- all RAN code, CI code, configuration files, dockerfiles, in CSSL v1.0
- all deployment code (openshift, charts, ancillary files like shell
scripts), in MIT
- documentation in CC-BY-4.0
- exceptions might apply and are listed in NOTICE
- there is a new LICENSES folder with all licenses
- CONTRIBUTIONS.md has been updated accordingly
For automated changes based on OAI PL v1.1:
perl -i~ -0pe 's/\/\*.*Licensed to the OpenAirInterface.*openairinterface.org\n#?/\/*\n * SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-CSSL-1.0\n/s' **/*.{c,h,cpp}
perl -i~ -0pe 's/\/\*.*Licensed to the OpenAirInterface.*openairinterface.org\n#?/\/*\n * SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-CSSL-1.0\n/s' **/*.ts
perl -i~ -0pe 's/<!--.*Licensed to the OpenAirInterface.*openairinterface.org\n.*-->/<!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-CSSL-1.0 -->/s' **/*.xml
The rest (cmake, files with missing license, cmake) manually.
Instead of making the function a class member, make it an instance
member because (1) it is more aligned with other functions, notably,
run(), and (2) especially for RemoteCmd() it can be faster, as
successive exec_script() calls do not require a new SSH connection.
Added ./run_locally.sh script. The script takes one argument being the testcase
that one wants to run. The testcase is run locally. This means that some testcases that
utilize hardware resources will not run. However most if not all rfsimulator testcases
should run as in CI.
To this end, the CI python scripting framework was updated, adding --local flag which changes
the script behavior as follows:
- overrides <node> and <srv_node> XML elements to 'localhost' so all commands are executed locally
- Avoid running image pull, image cleanup and workspace creation steps of the scripts:
user is responsible for that
pyflakes warns about various errors, addressed here. For cls_cluster.py,
remove (unknown) sys.exit and replace through Exception, as sys.exit()
has the unwanted effect that the CI script would stop. Instead, raise
an Exception that would show the problem in the HTML, and ensures that
the script runs until the end.
These are the warnings flagged by pyflakes.
cls_cluster.py:297:4: undefined name 'sys'
cls_containerize.py:39:1: 'subprocess' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:41:1: 'threading' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:43:1: 'multiprocessing.Process' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:43:1: 'multiprocessing.Lock' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:43:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:49:1: 'cls_cluster as OC' imported but unused
cls_containerize.py:50:1: redefinition of unused 'cls_cmd' from line 42
cls_module.py:28:1: 'os' imported but unused
cls_module.py:29:1: 'sys' imported but unused
cls_module.py:34:1: 'subprocess' imported but unused
cls_module.py:35:1: 'datetime.datetime' imported but unused
cls_module.py:211:11: undefined name 'sshconnection'
cls_oaicitest.py:37:1: 'pexpect' imported but unused
cls_oaicitest.py:47:1: 'cls_cluster as OC' imported but unused
cls_oaicitest.py:54:1: 'matplotlib.pyplot as plt' imported but unused
cls_oaicitest.py:55:1: 'numpy as np' imported but unused
cls_oai_html.py:34:1: 'sys' imported but unused
cls_oai_html.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.Process' imported but unused
cls_oai_html.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.Lock' imported but unused
cls_oai_html.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
cls_physim.py:37:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
cls_static_code_analysis.py:39:1: 'time' imported but unused
cls_static_code_analysis.py:40:1: 'multiprocessing.Process' imported but unused
cls_static_code_analysis.py:40:1: 'multiprocessing.Lock' imported but unused
cls_static_code_analysis.py:40:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
epc.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.Process' imported but unused
epc.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.Lock' imported but unused
epc.py:41:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
main.py:60:1: 'pexpect' imported but unused
main.py:66:1: 'datetime' imported but unused
main.py:68:1: redefinition of unused 'subprocess' from line 63
main.py:70:1: 'multiprocessing.Process' imported but unused
main.py:70:1: 'multiprocessing.Lock' imported but unused
main.py:70:1: 'multiprocessing.SimpleQueue' imported but unused
provideUniqueImageTag.py:2:1: 'os' imported but unused
A lot of CI code is python mixed with bash, e.g.,
ssh = getConnection(host)
ssh.run('ls')
ssh.run('echo')
At least some of this CI code would benefit if it was written in a
simple bash script, returning error codes and potentially other
information either through stdout/stderr or files, to the calling Python
code:
ssh = runScript(host, script)
# script does: ls; echo
This commit introduces the possibility to run entire scripts. The idea
is that the executor has a script (on localhost), which is either
executed locally or on a remote host. For the remote host, the script is
not copied but piped into a remotely executed bash. In both cases,
output is either returned like the Cmd.run() function with returncode
and mixed stdout/stderr, or optionally redirected into a file on the
(remote) host, which can be treated further by the Python code in later
steps.
The next commit will use "echo -e". The problem with that is that bash
and sh differ:
- in bash: this results in "a\nb" (a+newline+b)
- in sh: this results in -e a\nb (-e a+newline+b)
The problem is that by default, commands are executed through sh, which
nobody expects. Change to bash, which is likely more aligned with what
people want to use.
Add some basic unit tests to verify that Iperf/Ping work. Harmonize the
logging by only print in the "main" iperf/ping function, to avoid that
if we test with multiple UEs, the output intermixes. Also, do one common
mkdir before starting multiple pings/iperfs. Finally, harmonize the
paths so that Iperf and Ping log their files in the same place.
- Return code says if copying succeeded
- Improve handling of the recursive code paths, which copy files or
directories recursively into another directory
- both for RemoteCmd/LocalCmd