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This document will go over how to set up a local Autotest server for developing purposes.
Note that there is a script which will automate this process: src/third_party/autotest/files/site_utils/setup_dev_autotest.sh
You need to manually edit the generated shadow_config.ini and fill in your dev server hostname.
You need to set up SSH for the apache user (www-data) in its home directory. Follow the directions for ssh key setup, using the directory /var/www/.ssh and make sure everything is owned by www-data with user only permissions: https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/chromium-os/testing/autotest-developer-faq/ssh-test-keys-setup
If you ran the setup script please proceed to the Autotest Server Usage Guide: https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/chromium-os/testing/autotest-developer-faq/autotest-server-usage
You will want to re-run this script or the below steps for changes that are not easily testable in the production server. Generally this will not be needed for test development. This is if you are changing RPCs, The Scheduler, Any of the frontend GUI or common library changes.
Reference: https://github.com/autotest/autotest/wiki/AutotestServerInstall
Note that the following may be out of date.
These instructions will only work with a Debian based installation. Most likely you can use the package names to set up Autotest for Fedora/Redhat.
After installing all of the packages below you will end up with a server running MySQL, Apache, and have the supporting libraries need to bootstrap the Autotest installation.
**Be sure to remember the password you set up for the root user in Mysql (If any)
sudo apt-get install mysql-server mysql-common libapache2-mod-wsgi python-mysqldb gnuplot apache2-mpm-prefork unzip python-imaging libpng12-dev libfreetype6-dev sqlite3 python-pysqlite2 git-core pbzip2 openjdk-6-jre openjdk-6-jdk python-crypto python-dev subversion build-essential python-setuptools
*Note you will be prompted to enter a ‘root’ user password for MySQL this is reserved for administering the MySQL instance itself. You should not use this for the next section but do not forget it either.
Autotest use MySQL for all of its result storing and queuing jobs for the scheduler to interface with.
Setup the Autotest MYSQL user:
*some_password can be whatever you want. Make note of it as you will need it later on.
NOTE: Do not try to make the autotest server run directly from your home directory and DO follow the “/usr/local/autotest” bind mount or checkout. Changing all the paths in the source and making it work at the same time seems downright impossible.
*Preferred way, if you have a Chromium OS checkout you should already have the Autotest soure.
CHECKOUT=/your/chromiumos/checkout sudo mkdir /usr/local/autotest sudo mount --bind $CHECKOUT/src/third_party/autotest/files /usr/local/autotest
If you don't have a Chromium OS checkout and just want the Autotest bits:
mkdir /usr/local/autotest git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/third_party/autotest.git /usr/local/autotest
Edit the global_config.ini, or better yet, create a shadow configuration (place it in shadow_config.ini) to update the following areas:
[AUTOTEST_WEB]
[SERVER]
[SCHEDULER]
/usr/local/autotest/utils/build_externals.py /usr/local/autotest/utils/compile_gwt_clients.py -a
/usr/local/autotest/database/migrate.py sync /usr/local/autotest/frontend/manage.py syncdb # You may have to run this twice. /usr/local/autotest/frontend/manage.py syncdb
If you ran the above package install command you should already have a running apache server. All we need to do is point that configuration at the Autotest configuration.
sudo ln -s /usr/local/autotest/apache/apache-conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/autotest-server.conf # disable currently active default sudo a2dissite 000-default # enable autotest server sudo a2ensite autotest-server # Enable rewrite module sudo a2enmod rewrite # Enable version for IfVersion code (may not be needed anymore) sudo a2enmod version # Disable mod-python sudo a2dismod python # Enable mod-wsgi sudo a2enmod wsgi # Enable mod_headers sudo a2enmod headers # Setup permissions so that Apache web user can read the proper files. chmod -R o+r /usr/local/autotest find /usr/local/autotest/ -type d | xargs chmod o+x chmod o+x /usr/local/autotest/tko/*.cgi # restart server sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
If you try http://localhost, and Autotest afe page fails to load, you might want to check the apache's port configuration file (/etc/apache2/ports.conf) to make sure the file has port 80 listed:
NameVirtualHost *:80 Listen 80
Otherwise, apache will not be listening on port 80.
If you get 503 errors and see the following message in /var/log/apache2/error.log:
(2)No such file or directory: mod_wsgi: Couldn't bind unix domain socket ‘/etc/apache2/run/wsgi.30365.0.1.sock’.
Just create the /etc/apache2/run directory.
To view logs of a currently running job from the AFE click on the “Debug logs” link. From there you have a few different choices, you will most likely want to look at all the logs which are all in autoserv.DEBUG. Although this file does not automatically update when viewed in your browser if you refresh your view you will see the progress of the job.
All logs from jobs run via the scheduler are stored under: /usr/local/autotest/results.
If you get 403 Forbidden when viewing the results, or if the AFE starts giving Error 500 and strugging to import code, then you either need to re-run
# Setup permissions so that Apache web user can read the proper files. chmod -R o+r /usr/local/autotest find /usr/local/autotest/ -type d | xargs chmod o+x chmod o+x /usr/local/autotest/tko/*.cgi
Or (recommended) edit /etc/apache2/envvars so that it reads
export APACHE_RUN_USER=<user> export APACHE_RUN_GROUP=<group>
where <user> is what is returned by running |id -un| and <group> is the result of running |id -gn|
Import tests
/usr/local/autotest/utils/test_importer.py
***This is the end of what is done for you by setup_dev_autotest.sh.***
Now that everything is setup, please proceed to the Autotest Server Usage Guide https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/chromium-os/testing/autotest-developer-faq/autotest-server-usage