The bash scripts in this dir are intended for function test of the Non-RT RIC in different configurations, using simulators when needed for the external interfaces. A few of the bash scripts are so called 'suites', These suite scripts calls a sequence of the other bash scripts.
There are two types of scripts, filenames in the format FTCXXX.sh test one or more components of the Non-RT RIC. Filenames in the format SuiteZZZZ.sh tests a number of FTCXXX.sh script as one suite. (XXX is an integer selected from the categories described further below). FTC is short for Function Test Case. In addition, there are also other test scripts with other naming format used for demo setup etc (e.g PM_DEMO.sh).
The requirements, in terms of the execution enviroment, to run a script or a suite is to have docker, docker-compose and python3 installed (the scripts warns if not installed). As an option, the scripts can also be executed in a Minikube or Kubernetes installation. The additional requirement is to have a clean minikube/kubernetes installation, perferably with the kube dashboard installed. The scripts have been tested to work on both MacOS and Ubuntu using docker. They should work also in git-bash on windows (for docker) but only partly verified. Running using minikube has only been verified on Ubuntu and running on kubernetes has only been verified on MacOS.
The test scripts uses configuration from a single file, found in ../common/test_env.sh
, which contains all needed configuration in terms of image names, image tags, ports, file paths, passwords etc. This file can be modified if needed. See the README.md in ../common/
for all details of the config file.
A test script, for example FTC1, is executed from the cmd line using the script filename and one or more parameters:
./FTC1.sh remote docker --env-file ../common/test_env-oran-cherry.sh
Note that not is running on a released verion, the parameter "release" shall be included to run the released images.
See the README.md in ../common/
for all details about available parameters and their meaning.
Each test script prints out the overall result of the tests in the end of the execution.
The test scripts produce quite a number of logs; all container logs, a log of all http/htps calls from the test scripts including the payload, some configuration created during test and also a test case log (same as what is printed on the screen during execution). All these logs are stored in logs/FTCXXX/
. So each test script is using its own log directory.
To test all components on a very basic level, run the demo test script(s) for the desired release. Note that oran tests only include components from oran. Note that onap test uses components from onap combined with released oran components available at that onap release (e.g. Honolulu contains onap images from honolulu and oran images from cherry)
ORAN CHERRY =========== ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove docker release --env-file ../common/test_env-oran-cherry.sh ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove kube release --env-file ../common/test_env-oran-cherry.sh ORAN D-RELEASE ========= ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove docker --env-file ../common/test_env-oran-d-release.sh --use-release-image SDNC ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove kube --env-file ../common/test_env-oran-d-release.sh --use-release-image SDNC Note that D-Release has not updated the SDNC so cherry release is used Note: When D-Release is released, add the 'release' arg to run released images. ONAP GUILIN =========== ./PM_DEMO.sh remote-remove docker release --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-guilin.sh ./PM_DEMO.sh remote-remove kube release --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-guilin.sh Note that ECS was not available before oran cherry so a test script without ECS is used. ONAP HONOLULU ============= ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove docker release --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-honolulu.sh ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove kube release --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-honolulu.sh ONAP ISTANBUL ============= ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove docker --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-istanbul.sh ./PM_EI_DEMO.sh remote-remove kube --env-file ../common/test_env-onap-istanbul.sh Note: When istanbul is released, add the 'release' arg to run released images.
The test script are number using these basic categories where 0-999 are releated to the policy managment and 1000-1999 are related to enrichment management. 2000-2999 are for southbound http proxy. There are also demo test cases that test more or less all components. These test scripts does not use the numbering scheme below.
The numbering in each series corresponds to the following groupings 1-99 - Basic sanity tests
100-199 - API tests
300-399 - Config changes and sync
800-899 - Stability and capacity test
900-999 - Misc test
Suites
To get an overview of the available test scripts, use the following command to print the test script description: 'grep ONELINE *.sh' in the dir of the test scripts.
A test script contains a number of steps to verify a certain functionality. The empty template for a test case file looks like this. Only the parts noted with < and > shall be changed. It is strongly suggested to look at the existing test scripts, it is probably easier to copy an existing test script instead of creating one from scratch. The README.md in ../common/
describes the functions available in the test script in detail.
#!/bin/bash TC_ONELINE_DESCR="<test case description>" DOCKER_INCLUDED_IMAGES=<list of used apps in this test case - for docker> KUBE_INCLUDED_IMAGES=<list of used apps (started by the script) in this test case - for kube> KUBE_PRESTARTED_IMAGES=<list of used apps (prestartedd - i.e. not started by the script) in this test case - for kube> SUPPORTED_PROFILES=<list of supported profile names> SUPPORTED_RUNMODES=<List of runmodes, DOCKER and/or KUBE> CONDITIONALLY_IGNORED_IMAGES=<list of images to exclude if it does not exist in the profile file> . ../common/testcase_common.sh $@ < other scripts need to be sourced for specific interfaces> setup_testenvironment #### TEST BEGIN #### <tests here> #### TEST COMPLETE #### store_logs END
Copyright (C) 2020 Nordix Foundation. All rights reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.