The test-infra repository contains a collection of tools for testing Kubernetes and displaying Kubernetes tests results. See also CONTRIBUTING.md.
- The Kubernetes TestGrid shows historical test results.
- Configure your own testgrid dashboard at testgrid/config/config.yaml
- Gubernator formats the output of each run
- PR Dashboard finds PRs that need your attention
- Prow schedules testing and updates issues.
- Prow responds to GitHub events, timers and manual commands.
- The prow dashboard shows what it is currently testing
- Configure prow to run new tests at prow/config.yaml
- Triage Dashboard aggregates failures
- Triage clusters together similar failures
- Search for test failures across jobs
- Filter down to failures in a specific regex of tests and/or jobs.
- Test history is a deprecated tool
- Use the triage dashboard instead
- Summarizes the last 24 hours of testing.
- See Kettle and the corresponding bigquery metrics that largely supplement this information.
Test anything with the following pattern:
git clone https://github.com/kubernetes/test-infra
test-infra/jenkins/bootstrap.py --job=J --repo=R --service-account=S.json --upload=gs://B
The --job=J
flag specifies what test job to run.
The --repo=R
(or --bare
) flag controls what we check out from git.
Anyone can reconfigure our CI system with a test-infra PR that updates the appropriate files. Detailed instructions follow:
Create a PR in this repo to add/update/remove a job or suite. Specifically you'll need to do the following:
- Create an entry in
jobs/config.json
for the job- If this is a kubetest job create the corresponding
jobs/FOO.env
file - Ensure the
PROJECT=blah
in thejobs/FOO.env
has the right IAM grants
- If this is a kubetest job create the corresponding
- Add the job name to the
test_groups
list intestgrid/config/config.yaml
- Also the group to at least one
dashboard_tab
- Also the group to at least one
- Add the job to the appropriate section in
prow/config.yaml
- presubmit jobs run on unmerged code in PRs
- postsubmit jobs run after merging code
- periodic job run on a timed basis
- (Deprecated!) Some old jobs still run on jenkins
- Please do not add new jobs to jenkins
- Jenkins configuration is defined at
jenkins/job-configs
- More deprecated details at jenkins/README.md
Please test the job on your local workstation before creating a PR:
mkdir /tmp/whatever && cd /tmp/whatever
$GOPATH/src/k8s.io/test-infra/jenkins/bootstrap.py \
--job=J \ # aka your new job
--repo=R1 --repo=R2 \ # what repos to check out
--service-account ~/S.json # the service account to use to launch GCE/GKE clusters
# Note: create a service account at the cloud console for the project J uses
Presubmit will tell you if you forget to do any of this correctly.
Merge your PR and the job will be ready to go as soon as test-infra oncall
pushes the prow changes (make -C prow update-config
).
Largely similar to creating a new job, except you can just modify the existing entries rather than adding new ones.
Update what a job does by editing its definition in jobs/config.json
. For
the kubetest jobs this typically means editing the jobs/FOO.env
files it uses.
Update when a job runs by changing its definition in prow/config.yaml
.
The test-infra oncall must push prow changes (make -C prow update-config
).
Update where the job apears on testgrid by changing testgrid/config/config.yaml
.
The reverse of creating a new job: delete the appropriate entries in
jobs/config.json
, prow/config.yaml
and testgrid/config/config.yaml
.
The test-infra oncall must push prow changes (make -C prow update-config
).
We use Bazel to build and test the code in this repo.
The commands bazel build //...
and bazel test //...
should be all you need
for most cases. If you modify Go code, run ./verify/update-bazel.sh
to keep
BUILD
files up-to-date.
The Kubernetes project encourages organizations to contribute execution of e2e test jobs for a variety of platforms (e.g., Azure, rktnetes). The test-history scripts gather e2e results from these federated jobs. For information about how to contribute test results, see Federated Testing.