Commit Graph

3381 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kubernetes Prow Robot
0424a530a4 Merge pull request #115678 from pohly/e2e-full-reports
e2e: revise complete report creation
2023-02-10 15:07:29 -08:00
Patrick Ohly
3e2b26ce52 e2e: revise complete report creation
The previous approach was based on the observation that some Prow jobs use the
--report-dir parameter instead of the E2E_REPORT_DIR env variable. Parsing the
command line was necessary to use the --json-report and --junit-report
parameters.

But that is complex and can be avoided by triggering the creation of complete
reports in the E2E test suite. The paths are hard-coded and relative to the
report directory to keep the code simple.

There was a report that k8s-triage started processing more data after
6db4b741dd was merged. It's unclear whether
that was because of the new <report-dir>/ginkgo_report.xml file. To avoid
this potential problem, the reports are now in a "ginkgo" sub-directory.

While at it, error checking gets enhanced:
- Create directories at the start of
  the suite and bail out early if that fails.
- *All* e2e suites using the framework do this, not just test/e2e.
- Added missing error checking of truncated JUnit report writing.
2023-02-10 10:20:20 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
136f89dfc5 e2e: use error wrapping with %w
The recently introduced failure handling in ExpectNoError depends on error
wrapping: if an error prefix gets added with `fmt.Errorf("foo: %v", err)`, then
ExpectNoError cannot detect that the root cause is an assertion failure and
then will add another useless "unexpected error" prefix and will not dump the
additional failure information (currently the backtrace inside the E2E
framework).

Instead of manually deciding on a case-by-case basis where %w is needed, all
error wrapping was updated automatically with

    sed -i "s/fmt.Errorf\(.*\): '*\(%s\|%v\)'*\",\(.* err)\)/fmt.Errorf\1: %w\",\3/" $(git grep -l 'fmt.Errorf' test/e2e*)

This may be unnecessary in some cases, but it's not wrong.
2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
9878e735dd e2e pod: unit test for pod status + API error
This covers new behavior in gomega.
2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
1bd1167d56 e2e pod: remove dead code 2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
3bb735e6fa e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForRestartablePods 2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
1e346c4e4a e2e pod: convert ProxyResponseChecker into matcher
Instead of pod responses being printed to the log each time polling fails, we
get a consolidated failure message with all unexpected pod responses if (and
only if) the check times out or a progress report gets produced.
2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
c3266cde77 e2e: consolidate pod response checking
This renames PodsResponding to WaitForPodsResponding for the sake of
consistency and adds a timeout parameter. That is necessary because some other
users of NewProxyResponseChecker used a much lower timeout (2min vs. 15min).

Besides simplifying some code, it also makes it easier to rewrite
ProxyResponseChecker because it only gets used in WaitForPodsResponding.
2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
89a5d6d8af e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace 2023-02-06 15:39:13 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
9df3e2a47a e2e: replace WaitForPodToDisappear with WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace
WaitForPodToDisappear was always called such that it listed all pods, which
made it less efficient than trying to get just the one pod it was checking for.

Being able to customize the poll interval in practice wasn't useful, therefore
it can be replaced with WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
45d4631069 e2e: consolidate checking a pod list
WaitForPods is now a generic function which lists pods and then checks the pods
that it found against some provided condition. A parameter determines how many
pods must be found resp. match the condition for the check to succeed.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
d8428c6fb1 e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitTimeoutForPodReadyInNamespace/WaitForPodCondition
These get converted together because they relied on FinalErr which now isn't
needed anymore.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
01a40d9d6b e2e framework: support getting list of objects
This is similar to the previous support for getting a single object.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
3dd185aa40 e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForPodsRunningReady
The code becomes simpler (78 insertions, 91 deletions), easier to read (all
code entirely inside WaitForPodsRunningReady, no need to declare and later
overwrite variables) and possibly more correct (if all API calls failed,
the resulting error was ignored when allowedNotReadyPods > 0).
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
afbb2c5323 e2e framework: turn function into gomega.Matcher
The intention is to use this inside a helper function where the
corresponding Expect call is known.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
4d63e7d4d6 e2e: remove unused label filter from WaitForPodsRunningReady
None of the users of the functions passed anything other than nil or an empty
map and the implementation ignore the parameter - it seems like a candidate for
simplification.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
8181f97ecc e2e framework: include additional stack backtrace in failures
When a Gomega failure is converted to an error, the stack at the time when the
failure occurs may be useful: error wrapping provides some bread crumbs that
can be followed to determine where the failure really occurred, but error
wrapping may be missing or ambiguous.

To provide the additional information, a FailureError now includes a full stack
backtrace. The backtrace intentionally makes no attempt to exclude framework
functions besides the gomega support itself because helpers like
e2e/framework/pod may be relevant.

That backtrace is not included in the failure message for the sake of
brevity. Instead, it gets logged as part of the test's output.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
005a9da0cc e2e framework: implement pod polling with gomega.Eventually
gomega.Eventually provides better progress reports: instead of filling up the
log with rather useless one-line messages that are not enough to to understand
the current state, it integrates with Gingko's progress reporting (SIGUSR1,
--poll-progress-after) and then dumps the same complete failure message as
after a timeout. That makes it possible to understand why progress isn't
getting made without having to wait for the timeout.

The other advantage is that the failure message for some unexpected pod state
becomes more readable: instead of encapsulating it as "observed object" inside
an error, it directly gets rendered by gomega.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
71dc81ec89 e2e framework: gomega assertions as errors
Calling gomega.Expect/Eventually/Consistently deep inside a helper call chain
has several challenges:
- the stack offset must be tracked correctly, otherwise the callstack
  for the failure starts at some helper code, which is often not informative
- augmenting the failure message with additional information from each
  caller implies that each caller must pass down a string and/or format
  string plus arguments

Both challenges can be solved by returning errors:
- the stacktrace is taken at that level where the error is
  treated as a failure instead of passing back an error, i.e.
  inside the It callback
- traditional error wrapping can add additional information, if
  desirable

What was missing was some easy way to generate an error via a gomega
assertion. The new infrastructure achieves that by mirroring the
Gomega/Assertion/AsyncAssertion interfaces with errors as return values instead
of calling a fail handler.

It is intentionally less flexible than the gomega APIs:
- A context must be passed to Eventually/Consistently as first
  parameter because that is needed for proper timeout handling.
- No additional text can be added to the failure through this
  API because error wrapping is meant to be used for this.
- No need to adjust the callstack offset because no backtrace
  is recorded when a failure occurs.

To avoid the useless "unexpected error" log message when passing back a gomega
failure, ExpectNoError gets extended to recognize such errors and then skips
the logging.
2023-02-06 15:39:12 +01:00
Antonio Ojea
7f5ae1c0c1 Revert "e2e: wait for pods with gomega" 2023-02-06 12:08:22 +01:00
Kubernetes Prow Robot
85aa0057c6 Merge pull request #113298 from pohly/e2e-wait-for-pods-with-gomega
e2e: wait for pods with gomega
2023-02-04 05:26:29 -08:00
David Porter
83652673b6 test: Update runtime class detection logic
In the `NodeSupportsPreconfiguredRuntimeClassHandler`, update the check
for the runtime handler to return a failure if the
`/etc/containerd/config.toml` or `/etc/crio/crio.conf` config files do
not exist. If an error is returned, then the underlying test will be
skipped.

Test manually with starting a kind cluster and moving the containerd
config file and verifying that the test is skipped:

```
$ docker exec -it kind-worker /bin/bash
root@kind-worker:/# mv /etc/containerd/config.toml /etc/containerd/config.toml.bak
```

```
make WHAT="test/e2e/e2e.test"
$ ./_output/bin/e2e.test -kubeconfig /tmp/kubeconfig_kind -ginkgo.focus=".*should run a Pod requesting a RuntimeClass with a configured handler.*" --num-nodes=1 2>&1 -ginkgo.v=1 | tee -i "/tmp/build-log.txt"

[sig-node] RuntimeClass [It] should run a Pod requesting a RuntimeClass with a configured handler [NodeFeature:RuntimeHandler]
test/e2e/common/node/runtimeclass.go:85

  [SKIPPED] Skipping test as node does not have E2E runtime class handler preconfigured in container runtime config: command terminated with exit code 1
```

Signed-off-by: David Porter <david@porter.me>
2023-01-31 11:38:49 -08:00
Patrick Ohly
222f655062 e2e: use error wrapping with %w
The recently introduced failure handling in ExpectNoError depends on error
wrapping: if an error prefix gets added with `fmt.Errorf("foo: %v", err)`, then
ExpectNoError cannot detect that the root cause is an assertion failure and
then will add another useless "unexpected error" prefix and will not dump the
additional failure information (currently the backtrace inside the E2E
framework).

Instead of manually deciding on a case-by-case basis where %w is needed, all
error wrapping was updated automatically with

    sed -i "s/fmt.Errorf\(.*\): '*\(%s\|%v\)'*\",\(.* err)\)/fmt.Errorf\1: %w\",\3/" $(git grep -l 'fmt.Errorf' test/e2e*)

This may be unnecessary in some cases, but it's not wrong.
2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
5973e2c8cb e2e pod: unit test for pod status + API error
This covers new behavior in gomega.
2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
901928cd54 e2e pod: remove dead code 2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
f5782f1dbd e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForRestartablePods 2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
5d8e970be6 e2e pod: convert ProxyResponseChecker into matcher
Instead of pod responses being printed to the log each time polling fails, we
get a consolidated failure message with all unexpected pod responses if (and
only if) the check times out or a progress report gets produced.
2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
3b579fca91 e2e: consolidate pod response checking
This renames PodsResponding to WaitForPodsResponding for the sake of
consistency and adds a timeout parameter. That is necessary because some other
users of NewProxyResponseChecker used a much lower timeout (2min vs. 15min).

Besides simplifying some code, it also makes it easier to rewrite
ProxyResponseChecker because it only gets used in WaitForPodsResponding.
2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
4491c80074 e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace 2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
6eea1b2efa e2e: replace WaitForPodToDisappear with WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace
WaitForPodToDisappear was always called such that it listed all pods, which
made it less efficient than trying to get just the one pod it was checking for.

Being able to customize the poll interval in practice wasn't useful, therefore
it can be replaced with WaitForPodNotFoundInNamespace.
2023-01-31 13:01:39 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
4740d34edb e2e: consolidate checking a pod list
WaitForPods is now a generic function which lists pods and then checks the pods
that it found against some provided condition. A parameter determines how many
pods must be found resp. match the condition for the check to succeed.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
cd0c756c72 e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitTimeoutForPodReadyInNamespace/WaitForPodCondition
These get converted together because they relied on FinalErr which now isn't
needed anymore.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
5c1723d81f e2e framework: support getting list of objects
This is similar to the previous support for getting a single object.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
671835e976 e2e pod: use gomega.Eventually in WaitForPodsRunningReady
The code becomes simpler (78 insertions, 91 deletions), easier to read (all
code entirely inside WaitForPodsRunningReady, no need to declare and later
overwrite variables) and possibly more correct (if all API calls failed,
the resulting error was ignored when allowedNotReadyPods > 0).
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
b6ede21ff1 e2e framework: turn function into gomega.Matcher
The intention is to use this inside a helper function where the
corresponding Expect call is known.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
3ebab68c8a e2e: remove unused label filter from WaitForPodsRunningReady
None of the users of the functions passed anything other than nil or an empty
map and the implementation ignore the parameter - it seems like a candidate for
simplification.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
1b5da1035a e2e framework: include additional stack backtrace in failures
When a Gomega failure is converted to an error, the stack at the time when the
failure occurs may be useful: error wrapping provides some bread crumbs that
can be followed to determine where the failure really occurred, but error
wrapping may be missing or ambiguous.

To provide the additional information, a FailureError now includes a full stack
backtrace. The backtrace intentionally makes no attempt to exclude framework
functions besides the gomega support itself because helpers like
e2e/framework/pod may be relevant.

That backtrace is not included in the failure message for the sake of
brevity. Instead, it gets logged as part of the test's output.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
e8a50b0583 e2e framework: implement pod polling with gomega.Eventually
gomega.Eventually provides better progress reports: instead of filling up the
log with rather useless one-line messages that are not enough to to understand
the current state, it integrates with Gingko's progress reporting (SIGUSR1,
--poll-progress-after) and then dumps the same complete failure message as
after a timeout. That makes it possible to understand why progress isn't
getting made without having to wait for the timeout.

The other advantage is that the failure message for some unexpected pod state
becomes more readable: instead of encapsulating it as "observed object" inside
an error, it directly gets rendered by gomega.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
0872e8d927 e2e framework: gomega assertions as errors
Calling gomega.Expect/Eventually/Consistently deep inside a helper call chain
has several challenges:
- the stack offset must be tracked correctly, otherwise the callstack
  for the failure starts at some helper code, which is often not informative
- augmenting the failure message with additional information from each
  caller implies that each caller must pass down a string and/or format
  string plus arguments

Both challenges can be solved by returning errors:
- the stacktrace is taken at that level where the error is
  treated as a failure instead of passing back an error, i.e.
  inside the It callback
- traditional error wrapping can add additional information, if
  desirable

What was missing was some easy way to generate an error via a gomega
assertion. The new infrastructure achieves that by mirroring the
Gomega/Assertion/AsyncAssertion interfaces with errors as return values instead
of calling a fail handler.

It is intentionally less flexible than the gomega APIs:
- A context must be passed to Eventually/Consistently as first
  parameter because that is needed for proper timeout handling.
- No additional text can be added to the failure through this
  API because error wrapping is meant to be used for this.
- No need to adjust the callstack offset because no backtrace
  is recorded when a failure occurs.

To avoid the useless "unexpected error" log message when passing back a gomega
failure, ExpectNoError gets extended to recognize such errors and then skips
the logging.
2023-01-31 07:52:26 +01:00
Kubernetes Prow Robot
d863d04adc Merge pull request #114580 from pohly/e2e-ginkgo-timeout-fixes
e2e ginkgo timeout fixes, III
2023-01-30 13:48:48 -08:00
Kubernetes Prow Robot
8e642d3d0d Merge pull request #115310 from mzaian/etcd-3.5.7-build-image
etcd: Update to version 3.5.7
2023-01-28 10:20:42 -08:00
Mohamed Zaian
90570b7595 etcd: Update to version 3.5.7 2023-01-27 17:24:00 +01:00
Richa Banker
452343367c Enable ComponentSLIs as beta feature 2023-01-26 17:46:21 -08:00
Richa Banker
eb55e2b980 Add e2e test for checking /metrics/slis endpoint for API server 2023-01-26 17:46:21 -08:00
David Porter
b96290c08f e2e node: Update runtime class handler skip logic
There are two runtime class tests which required the container runtime
config to include explicit configuration for `test-handler`. The current
logic skips these tests in non GCE environments. This skip is too strict
since the test is skipped in node e2e environments and in other
environments such as kind, which support running the test and also
configure `test-handler`.

Instead of skipping based on provider, add a new function
`NodeSupportsPreconfiguredRuntimeClassHandler` which examines the
underlying container runtime config and checks if the config includes
`test-handler`. The check is a bit brittle since it assumes container
runtime config paths, but it is a net improvement over skipping the test
entirely on non GCE environments.

This results in the test working in the common test environments, namely
GCE kube-up, node e2e, and kind.

Signed-off-by: David Porter <david@porter.me>
2023-01-24 14:43:24 -08:00
Patrick Ohly
6b5f77b163 e2e framework/pod: add gomega matchers
They can be used for polling with a get function and gomega.Eventually or
gomega.Consistently.
2023-01-16 09:05:37 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
17eba2b2f7 e2e framework/pod: add Get helper
This helper will be used by several different tests and makes those tests more
readable.
2023-01-16 09:05:37 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
63ab23200b e2e framework: support polling with Get
These helper functions can be used in combination with
omega.Eventually/Consistently to implement polling of objects that is aware of
Kubernetes apiserver conventions:

- retry on certain errors instead of giving up,
  with "not found" handling decided by the caller (may or may not
  be fatal, depending on the test)
- sleep if requested by apiserver
2023-01-16 09:05:37 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
22341590bd e2e framework: add NamespacedName
The E2E framework contains several functions which only differ in how they get
name and namespace: from an API object (WaitForPodRunningInNamespace) or as
separate parameters (WaitTimeoutForPodRunningInNamespace).

NamespacedName and the NamedObject interface enable writing helper functions
that can be called with both an API object (like *v1.Pod, which implements
Object and thus NamedObject) and name+namespace string (via
NamespacedName).

The other advantage of NamespacedName is that the order of name and namespace
parameter cannot be mixed up.

NamespacedName was derived from k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/types.NamespacedName. A
separate type in the framework package was chosen a) to avoid additional
imports in test code and b) because the interface might not be suitable for
k8s.io/apimachinery.
2023-01-16 09:05:37 +01:00
Patrick Ohly
1ec4c7a41c e2e framework: add test case for early abort of pod polling
The early exit support was added in 004c1b6441
but without a corresponding test case.
2023-01-16 09:05:36 +01:00