doc/source | ||
elastic_recheck | ||
queries | ||
web | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitreview | ||
.testr.conf | ||
babel.cfg | ||
CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
elasticRecheck.conf.sample | ||
LICENSE | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
README.rst | ||
recheckwatchbot.yaml | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
test-requirements.txt | ||
tox.ini |
elastic-recheck
"Classify tempest-devstack failures using ElasticSearch"
- Open Source Software: Apache license
- Documentation: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/elastic-recheck
Idea
When a tempest job failure is detected, by monitoring gerrit (using gerritlib), a collection of logstash queries will be run on the failed job to detect what the bug was.
Eventually this can be tied into the rechecker tool and launchpad
queries/
All queries are stored in separate yaml files in a queries directory
at the top of the elastic_recheck code base. The format of these files
is ######.yaml (where ###### is the bug number), the yaml should have a
query
keyword which is the query text for elastic
search.
Guidelines for good queries
- After a bug is resolved and has no more hits in elasticsearch, we should flag it with a resolved_at keyword. This will let us keep some memory of past bugs, and see if they come back. (Note: this is a forward looking statement, sorting out resolved_at will come in the future)
- Queries should get as close as possible to fingerprinting the root cause
- Queries should not return any hits for successful jobs, this is a sign the query isn't specific enough
In order to support rapidly added queries, it's considered socially acceptable to +A changes that only add 1 new bug query, and to even self approve those changes by core reviewers.
Adding Bug Signatures
Most transient bugs seen in gate are not bugs in tempest associated with a specific tempest test failure, but rather some sort of issue further down the stack that can cause many tempest tests to fail.
- Given a transient bug that is seen during the gate, go through the logs (logs.openstack.org) and try to find a log that is associated with the failure. The closer to the root cause the better.
- Go to logstash.openstack.org and create an elastic search query to find the log message from step 1. To see the possible fields to search on click on an entry. Lucene query syntax is available at http://lucene.apache.org/core/4_0_0/queryparser/org/apache/lucene/queryparser/classic/package-summary.html#package_description
- Add a comment to the bug with the query you identified and a link to the logstash url for that query search.
- Add the query to
elastic-recheck/queries/BUGNUMBER.yaml
and push the patch up for review. https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/elastic-recheck/tree/queries
Future Work
- Move config files into a separate directory
- Make unit tests robust
- Add debug mode flag
- Expand gating testing
- Cleanup and document code better
- Sort out resolved_at stamping to remove active bugs
- Move away from polling ElasticSearch to discover if its ready or not
- Add nightly job to propose a patch to remove bug queries that return no hits -- Bug hasn't been seen in 2 weeks and must be closed
- implement resolved_at in loader
Main Dependencies
- gerritlib
- pyelasticsearch