# rust-vmm-ci **Repository Path**: mirrors_stefanha/rust-vmm-ci ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: rust-vmm-ci - **Description**: No description available - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: Apache-2.0 - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 0 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2020-09-26 - **Last Updated**: 2023-08-18 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # rust-vmm-ci The `rust-vmm-ci` repository contains [integration tests](#integration-tests) and [Buildkite pipeline](#buildkite-pipeline) definitions that are used for running the CI for all rust-vmm crates. Having a centralized place for the tests is one of the enablers for keeping the same quality standard for all crates in rust-vmm. ## Getting Started with rust-vmm-ci To run the integration tests defined in the pipeline as part of the CI: 1. Add rust-vmm-ci as a git submodule to your repository ```bash # Add rust-vmm-ci as a submodule. This will point to the latest rust-vmm-ci # commit from the master branch. The following command will also add a # `.gitmodules` file and the `rust-vmm-ci` to the index. git submodule add https://github.com/rust-vmm/rust-vmm-ci.git # Commit the changes to your repository so that the CI can run using the # rust-vmm-ci pipeline and tests. git commit -s -m "Added rust-vmm-ci as submodule" ``` 2. Create the coverage test configuration file named coverage_config_ARCH.json in the root of the repository, where ARCH is the architecture of the machine. There are two coverage test configuration files, one per each platform. The example of the configuration file for x86_64 architecture can be found in [coverage_config_x86_64.json.sample](coverage_config_x86_64.json.sample), and the example of the configuration file for aarch64 architecture can be found in [coverage_config_aarch64.json.sample](coverage_config_aarch64.json.sample). The json must have the following fields: - *coverage_score*: The coverage of the repository. - *exclude_path*: This field is used for excluding files from the report. It should be used to exclude autogenerated files. Files in *exclude_path* are separated by one coma. If the repository does not have any autogenerated files, *exclude_path* should be an empty string. - *crate_features*: `cargo kcov` does not build crate features by default. To get the coverage report including optional features these need to be specified in *crate_features* separated by coma. If the crate does not have any features, this field should be empty. This file is required for the coverage integration so it needs to be added to the repository as well. 3. Create a new pipeline definition in Buildkite. For this step ask one of the rust-vmm Buildkite [admins](CODEOWNERS) to create one for you. Add a pipeline step that is uploading the rust-vmm-ci pipeline: ```bash buildkite-agent pipeline upload rust-vmm-ci/.buildkite/pipeline.yml ``` 4. The code owner of the repository will have to setup a WebHook for triggering the CI on Pull Requests and pushes. ## Buildkite Pipeline The [Buildkite](https://buildkite.com) pipeline is the definition of tests to be run as part of the CI. It includes steps for running unit tests and linters (including coding style checks), and computing the coverage. Currently the tests can run on Linux x86_64 and aarch64 hosts. Example of step that checks the build: ```yaml steps: - label: "build-gnu-x86" commands: - cargo build --release retry: automatic: false agents: platform: x86_64.metal plugins: - docker#v3.0.1: image: "rustvmm/dev:v${LATEST}" always-pull: true ``` To see all steps in the pipeline check the [.buikite/pipeline.yml](.buildkite/pipeline.yml) file. ### Custom Pipeline Some crates might need to test functionality that is specific to that particular component and thus cannot be added to the common pipeline. In this situation, the repositories need to create a custom pipeline (besides the rust-vmm-ci pipeline) and add it in the repository. The preferred path for the custom pipeline is `.buildkite/pipeline.yml`. For example to test the build with one non-default [feature](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.19.0/book/first-edition/conditional-compilation.html) enabled, the following step can be added in the custom pipeline under `.buildkite/pipeline.yml`. ```yaml steps: - label: "build-gnu-x86-bzimage" commands: - cargo build --release --features bzimage retry: automatic: false agents: platform: x86_64.metal plugins: - docker#v3.0.1: image: "rustvmm/dev:${LATEST}" always-pull: true ``` ### Custom Repository Hooks The integration tests of some repositories have dependencies on external resources. One example is [linux-loader](https://github.com/rust-vmm/linux-loader/) which needs to download a bzImage before running the unit tests. Because this is specific to the linux-loader crate, the logic for downloading the required resources cannot be part of the common pipeline. The mechanism used here is [Repository Hooks](https://buildkite.com/docs/agent/v3/hooks#repository-hooks). The hooks are defined per repository and live in the crate repository under `.buildkite/hooks`. Example of post-checkout hook that downloads and extracts a bzImage: ```bash #!/bin/bash DEB_NAME="linux-image-4.9.0-9-amd64_4.9.168-1_amd64.deb" DEB_URL="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/l/linux/${DEB_NAME}" REPO_PATH="${BUILDKITE_BUILD_CHECKOUT_PATH}" DEB_PATH="${REPO_PATH}/${DEB_NAME}" EXTRACT_PATH="${REPO_PATH}/src/bzimage-archive" BZIMAGE_PATH="${EXTRACT_PATH}/boot/vmlinuz-4.9.0-9-amd64" mkdir -p ${EXTRACT_PATH} wget ${DEB_URL} -P ${REPO_PATH} dpkg-deb -x ${DEB_PATH} ${EXTRACT_PATH} mv ${BZIMAGE_PATH} ${REPO_PATH}/src/bzimage rm -r ${EXTRACT_PATH} rm -f ${DEB_PATH} ``` In this example the post-checkout hook downloads a deb image, extracts the contents of it and places it in `linux-loader/src/bzimage`. The unit tests will use the relative path `src/bzimage` which does not depend on the image being downloaded. ## Integration Tests In addition to the one-liner tests defined in the [Builkite Pipeline](#buildkite-pipeline), the rust-vmm-ci also has more complex tests defined in [integration_tests](integration_tests). ### Test Profiles The integration tests support two test profiles: - **devel**: this is the recommended profile for running the integration tests on a local development machine. - **ci** (default option): this is the profile used when running the integration tests as part of the the Continuous Integration (CI). The test profiles are applicable to tests that run using pytest. Currently only the [coverage test](tests/test_coverage.py) follows this model as all the other integration tests are run using the [Buildkite pipeline](https://buildkite.com/rust-vmm/kvm-ioctls-ci). The difference between is declaring tests as passed or failed: - with the **devel** profile the coverage test passes if the current coverage is equal or higher than the upstream coverage value. In case the current coverage is higher, the coverage file is updated to the new coverage value. - with the **ci** profile the coverage test passes only if the current coverage is equal to the upstream coverage value. Further details about the coverage test can be found in the [Adaptive Coverage](#adaptive-coverage) section. ### Adaptive Coverage The line coverage is saved in [tests/coverage](tests/coverage). To update the coverage before submitting a PR, run the coverage test: ```bash docker run --device=/dev/kvm \ -it \ --security-opt seccomp=unconfined \ --volume $(pwd)/${CRATE}:/${CRATE} \ rustvmm/dev:v${LATEST} cd ${CRATE} pytest --profile=devel rust-vmm-ci/integration_tests/test_coverage.py ``` If the PR coverage is higher than the upstream coverage, the coverage file needs to be manually added to the commit before submitting the PR: ```bash git add tests/coverage ``` Failing to do so will generate a fail on the CI pipeline when publishing the PR. **NOTE:** The coverage file is only updated in the `devel` test profile. In the `ci` profile the coverage test will fail if the current coverage is higher than the coverage reported in [tests/coverage](tests/coverage). ### Performance tests `rust-vmm-ci` includes an integration test that can run a battery of benchmarks at every pull request, comparing the results with the tip of the upstream `master` branch. The test is not included in the default Buildkite pipeline. Each crate that requires the test to be run as part of the CI must add a [custom pipeline](#custom-pipeline). An example of a pipeline that runs the test for ARM platforms and prints the results: ```yaml steps: - label: "bench-aarch64" commands: - pytest rust-vmm-ci/integration_tests/test_benchmark.py -s retry: automatic: false agents: platform: arm.metal plugins: - docker#v3.0.1: image: "rustvmm/dev:v${LATEST}" always-pull: true ``` The test requires [`criterion`](https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs) benchmarks to be exported by the crate. The test expects the entry point into the performance benchmarks to be named `main`. In other words, the following configuration is expected in `Cargo.toml`: ```toml [[bench]] name = "main" ``` All benchmarks need to be collected in a main.rs file placed in `benches/`. `criterion` collects performance results by running a function for a user-configured number of iterations, timing the runs, and applying statistics. The individual benchmark tests must be added in the crate. They can be run outside the CI with: ```bash cargo bench [--all-features] OR [--features ] ``` `rust-vmm-ci` uses [`critcmp`(https://github.com/BurntSushi/critcmp) to compare the results yielded by `cargo bench --all-features` on the PR being tested with those from the tip of the upstream `master` branch. The test runs `cargo bench` twice, once on the current `HEAD`, then again after `git checkout origin/master`. `critcmp` takes care of the comparison, making use of `criterion`'s stable format for [output files](https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/user_guide/csv_output.html). The results are printed to `stdout` and can be visually inspected in the pipeline output. In its present form, the test cannot fail. To run the test locally: ```bash docker run --device=/dev/kvm \ -it \ --security-opt seccomp=unconfined \ --volume $(pwd)/${CRATE}:/${CRATE} \ rustvmm/dev:v${LATEST} cd ${CRATE} pytest rust-vmm-ci/integration_tests/test_benchmark.py -s ``` Note that performance is highly dependent on the underlying platform that the tests are running on. The raw numbers obtained are likely to differ from their counterparts on a CI instance.