Run Prow integration tests
Run all integration tests
./test/integration/integration-test.sh
Run a specific integration test
./test/integration/integration-test.sh -run=TestIWantToRun
Cleanup
./test/integration/teardown.sh -all
Adding new integration tests
New component
Assume we want to add most-awesome-component
(source code in cmd/most-awesome-component
).
-
Add
most-awesome-component
to thePROW_COMPONENTS
,PROW_IMAGES
, andPROW_IMAGES_TO_COMPONENTS
variables in lib.sh.- Add the line
most-awesome-component
toPROW_COMPONENTS
. - Add the line
[most-awesome-component]=cmd/most-awesome-component
toPROW_IMAGES
. - Add the line
[most-awesome-component]=most-awesome-component
toPROW_IMAGES_TO_COMPONENTS
. - Explanation:
PROW_COMPONENTS
lists which components are deployed into the cluster,PROW_IMAGES
describes where the source code is located for each component (in order to build them), and finallyPROW_IMAGES_TO_COMPONENTS
defines the relationship between the first two variables (so that the test framework knows what to redeploy depending on what image has changed). As an example, thedeck
anddeck-tenanted
components (inPROW_COMPONENTS
) both use thedeck
image (defined inPROW_IMAGES_TO_COMPONENTS
), so they are both redeployed every time you change something incmd/deck
(defined inPROW_IMAGES
).
- Add the line
-
Set up Kubernetes Deployment and Service configurations inside the [configuration folder][config/prow/cluster] for your new component. This way the test cluster will pick it up when it deploys Prow components.
-
If you want to deploy an existing Prow component used in production (i.e., https://prow.k8s.io), you can reuse (symlink) the configurations used in production. See the examples in [configuration folder][config/prow/cluster].
-
Remember to use
localhost:5001/most-awesome-component
for theimage: ...
field in the Kubernetes configurations to make the test cluster use the freshly-built image.
-
New tests
Tests are written under the test
directory. They are named with the
pattern <COMPONENT>_test.go*
. Continuing the example above, you would add new
tests in most-awesome-component_test.go
Check that your new test is working
- Add or edit new tests (e.g.,
func TestMostAwesomeComponent(t *testing.T) {...}
) inmost-awesome-component_test.go
. - Run
./test/integration/integration-test.sh -run=TestMostAwesomeComponent
to bring up the test cluster and to only test your new test namedTestMostAwesomeComponent
. - If you need to make changes to
most-awesome-component_test.go
(and not the component itself), run./test/integration/integration-test.sh -run=TestMostAwesomeComponent -no-setup
. The-no-setup
will ensure that the test framework avoid redeploying the test cluster.- If you do need to make changes to the Prow component, run
./test/integration/integration-test.sh -run=TestMostAwesomeComponent -build=most-awesome-component
so thatcmd/most-awesome-component
is recompiled and redeployed into the cluster before runningTestMostAwesomeComponent
.
- If you do need to make changes to the Prow component, run
If Step 2 succeeds and there is nothing more to do, you’re done! If not (and your tests still need some tweaking), repeat steps 1 and 3 as needed.
How it works
In short, the integration-test.sh script creates a KIND Kubernetes cluster, runs all available integration tests, and finally deletes the cluster.
Recall that Prow is a collection of services (Prow components) that can be deployed into a Kubernetes cluster. KIND provides an environment where we can deploy certain Prow components, and then from the integration tests we can create a Kubernetes Client to talk to this deployment of Prow.
Note that the integration tests do not test all components (we need to fix this). The PROW_COMPONENTS variable is a list of components currently tested. These components are compiled and deployed into the test cluster on every invocation of integration-test.sh.
Each tested component needs a Kubernetes configuration so that KIND understands
how to deploy it into the cluster, but that’s about it (more on this below). The
main thing to keep in mind is that the integration tests must be hermetic and
reproducible. For this reason, all components that are tested must be configured
so that they do not attempt to reach endpoints that are outside of the cluster.
For example, this is why some Prow components have a -github-endpoint=...
flag
that you can use — this way these components can be instructed to talk to the
fakeghserver
deployed inside the cluster instead of trying to talk to GitHub.
Code layout
.
├── cmd # Binaries for fake services deployed into the test cluster along with actual Prow components.
│ ├── fakegerritserver # Fake Gerrit.
│ ├── fakeghserver # Fake GitHub.
│ └── fakegitserver # Fake low-level Git server. Can theoretically act as the backend for fakeghserver or fakegerritserver.
├── config # Kubernetes configuration files.
│ └── prow # Prow configuration for the test cluster.
│ ├── cluster # KIND test cluster configurations.
│ └── jobs # Static Prow jobs. Some tests use these definitions to run Prow jobs inside the test cluster.
├── internal
│ └── fakegitserver
└── test # The actual integration tests to run.
└── testdata # Test data.
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