ansible/test/integration/targets/win_async_wrapper/tasks/main.yml
Matt Davis ce56da69b2 make windows async ... async (#22624)
Fixes #22575 - issue under new exec wrapper where unconstrained handle inheritance (for stdin) caused WinRM to block on breakaway processes. Uses explicit handle inheritance to ensure that only stdin read handle gets inherited. Adds test to ensure that async is actually async.
2017-03-14 16:37:55 -07:00

195 lines
6 KiB
YAML

- name: capture timestamp before fire and forget
set_fact:
start_timestamp: "{{ lookup('pipe', 'date +%s') }}"
- name: async fire and forget
async_test:
sleep_delay_sec: 5
async: 20
poll: 0
register: asyncresult
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.started == 1
- asyncresult.finished == 0
- asyncresult.results_file is search('\.ansible_async.+\d+\.\d+')
# ensure that async is actually async- this test will fail if # hosts > forks or if the target host is VERY slow
- (lookup('pipe', 'date +%s') | int) - (start_timestamp | int) < 5
- name: async poll immediate success
async_test:
sleep_delay_sec: 0
async: 10
poll: 1
register: asyncresult
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.finished == 1
- asyncresult.changed == true
- asyncresult.ansible_async_watchdog_pid is number
# - asyncresult.module_tempdir is search('ansible-tmp-')
- asyncresult.module_pid is number
# this part of the test is flaky- Windows PIDs are reused aggressively, so this occasionally fails due to a new process with the same ID
# FUTURE: consider having the test module hook to a kernel object we can poke at that gets signaled/released on exit
#- name: ensure that watchdog and module procs have exited
# raw: Get-Process | Where { $_.Id -in ({{ asyncresult.ansible_async_watchdog_pid }}, {{ asyncresult.module_pid }}) }
# register: proclist
#
#- name: validate no running watchdog/module processes were returned
# assert:
# that:
# - proclist.stdout.strip() == ''
#- name: ensure that module_tempdir was deleted
# raw: Test-Path {{ asyncresult.module_tempdir }}
# register: tempdircheck
#
#- name: validate tempdir response
# assert:
# that:
# - tempdircheck.stdout | search('False')
- name: async poll retry
async_test:
sleep_delay_sec: 5
async: 10
poll: 1
register: asyncresult
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.finished == 1
- asyncresult.changed == true
# - asyncresult.module_tempdir is search('ansible-tmp-')
- asyncresult.module_pid is number
# this part of the test is flaky- Windows PIDs are reused aggressively, so this occasionally fails due to a new process with the same ID
# FUTURE: consider having the test module hook to a kernel object we can poke at that gets signaled/released on exit
#- name: ensure that watchdog and module procs have exited
# raw: Get-Process | Where { $_.Id -in ({{ asyncresult.ansible_async_watchdog_pid }}, {{ asyncresult.module_pid }}) }
# register: proclist
#
#- name: validate no running watchdog/module processes were returned
# assert:
# that:
# - proclist.stdout.strip() == ''
#- name: ensure that module_tempdir was deleted
# raw: Test-Path {{ asyncresult.module_tempdir }}
# register: tempdircheck
#
#- name: validate tempdir response
# assert:
# that:
# - tempdircheck.stdout | search('False')
- name: async poll timeout
async_test:
sleep_delay_sec: 5
async: 3
poll: 1
register: asyncresult
ignore_errors: true
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.finished == 1
- asyncresult.changed == false
- asyncresult | failed == true
- asyncresult.msg is search('timed out')
- name: async poll graceful module failure
async_test:
fail_mode: graceful
async: 5
poll: 1
register: asyncresult
ignore_errors: true
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.finished == 1
- asyncresult.changed == true
- asyncresult | failed == true
- asyncresult.msg == 'failed gracefully'
- name: async poll exception module failure
async_test:
fail_mode: exception
async: 5
poll: 1
register: asyncresult
ignore_errors: true
- name: validate response
assert:
that:
- asyncresult.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
- asyncresult.finished == 1
- asyncresult.changed == false
- asyncresult | failed == true
# TODO: reenable after catastrophic failure behavior is cleaned up
# - asyncresult.msg is search('failing via exception')
# FUTURE: figure out why the last iteration of this test often fails on shippable
#- name: loop async success
# async_test:
# sleep_delay_sec: 3
# async: 10
# poll: 0
# with_sequence: start=1 end=4
# register: async_many
#
#- name: wait for completion
# async_status:
# jid: "{{ item }}"
# register: asyncout
# until: asyncout.finished == 1
# retries: 10
# delay: 1
# with_items: "{{ async_many.results | map(attribute='ansible_job_id') | list }}"
#
#- name: validate results
# assert:
# that:
# - item.finished == 1
# - item.slept_sec == 3
# - item.changed == true
# - item.ansible_job_id is match('\d+\.\d+')
# with_items: "{{ asyncout.results }}"
# this part of the test is flaky- Windows PIDs are reused aggressively, so this occasionally fails due to a new process with the same ID
# FUTURE: consider having the test module hook to a kernel object we can poke at that gets signaled/released on exit
#- name: ensure that all watchdog and module procs have exited
# raw: Get-Process | Where { $_.Id -in ({{ asyncout.results | join(',', attribute='ansible_async_watchdog_pid') }}, {{ asyncout.results | join(',', attribute='module_pid') }}) }
# register: proclist
#
#- name: validate no processes were returned
# assert:
# that:
# - proclist.stdout.strip() == ""
# FUTURE: test junk before/after JSON
# FUTURE: verify tempdir stays through module exec
# FUTURE: verify tempdir is deleted after module exec
# FUTURE: verify tempdir is permanent with ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES=1 (how?)
# FUTURE: verify binary modules work
# FUTURE: test status/return
# FUTURE: test status/cleanup
# FUTURE: test reboot/connection failure
# FUTURE: figure out how to ensure that processes and tempdirs are cleaned up in all exceptional cases