To start read the OpenStack Common Review Checklist
For any new or change to a test it has to be verified in the gate. This means that the first thing to check with any change is that a gate job actually runs it. Tests which aren't executed either because of configuration or skips should not be accepted.
If a new test is added that depends on a new config option (like a feature flag), the commit message must reference a change in DevStack or DevStack-Gate that enables the execution of this newly introduced test. This reference could either be a Cross-Repository Dependency or a simple link to a Gerrit review.
For any change that adds new functionality to either common functionality or an out-of-band tool unit tests are required. This is to ensure we don't introduce future regressions and to test conditions which we may not hit in the gate runs. Tests, and service clients aren't required to have unit tests since they should be self verifying by running them in the gate.
Tests should only be added for a published stable APIs. If a patch contains tests for an API which hasn't been marked as stable or for an API that which doesn't conform to the API stability guidelines then it should not be approved.
When creating new tests that are similar to existing tests it is tempting to simply copy the code and make a few modifications. This increases code size and the maintenance burden. Such changes should not be approved if it is easy to abstract the duplicated code into a function or method.
When tests are being added that depend on a configurable feature or extension, polling the API to discover that it is enabled should not be done. This will just result in bugs being masked because the test can be skipped automatically. Instead the config file should be used to determine whether a test should be skipped or not. Do not approve changes that depend on an API call to determine whether to skip or not.
With the introduction of the tempest external test plugin interface we needed to provide a stable contract for tempest's configuration options. This means we can no longer simply remove a configuration option when it's no longer used. Patches proposed that remove options without a deprecation cycle should not be approved. Similarly when changing default values with configuration we need to similarly be careful that we don't break existing functionality. Also, when adding options, just as before, we need to weigh the benefit of adding an additional option against the complexity and maintenance overhead having it costs.
When a new test is being added refer to the Test Documentation section in hacking to see if the requirements are being met. With the exception of a class level docstring linking to the API ref doc in the API tests and a docstring for scenario tests this is up to the reviewers discretion whether a docstring is required or not.
Release notes are how we indicate to users and other consumers of Tempest what has changed in a given release. Since Tempest 10.0.0 we've been using reno to manage and build the release notes. There are certain types of changes that require release notes and we should not approve them without including a release note. These include but aren't limited to, any addition, deprecation or removal from the lib interface, any change to configuration options (including deprecation), CLI additions or deprecations, major feature additions, and anything backwards incompatible or would require a user to take note or do something extra.
Sometimes we have some bugs in deprecated code. Basically, we leave it. Because we don't need to maintain it. However, if the bug is critical, we might need to fix it. When it will happen, we will deal with it on a case-by-case basis.
- Every patch needs two +2s before being approved.
- Its ok to hold off on an approval until a subject matter expert reviews it
- If a patch has already been approved but requires a trivial rebase to merge, you do not have to wait for a second +2, since the patch has already had two +2s.
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