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authorRodolfo Alonso Hernandez <rodolfo.alonso.hernandez@intel.com>2017-10-26 17:36:39 +0100
committerRodolfo Alonso Hernandez <rodolfo.alonso.hernandez@intel.com>2017-11-13 15:30:05 +0000
commitd20b876a02904653cf390a97c2ed9973821dc508 (patch)
tree49304069bd86faad1e2c36b75dc2731ed2574f7b /docs/testing/user
parent349660091288e47c3c5032e6dec9d29e9a2f251f (diff)
Refactor userguide "Yardstick Installation"
[1] must be refactored in order to: * Include proxy options. * Use OpenStack client, instead of project CLI. * Use sudo in some commands. * Adapt the document to rst coding style. * Fix minor errors. JIRA: YARDSTICK-828 [1] https://github.com/opnfv/yardstick/blob/923aa1738cbf5a8053e77e00937fc26f2142f6a3/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst Change-Id: Ice63f344a8a87221bdf4daa6153b9ccac321e5b7 Signed-off-by: Rodolfo Alonso Hernandez <rodolfo.alonso.hernandez@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/testing/user')
-rw-r--r--docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst712
1 files changed, 392 insertions, 320 deletions
diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst
index f11a9c28e..dc528db6c 100644
--- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst
+++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-installation.rst
@@ -3,13 +3,11 @@
.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
.. (c) OPNFV, Ericsson AB, Huawei Technologies Co.,Ltd and others.
+======================
Yardstick Installation
======================
-Abstract
---------
-
Yardstick supports installation by Docker or directly in Ubuntu. The
installation procedure for Docker and direct installation are detailed in
the sections below.
@@ -21,126 +19,130 @@ The steps needed to run Yardstick are:
1. Install Yardstick.
2. Load OpenStack environment variables.
-#. Create Yardstick flavor.
-#. Build a guest image and load it into the OpenStack environment.
-#. Create the test configuration ``.yaml`` file and run the test case/suite.
+3. Create Yardstick flavor.
+4. Build a guest image and load it into the OpenStack environment.
+5. Create the test configuration ``.yaml`` file and run the test case/suite.
Prerequisites
-------------
-The OPNFV deployment is out of the scope of this document and can be found `here <http://artifacts.opnfv.org/opnfvdocs/colorado/docs/configguide/index.html>`_. The OPNFV platform is considered as the System Under Test (SUT) in this document.
+The OPNFV deployment is out of the scope of this document and can be found in
+`User Guide & Configuration Guide`_. The OPNFV platform is considered as the
+System Under Test (SUT) in this document.
Several prerequisites are needed for Yardstick:
-#. A Jumphost to run Yardstick on
-#. A Docker daemon or a virtual environment installed on the Jumphost
-#. A public/external network created on the SUT
-#. Connectivity from the Jumphost to the SUT public/external network
+1. A Jumphost to run Yardstick on
+2. A Docker daemon or a virtual environment installed on the Jumphost
+3. A public/external network created on the SUT
+4. Connectivity from the Jumphost to the SUT public/external network
-**NOTE:** *Jumphost* refers to any server which meets the previous
+.. note:: *Jumphost* refers to any server which meets the previous
requirements. Normally it is the same server from where the OPNFV
deployment has been triggered.
-**WARNING:** Connectivity from Jumphost is essential and it is of paramount
+.. warning:: Connectivity from Jumphost is essential and it is of paramount
importance to make sure it is working before even considering to install
and run Yardstick. Make also sure you understand how your networking is
designed to work.
-**NOTE:** If your Jumphost is operating behind a company http proxy and/or
-Firewall, please consult first the section `Proxy Support (**Todo**)`_, towards
-the end of this document. That section details some tips/tricks which
-*may* be of help in a proxified environment.
+.. note:: If your Jumphost is operating behind a company http proxy and/or
+Firewall, please first consult `Proxy Support`_ section which is towards the
+end of this document. That section details some tips/tricks which *may* be of
+help in a proxified environment.
-Install Yardstick using Docker (**recommended**)
----------------------------------------------------
+Install Yardstick using Docker (first option) (**recommended**)
+---------------------------------------------------------------
-Yardstick has a Docker image. It is recommended to use this Docker image to run Yardstick test.
+Yardstick has a Docker image. It is recommended to use this Docker image to run
+Yardstick test.
Prepare the Yardstick container
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-.. _dockerhub: https://hub.docker.com/r/opnfv/yardstick/
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Install docker on your guest system with the following command, if not done yet::
+Install docker on your guest system with the following command, if not done
+yet::
- wget -qO- https://get.docker.com/ | sh
+ wget -qO- https://get.docker.com/ | sh
Pull the Yardstick Docker image (``opnfv/yardstick``) from the public dockerhub
-registry under the OPNFV account: dockerhub_, with the following docker
+registry under the OPNFV account in dockerhub_, with the following docker
command::
- docker pull opnfv/yardstick:stable
+ sudo -EH docker pull opnfv/yardstick:stable
After pulling the Docker image, check that it is available with the
following docker command::
- [yardsticker@jumphost ~]$ docker images
- REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
- opnfv/yardstick stable a4501714757a 1 day ago 915.4 MB
+ [yardsticker@jumphost ~]$ docker images
+ REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
+ opnfv/yardstick stable a4501714757a 1 day ago 915.4 MB
Run the Docker image to get a Yardstick container::
- docker run -itd --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -p 8888:5000 --name yardstick opnfv/yardstick:stable
-
-Note:
-
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
-| parameters | Detail |
-+==============================================+==============================+
-| -itd | -i: interactive, Keep STDIN |
-| | open even if not attached. |
-| | -t: allocate a pseudo-TTY. |
-| | -d: run container in |
-| | detached mode, in the |
-| | background. |
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
-| --privileged | If you want to build |
-| | ``yardstick-image`` in |
-| | Yardstick container, this |
-| | parameter is needed. |
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
-| -p 8888:5000 | If you want to call |
-| | Yardstick API out of |
-| | Yardstick container, this |
-| | parameter is needed. |
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
-| -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock | If you want to use yardstick |
-| | env grafana/influxdb to |
-| | create a grafana/influxdb |
-| | container out of Yardstick |
-| | container, this parameter is |
-| | needed. |
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
-| --name yardstick | The name for this container, |
-| | not needed and can be |
-| | defined by the user. |
-+----------------------------------------------+------------------------------+
+ docker run -itd --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
+ -p 8888:5000 --name yardstick opnfv/yardstick:stable
+
+.. table:: Description of the parameters used with ``docker run`` command
+
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ Parameters Detail
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ -itd -i: interactive, Keep STDIN open even if not
+ attached
+ -t: allocate a pseudo-TTY detached mode, in the
+ background
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ --privileged If you want to build ``yardstick-image`` in
+ Yardstick container, this parameter is needed
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ -p 8888:5000 Redirect the a host port (8888) to a container port
+ (5000)
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ -v /var/run/docker.sock If you want to use yardstick env grafana/influxdb to
+ :/var/run/docker.sock create a grafana/influxdb container out of Yardstick
+ container
+ ======================= ====================================================
+ --name yardstick The name for this container
+
Configure the Yardstick container environment
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-There are three ways to configure environments for running Yardstick, which will be shown in the following sections. Before that, enter the Yardstick container::
+There are three ways to configure environments for running Yardstick, explained
+in the following sections. Before that, access the Yardstick container::
- docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
+ docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
and then configure Yardstick environments in the Yardstick container.
-The first way (**recommended**)
-###################################
+Using the CLI command ``env prepare`` (first way) (**recommended**)
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+In the Yardstick container, the Yardstick repository is located in the
+``/home/opnfv/repos`` directory. Yardstick provides a CLI to prepare OpenStack
+environment variables and create Yardstick flavor and guest images
+automatically::
+
+ yardstick env prepare
-In the Yardstick container, the Yardstick repository is located in the ``/home/opnfv/repos`` directory. Yardstick provides a CLI to prepare OpenStack environment variables and create Yardstick flavor and guest images automatically::
+.. note:: Since Euphrates release, the above command will not be able to
+automatically configure the ``/etc/yardstick/openstack.creds`` file. So before
+running the above command, it is necessary to create the
+``/etc/yardstick/openstack.creds`` file and save OpenStack environment
+variables into it manually. If you have the openstack credential file saved
+outside the Yardstick Docker container, you can do this easily by mapping the
+credential file into Yardstick container using::
- yardstick env prepare
+ '-v /path/to/credential_file:/etc/yardstick/openstack.creds'
-**NOTE**: Since Euphrates release, the above command will not able to automatically configure the /etc/yardstick/openstack.creds file.
-So before running the above command, it is necessary to create the /etc/yardstick/openstack.creds file and save OpenStack environment variables into it manually.
-If you have the openstack credential file saved outside the Yardstcik Docker container, you can do this easily by mapping the credential file into Yardstick container
- using '-v /path/to/credential_file:/etc/yardstick/openstack.creds' when running the Yardstick container.
-For details of the required OpenStack environment variables please refer to section **Export OpenStack environment variables**
+when running the Yardstick container. For details of the required OpenStack
+environment variables please refer to section `Export OpenStack environment
+variables`_.
-The env prepare command may take up to 6-8 minutes to finish building
+The ``env prepare`` command may take up to 6-8 minutes to finish building
yardstick-image and other environment preparation. Meanwhile if you wish to
monitor the env prepare process, you can enter the Yardstick container in a new
terminal window and execute the following command::
@@ -148,25 +150,26 @@ terminal window and execute the following command::
tail -f /var/log/yardstick/uwsgi.log
-The second way
-################
+Manually exporting the env variables and initializing OpenStack (second way)
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Export OpenStack environment variables
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
+######################################
-Before running Yardstick it is necessary to export OpenStack environment variables::
+Before running Yardstick it is necessary to export OpenStack environment
+variables::
- source openrc
+ source openrc
-Environment variables in the ``openrc`` file have to include at least:
+Environment variables in the ``openrc`` file have to include at least::
-* ``OS_AUTH_URL``
-* ``OS_USERNAME``
-* ``OS_PASSWORD``
-* ``OS_TENANT_NAME``
-* ``EXTERNAL_NETWORK``
+ OS_AUTH_URL
+ OS_USERNAME
+ OS_PASSWORD
+ OS_TENANT_NAME
+ EXTERNAL_NETWORK
-A sample `openrc` file may look like this::
+A sample ``openrc`` file may look like this::
export OS_PASSWORD=console
export OS_TENANT_NAME=admin
@@ -175,17 +178,23 @@ A sample `openrc` file may look like this::
export OS_VOLUME_API_VERSION=2
export EXTERNAL_NETWORK=net04_ext
-Manually create Yardstick falvor and guest images
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-Before executing Yardstick test cases, make sure that Yardstick flavor and guest image are available in OpenStack. Detailed steps about creating the Yardstick flavor and building the Yardstick guest image can be found below.
+Manual creation of Yardstick flavor and guest images
+####################################################
+
+Before executing Yardstick test cases, make sure that Yardstick flavor and
+guest image are available in OpenStack. Detailed steps about creating the
+Yardstick flavor and building the Yardstick guest image can be found below.
Most of the sample test cases in Yardstick are using an OpenStack flavor called
-``yardstick-flavor`` which deviates from the OpenStack standard ``m1.tiny`` flavor by the disk size - instead of 1GB it has 3GB. Other parameters are the same as in ``m1.tiny``.
+``yardstick-flavor`` which deviates from the OpenStack standard ``m1.tiny``
+flavor by the disk size; instead of 1GB it has 3GB. Other parameters are the
+same as in ``m1.tiny``.
Create ``yardstick-flavor``::
- nova flavor-create yardstick-flavor 100 512 3 1
+ openstack flavor create --disk 3 --vcpus 1 --ram 512 --swap 100 \
+ yardstick-flavor
Most of the sample test cases in Yardstick are using a guest image called
``yardstick-image`` which deviates from an Ubuntu Cloud Server image
@@ -196,136 +205,146 @@ Yardstick has a tool for building this custom image. It is necessary to have
Also you may need install several additional packages to use this tool, by
follwing the commands below::
- sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y qemu-utils kpartx
-
-This image can be built using the following command in the directory where Yardstick is installed::
+ sudo -EH apt-get update && sudo -EH apt-get install -y qemu-utils kpartx
- export YARD_IMG_ARCH='amd64'
- sudo echo "Defaults env_keep += \'YARD_IMG_ARCH\'" >> /etc/sudoers
- sudo tools/yardstick-img-modify tools/ubuntu-server-cloudimg-modify.sh
+This image can be built using the following command in the directory where
+Yardstick is installed::
-**Warning:** Before building the guest image inside the Yardstick container, make sure the container is granted with privilege. The script will create files by default in ``/tmp/workspace/yardstick`` and the files will be owned by root!
+ export YARD_IMG_ARCH='amd64'
+ echo "Defaults env_keep += \'YARD_IMG_ARCH\'" | sudo tee --append \
+ /etc/sudoers > /dev/null
+ sudo -EH tools/yardstick-img-modify tools/ubuntu-server-cloudimg-modify.sh
-The created image can be added to OpenStack using the ``glance image-create`` or via the OpenStack Dashboard. Example command is::
+.. warning:: Before building the guest image inside the Yardstick container,
+make sure the container is granted with privilege. The script will create files
+by default in ``/tmp/workspace/yardstick`` and the files will be owned by root.
- glance --os-image-api-version 1 image-create \
- --name yardstick-image --is-public true \
- --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare \
- --file /tmp/workspace/yardstick/yardstick-image.img
+The created image can be added to OpenStack using the OpenStack client or via
+the OpenStack Dashboard::
-.. _`Cirros 0.3.5`: http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.5/cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-disk.img
-.. _`Ubuntu 16.04`: https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/xenial/current/xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img
+ openstack image create --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare \
+ --public --file /tmp/workspace/yardstick/yardstick-image.img \
+ yardstick-image
-Some Yardstick test cases use a `Cirros 0.3.5`_ image and/or a `Ubuntu 16.04`_ image. Add Cirros and Ubuntu images to OpenStack::
- openstack image create \
- --disk-format qcow2 \
- --container-format bare \
- --file $cirros_image_file \
- cirros-0.3.5
+Some Yardstick test cases use a `Cirros 0.3.5`_ image and/or a `Ubuntu 16.04`_
+image. Add Cirros and Ubuntu images to OpenStack::
- openstack image create \
- --disk-format qcow2 \
- --container-format bare \
- --file $ubuntu_image_file \
- Ubuntu-16.04
+ openstack image create --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare \
+ --public --file $cirros_image_file cirros-0.3.5
+ openstack image create --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare \
+ --file $ubuntu_image_file Ubuntu-16.04
-The third way
-################
+Automatic initialization of OpenStack (third way)
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Similar to the second way, the first step is also to `Export OpenStack environment variables`_. Then the following steps should be done.
+Similar to the second way, the first step is also to
+`Export OpenStack environment variables`_. Then the following steps should be
+done.
-Automatically create Yardstcik flavor and guest images
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
+Automatic creation of Yardstick flavor and guest images
+#######################################################
Yardstick has a script for automatically creating Yardstick flavor and building
-Yardstick guest images. This script is mainly used for CI and can be also used in the local environment::
+Yardstick guest images. This script is mainly used for CI and can be also used
+in the local environment::
- source $YARDSTICK_REPO_DIR/tests/ci/load_images.sh
+ source $YARDSTICK_REPO_DIR/tests/ci/load_images.sh
The Yardstick container GUI
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-In Euphrates release, Yardstick implemeted a GUI for Yardstick Docker container.
-After booting up Yardstick container, you can visit the GUI at <container_host_ip>:8888/gui/index.html
+In Euphrates release, Yardstick implemented a GUI for Yardstick Docker
+container. After booting up Yardstick container, you can visit the GUI at
+``<container_host_ip>:8888/gui/index.html``.
-For usage of Yardstick GUI, please watch our demo video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3qbJDp6QBk
-**Note:** The Yardstick GUI is still in development, the GUI layout and features may change.
+For usage of Yardstick GUI, please watch our demo video at
+`Yardstick GUI demo`_.
+.. note:: The Yardstick GUI is still in development, the GUI layout and
+features may change.
Delete the Yardstick container
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If you want to uninstall Yardstick, just delete the Yardstick container::
- docker stop yardstick && docker rm yardstick
+ sudo docker stop yardstick && docker rm yardstick
+
-Install Yardstick directly in Ubuntu
----------------------------------------
+Install Yardstick directly in Ubuntu (second option)
+----------------------------------------------------
.. _install-framework:
-Alternatively you can install Yardstick framework directly in Ubuntu or in an Ubuntu Docker image. No matter which way you choose to install Yardstick, the following installation steps are identical.
+Alternatively you can install Yardstick framework directly in Ubuntu or in an
+Ubuntu Docker image. No matter which way you choose to install Yardstick, the
+following installation steps are identical.
If you choose to use the Ubuntu Docker image, you can pull the Ubuntu
Docker image from Docker hub::
- docker pull ubuntu:16.04
+ sudo -EH docker pull ubuntu:16.04
Install Yardstick
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Prerequisite preparation::
- apt-get update && apt-get install -y git python-setuptools python-pip
- easy_install -U setuptools==30.0.0
- pip install appdirs==1.4.0
- pip install virtualenv
+ sudo -EH apt-get update && sudo -EH apt-get install -y \
+ git python-setuptools python-pip
+ sudo -EH easy_install -U setuptools==30.0.0
+ sudo -EH pip install appdirs==1.4.0
+ sudo -EH pip install virtualenv
Create a virtual environment::
- virtualenv ~/yardstick_venv
- export YARDSTICK_VENV=~/yardstick_venv
- source ~/yardstick_venv/bin/activate
+ virtualenv ~/yardstick_venv
+ export YARDSTICK_VENV=~/yardstick_venv
+ source ~/yardstick_venv/bin/activate
Download the source code and install Yardstick from it::
- git clone https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/yardstick
- export YARDSTICK_REPO_DIR=~/yardstick
- cd yardstick
- ./install.sh
+ git clone https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/yardstick
+ export YARDSTICK_REPO_DIR=~/yardstick
+ cd ~/yardstick
+ sudo -EH ./install.sh
Configure the Yardstick environment (**Todo**)
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-For installing Yardstick directly in Ubuntu, the ``yardstick env`` command is not available. You need to prepare OpenStack environment variables and create Yardstick flavor and guest images manually.
+For installing Yardstick directly in Ubuntu, the ``yardstick env`` command is
+not available. You need to prepare OpenStack environment variables and create
+Yardstick flavor and guest images manually.
Uninstall Yardstick
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-For unistalling Yardstick, just delete the virtual environment::
+For uninstalling Yardstick, just delete the virtual environment::
- rm -rf ~/yardstick_venv
+ rm -rf ~/yardstick_venv
Verify the installation
------------------------------
+-----------------------
It is recommended to verify that Yardstick was installed successfully
by executing some simple commands and test samples. Before executing Yardstick
-test cases make sure ``yardstick-flavor`` and ``yardstick-image`` can be found in OpenStack and the ``openrc`` file is sourced. Below is an example
-invocation of Yardstick ``help`` command and ``ping.py`` test sample::
+test cases make sure ``yardstick-flavor`` and ``yardstick-image`` can be found
+in OpenStack and the ``openrc`` file is sourced. Below is an example invocation
+of Yardstick ``help`` command and ``ping.py`` test sample::
- yardstick -h
- yardstick task start samples/ping.yaml
+ yardstick -h
+ yardstick task start samples/ping.yaml
-**NOTE:** The above commands could be run in both the Yardstick container and the Ubuntu directly.
+.. note:: The above commands could be run in both the Yardstick container and
+the Ubuntu directly.
Each testing tool supported by Yardstick has a sample configuration file.
These configuration files can be found in the ``samples`` directory.
@@ -334,166 +353,145 @@ Default location for the output is ``/tmp/yardstick.out``.
Deploy InfluxDB and Grafana using Docker
--------------------------------------------
+----------------------------------------
-Without InfluxDB, Yardstick stores results for runnning test case in the file
-``/tmp/yardstick.out``. However, it's unconvenient to retrieve and display
+Without InfluxDB, Yardstick stores results for running test case in the file
+``/tmp/yardstick.out``. However, it's inconvenient to retrieve and display
test results. So we will show how to use InfluxDB to store data and use
Grafana to display data in the following sections.
-Automatically deploy InfluxDB and Grafana containers (**recommended**)
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Automatic deployment of InfluxDB and Grafana containers (**recommended**)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Firstly, enter the Yardstick container::
- docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
+ sudo -EH docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
Secondly, create InfluxDB container and configure with the following command::
- yardstick env influxdb
+ yardstick env influxdb
Thirdly, create and configure Grafana container::
- yardstick env grafana
+ yardstick env grafana
-Then you can run a test case and visit http://host_ip:3000 (``admin``/``admin``) to see the results.
+Then you can run a test case and visit http://host_ip:3000
+(``admin``/``admin``) to see the results.
-**NOTE:** Executing ``yardstick env`` command to deploy InfluxDB and Grafana requires Jumphost's docker API version => 1.24. Run the following command to check the docker API version on the Jumphost::
+.. note:: Executing ``yardstick env`` command to deploy InfluxDB and Grafana
+requires Jumphost's docker API version => 1.24. Run the following command to
+check the docker API version on the Jumphost::
- docker version
+ docker version
-Manually deploy InfluxDB and Grafana containers
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-You could also deploy influxDB and Grafana containers manually on the Jumphost.
-The following sections show how to do.
-
-.. pull docker images
-
-Pull docker images
-####################
+Manual deployment of InfluxDB and Grafana containers
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-::
+You can also deploy influxDB and Grafana containers manually on the Jumphost.
+The following sections show how to do.
- docker pull tutum/influxdb
- docker pull grafana/grafana
+Pull docker images::
-Run and configure influxDB
-###############################
+ sudo -EH docker pull tutum/influxdb
+ sudo -EH docker pull grafana/grafana
Run influxDB::
- docker run -d --name influxdb \
- -p 8083:8083 -p 8086:8086 --expose 8090 --expose 8099 \
- tutum/influxdb
- docker exec -it influxdb bash
+ sudo -EH docker run -d --name influxdb \
+ -p 8083:8083 -p 8086:8086 --expose 8090 --expose 8099 \
+ tutum/influxdb
+ docker exec -it influxdb bash
Configure influxDB::
- influx
- >CREATE USER root WITH PASSWORD 'root' WITH ALL PRIVILEGES
- >CREATE DATABASE yardstick;
- >use yardstick;
- >show MEASUREMENTS;
-
-Run and configure Grafana
-###############################
+ influx
+ >CREATE USER root WITH PASSWORD 'root' WITH ALL PRIVILEGES
+ >CREATE DATABASE yardstick;
+ >use yardstick;
+ >show MEASUREMENTS;
Run Grafana::
- docker run -d --name grafana -p 3000:3000 grafana/grafana
+ sudo -EH docker run -d --name grafana -p 3000:3000 grafana/grafana
-Log on http://{YOUR_IP_HERE}:3000 using ``admin``/``admin`` and configure database resource to be ``{YOUR_IP_HERE}:8086``.
+Log on http://{YOUR_IP_HERE}:3000 using ``admin``/``admin`` and configure
+database resource to be ``{YOUR_IP_HERE}:8086``.
.. image:: images/Grafana_config.png
:width: 800px
- :alt: Grafana data source configration
-
-Configure ``yardstick.conf``
-##############################
+ :alt: Grafana data source configuration
-::
+Configure ``yardstick.conf``::
- docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
- cp etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf.sample /etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf
- vi /etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf
+ sudo -EH docker exec -it yardstick /bin/bash
+ sudo cp etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf.sample /etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf
+ sudo vi /etc/yardstick/yardstick.conf
Modify ``yardstick.conf``::
- [DEFAULT]
- debug = True
- dispatcher = influxdb
+ [DEFAULT]
+ debug = True
+ dispatcher = influxdb
- [dispatcher_influxdb]
- timeout = 5
- target = http://{YOUR_IP_HERE}:8086
- db_name = yardstick
- username = root
- password = root
+ [dispatcher_influxdb]
+ timeout = 5
+ target = http://{YOUR_IP_HERE}:8086
+ db_name = yardstick
+ username = root
+ password = root
Now you can run Yardstick test cases and store the results in influxDB.
Deploy InfluxDB and Grafana directly in Ubuntu (**Todo**)
------------------------------------------------------------
+---------------------------------------------------------
Yardstick common CLI
--------------------
-list test cases
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-**yardstick testcase list**
-
-This command line would list all test cases in yardstick.
-It would show like below::
-
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- | Testcase Name | Description
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc001 | Measure network throughput using pktgen
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc002 | measure network latency using ping
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc005 | Measure Storage IOPS, throughput and latency using fio.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc006 | Measure volume storage IOPS, throughput and latency using fio.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc008 | Measure network throughput and packet loss using Pktgen
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc009 | Measure network throughput and packet loss using pktgen
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc010 | measure memory read latency using lmbench.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc011 | Measure packet delay variation (jitter) using iperf3.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc012 | Measure memory read and write bandwidth using lmbench.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc014 | Measure Processing speed using unixbench.
- | opnfv_yardstick_tc019 | Sample test case for the HA of controller node service.
- ...
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-show a test case config file
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-Take opnfv_yardstick_tc002 for an example. This test case measure network latency.
-You just need to type in **yardstick testcase show opnfv_yardstick_tc002**, and the console
-would show the config yaml of this test case::
- ##############################################################################
- # Copyright (c) 2017 kristian.hunt@gmail.com and others.
- #
- # All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
- # are made available under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0
- # which accompanies this distribution, and is available at
- # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- ##############################################################################
- ---
-
- schema: "yardstick:task:0.1"
- description: >
+List test cases
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+``yardstick testcase list``: This command line would list all test cases in
+Yardstick. It would show like below::
+
+ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ | Testcase Name | Description
+ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ | opnfv_yardstick_tc001 | Measure network throughput using pktgen
+ | opnfv_yardstick_tc002 | measure network latency using ping
+ | opnfv_yardstick_tc005 | Measure Storage IOPS, throughput and latency using fio.
+ ...
+ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+Show a test case config file
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Take opnfv_yardstick_tc002 for an example. This test case measure network
+latency. You just need to type in ``yardstick testcase show
+opnfv_yardstick_tc002``, and the console would show the config yaml of this
+test case::
+
+ ---
+
+ schema: "yardstick:task:0.1"
+ description: >
Yardstick TC002 config file;
measure network latency using ping;
- {% set image = image or "cirros-0.3.5" %}
+ {% set image = image or "cirros-0.3.5" %}
- {% set provider = provider or none %}
- {% set physical_network = physical_network or 'physnet1' %}
- {% set segmentation_id = segmentation_id or none %}
- {% set packetsize = packetsize or 100 %}
+ {% set provider = provider or none %}
+ {% set physical_network = physical_network or 'physnet1' %}
+ {% set segmentation_id = segmentation_id or none %}
+ {% set packetsize = packetsize or 100 %}
- scenarios:
- {% for i in range(2) %}
- -
+ scenarios:
+ {% for i in range(2) %}
+ -
type: Ping
options:
packetsize: {{packetsize}}
@@ -508,9 +506,9 @@ would show the config yaml of this test case::
sla:
max_rtt: 10
action: monitor
- {% endfor %}
+ {% endfor %}
- context:
+ context:
name: demo
image: {{image}}
flavor: yardstick-flavor
@@ -538,39 +536,41 @@ would show the config yaml of this test case::
{% endif %}
{% endif %}
-start a task to run yardstick test case
->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-If you want run a test case, then you need to use **yardstick task start <test_case_path>**
-this command support some parameters as below:
-
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| Parameters | Detail |
-+=====================+==================================================+
-| -d | show debug log of yardstick running |
-| | |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| --task-args | If you want to customize test case parameters, |
-| | use "--task-args" to pass the value. The format |
-| | is a json string with parameter key-value pair. |
-| | |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| --task-args-file | If you want to use yardstick |
-| | env prepare command(or |
-| | related API) to load the |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| --parse-only | |
-| | |
-| | |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| --output-file \ | Specify where to output the log. if not pass, |
-| OUTPUT_FILE_PATH | the default value is |
-| | "/tmp/yardstick/yardstick.log" |
-| | |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
-| --suite \ | run a test suite, TEST_SUITE_PATH speciy where |
-| TEST_SUITE_PATH | the test suite locates |
-| | |
-+---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+
+Start a task to run yardstick test case
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+If you want run a test case, then you need to use ``yardstick task start
+<test_case_path>`` this command support some parameters as below::
+
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | Parameters | Detail |
+ +=====================+==================================================+
+ | -d | show debug log of yardstick running |
+ | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | --task-args | If you want to customize test case parameters, |
+ | | use "--task-args" to pass the value. The format |
+ | | is a json string with parameter key-value pair. |
+ | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | --task-args-file | If you want to use yardstick |
+ | | env prepare command(or |
+ | | related API) to load the |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | --parse-only | |
+ | | |
+ | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | --output-file \ | Specify where to output the log. if not pass, |
+ | OUTPUT_FILE_PATH | the default value is |
+ | | "/tmp/yardstick/yardstick.log" |
+ | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
+ | --suite \ | run a test suite, TEST_SUITE_PATH specify where |
+ | TEST_SUITE_PATH | the test suite locates |
+ | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
Run Yardstick in a local environment
@@ -578,7 +578,7 @@ Run Yardstick in a local environment
We also have a guide about how to run Yardstick in a local environment.
This work is contributed by Tapio Tallgren.
-You can find this guide at `here <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/yardstick/How+to+run+Yardstick+in+a+local+environment>`_.
+You can find this guide at `How to run Yardstick in a local environment`_.
Create a test suite for Yardstick
@@ -588,19 +588,20 @@ A test suite in yardstick is a yaml file which include one or more test cases.
Yardstick is able to support running test suite task, so you can customize your
own test suite and run it in one task.
-``tests/opnfv/test_suites`` is the folder where Yardstick puts CI test suite. A typical test suite is like below (the ``fuel_test_suite.yaml`` example)::
+``tests/opnfv/test_suites`` is the folder where Yardstick puts CI test suite.
+A typical test suite is like below (the ``fuel_test_suite.yaml`` example)::
- ---
- # Fuel integration test task suite
+ ---
+ # Fuel integration test task suite
- schema: "yardstick:suite:0.1"
+ schema: "yardstick:suite:0.1"
- name: "fuel_test_suite"
- test_cases_dir: "samples/"
- test_cases:
- -
+ name: "fuel_test_suite"
+ test_cases_dir: "samples/"
+ test_cases:
+ -
file_name: ping.yaml
- -
+ -
file_name: iperf3.yaml
As you can see, there are two test cases in the ``fuel_test_suite.yaml``. The
@@ -612,18 +613,18 @@ Yardstick test suite also supports constraints and task args for each test
case. Here is another sample (the ``os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.yaml`` example) to
show this, which is digested from one big test suite::
- ---
+ ---
- schema: "yardstick:suite:0.1"
+ schema: "yardstick:suite:0.1"
- name: "os-nosdn-nofeature-ha"
- test_cases_dir: "tests/opnfv/test_cases/"
- test_cases:
- -
+ name: "os-nosdn-nofeature-ha"
+ test_cases_dir: "tests/opnfv/test_cases/"
+ test_cases:
+ -
file_name: opnfv_yardstick_tc002.yaml
- -
+ -
file_name: opnfv_yardstick_tc005.yaml
- -
+ -
file_name: opnfv_yardstick_tc043.yaml
constraint:
installer: compass
@@ -641,6 +642,77 @@ All in all, to create a test suite in Yardstick, you just need to create a
yaml file and add test cases, constraint or task arguments if necessary.
-Proxy Support (**Todo**)
----------------------------
+Proxy Support
+-------------
+
+To configure the Jumphost to access Internet through a proxy its necessary to
+export several variables to the environment, contained in the following
+script::
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ _proxy=<proxy_address>
+ _proxyport=<proxy_port>
+ _ip=$(hostname -I | awk '{print $1}')
+
+ export ftp_proxy=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export FTP_PROXY=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export http_proxy=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export HTTP_PROXY=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export https_proxy=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export HTTPS_PROXY=http://$_proxy:$_proxyport
+ export no_proxy=127.0.0.1,localhost,$_ip,$(hostname),<.localdomain>
+ export NO_PROXY=127.0.0.1,localhost,$_ip,$(hostname),<.localdomain>
+
+To enable Internet access from a container using ``docker``, depends on the OS
+version. On Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, which uses SysVinit, ``/etc/default/docker`` must
+be modified::
+
+ .......
+ # If you need Docker to use an HTTP proxy, it can also be specified here.
+ export http_proxy="http://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port>/"
+ export https_proxy="https://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port>/"
+
+Then its necessary to restart the ``docker`` service::
+
+ sudo -EH service docker restart
+
+In Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, which uses Systemd, its necessary to create a drop-in
+directory::
+
+ sudo mkdir /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d
+
+Then, the proxy configuration will be stored in the following file::
+ # cat /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/http-proxy.conf
+ [Service]
+ Environment="HTTP_PROXY=https://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port>/"
+ Environment="HTTPS_PROXY=https://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port>/"
+ Environment="NO_PROXY=localhost,127.0.0.1,<localaddress>,<.localdomain>"
+
+The changes need to be flushed and the ``docker`` service restarted::
+
+ sudo systemctl daemon-reload
+ sudo systemctl restart docker
+
+Any container is already created won't contain these modifications. If needed,
+stop and delete the container::
+
+ sudo docker stop yardstick
+ sudo docker rm yardstick
+
+.. warning:: Be careful, the above ``rm`` command will delete the container
+completely. Everything on this container will be lost.
+
+Then follow the previous instructions `Prepare the Yardstick container`_ to
+rebuild the Yardstick container.
+
+
+References
+----------
+
+.. _`User Guide & Configuration Guide`: http://docs.opnfv.org/en/latest/release/userguide.introduction.html
+.. _dockerhub: https://hub.docker.com/r/opnfv/yardstick/
+.. _`Cirros 0.3.5`: http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.5/cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-disk.img
+.. _`Ubuntu 16.04`: https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/xenial/current/xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img
+.. _`Yardstick GUI demo`: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3qbJDp6QBk
+.. _`How to run Yardstick in a local environment`: https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/yardstick/How+to+run+Yardstick+in+a+local+environment