Add a playbook to pull down the integration and e2e testing
logs/xml. By default they will appear in a 'artifacts' subdirectory
of wherever the ``results.yml`` playbook lives. If the ``$WORKSPACE``
env. var is set and non-empty, the subdirectory will be created
there instead.
Inside the ``artifacts`` directory, further sub-directories are created,
one for each subject's Ansible inventory name. Within those
sub-directories are all the collected logs from that host. In this way,
automation may simply archive the entire 'artifacts' directory to
capture the important log files.
(Depends on PR #935)
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
Processing node-e2e.log into jUnit format is insane, it's chock-full of
terminal escape codes. They would either need to be scraped/removed or
disabled somehow. Instead, take advantage of ``e2e.go --report-dir=``
option. This will cause it to store native jUnit results in the
specified directory for later collection. The jUnit results are also
needed for the google test grid.
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
When run by hand, it's much easier to spot things going wrong when
they're colored in red. Add an ansible.cfg to make that happen. This
also sets a default output log file (``$ARTIFACTS/main.log``) - that
doesn't contain color-codes.
When executing against multple hosts, the output can sometimes become
difficult to read, esp. with lots of async. tasks. The callback_plugin
script reorganizes how the console and log is organized, making it
clearer which host did what and when.
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
There are no tasks that we need to run after the suite has finished,
like we do with the integration suite, so it does not make sense to
ignore the errors coming out of the e2e suite.
Signed-off-by: Steve Kuznetsov <skuznets@redhat.com>