.html 
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## ticket templates
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You can use these templates to fill in tickets and further improve them with more detail over time. Copy the code block, paste it into a new issue, replace every block marked with "<…>" with your content or delete if not appropriate.
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### Defects
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Subject: `<Short description, example: "openQA dies when triggering any Windows ME tests">`
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```
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## Observation
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<description of what can be observed and what the symptoms are, provide links to failing test results and/or put short blocks from the log output here to visualize what is happening>
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## Steps to reproduce
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* <do this>
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* <do that>
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* <observe result>
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## Problem
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<problem investigation, can also include different hypotheses, should be labeled as "H1" for first hypothesis, etc.>
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## Suggestion
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* <what to do as a first step>
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* <Fix the actual problem>
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* <Consider fixing the design>
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* <Consider fixing the team's process>
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* <Consider to explore further>
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## Workaround
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<example: retrigger job>
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```
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example ticket: #10526
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For tickets referencing "auto_review" see
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https://github.com/os-autoinst/scripts/blob/master/README.md#auto-review---automatically-detect-known-issues-in-openqa-jobs-label-openqa-jobs-with-ticket-references-and-optionally-retrigger
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for a suggested template snippet.
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### Feature requests
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Subject: `<Short description, example: "grub3 btrfs support" (feature)>`
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```
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## User story
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<As a <role>, I want to <do an action>, to <achieve which goal> >
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## Acceptance criteria
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* <**AC1:** the first acceptance criterion that needs to be fulfilled to do this, example: Clicking "restart button" causes restart of the job>
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* <**AC2:** also think about the "not-actions", example: other jobs are not affected>
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## Tasks
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* <first task to do as an easy starting point>
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* <what do do next, all tasks optionally with an effort estimation in hours, e.g. "(0.5-2h)">
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* <optional: mark "optional" tasks>
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## Further details
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<everything that does not fit into above sections>
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```
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example ticket: #10212
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## Further decision steps working on test issues
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Test issues could be one of the following sources. Feel free to use the following template in tickets as well
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```
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## Problem
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* **H1** The product has changed
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 * **H1.1** product changed slightly but in an acceptable way without the need for communication with DEV+RM --> adapt test
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 * **H1.2** product changed slightly but in an acceptable way found after feedback from RM --> adapt test
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 * **H1.3** product changed significantly --> after approval by RM adapt test
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* **H2** Fails because of changes in test setup
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 * **H2.1** Our test hardware equipment behaves different
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 * **H2.2** The network behaves different
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* **H3** Fails because of changes in test infrastructure software, e.g. os-autoinst, openQA
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* **H4** Fails because of changes in test management configuration, e.g. openQA database settings
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* **H5** Fails because of changes in the test software itself (the test plan in source code as well as needles)
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* **H6** Sporadic issue, i.e. the root problem is already hidden in the system for a long time but does not show symptoms every time
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```
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## pull request handling on github
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As a reviewer of pull requests on github for all related repositories, e.g. https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst-distri-opensuse/pulls, apply labels in case PRs are open for a longer time and can not be merged so that we keep our backlog clean and know why PRs are blocked.
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* **notready**: Triaged as not ready yet for merging, no (immediate) reaction by the reviewee, e.g. when tests are missing, other scenarios break, only tested for one of SLE/TW
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* **wip**: Marked by the reviewee itself as "[WIP]" or "[DO-NOT-MERGE]" or similar
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* **question**: Questions to the reviewee, not answered yet
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## Where to contribute?
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If you want to help openQA development you can take a look into the existing [issues](https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/issues).
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You can start with [this search query](https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/search?q=entrance+level+issue&open_issues=1) as well as ideas from #65271.
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There are also some "always valid" tasks to be working on:
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* *improve test coverage*:
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 * *user story*: As openqa backend as well as test developer I want better test coverage of our projects to reduce technical debt
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 * *acceptance criteria*: test coverage is significantly higher than before
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 * *suggestions*: check current coverage in each individual project (os-autoinst/openQA/os-autoinst-distri-opensuse) and add tests as necessary
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# Use cases
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The following use cases 1-6 have been defined within a SUSE workshop (others have been defined later) to clarify how different actors work with openQA. Some of them are covered already within openQA quite well, some others are stated as motivation for further feature development.
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## Use case 1
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**User:** QA-Project Managment
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**primary actor:** QA Project Manager, QA Team Leads
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**stakeholder:** Directors, VP
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**trigger:** product milestones, providing a daily status
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**user story:** „As a QA project manager I want to check on a daily basis the „openQA Dashboard“ to get a summary/an overall status of the „reviewers results“ in order to take the right actions and prioritize tasks in QA accordingly.“
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## Use case 2
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**User:** openQA-Admin
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**primary actor:** Backend-Team
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**stakeholder:** Qa-Prjmgr, QA-TL, openQA Tech-Lead
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**trigger:** Bugs, features, new testcases
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**user story:** „As an openQA admin I constantly check in the web-UI the system health and I manage its configuration to ensure smooth operation of the tool.“
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## Use case 3
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**User:** QA-Reviewer
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**primary actor:** QA-Team
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**stakeholder:** QA-Prjmgr, Release-Mgmt, openQA-Admin
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**trigger:** every new build
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**user story:** „As an openQA-Reviewer at any point in time I review on the webpage of openQA the overall status of a build in order to track and find bugs, because I want to find bugs as early as possible and report them.“
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## Use case 4
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**User:** Testcase-Contributor
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**primary actor:** All development teams, Maintenance QA
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**stakeholder:** QA-Reviewer, openQA-Admin, openQA Tech-Lead
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**trigger:** features, new functionality, bugs, new product/package
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**user story:** „As developer when there are new features, new functionality, bugs, new product/package in git I contribute my testcases because I want to ensure good quality submissions and smooth product integration.“
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## Use case 5
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**User:** Release-Mgmt
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**primary actor:** Release Manager
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**stakeholder:** Directors, VP, PM, TAMs, Partners
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**trigger:** Milestones
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**user story:** „As a Release-Manager on a daily basis I check on a dashboard for the product health/build status in order to act early in case of failures and have concrete and current reports.“
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## Use case 6
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**User:** Staging-Admin
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**primary actor:** Staging-Manager for the products
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**stakeholder:** Release-Mgmt, Build-Team
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**trigger:** every single submission to projects
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**user story:** „As a Staging-Manager I review the build status of packages with every staged submission to the „staging projects“ in the „staging dashboard“ and the test-status of the pre-integrated fixes, because I want to identify major breakage before integration to the products and provide fast feedback back to the development.“
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## Use case 7
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**User:** Bug investigator
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**primary actor:** Any bug assignee for openQA observed bugs
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**stakeholder:** Developer
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**trigger:** bugs
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**user story:** „As a developer that has been assigned a bug which has been observed in openQA I can review referenced tests, find a newer and the most recent job in the same scenario, understand what changed since the last successful job, what other jobs show same symptoms to investigate the root cause fast and use openQA for verification of a bug fix.“
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# Thoughts about categorizing test results, issues, states within openQA
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When reviewing test results it is important to distinguish between different causes of "failed tests"
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## Nomenclature
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### Test status categories
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A common definition about the status of a test regarding the product it tests: "false|true positive|negative" as described on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_positives_and_false_negatives. "positive|negative" describes the outcome of a test ("positive": test signals presence of issue; "negative": no signal) whereas "false|true" describes the conclusion of the test regarding the presence of issues in the SUT or product in our case ("true": correct reporting; "false": incorrect reporting), e.g. "true negative", test successful, no issues detected and there are no issues, product is working as expected by customer. Another example: Think of testing as of a fire alarm. An alarm (event detector) should only go off (be "positive") *if* there is a fire (event to detect) --> "true positive" whereas *if* there is *no* fire there should be *no* alarm --> "true negative".
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Another common but potentially ambiguous categorization:
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* *broken*: the test is not behaving as expected (Ambiguity: "as expected" by whom?) --> commonly a "false positive", can also be "false negative" but hard to detect
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* *failing*: the test is behaving as expected, but the test output is a fail --> "true positive"
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* *working*: the test is behaving as expected (with no comment regarding the result, though some might ambiguously imply 'result is negative')
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* *passing*: the test is behaving as expected, but the result is a success --> "true negative"
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If in doubt declare a test as "broken". We should review the test and examine if it is behaving as expected.
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Be careful about "positive/negative" as some might also use "positive" to incorrectly denote a passing test (and "negative" for failing test) as an indicator of "working product" not an indicator about "issue present". If you argue what is "used in common speech" think about how "false positive" is used as in "false alarm" --> "positive" == "alarm raised", also see https://narainko.wordpress.com/2012/08/26/understanding-false-positive-and-false-negative/
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### Priorization of work regarding categories
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In this sense development+QA want to accomplish a "true negative" state whenever possible (no issues present, therefore none detected). As QA and test developers we want to prevent "false positives" ("false alarms" declaring a product as broken when it is not but the test failed for other reasons), also known as "type I error" and "false negatives" (a product issue is not catched by tests and might "slip through" QA and at worst is only found by an external outside customer) also known as "type II error". Also see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_I_and_type_II_errors. In the context of openQA and system testing paired with screen matching a "false positive" is much more likely as the tests are very susceptible to subtle variations and changes even if they should be accepted. So when in doubt, create an issue in progress, look at it again, and find that it was a false alarm, rather than wasting more peoples time with INVALID bug reports by believing the product to be broken when it isn't. To quote Richard Brown: "I […] believe this is the route to ongoing improvement - if we have tests which produce such false alarms, then that is a clear indicator that the test needs to be reworked to be less ambiguous, and that IS our job as openQA developers to deal with".
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## Further categorization of statuses, issues and such in testing, especially automatic tests
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By okurz
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This categorization scheme is meant to help in communication in either written or spoken discussions being simple, concise, easy to remember while unambiguous in every case.
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While used for naming it should also be used as a decision tree and can be followed from the top following each branch.
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### Categorization scheme
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To keep it simple I will try to go in steps of deciding if a potential issue is of one of two categories in every step (maybe three) and go further down from there. The degree of further detailing is not limited, i.e. it can be further extended. Naming scheme should follow arabic number (for two levels just 1 and 2) counting schemes added from the right for every additional level of decision step and detail without any separation between the digits, e.g. "1111" for the first type in every level of detail up to level four. Also, I am thinking of giving the fully written form phonetic name to unambiguously identify each on every level as long as not more individual levels are necessary. The alphabet should be reserved for higher levels and higher priority types.
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Every leaf of the tree must have an action assigned to it.
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1 **failed** (ZULU)
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11 new (passed->failed) (YANKEE)
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111 product issue ("true positive") (WHISKEY)
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1111 unfiled issue (SIERRA)
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11111 hard issue (openqa *fail*) (KILO)
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111121 critical / potential ship stopper (INDIA) --> immediately file bug report with "ship_stopper?" flag; opt. inform RM directly
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111122 non-critical hard issue (HOTEL) --> file bug report
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11112 soft issue (openqa *softfail* on job level, not on module level) (JULIETT) --> file bug report on failing test module
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1112 bugzilla bug exists (ROMEO)
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11121 bug was known to openqa / openqa developer --> cross-reference (bug->test, test->bug) AND raise review process issue, improve openqa process
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11122 bug was filed by other sources (e.g. beta-tester) --> cross-reference (bug->test, test->bug)
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112 test issue ("false positive") (VICTOR)
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1121 progress issue exists (QUEBEC) --> cross-reference (issue->test, test->issue)
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1122 unfiled test issue (PAPA)
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11221 easy to do w/o progress issue
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112211 need needles update --> re-needle if sure, TODO how to notify?
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112212 pot. flaky, timeout
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1122121 retrigger yields PASS --> comment in progress about flaky issue fixed
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1122122 reproducible on retrigger --> file progress issue
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11222 needs progress issue filed --> file progress issue
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12 existing / still failing (failed->failed) (XRAY)
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121 product issue (UNIFORM)
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1211 unfiled issue (OSCAR) --> file bug report AND raise review process issue (why has it not been found and filed?)
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1212 bugzilla bug exists (NOVEMBER) --> ensure cross-reference, also see rules for 1112 ROMEO
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1221 progress issue exists (MIKE) --> monitor, if persisting reprioritize test development work
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1222 needs progress issue filed (LIMA) --> file progress issue AND raise review process issue, see 1211 OSCAR
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2 **passed** (ALFA)
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21 stable (passed->passed) (BRAVO)
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211 existing "true negative" (DELTA) --> monitor, maybe can be made stricter
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212 existing "false negative" (ECHO) --> needs test improvement
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22 fixed (failed->passed) (CHARLIE)
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222 fixed "true negative" (FOXTROTT) --> TODO split monitor, see 211 DELTA
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2221 was test issue --> close progress issue
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2222 was product issue
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22221 no bug report exists --> raise review process issue (why was it not filed?)
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22222 bug report exists
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222221 was marked as RESOLVED FIXED
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221 fixed but "false negative" (GOLF) --> potentially revert test fix, also see 212 ECHO
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Priority from high to low: INDIA->OSCAR->HOTEL->JULIETT->…
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# Important ticket queries
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* All auto-review tickets: https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/issues?query_id=697 , see https://github.com/os-autoinst/scripts/blob/master/README.md#auto-review---automatically-detect-known-issues-in-openqa-jobs-label-openqa-jobs-with-ticket-references-and-optionally-retrigger for further information regarding auto-review
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* All auto-review+force-result tickets: https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/issues?query_id=700
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# Proposals for uses of labels
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With [Show bug or label icon on overview if labeled (gh#550)](https://github.com/os-autoinst/openQA/pull/550) it is possible to add custom labels just by writing them. Nevertheless, a convention should be found for a common benefit. <del>Beware that labels are also automatically carried over with (Carry over labels from previous jobs in same scenario if still failing [gh#564])(https://github.com/os-autoinst/openQA/pull/564) which might make consistent test failures less visible when reviewers only look for test results without labels or bugrefs.</del> Labels are not anymore automatically carried over ([gh#1071](https://github.com/os-autoinst/openQA/pull/1071)).
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List of proposed labels with their meaning and where they could be applied.
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* ***`fixed_<build_ref>`***: If a test failure is already fixed in a more recent build and no bug reference is known, use this label together with a reference to a more recent passed test run in the same scenario. Useful for reviewing older builds. Example (https://openqa.suse.de/tests/382518#comments):
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```
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label:fixed_Build1501
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t#382919
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```
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* ***`needles_added`***: In case needles were missing for test changes or expected product changes caused needle matching to fail, use this label with a reference to the test PR or a proper reasoning why the needles were missing and how you added them. Example (https://openqa.suse.de/tests/388521#comments):
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```
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label:needles_added
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needles for https://github.com/os-autoinst/os-autoinst-distri-opensuse/pull/1353 were missing, added by jpupava in the meantime.
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```
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# s390x Test Organisation
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See the following picture for a graphical overview of the current s390x test infrastructure at SUSE:
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![SUSE s390x test infrastructure](qa_sle_openqa_s390x_test_infrastructure.jpg)
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## Upgrades
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### on z/VM 
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#### special Requirements
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Due to the lack of proper use of hdd-images on zVM, we need to workaround this with having a dedicated worker_class aka a dedicated Host where we run two jobs with START_AFTER_TEST,
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the first one which installs the basesystem we want to have upgraded and a second one which is doing the actually upgrade (e.g migration_offline_sle12sp2_zVM_preparation and migration_offline_sle12sp2_zVM)
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Since we encountered issues with randomly other preparation jobs are started in between there, we need to ensure that we have one complete chain for all migration jobs running on one worker, that means for example:
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1. migration_offline_sle12sp2_zVM_preparation 
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1. migration_offline_sle12sp2_zVM (START_AFTER_TEST=#1) 
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1. migration_offline_sle12sp2_allpatterns_zVM_preparation (START_AFTER_TEST=#2) 
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1. migration_offline_sle12sp2_allpatterns_zVM 
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1. ...
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This scheme ensures that all actual Upgrade jobs are finding the prepared system and are able to upgrade it
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### on z/KVM
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No special requirements anymore, see details in #18016
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## Automated z/VM LPAR installation with openQA using qnipl
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There is an ongoing effort to automate the LPAR creation and installation on z/VM. A first idea resulted in the creation of [qnipl](https://github.com/openSUSE/dracut-qnipl). `qnipl` enables one to boot a very slim initramfs from a shared medium (e.g. shared SCSI-disks) and supply it with the needed parameters to chainload a "normal SLES installation" using kexec.
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This method is required for z/VM because snipl (Simple network initial program loader) can only load/boot LPARs from specific disks, not network resources.
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### Setup
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1. Get a shared disk for all your LPARs
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  * Normally this can easily done by infra/gschlotter
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  * Disks needs to be connected to all guests which should be able to network-boot
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1. Boot a fully installed SLES on one of the LPARs to start preparing the shared-disk
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1. Put a DOS partition table on the disk and create one single, large partition on there
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1. Put a FS on there. Our first test was on ext2 and it worked flawlessly in our attempts
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1. Install `zipl` (The s390x bootloader from IBM) on this partition
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  * A simple and sufficient config can be found in [poo#33682](https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/33682)
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1. clone [`qnipl`](https://github.com/nicksinger/dracut-qnipl) to your dracut modules (e.g. /usr/lib/dracut/modules.d/95qnipl)
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1. Include the module named `qnipl` to your dracut modules for initramfs generation
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  * e.g. in /etc/dracut.conf.d/99-qnipl.conf add: `add_dracutmodules+=qnipl`
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1. Generate your initramfs (e.g. `dracut -f -a "url-lib qnipl" --no-hostonly-cmdline /tmp/custom_initramfs`)
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  * Put the initramfs next to your kernel binary on the partition you want to prepare
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1. From now on you can use `snipl` to boot any LPAR connected with this shared disk from network
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  * example: `snipl -f ./snipl.conf -s P0069A27-LP3 -A fa00 --wwpn_scsiload 500507630713d3b3 --lun_scsiload 4001401100000000 --ossparms_scsiload "install=http://openqa.suse.de/assets/repo/SLE-15-Installer-DVD-s390x-Build533.2-Media1 hostip=10.161.159.3/20 gateway=10.161.159.254 Nameserver=10.160.0.1 Domain=suse.de ssh=1 regurl=http://all-533.2.proxy.scc.suse.de"`
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  * `--ossparms_scsiload` is then evaluated and used by `qnipl` to kexec into the installer with the (for the installer) needed parameters
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### Further details
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Further details can also be found in the [github repo](https://github.com/openSUSE/dracut-qnipl/blob/master/README.md). Pull requests, questions and ideas always welcome!
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359 109 okurz
# Infrastructure setup for o3 (openqa.opensuse.org) and osd (openqa.suse.de)
360 1 alarrosa
361 109 okurz
## o3 (openqa.opensuse.org)
362
363 113 okurz
o3 consists of a VM running the web UI and physical worker machines. The VM for o3 has netapp backed storage on rotating disk so less performant than SSD but cheaper. So eventually we might have the possibility to use SSD based storage. Currently there are four virtual storage devices provided to o3 totalling to 10 TB.
364 88 okurz
365 141 okurz
### Accessing the o3 infrastructure
366
367
The o3 webui host as well the workers within the o3 infrastructure can be accessed over ssh by using `ssh -p 2213 gate.opensuse.org`. Ask one of the existing admins to put your ssh key on the o3 webui host to be able to login.
368
369
To give access for a new user an existing admin can do the following:
370
371
```
372
sudo useradd -G users,trusted --create-home $user
373
echo "$ssh_key_from_user" | sudo tee -a /home/$user/.ssh/authorized_keys
374
```
375
376
#### SSH configuration
377
378
To easily access all hosts behind the jump host you can use the following config for your ssh client (`~.ssh/config`):
379
380
```
381
Host ariel
382
  HostName gate.opensuse.org
383
  Port 2213
384
385
# Note that %h as understood by -W needs the real host, aliases won't work:
386
# kex_exchange_identification: Connection closed by remote host
387
# Connection closed by UNKNOWN port 65535`
388
Host *.opensuse.org
389
  ProxyCommand ssh -q -A -x ariel -W %h:%p
390
```
391
392
**A word of warning:** be aware that this enables agent-forwarding to at least the jumphost. Please read up for yourself if and how bad you consider the security implications of doing so.
393
394
The workers can only be accessed from "ariel", not directly. One can use password authentication on the workers using the root account. Ask existing admins for the root password. It is suggested that you use key-based authentication. For this put your ssh keys on all the workers, e.g. using the above configuration and `ssh-copy-id`.
395
396
**Notice:** Some machines are connected to the o3 openQA host from other networks and might need different ways of access, at time of writing:
397
398
* Remote (owner: @ggardet_arm):
399
 * ip-10-0-0-58
400
 * oss-cobbler-03
401
 * siodtw01 (for tests on Raspberry Pi 2,3,4)
402
403
### Manual command execution on o3 workers
404
405
To execute commands manually on all workers within the o3 infrastructure one can do for example the following:
406
407
```
408
for i in aarch64 openqaworker1 openqaworker4 openqaworker7 power8 imagetester rebel; do echo $i && ssh root@$i "(transactional-update -n dup || zypper -n dup) && reboot" ; done
409
```
410
411
mind the correct list of machines.
412
413 91 okurz
### Automatic update of o3
414 92 okurz
415
o3 is automatically deployed on a daily base, that includes both the webUI host as well as the workers.
416 111 okurz
417
#### Automatic update of o3 webUI host
418
419
Done with cron job in `/etc/cron.d/auto-update`
420
421
#### Recurring automatic update of openQA workers
422
423
All o3 workers (except power8) apply a daily automatic update and are "Transactional Servers" running openSUSE Leap. power8 is non-transactional with a weekly update every Sunday.
424
425
This was for a number of reasons including:
426 109 okurz
427 96 okurz
* Getting all the machines consistent after a few years of drift
428
* Making it easier to keep them consistent by leveraging a read only root filesystem
429
* Guaranteeing rollbackability by using transactional updates
430 102 okurz
431 1 alarrosa
This was done by rbrown also to fulfill the prerequisite to getting them viable for multi-machine testing
432 102 okurz
433
These systems currently patch themselves and reboot automatically in the default maintenance window of 0330-0500 CET/CEST.
434 112 okurz
435 102 okurz
On problems this could be changed in the following way:
436
437 109 okurz
* Edit the maintenance window in /etc/rebootmgr.conf
438 105 nicksinger
* Disable the automatic reboot by "systemctl disable rebootmgr.service"
439
* Disable the automatic patching by "systemctl disable transactional-update.timer"
440
441
SUSE employees have access to the bootmenu for the openQA worker machines, e.g. openqaworker1 and openqaworker4 via openqaworker1- ipmi.suse.de and openqaworker4-ipmi.suse.de which are both connected to the r&d network. For imagetester one would need to go through SUSE-IT in an unlikely event of a boot-preventing update. "snapper rollback" can be executed from a booted, functionally operative machine which one can ssh into.
442
443
For manual investigation https://github.com/kubic-project/microos-toolbox can be helpful
444
445
#### Rollback of updates
446 140 livdywan
447
Updates on workers can be rolled back using `transactional-update` affecting the transactional workers (others are likely not updated that often):
448
449 105 nicksinger
```
450
for i in aarch64 openqaworker1 openqaworker4 openqaworker7 power8 imagetester rebel; do echo $i && ssh root@$i "transactional-update rollback last && reboot"; done
451
```
452
453
Updates on the central webUI host openqa.opensuse.org can be rolled back by using either older variants of packages that receive maintenance updates or using the locally cached packages in e.g. /var/cache/zypp/packages/devel_openQA/noarch using `zypper in --oldpackage`, similar to https://github.com/os-autoinst/openQA/blob/master/script/openqa-rollback#L39
454 108 SLindoMansilla
455
#### Debugging qemu SUTs in openqa.opensuse.org
456
457
SUT: System Under Test
458
459
os-autoinst starts qemu with network type that doesn't allow access from the outside, so ssh is not possible. But, qemu is started with a VNC channel available from the host (the openQA-worker).
460
Running vncviewer inside a headless server is useless, but it is possible to use gate.opensuse.org as a jump host and SSH port forwarding to start vncviewer client from your desktop environment and connect to the VNC channel of the qemu SUT.
461
462
```
463
ssh -p 2213 -L LOCAL_PORT:WORKER_HOSTNAME:QEMU_VNC_PORT USERNAME@gate.opensuse.org
464
```
465
466
For example, if user **bernhard**, wants to connect to openqaworker7:11, and wants to use local port **43043**
467
Being the IP of openqaworker7 **192.168.112.12**
468
And the VNC channel port of openqa-worker@11 **6001** (5990 + 11)
469
470
##### 1. Create SSH tunnel with port forwarding
471
* on laptop shell 1: ssh -p 2213 -L 43043:192.168.112.12:6001 bernhard@gate.opensuse.org
472 1 alarrosa
* Keep shell open to keep the tunnel open and the port forwarding
473 108 SLindoMansilla
474 1 alarrosa
##### 2. Open vncviewer
475
* on laptop shell 2: vncviewer -Shared localhost:43043
476
* `-shared` is needed to not kick the VNC connection of os-autoinst. If it is kicked, the job will terminate and the qemu process will be killed.
477
478 109 okurz
### AArch64 specific configurations on o3
479 1 alarrosa
480 109 okurz
On o3, the aarch64 workers need additional configuration.
481
482 127 dheidler
#### Setup HugePages
483
484
You need to setup HugePages support to improve performances with qemu VM and to match current aarch64 `MACHINE` configuration.
485
For the D05 machine, the configuration is: `40` pages with a size of `1G`.
486
If there are some permissions issues on `/dev/hugepages/`, check https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/53234
487
488 126 dheidler
### o3 s390 workers
489
490
The s390 workers for openQA are running within podman containers on openqaworker1.
491
The containers are started using systemd but the unit files are specific to the containers and will end up in a restart-loop if this fact is ignored. Whenever the containers are recreated, the systemd files have to be recreated.
492
493
The containers are started like this (for i=101…104):
494
495
```
496
i=101
497 109 okurz
podman run -d -h openqaworker1_container --name openqaworker1_container_$i -p $(python3 -c"p=${i}*10+20003;print(f'{p}:{p}')") -e OPENQA_WORKER_INSTANCE=$i -v /opt/s390x_rebel_replacement:/etc/openqa -v /var/lib/openqa/share:/var/lib/openqa/share registry.opensuse.org/devel/openqa/containers15.2/openqa_worker:latest
498
(cd /etc/systemd/system/; podman generate systemd -f -n openqaworker1_container_$i --restart-policy always)
499
systemctl daemon-reload
500
systemctl enable container-openqaworker1_container_$i
501
```
502
503 133 okurz
As alternative s390x workers can run on the host "rebel" as well. Be aware that openQA workers accessing the same s390x instances must not run in parallel so only enable one worker instance per s390x instance at a time (See https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/97658 for details).
504
505 121 okurz
### Monitoring
506
507
There is an internal munin instance on o3. Anyone wanting to look at the HTML pages, do this:
508
```
509
rsync -a o3:/srv/www/htdocs/munin ~/o3-munin/ 
510
```
511
(where "o3" is configured in your ssh config of course)
512
513 89 ggardet_arm
## Mitigation of boot failure or disk issues
514
515
### Worker stuck in recovery
516
517
Check disk health and consider manual fixup of mount points, e.g.:
518
519
```
520
test -e /dev/md/openqa || lsblk -n | grep -v nvme | grep "/$" && mdadm --create /dev/md/openqa --level=0 --force --raid-devices=$(ls /dev/nvme?n1 | wc -l) --run /dev/nvme?n1 || mdadm --create /dev/md/openqa --level=0 --force --raid-devices=1 --run /dev/nvme0n1p3
521
```
522
523 106 okurz
## PPC specific configurations
524
525
In one case it was necessary to disable snapshots for petitboot with `nvram -p default --update-config "petitboot,snapshots?=false"` to prevent a race condition between dm_raid and btrfs trying to discover bootable devices (https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/68053#note-25). In another case https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1174166 caused the boot entries to be not properly discovered and it was necessary to prevent grub from trying to update the according sections (https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/68053#note-31).
526 89 ggardet_arm
527 84 okurz
## Moving worker from osd to o3
528
529
* Ensure system management, e.g. over IPMI works. This is untouched by the following steps and can be used during the process for recovery and setup
530
* Ensure network is configured for DHCP
531
* Instruct SUSE-IT to change VLAN for machine from 2 to 662 (example: https://infra.nue.suse.com/SelfService/Display.html?id=16458)
532
* Remove from osd:
533
534
```
535
salt-key -y -d openqaworker7.suse.de
536
```
537
538
* Add entry on o3 to `/etc/dnsmasq.d/openqa.conf` with MAC address, e.g.
539
540
```
541
dhcp-host=54:ab:3a:24:34:b8,openqaworker7
542
```
543
544
* Add entry to `/etc/hosts` which dnsmasq picks up to give out a DHCP lease, e.g.
545
546
```
547
192.168.112.12   openqaworker7.openqanet.opensuse.org openqaworker7
548
```
549
550 85 okurz
* Adapt NFS mount point
551
552
```
553
sed -i '/openqa\.suse\.de/d' /etc/fstab && echo 'openqa1-opensuse:/ /var/lib/openqa/share nfs4 ro,fsc 0 0' >> /etc/fstab
554
```
555
556 84 okurz
* Reload dnsmasq with `systemctl restart dnsmasq`
557
* Restart network on machine (over IMPI) using `systemctl restart network` and monitor in o3:`journalctl -f -u dnsmasq` until address is assigned, e.g.:
558
559
```
560
Feb 29 10:48:30 ariel dnsmasq[28105]: read /etc/hosts - 30 addresses
561
Feb 29 10:48:54 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPREQUEST(eth1) 10.160.1.101 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8
562
Feb 29 10:48:54 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPNAK(eth1) 10.160.1.101 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8 wrong network
563
Feb 29 10:49:10 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPDISCOVER(eth1) 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8
564
Feb 29 10:49:10 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPOFFER(eth1) 192.168.112.12 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8
565
Feb 29 10:49:10 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPREQUEST(eth1) 192.168.112.12 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8
566
Feb 29 10:49:10 ariel dnsmasq-dhcp[28105]: DHCPACK(eth1) 192.168.112.12 54:ab:3a:24:34:b8 openqaworker7
567 85 okurz
```
568
569
* Ensure all mountpoints up
570
571
```
572
mount -a
573 84 okurz
```
574
575
* Change root password to o3 one
576 86 okurz
* Allow ssh password authentication: `sed -i 's/^PasswordAuthentication/#&/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config && systemctl restart sshd`
577 84 okurz
* Add personal ssh key to machine, e.g. openqaworker7:/root/.ssh/authorized_keys
578
* Update /etc/openqa/client.conf with the same key as used on other workers for "openqa1-opensuse"
579
* Update /etc/openqa/workers.ini with similar config as used on other workers, e.g. based on openqaworker4, example:
580
581
```
582
# diff -Naur /etc/openqa/workers.ini{.osd,}
583
--- /etc/openqa/workers.ini.osd 2020-02-29 15:21:47.737998821 +0100
584
+++ /etc/openqa/workers.ini     2020-02-29 15:22:53.334464958 +0100
585
@@ -1,17 +1,10 @@
586
-# This file is generated by salt - don't touch
587
-# Hosted on https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-pillars-openqa
588
-# numofworkers: 10
589
-
590
 [global]
591
-HOST=openqa.suse.de
592
-CACHEDIRECTORY=/var/lib/openqa/cache
593
-LOG_LEVEL=debug
594
-WORKER_CLASS=qemu_x86_64,qemu_x86_64_staging,tap,openqaworker7
595
-WORKER_HOSTNAME=10.160.1.101
596
-
597
-[1]
598
-WORKER_CLASS=qemu_x86_64,qemu_x86_64_staging,tap,qemu_x86_64_ibft,openqaworker7
599
+HOST=http://openqa1-opensuse
600
+WORKER_HOSTNAME=192.168.112.12
601
+CACHEDIRECTORY = /var/lib/openqa/cache
602
+CACHELIMIT = 50
603
+WORKER_CLASS = openqaworker7,qemu_x86_64
604
605
-[openqa.suse.de]
606
-TESTPOOLSERVER = rsync://openqa.suse.de/tests
607
+[http://openqa1-opensuse]
608
+TESTPOOLSERVER = rsync://openqa1-opensuse/tests
609
```
610
611
* Remove OSD specifics
612
613
```
614
systemctl disable --now auto-update.timer salt-minion telegraf
615
for i in  NPI SUSE_CA telegraf-monitoring; do zypper rr $i; done
616
zypper -n dup --force-resolution --allow-vendor-change
617
```
618
619
* If the machine is not a transactional-server one has the following options: Keep as is and handle like power8 (also not transactional), enable transactional updates w/o root being r/o, change to root being r/o on-the-fly, reinstall as transactional. At least option 2 is suggested, enable transactional updates:
620
621
```
622
zypper -n in transactional-update
623
systemctl enable --now transactional-update.timer rebootmgr
624
```
625
626
* Enable apparmor
627
628
```
629
zypper -n in apparmor-utils
630
systemctl unmask apparmor
631
systemctl enable --now apparmor
632
```
633
634
* Switch firewall from SuSEfirewall2 to firewalld
635
636
```
637
zypper -n in firewalld && zypper -n rm SuSEfirewall2
638
systemctl enable --now firewalld
639
firewall-cmd --zone=trusted --add-interface=br1
640
firewall-cmd --set-default-zone trusted
641
firewall-cmd --zone=trusted --add-masquerade
642
```
643
644
* Copy over special openSUSE UEFI staging images, see #63382
645
* Check operation with a single openQA worker instance:
646
647
```
648
systemctl enable --now openqa-worker.target openqa-worker@1
649
```
650
651
* Test with an openQA job cloned from a production job, e.g. for openqaworker7
652
653
```
654
openqa-clone-job --within-instance https://openqa.opensuse.org/t${id} WORKER_CLASS=openqaworker7
655
```
656
657
* After the latest openQA job could successfully finish enable more worker instances
658
659
```
660
systemctl unmask openqa-worker@{2..14} && systemctl enable --now openqa-worker@{2..14}
661
```
662
663
* Monitor if nightly update works, e.g. look for journal entry:
664
665
```
666
Mar 01 00:08:26 openqaworker7 transactional-update[10933]: Calling zypper up
667
668
Mar 01 00:08:51 openqaworker7 transactional-update[10933]: transactional-update finished - informed rebootmgr
669
Mar 01 00:08:51 openqaworker7 systemd[1]: Started Update the system.
670
671
Mar 01 03:30:00 openqaworker7 rebootmgrd[40760]: rebootmgr: reboot triggered now!
672
673
Mar 01 03:36:32 openqaworker7 systemd[1]: Reached target openQA Worker.
674
```
675 93 okurz
676 95 okurz
## Distribution upgrades
677
678 131 livdywan
**Note:** Performing the upgrade differs slightly depending on the host setup:
679 138 okurz
* On hosts with a writeable `/` you need to enter a root shell i.e. `sudo bash`
680
* Transactional hosts require that you use `transactional-update shell` thereby creating a snapshot which is applied after a reboot, optionally using `--continue` if you want to make further changes to an existing snapshot
681
* Depending on available space it might be necessary to cleanup space before conducting the upgrade, e.g. use `snapper rm <N..M>` to delete older root btrfs snapshots, cleanup unneeded packages, e.g. with https://github.com/okurz/scripts/blob/master/zypper-rm-orphaned and https://github.com/okurz/scripts/blob/master/zypper-rm-unneeded
682
* Consider using https://github.com/okurz/auto-upgrade/blob/master/auto-upgrade or manual (*Tip**: Run this in `screen -d -r || screen` and use e.g. `sudo bash`):
683 101 okurz
684 95 okurz
```
685 137 okurz
new_version=15.3 # Specify the target release
686 1 alarrosa
687 98 livdywan
# Change the release via the special $releasever
688 1 alarrosa
. /etc/os-release
689
sed -i -e "s/${VERSION_ID}/\$releasever/g" /etc/zypp/repos.d/*
690
zypper --releasever=$new_version ref
691
test -f /etc/openqa/openqa.ini && sudo -u geekotest /opt/openqa-scripts/dump-psql
692
zypper -n --releasever=$new_version dup --auto-agree-with-licenses --replacefiles --download-in-advance
693
694
# Check config files for relevant changes
695 95 okurz
rpmconfigcheck
696
for i in $(cat /var/adm/rpmconfigcheck) ; do vimdiff ${i%.rpm*} $i ; done
697
rm $(cat /var/adm/rpmconfigcheck)
698
699 1 alarrosa
reboot
700
systemctl --failed
701 98 livdywan
```
702
703 138 okurz
* Ensure that the upgrade was really successful, e.g. /etc/os-release should show the new version, the above `zypper dup` command should show no more pending actions
704
* Crosscheck for any obvious alerts, pipelines failing, user reports, etc.
705
* Monitor for successful openQA jobs on the host
706 132 livdywan
707 109 okurz
## Remote management with IPMI
708 95 okurz
709 119 livdywan
o3 and osd worker machines are controllable over IPMI from within the SUSE network, see [openqa/workerconf.sls](https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-pillars-openqa/-/blob/master/openqa/workerconf.sls) for the commands.
710
It is recommended to use [shell aliases](https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-pillars-openqa#get-ipmi-definition-aliases) for convenience.
711 109 okurz
712
`ipmitool` can sometimes behave unreliably. It seems (to okurz) as if ipmitool version ipmitool-1.8.18+git20200916.1245aaa387dc from openSUSE Tumbleweed or Factory or the "systemsmanagement" OBS repo is more reliable than the version supplied with openSUSE Leap 15.2 (See #80544#note-14) and given a stable internet connection it is certainly possible to have a consistent serial console experience.
713
714 110 okurz
To ensure that remotely controlled machines power on automatically after a power loss ensure to set the power restory policy to "previous", especially for new machines. Using https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-pillars-openqa/#get-ipmi-definition-aliases :
715
716
```
717
IFS=$'\n'; for i in $(sed 's/^alias .*="\(.*\)"/\1/' ~/.openqa_ipmi_aliases); do eval "$i" chassis policy previous; done
718
```
719
720 130 nicksinger
### Accessing imagetester
721 163 mkittler
Imagetester can't output anything over SOL. Therefore it is necessary to access it over the integrated iKVM console. Unfortunately java-webstart is somewhat broken and requires some extra steps to work:
722 129 nicksinger
723 163 mkittler
1. Access the web interface of the BMC at http://imagetester-ipmi.suse.de and login via the IPMI credentials mentioned in the salt pillars repository.
724
2. Click on the preview image of the "Remote Console Preview" and download the according "launch.jnlp" webstart script.
725 129 nicksinger
3. Grab the required dependencies with curl and place them in a local directory:
726
727
```
728
mkdir /tmp/ikvm
729 163 mkittler
curl -k https://imagetester-ipmi.suse.de:443/liblinux_x86_64__V1.0.3.jar.pack.gz > /tmp/ikvm/liblinux_x86_64__V1.0.3.jar.pack.gz
730
curl -k https://imagetester-ipmi.suse.de:443/iKVM__V1.69.13.0x0.jar.pack.gz > /tmp/ikvm/iKVM__V1.69.13.0x0.jar.pack.gz
731 129 nicksinger
```
732
733 163 mkittler
4. Open the previous downloaded "launch.jnlp" and replace the IP in the first line from e.g. `<jnlp spec="1.0+" codebase="https://10.160.65.195:443/">` to `<jnlp spec="1.0+" codebase="http://127.0.0.1:8080/">`
734
5. Launch some kind of web server which can serve the previously downloaded dependencies for javaws (from /tmp/ikvm). In this example we use python: `python3 -m http.server 8080`
735 129 nicksinger
6. Now you can finally launch the webstart application from your modifies "launch.jnlp" file in a second console: `javaws -nosecurity -jnlp ~/Downloads/launch.jnlp`
736
  * It will ask you how to run the application. You can run it in a sandbox and everything still works
737
7. You should see the monitor output of imagetester now. "Virtual Storage" is also working which allows you to mount an ISO over this remote connection. 
738
739
*Also check https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/96719#note-27 where this was discovered. If you have questions or remarks you can ping @nicksinger*
740 128 okurz
741 109 okurz
## openQA infrastructure needs (o3 + osd)
742
743 115 okurz
TL;DR: new OSD ARM workers needed, missing redundancy for o3-ppc, rest is needing replacement as nearly all current hardware is out of vendor provided maintenance (as of 2021-05), SSD storage for o3 would be good
744 93 okurz
745
2020-03: SUSE IT (EngInfra) provided us more space for O3 but we have only slow rotating-disk storage. Performance could be improved by providing SSD storage.
746
747
The most time and effort we currently struggle with storage space for OSD (openqa.suse.de) ~~both OSD (openqa.suse.de) as well as O3 (openqa.opensuse.org) (2020-03: Situation on o3 resolved with more storage provided by SUSE IT)~~. Both instances (OSD + O3) are using precious netapp-storage but there is currently no better approach to use different, external storage. An increase of the available space would be appreciated, ~~o3 being more important right now than osd,~~ see https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/57494 for details. Graphs like 
748
https://stats.openqa-monitor.qa.suse.de/d/nRDab3Jiz/openqa-jobs-test?orgId=1&from=1578343509900&to=1578653794173&fullscreen&panelId=12 show how usual test backlogs are worked on within OSD by architecture. It can be seen that both the ppc64le and aarch64 backlogs are reduced fast so we do not need more ppc64le or aarch64 machines. However, we have a stability problem with all three aarch64 workers. Potentially new machine(s) could help, see https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/41882 for details.
749 107 okurz
750 125 okurz
With number of workers and parallel processed tests as well as with the increased number of products tested on OSD and users using the system the workload on OSD constantly increases. CPU load alerts had been seen recently in #96713 and the higher load is visible in https://monitor.qa.suse.de/d/WebuiDb/webui-summary?viewPanel=25 . From time to time should increase the number of CPU cores on the OSD VM due to the higher usage.
751
752 117 okurz
## Setup guide for new machines
753
754
* Make sure to set /etc/salt/minion_id to the FQDN (see #90875#note-2 for reference)
755 135 okurz
* Change IPMI/BMC passwords to use our common passwords instead of default IPMI
756 117 okurz
* Add to salt using https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-states-openqa
757
758 120 okurz
## Take machines out of salt-controlled production
759
760
E.g. for investigation or development or manual maintenance work
761 118 okurz
762
```
763
ssh osd "sudo salt-key -y -d $hostname"
764
ssh $hostname "sudo systemctl disable --now telegraf openqa-worker-auto-restart@\*"
765
```
766
767
## Bring back machines into production
768
769
```
770 124 dheidler
ssh osd "sudo salt-key -a $hostname && sudo salt --state-output=changes $hostname state.apply"
771 118 okurz
```
772
773
Depending on your actions further manual cleanup might be necessary, e.g. `ssh $hostname "sudo systemctl unmask telegraf salt-minion"`
774 117 okurz
775 122 okurz
## Backup
776
777 134 okurz
Both openqa.opensuse.org and openqa.suse.de run on virtual machine clusters that provide redundancy and differential backup using snapshotting of the involved storage. SUSE-IT currently provides backups going back up to 3 days with two daily backups conducted at 23:10Z and 11:00Z. With this it is possible in cases of catastrophic data loss to recover (raise ticket over https://sd.suse.com in that case). Additionally automatic backup for the o3 webui host introduced with https://gitlab.suse.de/okurz/backup-server-salt/tree/master/rsnapshot covering so far /etc and the SQL database dumps. Fixed assets and testresults are backed up on storage.qa.suse.de (see https://gitlab.suse.de/openqa/salt-states-openqa/-/merge_requests/612)
778 122 okurz
779 139 okurz
### openQA database backups
780
781
Database backups of o3+osd are available on backup.qa.suse.de, acessible over ssh, same credentials as for the OSD infrastructure
782
783 144 livdywan
### Fallback deployment on AWS
784
785
To get an instance running from a backup in case of a disaster, one can be created on AWS with this configuration:
786 149 tinita
787
#### Launch instance
788
789 155 tinita
##### Web Interface, from scratch (only if necessary, otherwise just use the template below)
790 149 tinita
791 144 livdywan
- Ensure your region is **Frankfurt, Germany**
792
- Pick a **t3.large** with `openSUSE Leap` on AWS Marketplace
793 146 mkittler
- Add two disks
794
    - 10 GiB for the root filesystem should be sufficient (can be easily extended later if needed)
795
    - The OSD database alone needs > 30 GiB and results plus assets will also need a lot (e.g. > 4 GiB for TW snapshot ISO) so take at least 100 GiB for the 2nd drive
796 144 livdywan
- The security group needs to include ssh and http
797
- Add `openqa_created_by`, `openqa_ttl` and `team:qa-tools` tags
798 149 tinita
799
##### Launch from a template
800
801 151 tinita
Note: When you modify the template (creating a new version), be sure to set the new version as the default.
802
803 155 tinita
- Go to the [openQA-webUI-openSUSE-Leap](https://eu-central-1.console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/v2/home?region=eu-central-1#LaunchTemplateDetails:launchTemplateId=lt-002dfbcbd2f818e4c) Template
804 154 tinita
- Select "Actions - Launch instance from template"
805 149 tinita
- Choose your key pair
806
- Click "Launch instance"
807 1 alarrosa
808
###### Command line
809 151 tinita
810 156 tinita
For configuring aws cli, see [below](https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/wiki/Wiki#Configure-aws-cli)
811
812
[aws run-instances docs](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-launch-templates.html)
813 149 tinita
814
    aws ec2 run-instances --launch-template LaunchTemplateId=lt-002dfbcbd2f818e4c --key-name <your-keyname>
815 150 tinita
    # or
816
    aws ec2 run-instances --launch-template LaunchTemplateName=openQA-webUI-openSUSE-Leap --key-name <your-keyname>
817 149 tinita
818
For this you have to create a key pair first, if you haven't done so.
819
Save the result and look for the `InstanceId`.
820 144 livdywan
821
#### Transfer keys
822
823
Since an instance is always created with a single key, public keys of all users need to be deployed by whoever owns that key.
824
825
**Note**: `osd2` refers to the instance created above. Replace with the instance IP or add an alias to your SSH config.
826
827
    ssh openqa.suse.de "sudo su -c 'cat /home/*/.ssh/authorized_keys'" | ssh ec2-user@osd2 "cat - >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys"
828
829
#### Bootstrapping
830
831
```
832
ssh osd2
833 145 mkittler
parted --script /dev/nvme1n1 mklabel gpt && parted --script /dev/nvme1n1 mkpart ext4 4096s 100%
834
mkfs.ext4 /dev/nvme1n1p1
835 160 osukup
vim /etc/fstab # add mount to fstab
836 145 mkittler
mkdir /space && mount /dev/nvme1n1p1 /space
837 158 okurz
mkdir -p /space/pgsql/data
838
mkdir -p /var/lib/pgsql
839
ln -s /space/pgsql/data /var/lib/pgsql/data
840 1 alarrosa
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/os-autoinst/openQA/master/script/openqa-bootstrap | bash -x
841 162 osukup
chown -R postgres.postgres /space/pgsql
842 161 osukup
systemctl restart postgresql
843 152 tinita
844
ssh -A backup.qa.suse.de
845 145 mkittler
rsync --progress /home/rsnapshot/alpha.0/openqa.suse.de/var/lib/openqa/SQL-DUMPS/2022-02-08.dump ec2-user@osd2:/tmp
846 1 alarrosa
847
ssh osd2
848 147 mkittler
sudo -u postgres createdb -O geekotest openqa-osd # create pristine db for OSD import (to avoid conflicts with existing data)
849 1 alarrosa
sudo -u geekotest pg_restore -d openqa-osd /tmp/2022-02-08.dump # import data, will take a while (22m is a realistic time)
850 153 tinita
vim /etc/openqa/openqa.ini # change auth from Fake to OpenID
851 1 alarrosa
vim /etc/openqa/database.ini # change database to openqa-osd
852 158 okurz
systemctl restart openqa-webui
853 1 alarrosa
```
854 155 tinita
855
##### Configure aws cli
856
857
You can use the command
858
859
    aws configure
860
861
but it doesn't actually help you with the possible values, so you can just create the file yourself like this:
862
863
    % cat ~/.aws/config
864
    [default]
865
    region = eu-central-1
866
    output = json
867 157 tinita
    % cat ~/.aws/credentials
868
    [default]
869
    aws_access_key_id = ABCDE
870 155 tinita
    aws_secret_access_key = FGHIJ
871 144 livdywan
872 109 okurz
## Best practices for infrastructure work
873 107 okurz
874
* Same as in OSD deployment we should look for failed grafana alerts if users report something suspicious
875
* Collect all the information between "last good" and "first bad" and then also find the git diff in openqa/salt-states-openqa
876
* Apply proper "scientific method" with written down hypotheses, experiments and conclusions in tickets, follow https://progress.opensuse.org/projects/openqav3/wiki#Further-decision-steps-working-on-test-issues
877
* Keep salt states to describe what should *not* be there
878
* Try out older btrfs snapshots in systems for crosschecking and boot with disabled salt. In the kernel cmdline append `systemd.mask=salt-minion.service`
879
* Team should conduct a work backlog check on a daily base, e.g. look for urgent tickets related to infrastructure problems
880 143 okurz
* For hardware replacement, create EngInfra ticket for coordination, order replacement on private expenses and get reimbursed using https://intra.suse.net/company/company-news/department/finance/claim-expenses/claim-expenses/ or have order placed with the help of line managers, let the components be delivered to the according place, e.g. SUSE Nuremberg datacenter and inform EngInfra in ticket to have them conduct the physical component replacement
881 148 livdywan
* Prefer `reload` over `restart` where available e.g. `systemctl reload postgres` - in general `systemctl cat postgres` will show available commands for any service
882 116 okurz
* Test reboot stability of machines with commands like in https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/78010#note-31 e.g.
883
884
```
885
for run in {01..30}; do for host in $host; do echo -n "run: $run, $host: ping .. " && timeout -k 5 600 sh -c "until ping -c30 $host >/dev/null; do :; done" && echo -n "ok, ssh .. " && timeout -k 5 600 sh -c "until nc -z -w 1 $host 22; do :; done" && echo -n "ok, uptime/reboot: " && ssh $host "uptime && sudo reboot" && sleep 120 || break; done || break; done
886
```