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test-suite

A portable test suite for software installations, using ReFrame.

Documentation

For documentation on installing, configuring, and using the EESSI test suite, see https://eessi.io/docs/test-suite/.

Development

If you want to install the EESSI test suite from a branch, you can either install the feature branch with pip, or clone the Github repository and check out the feature branch.

Install from branch with pip

To install from one of the branches of the main repository, use:

pip install git+https://github.com/EESSI/test-suite.git@branchname

Generally, you'll want to do this from a forked repository though, where someone worked on a feature. E.g.

pip install git+https://github.com/<someuser>/test-suite.git@branchname

Check out a feature branch from a fork

We'll assume you already have a local clone of the official test-suite repository, called 'origin'. In that case, executing git remote -v, you should see:

$ git remote -v
origin  [email protected]:EESSI/test-suite.git (fetch)
origin  [email protected]:EESSI/test-suite.git (push)

Option 1: Creating a branch from the PR directly

git fetch origin pull/ID/head:BRANCH_NAME

where ID is the number of the pull request, and BRANCH_NAME is the name of the local branch (you can pick this yourself).

Option 2: Creating a branch tracking the feature branch

You can add a fork to your local clone by adding a new remote. Pick a name for the remote that you find easy to recognize. E.g. to add the fork https://github.com/casparvl/test-suite and give it the (local) name casparvl, run:

git remote add casparvl [email protected]:casparvl/test-suite.git

With git remote -v you should now see the new remote:

$ git remote -v
origin    [email protected]:EESSI/test-suite.git (fetch)
origin    [email protected]:EESSI/test-suite.git (push)
casparvl  [email protected]:casparvl/test-suite.git (fetch)
casparvl  [email protected]:casparvl/test-suite.git (push)

Next, we'll fetch the branches that casparvl has in his fork:

$ git fetch casparvl

We can check the remote branches using

$ git branch --list --remotes
  casparvl/example_branch
  casparvl/main
  origin/HEAD -> origin/main
  origin/main

(remember to re-run git fetch <remote> if new branches don't show up with this command).

Finally, we can create a new local branch (-c) and checkout one of these feature branches (e.g. example_branch from the remote casparvl). Here, we've picked my_own_example_branch as the local branch name:

$ git switch -c my_own_example_branch casparvl/example_branch

While the initial setup is a bit more involved, the advantage of this approach is that it is easy to pull in updates from a feature branch using git pull.

You can also push back changes to the feature branch directly, but note that you are pushing to the Github fork of another Github user, so make sure they are ok with that before doing so!