Validating a driver

This is a guide for Cinder driver maintainers to validate that their drivers are fully supported by cinderlib and therefore by projects like Ember-CSI and oVirt that rely on it for storage backend management.

Validation steps include initial manual validation as well as automatic testing at the gate as part of Cinder’s 3rd party CI jobs.

With DevStack

There are many ways we can install cinderlib for the initial validation phase, such as using pip from master repositories or PyPi or using packaged versions of the project, but the official recommendation is to use DevStack.

We believe that, as a Cinder driver maintainer, you will be already familiar with DevStack and know how to configure and use it to work with your storage backend, so this will most likely be the easiest way for you to do an initial validation of the driver.

Cinderlib has a DevStack plugin that automatically installs the library as during the stacking process when running the ./stach.sh script, so we will be adding this plugin to our local.conf file.

To use cinderlib’s master code we will add the line enable_plugin cinderlib https://git.openstack.org/openstack/cinderlib after the [[local|localrc]] header the in our normal local.conf file that already configures our backend. The result will look like this:

[[local|localrc]]
enable_plugin cinderlib https://opendev.org/openstack/cinderlib

After adding this we can proceed to run the stack.sh script.

Once the script has finished executing we will have cinderlib installed from Git in our system and we will also have sample Python code of how to use our backend in cinderlib using the same backend configuration that exists in our cinder.conf. The sample Python code is generated in file cinderlib.py in the same directory as our cinder.conf file.

The tool generating the cinderlib.py file supports cinder.conf files with multiple backends, so there’s no need to make any additional changes to your local.conf if you usually deploy DevStack with multiple backends.

The generation of the sample code runs at the very end of the stacking process (the extra stage), so we can use other DevStack storage plugins, such as the Ceph plugin, and the sample code will still be properly generated.

For the LVM default backend the contents of the cinderlib.py file are:

$ cat /etc/cinder/cinderlib.py
import cinderlib as cl

lvmdriver_1 = cl.Backend(volume_clear="zero", lvm_type="auto",
                         volume_backend_name="lvmdriver-1",
                         target_helper="lioadm",
                         volume_driver="cinder.volume.drivers.lvm.LVMVolumeDriver",
                         image_volume_cache_enabled=True,
                         volume_group="stack-volumes-lvmdriver-1")

To confirm that this automatically generated configuration is correct we can do:

$ cd /etc/cinder
$ mv cinderlib.py example.py
$ python
[GCC 4.8.5 20150623 (Red Hat 4.8.5-36)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from pprint import pprint as pp
>>> import cinderlib
>>> pp(example.lvmdriver_1.stats())
{'driver_version': '3.0.0',
 'pools': [{'QoS_support': False,
            'backend_state': 'up',
            'filter_function': None,
            'free_capacity_gb': 4.75,
            'goodness_function': None,
            'location_info': 'LVMVolumeDriver:localhost.localdomain:stack-volumes-lvmdriver-1:thin:0',
            'max_over_subscription_ratio': '20.0',
            'multiattach': True,
            'pool_name': 'lvmdriver-1',
            'provisioned_capacity_gb': 0.0,
            'reserved_percentage': 0,
            'thick_provisioning_support': False,
            'thin_provisioning_support': True,
            'total_capacity_gb': 4.75,
            'total_volumes': 1}],
 'shared_targets': False,
 'sparse_copy_volume': True,
 'storage_protocol': 'iSCSI',
 'vendor_name': 'Open Source',
 'volume_backend_name': 'lvmdriver-1'}
>>>

Here the name of the variable is lvmdriver_1, but in your case the name will be different, as it uses the volume_backend_name from the different driver section in the cinder.conf file. One way to see the backends that have been initialized by importing the example code is looking into the example.cl.Backend.backends dictionary.

Some people deploy DevStack with the default backend and then manually modify the cinder.conf file afterwards and restart the Cinder services to use their configuration. This is fine as well, as you can easily recreate the Python code to include you backend using the cinder-cfg-to-cinderlib-code tool that’s installed with cinderlib.

Generating the example code manually can be done like this:

$ cinder-cfg-to-cinderlib-code /etc/cinder/cinder.conf example.py

Now that we know that cinderlib can access our backend we will proceed to run cinderlib’s functional tests to confirm that all the operations work as expected.

The functional tests use the contents of the existing /etc/cinder/cinder.conf file to get the backend configuration. The functional test runner also supports cinder.conf files with multiple backends. Test methods have meaningful names ending in the backend name as per the volume_backend_name values in the configuration file.

The functional tests are quite fast, as they usually take about 1 minute to run:

$ python -m unittest2 discover -v cinderlib.tests.functional

test_attach_detach_volume_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_attach_detach_volume_via_attachment_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_attach_volume_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_clone_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_create_delete_snapshot_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_create_delete_volume_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_create_snapshot_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_create_volume_from_snapshot_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_create_volume_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_disk_io_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_extend_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_stats_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok
test_stats_with_creation_on_lvmdriver-1 (cinderlib.tests.functional.test_basic.BackendFunctBasic) ... ok

----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 13 tests in 54.179s

OK

There are a couple of interesting options we can use when the running functional tests using environmental variables:

  • CL_FTEST_LOGGING: If set it will enable the Cinder code to log to stdout during the testing. Undefined by default, which means no output.

  • CL_FTEST_PRECISION: Integer value describing how much precision we must use when comparing volume sizes. Due to cylinder sizes some storage arrays don’t abide 100% to the requested size of the volume. With this option we can define how many decimals will be correct when testing sizes. A value of 2 means that the backend could create a 1.0015869140625GB volume when we request a 1GB volume and the tests wouldn’t fail. Default is zero, which means that it must be perfect or it will fail.

  • CL_FTEST_CFG`: Location of the configuration file. Defaults to /etc/cinder/cinder.conf.

If we encounter problems while running the functional tests, but the Cinder service is running just fine, we can go to the #openstack-cinder IRC channel in Freenode, or send an email to the discuss-openstack mailing list starting the subject with [cinderlib].

Cinder 3rd party CI

Once we have been able to successfully run the functional tests it’s time to make the CI jobs run them on every patch submitted to Cinder to ensure the driver keeps being compatible.

There are multiples ways we can accomplish this:

  1. Create a 3rd party CI job listening to cinderlib patches

  2. Create an additional 3rd party CI job in Cinder, similar to the one we already have.

  3. Reusing our existing 3rd party CI job making it also run the cinderlib functional tests.

Options #1 and #2 require more work, as we have to create new jobs, but they make it easier to know that our driver is compatible with cinderlib. Option #3 is the opposite, it is easy to setup, but it doesn’t make it so obvious that our driver is supported by cinderlib.

Configuration

When reusing existing 3rd party CI jobs, the normal setup will generate a valid configuration file on /etc/cinder/cinder.conf and cinderlib functional tests will use it by default, so we don’t have to do anything, but when running a custom CI job we will have to write the configuration ourselves. Though we don’t have to do this dynamically. We can write it once and use it in all the cinderlib jobs.

To get our backend configuration file for the functional tests we can:

  • Use the cinder.conf file from one of your DevStack deployments.

  • Manually create a minimal cinder.conf file.

  • Create a custom YAML file.

We can create the minimal cinder.conf file using one generated by DevStack. Having a minimal configuration has the advantage of being easy to read.

For an LVM backend could look like this:

[DEFAULT]
enabled_backends = lvm

[lvm]
volume_clear = none
target_helper = lioadm
volume_group = cinder-volumes
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.lvm.LVMVolumeDriver
volume_backend_name = lvm

Besides the INI style configuration files, we can also use YAML configuration files for the functional tests.

The YAML file has 3 key-value pairs that are of interest to us. Only one of them is mandatory, the other 2 are optional.

  • logs: Boolean value defining whether we want the Cinder code to log to stdout during the testing. Defaults to false. Takes precedence over environmental variable CL_TESTING_LOGGING.

  • size_precision: Integer value describing how much precision we must use when comparing volume sizes. Due to cylinder sizes some storage arrays don’t abide 100% to the requested size of the volume. With this option we can define how many decimals will be correct when testing sizes. A value of 2 means that the backend could create a 1.0015869140625GB volume when we request a 1GB volume and the tests wouldn’t fail. Default is zero, which for us means that it must be perfect or it will fail. Takes precedence over environmental variable CL_FTEST_PRECISION.

  • backends: This is a list of dictionaries, each with the configuration parameters that are set in the backend section of the cinder.conf file in Cinder. This is a mandatory field.

The same configuration we presented for the LVM backend as a minimal cinder.conf file would look like this in the YAML format:

logs: false
venv_sudo: false
backends:
    - volume_backend_name: lvm
      volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.lvm.LVMVolumeDriver
      volume_group: cinder-volumes
      target_helper: lioadm
      volume_clear: none

To pass the location of the configuration file to the functional test runner we must use the CL_FTEST_CFG environmental variable to point to the location of our file. If we are using a cinder.conf file and we save it in etc/cinder then we don’t need to pass it to the tests runner, since that’s the default location.

Use independent job

Creating new jobs is mostly identical to what you already did for the Cinder job with the difference that here we don’t need to do a full DevStack installation, as it would take too long. We only need the cinderlib, Cinder, and OS-Brick projects from master and then run cinderlib’s functional tests.

As an example here’s the Ceph job in the cinderlib project that takes approximately 8 minutes to run at the gate. In the pre-run phase it starts a Ceph demo container to run a Ceph toy cluster as the backend. Then provides a custom configuration YAML file with the backend configuration:

- job:
    name: cinderlib-ceph-functional
    parent: openstack-tox-functional-with-sudo
    required-projects:
      - openstack/os-brick
      - openstack/cinder
    pre-run: playbooks/setup-ceph.yaml
    nodeset: centos-7
    vars:
      tox_environment:
        CL_FTEST_CFG: "cinderlib/tests/functional/ceph.yaml"
        CL_FTEST_ROOT_HELPER: sudo
        # These come from great-great-grandparent tox job
        NOSE_WITH_HTML_OUTPUT: 1
        NOSE_HTML_OUT_FILE: nose_results.html
        NOSE_WITH_XUNIT: 1

For jobs in the cinderlib project you can use the openstack-tox-functional-with-sudo parent, but for jobs in the Cinder project you’ll have to call this yourself by calling tox or using the same command we used during our manual testing: python -m unittest2 discover -v cinderlib.tests.functional.

Use existing job

The easiest way to run the cinderlib functional tests is to reuse an existing Cinder CI job, since we don’t need to setup anything. We just need to modify our job to run an additional command at the end.

Running the cinderlib functional tests after tempest will only add about 1 minute to the job’s current runtime.

You will need to add openstack/cinderlib to the required-projects configuration of the Zuul job. This will ensure not only that cinderlib is installed, but also that is using the right patch when a patch has cross-repository dependencies.

For example, the LVM lio job called cinder-tempest-dsvm-lvm-lio-barbican has the following required projects:

required-projects:
  - openstack-infra/devstack-gate
  - openstack/barbican
  - openstack/cinderlib
  - openstack/python-barbicanclient
  - openstack/tempest
  - openstack/os-brick

To facilitate running the cinderlib functional tests in existing CI jobs the Cinder project includes 2 playbooks:

  • playbooks/tempest-and-cinderlib-run.yaml

  • playbooks/cinderlib-run.yaml

These 2 playbooks support the cinderlib_ignore_errors boolean variable to allow CI jobs to run the functional tests and ignore the results so that cinderlib failures won’t block patches. You can think of it as running the cinderlib tests as non voting. We don’t recommend setting it, as it would defeat the purpose of running the jobs at the gate and the cinderlib tests are very consistent and reliable and don’t raise false failures.

Which one of these 2 playbook to use depends on how we are defining our CI job. For example the LVM job uses the cinderlib-run.yaml job in it’s run.yaml file, and the Ceph job uses the tempest-and-cinderlib-run.yaml as its run job command.

If you are running tempest tests using a custom script you can also add the running of the cinderlib tests at the end.

Notes

Additional features

The validation process we’ve discussed tests the basic functionality, but some Cinder drivers have additional functionality such as backend QoS, multi-pool support, and support for extra specs parameters that modify advanced volume characteristics -such as compression, deduplication, and thin/thick provisioning- on a per volume basis.

Cinderlib supports these features, but since they are driver specific, there is no automated testing in cinderlib’s functional tests; but we can test them them manually ourselves using the extra_specs, qos_specs and pool_name parameters in the create_volume and clone methods.

We can see the list of available pools in multi-pool drivers on the pool_names property in the Backend instance.

Configuration options

One of the difficulties in the Cinder project is determining which options are valid for a specific driver on a specific release. This is usually handled by users checking the OpenStack or vendor documentation, which makes it impossible to automate.

There was a recent addition to the Cinder driver interface that allowed drivers to report exactly which configuration options were relevant for them via the get_driver_options method.

On the initial patch some basic values were added to the drivers, but we urge all driver maintainers to have a careful look at the values currently being returned and make sure they are returning all relevant options, because this will not only be useful for some Cinder installers, but also for projects using cinderlib, as they will be able to automatically build GUIs to configure backends and to validate provided parameters. Having incorrect or missing values there will result in undesired behavior in those systems.

Reporting results

Once you have completed the process described in this guide you will have a Cinder driver that is supported not only in OpenStack, but also by cinderlib and its related projects, and it is time to make it visible.

For this you just need to submit a patch to the cinderlib project modifying the doc/source/validated.rst file with the information from your backend.

The information that must be added to the documentation is:

  • Storage: The make and model of the hardware used.

  • Versions: Firmware versions used for the manual testing.

  • Connection type: iSCSI, FC, RBD, etc. Can add multiple types on the same line.

  • Requirements: Required packages, Python libraries, configuration files, etc. for the driver to work.

  • Automated testing: Accepted values are:

    • No

    • On cinderlib jobs.

    • On cinder jobs.

    • On cinderlib and Cinder jobs.

  • Notes: Any additional information relevant for cinderlib usage.

  • Configuration: The contents of the YAML file or the driver section in the cinder.conf, with masked sensitive data.