This collection provides a set of ansible modules to control a pulp server (version 3) in a descriptive way. This is neither to be confused with pulp_installer to install pulp, nor pulp_ansible to manage ansible content in pulp.
A lot of inspiration has been drawn from foreman-ansible-modules.
The collection is available from Ansible Galaxy, so you can install it via
$ ansible-galaxy collection install pulp.squeezer
Alternatively you can building the collection artifact with
$ make dist
and install the resulting tar.gz
file with
$ ansible-galaxy collection install pulp-squeezer-<version>.tar.gz
You can find the inline documentation of each module with ansible-doc pulp.squeezer.<module_name>
.
Testing is done by running handcrafted playbooks from tests/playbooks
while playing back prerecorded server answers.
Using python virtual environments is recommended.
There is usually one playbook per module that it is meant to test, but that is not a hard requirement.
The playbooks are usually organized in three consecutive plays:
- The first play is meant to setup the environment.
Fixtures like dependent pulp resources can be prepared here.
It runs against
localhost
to prevent recording any vcr tapes. - The second play contains the actual tests.
This usually involves calling the module in question several times with varying parameters and verifying its output.
Resources created in the first play can be referred to here.
It is executed on the virtual host
tests
to allow for requests to the REST API and their corresponding responses to be recorded. - The third and last play is dedicated to cleanup.
Any resources created (and maybe left over) in the previous two plays should be removed again here.
Again with the target
localhost
, this part is not recorded.
During playback, only the prerecorded play in the middle is executed.
Please make sure, that it can run independently from the others.
Also it should not depend on any of the variables defined in tests/playbooks/vars/server.yaml
other than the connection credentials.
To run the tests, you can either call make test
, or make test_<playbook_name>
to only run a specific one.
To perform codestyle linting and ansible sanity checks, run make lint sanity
.
To (re-)record tests or run live tests, you need a running pulp instance. Two common ways to provide that development server are explained below.
!!! Warning Do not use a production instance, as the tests might perform destructive actions.
A full vm installation of pulp can easily be achieved by using pulplift.
It is recommended to use one of the sandbox installations.
When the vm is up, you need to configure its connection details in tests/playbooks/vars/server.yaml
.
For example, to run all tests live against this vm:
+ make livetest +
The fixtures for the file_remote
test can be recorded with:
+ make record_file_remote +
The tests/run_container.sh
script is provided and allows you to run a command with a Pulp in one container active.
It requires Docker or Podman to be installed.
The default credentials in tests/playbooks/vars/server.yaml
are sufficient.
For example, to run all tests against the live Pulp instance:
./tests/run_container.sh make livetest
Or to record test fixtures for the rpm_repository
test:
./tests/run_container.sh make record_rpm_repository
By default, the container will be stopped and removed when the script exits.
Set KEEP_CONTAINER=1
to avoid removing the container to allow for debugging.
Set IMAGE_TAG=<tag>
to override the default latest
tag for the pulp
image.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.