andebox

Ansible Developers Box


Keywords
ansible, tox, vagrant
License
MIT
Install
pip install andebox==0.62

Documentation

andebox

Ansible Developer's (tool)Box, andebox, is a script to assist Ansible developers by encapsulating some boilerplate tasks. One of the core features is the ability to run ansible-test on a local copy of a collection repository without having to worry about setting environment variables nor having the expected directory structure above the collection directory.

It also allows some basic stats gathering from the tests/sanity/ignore-X.Y.txt files.

Installation

Install it as usual:

pip install andebox

Requirements

  • ansible-core for actions test and tox-test
  • pyyaml for reading galaxy.yml
  • distutils for comparing LooseVersion objects for action ignore
  • vagrant for action vagrant
    • andebox and any other dependency must be installed inside the VM, but that setup is the user responsibility

Setup-less ansible-test

No need to clone in specific locations or keep track of env variables. Simply clone whichever collection you want and run the ansible-test command as:

# Run sanity test(s)
$ andebox test -- sanity --docker default --test validate-modules plugins/modules/mymodule.py

# Run sanity test(s) excluding the modules listed in the CLI from the sanity 'ignore-X.Y.txt' files
$ andebox test -ei -- sanity --docker default --test validate-modules plugins/modules/mymodule.py

# Run unit test(s)
$ andebox test -- unit --docker default test/units/plugins/modules/mymodule.py

# Run integration test
$ andebox test -- integration --docker default mymodule

# Run tests in multiple Ansible versions using tox
$ andebox tox-test -- sanity --docker default --test validate-modules plugins/modules/mymodule.py
$ andebox tox-test -- unit --docker default test/units/plugins/modules/mymodule.py
$ andebox tox-test -- integration --docker default mymodule

# Run tests in multiple specific Ansible versions using tox
$ andebox tox-test -e ac211,ac212 -- unit --docker default test/units/plugins/modules/mymodule.py     # ansible-core 2.11 & 2.12 only
$ andebox tox-test -e a4,dev -- integration --docker default mymodule                                 # ansible 4 & development branch

By default, andebox will discover the full name of the collection by parsing the galaxy.yml file found in the local directory. If the file is not present or if it fails for any reason, use the option --collection to specify it, as in:

$ andebox test --collection community.general -- sanity --docker default -v --test validate-modules

Please notice that andebox uses whichever ansible-test is available in PATH for execution

Stats on ignore files

Gathering stats from the ignore files can be quite annoying, especially if they are long. One can run:

$ andebox ignores -v2.10 -d4 -fc '.*:parameter-list-no-elements'
    24  plugins/modules/ovirt validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     8  plugins/modules/centurylink validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     6  plugins/modules/redfish validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     5  plugins/modules/oneandone validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     4  plugins/modules/rackspace validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     4  plugins/modules/oneview validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     3  plugins/modules/opennebula validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     3  plugins/modules/univention validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     3  plugins/modules/consul validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements
     3  plugins/modules/sensu validate-modules:parameter-list-no-elements

Runtime config

Quickly peek what is the runtime.yml status for a specific module:

$ andebox runtime scaleway_ip_facts
D modules scaleway_ip_facts: deprecation in 3.0.0 (current=2.4.0): Use community.general.scaleway_ip_info instead.

Or using a regular expression:

$ andebox runtime -r 'gc[pe]'
R lookup gcp_storage_file: redirected to community.google.gcp_storage_file
T modules gce: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_instance instead.
R modules gce_eip: redirected to community.google.gce_eip
R modules gce_img: redirected to community.google.gce_img
R modules gce_instance_template: redirected to community.google.gce_instance_template
R modules gce_labels: redirected to community.google.gce_labels
R modules gce_lb: redirected to community.google.gce_lb
R modules gce_mig: redirected to community.google.gce_mig
R modules gce_net: redirected to community.google.gce_net
R modules gce_pd: redirected to community.google.gce_pd
R modules gce_snapshot: redirected to community.google.gce_snapshot
R modules gce_tag: redirected to community.google.gce_tag
T modules gcp_backend_service: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_backend_service instead.
T modules gcp_forwarding_rule: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_forwarding_rule or google.cloud.gcp_compute_global_forwarding_rule instead.
T modules gcp_healthcheck: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_health_check, google.cloud.gcp_compute_http_health_check or google.cloud.gcp_compute_https_health_check instead.
T modules gcp_target_proxy: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_target_http_proxy instead.
T modules gcp_url_map: terminated in 2.0.0: Use google.cloud.gcp_compute_url_map instead.
R modules gcpubsub: redirected to community.google.gcpubsub
R modules gcpubsub_info: redirected to community.google.gcpubsub_info
R modules gcpubsub_facts: redirected to community.google.gcpubsub_info
R doc_fragments _gcp: redirected to community.google._gcp
R module_utils gce: redirected to community.google.gce
R module_utils gcp: redirected to community.google.gcp

where D=Deprecated, T=Tombstone, R=Redirect.

Run Integration Tests in Vagrant VMs

To run the test inside a VM managed by vagrant:

# Run test in VM named "fedora37" using sudo
$ andebox vagrant -n fedora37 -s -- --python 3.9 xfs_quota --color yes

Also beware that andebox does not create nor manage Vagrantfile. The user is responsible for creating and setting up the VM definition. It must have andebox and ansible-core (or ansible-base or ansible) installed on a virtual environment. By default, the venv is expected to be at /venv but the location can be specified using the --venv parameter.