Cartesian Configuration

Cartesian Configuration is a highly specialized way of providing lists of key/value pairs within combination’s of various categories. The format simplifies and condenses highly complex multidimensional arrays of test parameters into a flat list. The combinatorial result can be filtered and adjusted prior to testing, with filters, dependencies, and key/value substitutions.

The parser relies on indentation, and is very sensitive to misplacement of tab and space characters. It’s highly recommended to edit/view Cartesian configuration files in an editor capable of collapsing tab characters into four space characters. Improper attention to column spacing can drastically affect output.

Keys and values

Keys and values are the most basic useful facility provided by the format. A statement in the form <key> = <value> sets <key> to <value>. Values are strings, terminated by a linefeed, with surrounding quotes completely optional (but honored). A reference of descriptions for most keys is included in section Configuration Parameter Reference. The key will become part of all lower-level (i.e. further indented) variant stanzas (see section variants). However, key precedence is evaluated in top-down or ‘last defined’ order. In other words, the last parsed key has precedence over earlier definitions.

Variants

A ‘variants’ stanza is opened by a ‘variants:’ statement. The contents of the stanza must be indented further left than the ‘variants:’ statement. Each variant stanza or block defines a single dimension of the output array. When a Cartesian configuration file contains two variants stanzas, the output will be all possible combination’s of both variant contents. Variants may be nested within other variants, effectively nesting arbitrarily complex arrays within the cells of outside arrays. For example:

variants:
    - one:
        key1 = Hello
    - two:
        key2 = World
    - three:
variants:
    - four:
        key3 = foo
    - five:
        key3 = bar
    - six:
        key1 = foo
        key2 = bar

While combining, the parser forms names for each outcome based on prepending each variant onto a list. In other words, the first variant name parsed will appear as the left most name component. These names can become quite long, and since they contain keys to distinguishing between results, a ‘short-name’ key is also used. For example, running cartesian_config.py against the content above produces the following combinations and names:

dict    1:  four.one
dict    2:  four.two
dict    3:  four.three
dict    4:  five.one
dict    5:  five.two
dict    6:  five.three
dict    7:  six.one
dict    8:  six.two
dict    9:  six.three

Variant shortnames represent the <TESTNAME> value used when results are recorded (see section Job Names and Tags. For convenience variants who’s name begins with a ‘@’ do not prepend their name to ‘short-name’, only ‘name’. This allows creating ‘shortcuts’ for specifying multiple sets or changes to key/value pairs without changing the results directory name. For example, this is often convenient for providing a collection of related pre-configured tests based on a combination of others.

Named variants

Named variants allow assigning a parseable name to a variant set. This enables an entire variant set to be used for in filters. All output combinations will inherit the named variant key, along with the specific variant name. For example:

variants var1_name:
     - one:
         key1 = Hello
     - two:
         key2 = World
     - three:
variants var2_name:
     - one:
         key3 = Hello2
     - two:
         key4 = World2
     - three:

only (var2_name=one).(var1_name=two)

Results in the following outcome when parsed with cartesian_config.py -c:

dict    1:  (var2_name=one).(var1_name=two)
      dep = []
      key2 = World         # variable key2 from variants var1_name and variant two.
      key3 = Hello2        # variable key3 from variants var2_name and variant one.
      name = (var2_name=one).(var1_name=two)
      shortname = (var2_name=one).(var1_name=two)
      var1_name = two      # variant name in same namespace as variables.
      var2_name = one      # variant name in same namespace as variables.

Named variants could also be used as normal variables.:

variants guest_os:
     - fedora:
     - ubuntu:
variants disk_interface:
     - virtio:
     - hda:

Which then results in the following:

dict    1:  (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=fedora)
    dep = []
    disk_interface = virtio
    guest_os = fedora
    name = (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=fedora)
    shortname = (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=fedora)
dict    2:  (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=ubuntu)
    dep = []
    disk_interface = virtio
    guest_os = ubuntu
    name = (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=ubuntu)
    shortname = (disk_interface=virtio).(guest_os=ubuntu)
dict    3:  (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=fedora)
    dep = []
    disk_interface = hda
    guest_os = fedora
    name = (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=fedora)
    shortname = (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=fedora)
dict    4:  (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=ubuntu)
    dep = []
    disk_interface = hda
    guest_os = ubuntu
    name = (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=ubuntu)
    shortname = (disk_interface=hda).(guest_os=ubuntu)

Dependencies

Often it is necessary to dictate relationships between variants. In this way, the order of the resulting variant sets may be influenced. This is accomplished by listing the names of all parents (in order) after the child’s variant name. However, the influence of dependencies is ‘weak’, in that any later defined, lower-level (higher indentation) definitions, and/or filters (see section filters) can remove or modify dependents. For example, if testing unattended installs, each virtual machine must be booted before, and shutdown after:

variants:
    - one:
        key1 = Hello
    - two: one
        key2 = World
    - three: one two

Results in the correct sequence of variant sets: one, two, then three.

Filters

Filter statements allow modifying the resultant set of keys based on the name of the variant set (see section variants). Filters can be used in 3 ways: Limiting the set to include only combination names matching a pattern. Limiting the set to exclude all combination names not matching a pattern. Modifying the set or contents of key/value pairs within a matching combination name.

Names are matched by pairing a variant name component with the character(s) ‘,’ meaning OR, ‘..’ meaning AND, and ‘.’ meaning IMMEDIATELY-FOLLOWED-BY. When used alone, they permit modifying the list of key/values previously defined. For example:

Linux..OpenSuse:
initrd = initrd

Modifies all variants containing ‘Linux’ followed anywhere thereafter with ‘OpenSuse’, such that the ‘initrd’ key is created or overwritten with the value ‘initrd’.

When a filter is preceded by the keyword ‘only’ or ‘no’, it limits the selection of variant combination’s This is used where a particular set of one or more variant combination’s should be considered selectively or exclusively. When given an extremely large matrix of variants, the ‘only’ keyword is convenient to limit the result set to only those matching the filter. Whereas the ‘no’ keyword could be used to remove particular conflicting key/value sets under other variant combination names. For example:

only Linux..Fedora..64

Would reduce an arbitrarily large matrix to only those variants who’s names contain Linux, Fedora, and 64 in them.

However, note that any of these filters may be used within named variants as well. In this application, they are only evaluated when that variant name is selected for inclusion (implicitly or explicitly) by a higher-order. For example:

variants:
    - one:
        key1 = Hello
variants:
    - two:
        key2 = Complicated
    - three: one two
        key3 = World
variants:
    - default:
        only three
        key2 =

only default

Results in the following outcome:

name = default.three.one
key1 = Hello
key2 =
key3 = World

Value Substitutions

Value substitution allows for selectively overriding precedence and defining part or all of a future key’s value. Using a previously defined key, it’s value may be substituted in or as a another key’s value. The syntax is exactly the same as in the bash shell, where as a key’s value is substituted in wherever that key’s name appears following a ‘$’ character. When nesting a key within other non-key-name text, the name should also be surrounded by ‘{‘, and ‘}’ characters.

Replacement is context-sensitive, thereby if a key is redefined within the same, or, higher-order block, that value will be used for future substitutions. If a key is referenced for substitution, but hasn’t yet been defined, no action is taken. In other words, the $key or ${key} string will appear literally as or within the value. Nesting of references is not supported (i.e. key substitutions within other substitutions.

For example, if one = 1, two = 2, and three = 3; then, order = ${one}${two}${three} results in order = 123. This is particularly handy for rooting an arbitrary complex directory tree within a predefined top-level directory.

An example of context-sensitivity,

key1 = default value
key2 = default value

sub = "key1: ${key1}; key2: ${key2};"

variants:
    - one:
        key1 = Hello
        sub = "key1: ${key1}; key2: ${key2};"
    - two: one
        key2 = World
        sub = "key1: ${key1}; key2: ${key2};"
    - three: one two
        sub = "key1: ${key1}; key2: ${key2};"

Results in the following,

dict    1:  one
    dep = []
    key1 = Hello
    key2 = default value
    name = one
    shortname = one
    sub = key1: Hello; key2: default value;
dict    2:  two
    dep = ['one']
    key1 = default value
    key2 = World
    name = two
    shortname = two
    sub = key1: default value; key2: World;
dict    3:  three
    dep = ['one', 'two']
    key1 = default value
    key2 = default value
    name = three
    shortname = three
    sub = key1: default value; key2: default value;

Key sub-arrays

Parameters for objects like VM’s utilize array’s of keys specific to a particular object instance. In this way, values specific to an object instance can be addressed. For example, a parameter ‘vms’ lists the VM objects names to instantiate in the current frame’s test. Values specific to one of the named instances should be prefixed to the name:

vms = vm1 second_vm another_vm
mem = 128
mem_vm1 = 512
mem_second_vm = 1024

The result would be, three virtual machine objects are create. The third one (another_vm) receives the default ‘mem’ value of 128. The first two receive specialized values based on their name.

The order in which these statements are written in a configuration file is not important; statements addressing a single object always override statements addressing all objects. Note: This is contrary to the way the Cartesian configuration file as a whole is parsed (top-down).

Heterogeneous guest variants

The ‘join’ filter combined with the ‘suffix’ operator can be utilized together in order to produce guest variants with different guest OS or other types of configuration within the same test. Adding the ‘suffix’ keyword at the end of each variant to be combined and joining all the variants in the end will produce one final variant product with all participating variant dictionaries separately suffixed and combined into one final dictionary. For instance the following definition

variants:
    - one:
        key1 = Hello
        key2 = Brave
        suffix _v1
    - two:
        key1 = Bye
        key2 = Brave
        key3 = World
        suffix _v2
    - three:
variants:
    - four:
        key4 = foo
        only one
    - five:
        key4 = bar
    - six:
        key1 = foo
        key2 = bar
        key3 = baz
        only two

join one two

will join variants one and two with suffixed parameters key1_v1 = Hello and key1_v2 = Bye in each of the following resulting dictionaries:

dict    1:  four.one.five.two
    dep = []
    key1_v1 = Hello
    key1_v2 = Bye
    key2 = Brave
    key3 = World
    key4 = bar
    name = four.one.five.two
    shortname = four.one.five.two
dict    2:  four.one.six.two
    dep = []
    key1 = foo
    key1_v1 = Hello
    key1_v2 = Bye
    key2 = bar
    key2_v1 = Brave
    key2_v2 = Brave
    key3 = baz
    key3_v2 = World
    key4 = foo
    name = four.one.six.two
    shortname = four.one.six.two
dict    3:  five.one.two
    dep = []
    key1_v1 = Hello
    key1_v2 = Bye
    key2 = Brave
    key3 = World
    key4 = bar
    name = five.one.two
    shortname = five.one.two
dict    4:  five.one.six.two
    dep = []
    key1 = foo
    key1_v1 = Hello
    key1_v2 = Bye
    key2 = bar
    key2_v1 = Brave
    key2_v2 = Brave
    key3 = baz
    key3_v2 = World
    key4 = bar
    name = five.one.six.two
    shortname = five.one.six.two

Regarding the choice of variants, using the join one two also plays the role of a filter for three which restricts the final selection to all joined one-two test variants. The join one operation is thus equivalent to an only one filter. The outcome above is additionally filtered by only filters, which restrict the initial joined Cartesian products:

dict    1:  four.one.two
dict    2:  four.one.five.two
dict    3:  four.one.six.two
dict    4:  five.one.four.two
dict    5:  five.one.two
dict    6:  five.one.six.two
dict    7:  six.one.four.two
dict    8:  six.one.five.two
dict    9:  six.one.two

of pairs <four-or-five-or-six>.one and <four-or-five-or-six>.two to variants containing four.one, six.two, or five.<one-or-two>

dict    1:  four.one.five.two
dict    2:  four.one.six.two
dict    3:  five.one.two
dict    4:  five.one.six.two

One important point to consider when using heterogeneous variants is that parameter overwriting of suffixed parameters is only possible using regex operators like ‘?=’, ‘?<=’, and ‘?+=’. Since adding a suffix will transform all parameters within the variant (or at least the ones that have more general nonsuffixed version of different value), regular overwriting will only match the general parameter and will not perform a search for the suffixed versions for performance reasons. Using the above operators with proper regular expression for the key will solve this.

Include statements

The ‘include’ statement is utilized within a Cartesian configuration file to better organize related content. When parsing, the contents of any referenced files will be evaluated as soon as the parser encounters the include statement. The order in which files are included is relevant, and will carry through any key/value substitutions (see section key_sub_arrays) as if parsing a complete, flat file.

Combinatorial outcome

The parser is available as both a python module and command-line tool for examining the parsing results in a text-based listing. To utilize it on the command-line, run the module followed by the path of the configuration file to parse. For example, common_lib/cartesian_config.py tests/libvirt/tests.cfg.

The output will be just the names of the combinatorial result set items (see short-names, section Variants). However, the ‘--contents’ parameter may be specified to examine the output in more depth. Internally, the key/value data is stored/accessed similar to a python dictionary instance. With the collection of dictionaries all being part of a python list-like object. Irrespective of the internals, running this module from the command-line is an excellent tool for both reviewing and learning about the Cartesian Configuration format.

In general, each individual combination of the defined variants provides the parameters for a single test. Testing proceeds in order, through each result, passing the set of keys and values through to the harness and test code. When examining Cartesian configuration files, it’s helpful to consider the earliest key definitions as “defaults”, then look to the end of the file for other top-level override to those values. If in doubt of where to define or set a key, placing it at the top indentation level, at the end of the file, will guarantee it is used.

Formal definition

  • A list of dictionaries is referred to as a frame.

  • The parser produces a list of dictionaries (dicts). Each dictionary contains a set of key-value pairs.

  • Each dict contains at least three keys: name, shortname and depend. The values of name and shortname are strings, and the value of depend is a list of strings.

  • The initial frame contains a single dict, whose name and shortname are empty strings, and whose depend is an empty list.

  • Parsing dict contents

    • The dict parser operates on a frame, referred to as the current frame.
    • A statement of the form <key> = <value> sets the value of <key> to <value> in all dicts of the current frame. If a dict lacks <key>, it will be created.
    • A statement of the form <key> += <value> appends <value> to the value of <key> in all dicts of the current frame. If a dict lacks <key>, it will be created.
    • A statement of the form <key> <= <value> pre-pends <value> to the value of <key> in all dicts of the current frame. If a dict lacks <key>, it will be created.
    • A statement of the form <key> ~= <value> sets the value of <key> to <value> in all dicts of the current frame unless the <key> was already defined. Otherwise the original value is preserved.
    • A statement of the form <key> ?= <value> sets the value of <key> to <value>, in all dicts of the current frame, but only if <key> exists in the dict. The operators ?+= and ?<= are also supported.
    • A statement of the form no <regex> removes from the current frame all dicts whose name field matches <regex>.
    • A statement of the form only <regex> removes from the current frame all dicts whose name field does not match <regex>.
  • Content exceptions

    • Single line exceptions have the format <regex>: <key> <operator> <value> where <operator> is any of the operators listed above (e.g. =, +=, ?<=). The statement following the regular expression <regex> will apply only to the dicts in the current frame whose name partially matches <regex> (i.e. contains a substring that matches <regex>).
    • A multi-line exception block is opened by a line of the format <regex>:. The text following this line should be indented. The statements in a multi-line exception block may be assignment statements (such as <key> = <value>) or no or only statements. Nested multi-line exceptions are allowed.
  • Parsing Variants

    • A variants block is opened by a variants: statement. The indentation level of the statement places the following set within the outer-most context-level when nested within other variant: blocks. The contents of the variants: block must be further indented.
    • A variant-name may optionally follow the variants keyword, before the : character. That name will be inherited by and decorate all block content as the key for each variant contained in it’s the block.
    • The name of the variants are specified as - <variant_name>:. Each name is pre-pended to the name field of each dict of the variant’s frame, along with a separator dot (‘.’).
    • The contents of each variant may use the format <key> <op> <value>. They may also contain further variants: statements.
    • If the name of the variant is not preceeded by a @ (i.e. - @<variant_name>:), it is pre-pended to the shortname field of each dict of the variant’s frame. In other words, if a variant’s name is preceeded by a @, it is omitted from the shortname field.
    • Each variant in a variants block inherits a copy of the frame in which the variants: statement appears. The ‘current frame’, which may be modified by the dict parser, becomes this copy.
    • The frames of the variants defined in the block are joined into a single frame. The contents of frame replace the contents of the outer containing frame (if there is one).
  • Filters

    • Filters can be used in 3 ways:

      • only <filter>
        
      • no <filter>
        
      • <filter>: starts a conditional block (see section :ref:`filters_`)
        
    • Syntax:

.. means AND
. means IMMEDIATELY-FOLLOWED-BY
  • Example:

    qcow2..Fedora.14, RHEL.6..raw..boot, smp2..qcow2..migrate..ide
    
means match all dicts whose names have:
(qcow2 AND (Fedora IMMEDIATELY-FOLLOWED-BY 14)) OR
((RHEL IMMEDIATELY-FOLLOWED-BY 6) AND raw AND boot) OR
(smp2 AND qcow2 AND migrate AND ide)
  • Note:

    'qcow2..Fedora.14' is equivalent to 'Fedora.14..qcow2'.
    
'qcow2..Fedora.14' is not equivalent to 'qcow2..14.Fedora'.
'ide, scsi' is equivalent to 'scsi, ide'.

Examples

  • A single dictionary:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    Results in the following::
    
    Dictionary #0:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name =
        shortname =
    
  • Adding a variants block:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
        - two:
        - three:
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = one
        shortname = one
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = two
        shortname = two
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = three
        shortname = three
    
  • Modifying dictionaries inside a variant:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two:
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three:
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = one
        shortname = one
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = two
        shortname = two
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = []
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = three
        shortname = three
    
  • Adding dependencies:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two: one
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three: one two
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = one
        shortname = one
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = ['one']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = two
        shortname = two
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = ['one', 'two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = three
        shortname = three
    
  • Multiple variant blocks:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two: one
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three: one two
    
    variants:
        - A:
        - B:
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.one
        shortname = A.one
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = ['A.one']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.two
        shortname = A.two
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = ['A.one', 'A.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.three
        shortname = A.three
    Dictionary #3:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.one
        shortname = B.one
    Dictionary #4:
        depend = ['B.one']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.two
        shortname = B.two
    Dictionary #5:
        depend = ['B.one', 'B.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.three
        shortname = B.three
    
  • Filters, no and only:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two: one
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three: one two
    
    variants:
        - A:
            no one
        - B:
            only one,three
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = ['A.one']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.two
        shortname = A.two
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = ['A.one', 'A.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.three
        shortname = A.three
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.one
        shortname = B.one
    Dictionary #3:
        depend = ['B.one', 'B.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.three
        shortname = B.three
    
  • Short-names:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two: one
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three: one two
    
    variants:
        - @A:
            no one
        - B:
            only one,three
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = ['A.one']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = another_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.two
        shortname = two
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = ['A.one', 'A.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = A.three
        shortname = three
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.one
        shortname = B.one
    Dictionary #3:
        depend = ['B.one', 'B.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.three
        shortname = B.three
    
  • Exceptions:

    key1 = value1
    key2 = value2
    key3 = value3
    
    variants:
        - one:
            key1 = Hello World
            key2 <= some_prefix_
        - two: one
            key2 <= another_prefix_
        - three: one two
    
    variants:
        - @A:
            no one
        - B:
            only one,three
    
    three: key4 = some_value
    
    A:
        no two
        key5 = yet_another_value
    

    Results in the following:

    Dictionary #0:
        depend = ['A.one', 'A.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        key4 = some_value
        key5 = yet_another_value
        name = A.three
        shortname = three
    Dictionary #1:
        depend = []
        key1 = Hello World
        key2 = some_prefix_value2
        key3 = value3
        name = B.one
        shortname = B.one
    Dictionary #2:
        depend = ['B.one', 'B.two']
        key1 = value1
        key2 = value2
        key3 = value3
        key4 = some_value
        name = B.three
        shortname = B.three
    

Default Configuration Files

The test configuration files are used for controlling the framework, by specifying parameters for each test. The parser produces a list of key/value sets, each set pertaining to a single test. Variants are organized into separate files based on scope and/or applicability. For example, the definitions for guest operating systems is sourced from a shared location since all virtualization tests may utilize them.

For each set/test, keys are interpreted by the test dispatching system, the pre-processor, the test module itself, then by the post-processor. Some parameters are required by specific sections and others are optional. When required, parameters are often commented with possible values and/or their effect. There are select places in the code where in-memory keys are modified, however this practice is discouraged unless there’s a very good reason.

When avocado vt-bootstrap --vt-type [type] is executed (see section Bootstrapping Avocado-VT), copies of the sample configuration files are copied for use under the backends/[type]/cfg subdirectory of the virtualization technology-specific directory. For example, backends/qemu/cfg/base.cfg.

Relative Directory or File Description
cfg/tests.cfg The first file read that includes all other files, then the master set of filters to select the actual test set to be run. Normally this file never needs to be modified unless precise control over the test-set is needed when utilizing the autotest-client (only).
cfg/tests-shared.cfg Included by tests.cfg to indirectly reference the remaining set of files to include as well as set some global parameters. It is used to allow customization and/or insertion within the set of includes. Normally this file never needs to be modified.
cfg/base.cfg Top-level file containing important parameters relating to all tests. All keys/values defined here will be inherited by every variant unless overridden. This is the first file to check for settings to change based on your environment
cfg/build.cfg Configuration specific to pre-test code compilation where required/requested. Ignored when a client is not setup for build testing.
cfg/subtests.cfg Automatically generated based on the test modules and test configuration files found when the avocado vt-bootstrap is used. Modifications are discouraged since they will be lost next time bootstrap is used.
cfg/guest-os.cfg Automatically generated when avocado vt-bootstrap is used from files within shared/cfg/guest-os/. Defines all supported guest operating system types, architectures, installation images, parameters, and disk device or image names.
cfg/guest-hw.cfg All virtual and physical hardware related parameters are organized within variant names. Within subtest variants or the top-level test set definition, hardware is specified by Including, excluding, or filtering variants and keys established in this file.
cfg/cdkeys.cfg Certain operating systems require non-public information in order to operate and or install properly. For example, installation numbers and license keys. None of the values in this file are populated automatically. This file should be edited to supply this data for use by the unattended install test.
cfg/virtio-win.cfg Paravirtualized hardware when specified for Windows testing, must have dependent drivers installed as part of the OS installation process. This file contains mandatory variants and keys for each Windows OS version, specifying the host location and installation method for each driver.