Makefile is used to automate Pyroute2 deployment and test processes. Mostly, it is but a collection of common commands.
Clean up the repo directory from the built documentation, collected coverage data, compiled bytecode etc.
Build documentation. Requires sphinx
.
Run tests against current code. Command line options:
- python -- path to the Python to use
- nosetests -- path to nosetests to use
- wlevel -- the Python -W level
- coverage -- set
coverage=html
to get coverage report - pdb -- set
pdb=true
to launch pdb on errors - module -- run only specific test module
- skip -- skip tests by pattern
- loop -- number of test iterations for each module
- report -- url to submit reports to (see tests/collector.py)
- worker -- the worker id
To run the full test cycle on the project, using a specific python, making html coverage report::
$ sudo make test python=python3 coverage=html
To run a specific test module::
$ sudo make test module=general:test_ipdb.py:TestExplicit
The module parameter syntax::
## module=package[:test_file.py[:TestClass[.test_case]]]
$ sudo make test module=lnst
$ sudo make test module=general:test_ipr.py
$ sudo make test module=general:test_ipdb.py:TestExplicit
There are several test packages:
- general -- common functional tests
- eventlet -- Neutron compatibility tests
- lnst -- LNST compatibility tests
For each package a new Python instance is launched, keep that in mind since it affects the code coverage collection.
It is possible to skip tests by a pattern::
$ sudo make test skip=test_stress
To run tests in a loop, use the loop parameter::
$ sudo make test loop=10
For every iteration the code will be packed again with make dist
and checked against PEP8.
All the statistic may be collected with a simple web-script, see
tests/collector.py
(requires the bottle framework). To retrieve
the collected data one can use curl::
$ sudo make test report=http://localhost:8080/v1/report/
$ curl http://localhost:8080/v1/report/ | python -m json.tool
Make Python distribution package. Command line options:
- python -- the Python to use
Build and install the package into the system. Command line options:
- python -- the Python to use
- root -- root install directory
- lib -- where to install lib files
Build the package and deploy the egg-link with setuptools. No code
will be deployed into the system directories, but instead the local
package directory will be visible to the python. In that case one
can change the code locally and immediately test it system-wide
without running make install
.
- python -- the Python to use
Other targets are either utility targets to be used internally, or hooks for related projects. You can safely ignore them.