CSI driver for Ceph
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Niels de Vos 209b31c83a ci: use last "git fetch" output to test commitlint
When running in the CI the git repository is not completely cloned. This
causes the 'commitlint' job to be unable to resolve the history of the
commits.

By using FETCH_HEAD, the last 'git fetch' output will be used.

Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
deploy ci: OCP4 deletes pods from batch jobs automatically 2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
jobs ci: allow everyone to run the "commitlint" job 2020-08-10 13:04:23 +00:00
scripts ci: skip containerized-tests for doc-only PRs 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
.commitlintrc.yml ci: add 'make test' target to validate CI job scripts 2020-05-27 12:52:21 +02:00
.gitignore ci: add 'make test' target to validate CI job scripts 2020-05-27 12:52:21 +02:00
ci-job-validation.groovy ci: skip ci-job-validation for doc-only PRs 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
commitlint.groovy ci: run commitlint when requested, not containeriized-tests 2020-08-07 14:15:51 +00:00
containerized-tests.groovy ci: skip containerized-tests for doc-only PRs 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
Makefile ci: use last "git fetch" output to test commitlint 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
mini-e2e-helm.groovy ci: skip mini-e2e-helm for doc-only PRs 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
mini-e2e.groovy ci: skip mini-e2e for doc-only PRs 2020-08-12 16:04:26 +00:00
prepare.sh ci: use dnf on CentOS-8 systems 2020-08-03 08:11:17 +00:00
README.md ci: update links to new OCP4 deployment 2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
single-node-k8s.sh ci: give minikube 8GB RAM on CentOS bare-metal systems 2020-08-04 07:19:39 +00:00

Continuous Integration Jobs for the CentOS CI

  • dedicated Jenkins instance for Ceph-CSI
  • Jenkins is hosted on OpenShift in the CentOS CI
  • scripts and Jenkins jobs are hosted in the Ceph-CSI repository (ci/centos branch)
  • a Jenkins Pipeline is used to reserve bare metal system(s), and run jobs on those systems

Repository/Branch Structure

This is the ci/centos branch, where all the scripts for the Jenkins jobs are maintained. The tests that are executed by the jobs are part of the normal projects branches.

As an example, the containerized-tests Jenkins job consists out of the following files:

  • jobs/containerized-tests.yaml is a Jenkins Job Builder configuration that describes the events when the job should get run and fetches the .groovy file from the git repository/branch

  • containerized-tests.groovy is the Jenkins Pipeline that contains the stages for the Jenkins Job itself. In order to work with the bare-metal machines from the CentOS CI, it executes the following stages:

    1. dynamically allocate a Jenkins Slave (node('cico-workspace')) with tools and configuration to request a bare-metal machine
    2. checkout the centos/ci branch of the repository, which contains scripts for provisioning and preparing the environment for running tests
    3. reserve a bare-metal machine with cico (configured on the Jenkins Slave)
    4. provision the reserved bare-metal machine with additional tools and dependencies to run the test (see prepare.sh below)
    5. run make containerized-tests and make containerized-build in parallel
    6. as final step, return the bare-metal machine to the CentOS CI for other users (it will be re-installed with a minimal CentOS environment again)
  • prepare.sh installs dependencies for the test, and checks out the git repository and branch (or Pull Request) that contains the commits to be tested (and the test itself)

Deploying the Jenkins Jobs

The Jenkins Jobs are described in Jenkins Job Builder configuration files and Jenkins Pipelines. These need to be imported in the Jenkins instance before they can be run. Importing is done with the jenkins-jobs command, which runs in a jjb container. To build the container, and provide the configuration for Jenkins Job Builder, see the documentation in the deploy/ directory.