As of MAAS 3.0 Beta1, this page has been deprecated and the content moved to the CLI sections of other, relevant MAAS documents. The contents may or may not diverge from the latest information over time.
With MAAS, you can easily write, upload and execute your hardware testing scripts and see the results.
Quick questions you may have:
- How do I upload and manage test scripts?
- How do I use tags to help with test scripts?
- How do I view test results?
- What metadata fields are available to me for test scripts?
Script management
To upload a hardware testing script to MAAS, enter the following:
maas $PROFILE node-scripts create name=$SCRIPT_NAME name> \
script=$PATH_TO_SCRIPT type=testing
Changing the type to commissioning adds the test script to the commissioning process.
You can list all uploaded scripts with the following command:
maas $PROFILE node-scripts read type=testing filters=$TAG
The optional filters argument lets you search for tags assigned to a script, such as using TAG=cpu
with the above example.
A script’s metadata, and even the script itself, can be updated from the command line:
maas $PROFILE node-script update \
$SCRIPT_NAME script=$PATH_TO_SCRIPT comment=$COMMENT
The JSON formatted output to the above command will include ‘history’ dictionary entries, detailing script modification times and associated comments:
"history": [
{
"id": 40,
"created": "Tue, 12 Sep 2017 12:12:08 -0000",
"comment": "Updated version"
},
{
"id": 34,
"created": "Fri, 08 Sep 2017 17:07:46 -0000",
"comment": null
}
]
MAAS keeps a history of all uploaded script versions, allowing you to easily revert to a previous version using the id
of the version you wish to revert to:
maas $PROFILE node-script revert $SCRIPT_NAME to=$VERSION_ID
Warning: The history for later modifications will be lost when reverting to an earlier version of the script.
To download a script, enter the following:
maas $PROFILE node-script download $SCRIPT_NAME > $LOCAL_FILENAME
To delete a script, use delete
:
maas $PROFILE node-script delete $SCRIPT_NAME
Tags
As with general tag management, tags make scripts easier to manage; grouping scripts together for commissioning and testing, for example:
maas $PROFILE node-script add-tag $SCRIPT_NAME tag=$TAG
maas $PROFILE node-script remove-tag $SCRIPT_NAME tag=$TAG
MAAS runs all commissioning scripts by default. However, you can select which custom scripts to run during commissioning by name or tag:
maas $PROFILE machine commission \
commissioning_scripts=$SCRIPT_NAME,$SCRIPT_TAG
You can also select which testing scripts to run by name or tag:
maas $PROFILE machine commission \
testing_scripts=$SCRIPT_NAME,$SCRIPT_TAG
Any testing scripts tagged with commissioning will also run during commissioning.
Results
The command line allows you to not only view the current script’s progress but also retrieve the verbatim output from any previous runs too.
If you only want to see the latest or currently-running result, you can use current-commissioning
, current-testing
, or current-installation
instead of an id:
maas $PROFILE node-script-result read $SYSTEM_ID $RESULTS
You can also limit which results are returned by type (commissioning, testing, or installation), script name, or script run:
maas $PROFILE node-script-results read \
$SYSTEM_ID type=$SCRIPT_TYPE filters=$SCRIPT_NAME,$TAGS
You can also suppress failed results, which is useful if you want to ignore a known failure:
maas $PROFILE node-script-results update \
$SYSTEM_ID type=$SCRIPT_TYPE filters=$SCRIPT_NAME,$TAGS suppressed=$SUPPRESSED
where $SUPPRESSED
is either True
or False
. The JSON formatted output to the above command will include ‘results’ dictionary with an entry for suppressed
:
"results": [
{
"id": 21,
"created": "Tue, 02 Apr 2019 17:00:36 -0000",
"updated": "Tue, 02 Apr 2019 20:56:41 -0000",
"name": "smartctl-validate",
"status": 5,
"status_name": "Aborted",
"exit_status": null,
"started": "Tue, 02 Apr 2019 20:56:41 -0000",
"ended": "Tue, 02 Apr 2019 20:56:41 -0000",
"runtime": "0:00:00",
"starttime": 1554238601.765214,
"endtime": 1554238601.765214,
"estimated_runtime": "0:00:00",
"parameters": {
"storage": {
"argument_format": "{path}",
"type": "storage",
"value": {
"id_path": "/dev/vda",
"model": "",
"name": "sda",
"physical_blockdevice_id": 1,
"serial": ""
}
}
},
"script_id": 1,
"script_revision_id": null,
"suppressed": true
}
]
Finally, results can be downloaded, either to stdout, stderr, as combined output or as a tar.xz:
maas $PROFILE node-script-result download $SYSTEM_ID $RUN_ID output=all \
filetype=tar.xz > $LOCAL_FILENAME
$RUN_ID is labelled id
in the verbose result output.