test_that
is the supported mechanism to run autotests against Chrome OS devices at your desk. test_that
replaces an older script, run_remote_tests
.
Features for testing a local device:
test_that
and all its autoserv children. Orphaned processes are no longer left behind.test_that
by the NAME field of their control file. Matching tests by filename is supported using f:[file pattern]In addition to running tests against local device, test_that
can be used to launch jobs in the ChromeOS Hardware Lab (or against a local Autotest instance or a Moblab). This feature is only supported for infrastructure-produced builds that were uploaded to google storage.
Run the test(s) named dummy_Pass:
$ test_that -b ${board} ${host} dummy_Pass
Run the test(s) named dummy_Pass.suspend:
$ test_that -b ${board} ${host} dummy_Pass.suspend
Run the bvt-inline suite against dut:
$ test_that -b ${board} ${host} suite:bvt-inline
Run all tests whose names match the regular expression ^login_.*$
. Note that even though these tests have binary dependencies, there is no longer a need to specify extra flags.
$ test_that -b ${board} ${host} e:login_.*
Run all tests whose control file filename matches the regular expression ^.*control.dummy$
:
$ test_that -b ${board} ${host} f:.*control.dummy
test_that
now allows you to run jobs in the test lab. The usage is similar to running tests against a specified host. The keyword :lab: is used as test_that‘s REMOTE argument, and the -i/--build argument is required, and takes a trybot, paladin, or canary build number. To learn how to build a trybot image with a new test that you’re iterating on, see “dynamic suite” codelab or the Chromium OS Remote Trybots guide.
For instance:
$ test_that -b lumpy -i lumpy-paladin/R38-6009.0.0-rc4 :lab: dummy_Pass
This will kick off a suite in the lab that consists of just 1 job, dummy_Pass, to run in this case on board lumpy using the image lumpy-paladin/R38-6009.0.0-rc4. The lab's scheduler will take responsibility for finding a suitable set of hosts, provisioning them to the correct image, and running the tests. test_that
will return after the suite finishes running, with a suite run report.
You can specify multiple tests or test-matching expressions in the same way as before:
$ test_that -b lumpy -i ${latest_image} :lab: dummy_Pass dummy_Fail $ test_that -b lumpy -i ${latest_image} :lab: e:login_.*
Kicking off a run in the lab should be useful whenever you need to run a particular test on a board or image that you do not have readily available locally.For occasional runs of ad-hoc suites in the lab, this will also avoid the need to create a suite control file and wait for it to end up in an image.
You can also kick off a suite, for example with:
test_that -b peach_pit :lab: suite:pyauto_perf -i 'peach_pit-release/R32-4763.0.0'
That told me that my job ID was 5196037. I could follow along by going to http://cautotest/afe/#tab_id=view_job&object_id=5195962.
Things to note about running in the lab:
suites
machine pool. That can be overridden with the -p
flag.test_that
allows you to run jobs against a local Autotest setup or a MobLab instance. This usage is similar to running tests in the lab. The argument --web allows you to specify the web address of the Autotest instance you want to run tests within.
For instance:
$ test_that -b lumpy -i lumpy-paladin/R38-6009.0.0-rc4 --web 100.96.51.136 :lab: dummy_Pass
This will kick off the dummy_Pass test on a lumpy device on the Autotest instance located at 100.96.51.136