The run_tests.sh
Script¶
Warning
This script is deprecated as of Newton (11.0), and will be removed in Queens (13.0), in favor of tox. The tox docs can be found at https://tox.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
Contents:
Horizon ships with a script called run_tests.sh
at the root of the
repository. This script provides many crucial functions for the project,
and also makes several otherwise complex tasks trivial for you as a
developer.
First Run¶
If you start with a clean copy of the Horizon repository, the first thing
you should do is to run ./run_tests.sh
from the root of the repository.
This will do two things for you:
- Set up a virtual environment for both the
horizon
module and theopenstack_dashboard
project using./tools/install_venv.py
.- Run the tests for both
horizon
andopenstack_dashboard
using their respective environments and verify that everything is working.
Setting up the environment the first time can take several minutes, but only needs to be done once. If dependencies are added in the future, updating the environments will be necessary but not as time consuming.
I just want to run the tests!¶
Running the full set of unit tests quickly and easily is the main goal of this script. All you need to do is:
./run_tests.sh
Yep, that’s it. However, for a more thorough test run you can include the
Selenium tests by using the --with-selenium
flag:
./run_tests.sh --with-selenium
If you run horizon in a minimal installation VM, you will probably need the following (steps for Fedora 18 minimal installation):
- Install these packages in the VM:
yum install xorg-x11-xauth xorg-x11-fonts-Type1.noarch
.- Install firefox in the VM:
yum install firefox
.- Connect to the VM by
ssh -X
(if you runset|grep DISP
, you should see that the DISPLAY is set).- Run
./run_tests.sh --with-selenium
.
Running a subset of tests¶
Instead of running all tests, you can specify an individual directory, file, class, or method that contains test code.
To run the tests in the horizon/test/tests/tables.py
file:
./run_tests.sh horizon.test.tests.tables
To run the tests in the WorkflowsTests class in
horizon/test/tests/workflows
:
./run_tests.sh horizon.test.tests.workflows:WorkflowsTests
To run just the WorkflowsTests.test_workflow_view test method:
./run_tests.sh horizon.test.tests.workflows:WorkflowsTests.test_workflow_view
Running the integration tests¶
The Horizon integration tests treat Horizon as a black box, and similar to Tempest must be run against an existing OpenStack system. These tests are not run by default.
Update the configuration file openstack_dashboard/test/integration_tests/horizon.conf as required (the format is similar to the Tempest configuration file).
Run the tests with the following command:
$ ./run_tests.sh --integration
Like for the unit tests, you can choose to only run a subset.
$ ./run_tests.sh --integration openstack_dashboard.test.integration_tests.tests.test_login
Using Dashboard and Panel Templates¶
Horizon has a set of convenient management commands for creating new dashboards and panels based on basic templates.
Dashboards¶
To create a new dashboard, run the following:
./run_tests.sh -m startdash <dash_name>
This will create a directory with the given dashboard name, a dashboard.py
module with the basic dashboard code filled in, and various other common
“boilerplate” code.
Available options:
--target
: the directory in which the dashboard files should be created. Default: A new directory within the current directory.
Panels¶
To create a new panel, run the following:
./run_tests -m startpanel <panel_name>
This will create a directory with the given panel name, and panel.py
module with the basic panel code filled in, and various other common
“boilerplate” code.
Available options:
-d
,--dashboard
: The dotted python path to your dashboard app (the module which contains thedashboard.py
file.). If not specified, the target dashboard should be specified in a pluggable settings file for the panel.--target
: the directory in which the panel files should be created. If the value isauto
the panel will be created as a new directory inside the dashboard module’s directory structure. Default: A new directory within the current directory.
JavaScript Tests¶
You can also run JavaScript unit tests using Karma. Karma is a test environment that allows for multiple test runners and reporters, including such features as code coverage. Karma allows developer to run tests live, as it can watch source and test files for changes.
The default configuration also performs coverage reports, which are saved
to cover/horizon/
and cover/openstack_dashboard/
.
To run the Karma tests for Horizon and Dashboard using the run_tests.sh script:
./run_tests.sh --karma
To run the Karma tests for Horizon and Dashboard using npm:
npm install # You only need to execute this once.
npm test
Note
These two methods are equivalent. The former merely executes the latter.
JavaScript Code Style Checks¶
You can run the JavaScript code style checks, or linting, using eslint. ESLint is a permissively licensed, sophisticated language parser and linter that confirms both our style guidelines, and checks the code for common errors that may create unexpected behavior.
To run eslint for Horizon and Dashboard using the run_tests.sh script:
./run_tests.sh --eslint
To run eslint for Horizon and Dashboard using npm:
npm install # You only need to execute this once.
npm run lint
Note
These two methods are equivalent. The former merely executes the latter.
Give me metrics!¶
You can generate various reports and metrics using command line arguments
to run_tests.sh
.
Coverage¶
To run coverage reports:
./run_tests.sh --coverage
The reports are saved to ./reports/
and ./coverage.xml
.
PEP8¶
You can check for PEP8 violations as well:
./run_tests.sh --pep8
The results are saved to ./pep8.txt
.
PyLint¶
For more detailed code analysis you can run:
./run_tests.sh --pylint
The output will be saved in ./pylint.txt
.
Tab Characters¶
For those who dislike having a mix of tab characters and spaces for indentation there’s a command to check for that in Python, CSS, JavaScript and HTML files:
./run_tests.sh --tabs
This will output a total “tab count” and a list of the offending files.
Running the development server¶
As an added bonus, you can run Django’s development server directly from
the root of the repository with run_tests.sh
like so:
./run_tests.sh --runserver
This is effectively just an alias for:
./tools/with_venv.sh ./manage.py runserver
Generating the documentation¶
You can build Horizon’s documentation automatically by running:
./run_tests.sh --docs
The output is stored in ./doc/build/html/
.
Updating the translation files¶
You can update all of the translation files for both the horizon
app and
openstack_dashboard
project with a single command:
./run_tests.sh --makemessages
or, more compactly:
./run_tests.sh --m
Starting clean¶
If you ever want to start clean with a new environment for Horizon, you can run:
./run_tests.sh --force
That will blow away the existing environments and create new ones for you.
Non-interactive Mode¶
There is an optional flag which will run the script in a non-interactive (and eventually less verbose) mode:
./run_tests.sh --quiet
This will automatically take the default action for actions which would normally prompt for user input such as installing/updating the environment.
Environment Backups¶
To speed up the process of doing clean checkouts, running continuous integration tests, etc. there are options for backing up the current environment and restoring from a backup:
./run_tests.sh --restore-environment
./run_tests.sh --backup-environment
The environment backup is stored in /tmp/.horizon_environment/
.
Environment Versioning¶
Horizon keeps track of changes to the environment by comparing the
current requirements files (requirements.txt
and
test-requirements.txt
) and the files last time the virtual
environment was created or updated. If there is any difference,
the virtual environment will be update automatically when you run
run_tests.sh
.