Troubleshooting Buildtest

This guide will discuss how to troubleshoot buildtest when you encounter issues.

How to enable debugging?

Whenever you run into issues with buildtest, you should enable debug mode by running buildtest --debug <command> which will stream debug messages to console. The debug messages can help pinpoint issues and provide additional details.

buildtest will write a log file, you can view content of log via:

buildtest --view-log
buildtest --print-log

The --print-log will print output to console, while --view-log will display in paginated mode. By default, buildtest will write logfile in $BUILDTEST_ROOT/var/buildtest.log. You can view path to logfile via buildtest --logpath.

If you want to filter log messages when running command you can run buildtest --loglevel <LOG_LEVEL>. The logging levels are defined in the python logging library.

The buildtest info command can be useful when debugging buildtest, it will report a summary of details related to buildtest and system details that can help pinpoint issue.

How to troubleshoot buildtest configuration?

buildtest provides several location where configuration file can be defined. You can see which configuration file is used by buildtest. You can retrieve path to configuration used by buildtest by running buildtest config path. Check if the path to configuration file is one you want to use.

The environment variable BUILDTEST_CONFIGFILE can be used to specify path to configuration file, you should check if this variable is set in your shell.

To validate your configuration file with JSON Schema you should run the following:

buildtest config validate

If your configuration is invalid, please review the error message and fix the configuration. Please run buildtest config validate until your configuration is valid.

Hostname mismatch

The configuration file must specify hostnames for determining where buildtest can run, please see Hostnames. If you see an error message when validating configuration file, please consider updating hostnames property or login to the desired host where buildtest should be run. An example below shows an error message when you run into hostname issues.

ConfigurationError: "[/Users/siddiq90/Documents/github/buildtest/buildtest/settings/config.yml]: Based on current system hostname: DOE-7086392.vpn-dhcp.lbl.gov\n we cannot
find a matching system  ['generic'] based on current hostnames: {'generic': ['foo']} "

How to troubleshoot a buildspec?

If you are developing a buildspec file, please consider checking file is valid, there are several way to validate file, the most convenient way is to run:

buildtest buildspec validate -b <file>

If your buildspec is valid, your next step is to run the test. You should check if test is generated properly, this can be done by running buildtest build -b <file> --dry-run which will generate the test and stop execution. Next you can navigate to the generated test and inspect the content of test and run your test manually.

How to view past builds?

You can access build history via buildtest history command. To see a list of builds you can run:

buildtest history list

Next you can query a given build you can run:

buildtest history query <id>

To view output of buildtest build command for a given build you can run:

buildtest history query -o <id>

The build history is valid until files are removed, which could be done via buildtest clean or files are remove manually. The build history provides a means for accessing old builds along with logfile for each build.

How to view all available tests in buildspec cache?

First, make sure your buildspec cache is built, you can run buildtest buildspec find --rebuild to rebuild the cache. Once buildspec cache is built, you can view query all tests in buildspec cache by running:

buildtest buildspec find --format name --terse --no-header

Shown below is a sample output where we query 5 records from the buildspec cache

$ buildtest buildspec find --format name --terse --no-header --count=5
bash_login_shebang
bash_nonlogin_shebang
post_run_example
create_burst_buffer_executors
linux_strict_test

To get all tests in buildspec cache, consider setting to any negative value --count=-1 or a really high number.

Unable to query test details

Let’s say you are trying to query a test name hello_world, and you get an error message such as following

  buildtest it query hello_world
Unable to find any tests by name ['hello_world'], please select one of the following tests: ['returncode_list_mismatch', 'returncode_int_match', 'exit1_pass', 'exit1_fail', 'python_hello', 'circle_area']

To address this issue, you will need to first build the test, so that buildtest can capture the results in the report file. This can be done in various ways, typically you can do buildtest build -b <file> to specify the buildspec file that will run the test hello_world. You can also use buildtest build --name hello_world which will let buildtest find the buildspec that corresponds to test hello_world and then run the test.

Once test is built, the test will be added to the report file and you can query the test by name.

If you use buildtest --report to write test result to alternate report file, please make sure you specify the report path. You can run into issues if you don’t the correct report path which could lead to error. You can query the current report file using buildtest report path or use buildtest report list to show all report files.

Unable to query all test results

If you run into situation where you are unable to query all test results, you should check the buildtest configuration file see Configuring buildtest report. In this section, check if count property is set in configuration file. For instance if you have count: 25, everytime you run buildtest report it will query 25 records

report:
  count: 25

You will have a situation where buildtest will only show 25 records as shown below

 buildtest report --terse --no-header | wc -l
25

You can work around this issue by passing --count on command line and it will override the configuration. To retrieve all content you can specify a negative value and buildtest will fetch all records or alternatively you can specify a really high number

  buildtest report --terse --no-header --count=-1 | wc -l
30

If you want to make this change permanent, you can update the configuration file and set count to a high number