This page provides specific steps to do a basic one-system installation of openQA (with jobs run on the same system as the server) on Fedora (25 or higher), directly to the system. For more details and background information on this process, see the upstream install guide.
- Install the required packages:
sudo dnf install openqa openqa-httpd openqa-worker fedora-messaging python3-jsonschema
- Configure httpd:
cd /etc/httpd/conf.d/ cp openqa.conf.template openqa.conf cp openqa-ssl.conf.template openqa-ssl.conf setsebool -P httpd_can_network_connect 1 systemctl restart httpd
- Configure the web UI by editing
/etc/openqa/openqa.ini
:
[global] branding=plain download_domains = fedoraproject.org
- To use insecure but convenient 'fake' authentication, add:
[auth] method = Fake
- To use more secure FAS-based authentication, add:
[auth] method=OpenID [openid] provider = https://id.fedoraproject.org/ httpsonly = 1
- install and configure PostgreSQL required for new version of openQA
dnf install postgresql-server postgresql-setup --initdb
- Start the services (consider also running enable if you want persistence):
systemctl start postgresql systemctl start httpd systemctl start openqa-gru systemctl start openqa-scheduler systemctl start openqa-websockets systemctl start openqa-webui systemctl start fm-consumer@fedora_openqa_scheduler
- Create non-temporary API keys in the web interface at http://localhost. Click Login, then Manage API Keys and create a key and secret. Edit
/etc/openqa/client.conf
as follows:
[localhost] key = insert key from web api secret = insert secret from web api
- Start a worker, and check that it shows up in the web UI admin interface:
systemctl start openqa-worker@1
- To start more workers, change the number after the @ sign in the above command.
- Check out the Fedora tests and load them into openQA:
cd /var/lib/openqa/tests/ git clone https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/os-autoinst-distri-fedora.git fedora chown -R geekotest:geekotest fedora cd fedora ./fifloader.py -l -c templates.fif.json templates-updates.fif.json
- To run some of the tests, you will also need to build some hard disk images:
git clone https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/createhdds.git ~/createhdds dnf install libguestfs-tools libguestfs-xfs python3-fedfind python3-libguestfs libvirt-daemon-config-network libvirt-python3 virt-install withlock mkdir -p /var/lib/openqa/factory/hdd/fixed cd /var/lib/openqa/factory/hdd/fixed ~/createhdds/createhdds.py all chown geekotest *
- [optional] Set up a cron job that will run regularly and re-generate some of the images every two weeks or so. Create a file
/etc/cron.daily/createhdds
with this content (adjusting /path/to/createhdds as appropriate):
#!/bin/sh cd /var/lib/openqa/share/factory/hdd/fixed LIBGUESTFS_BACKEND=direct withlock /var/lock/createhdds.lock /path/to/createhdds/createhdds.py all --clean
- To stay up-to-date as the tests are updated, you can do this periodically:
cd /var/lib/openqa/share/tests/fedora git pull ./fifloader.py -l -c templates.fif.json templates-updates.fif.json
At this point you should be able to schedule jobs (see the fedora_openqa instructions) and most of the tests should work. However, a few of the tests require two or more workers to be able to communicate with each other (e.g. the FreeIPA tests, where one job sets up a server, and other jobs set up clients and try to connect to the server). For these tests to work, you must do some quite complex software-defined networking configuration on the worker host(s). Instructions for this are in the page OpenQA_advanced_network_guide.
To run some tests (currently only one specific test for IoT images), you will also need to set up TPM emulation. To do this:
dnf install swtpm swtpm-tools curl -o /etc/systemd/system/openqa-swtpm@.service https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible/blob/master/f/roles/openqa/worker/files/openqa-swtpm@.service systemctl daemon-reload curl -o systemd-swtpm.pp https://pagure.io/fedora-infra/ansible/blob/master/f/roles/openqa/worker/files/systemd-swtpm.pp semodule -i ./systemd-swtpm.pp systemctl enable openqa-swtpm@1.service systemctl start openqa-swtpm@1.service
Repeat the last two commands as many times as you have worker instances enabled, incrementing the number each time (so if you have three worker instances, do them three times, for openqa-swtpm@1.service, then openqa-swtpm@2.service, then openqa-swtpm@3.service). You will also need to edit /etc/openqa/workers.ini
and include tpm in the WORKER_CLASS setting.