On jenkins, place all logs and manage docker volumes in the workspace instead
of a /tmp/* dir. Use $WORKSPACE/logs as docker volume base to begin with, thus
there needs to be no copy from /tmp to $WORKSPACE/logs.
On non-jenkins runs, place all in a /tmp/* dir still, but also skip copying of
the logs: just have a /tmp/logs symlink to the last tmpdir.
Change-Id: I8cf6014725ae8ba602be5f3ec31dfb8e49ff993e
To remove code dup and prepare a change to where logs are written, add
collect_logs() to jenkins_common.sh and call that from each jenkins.sh after
the tests are done.
The 'rm -rf' is already done before a test starts. No need to do that again
after each test.
Change-Id: I5d8472ec36b07c828685b1bd7718e31392d168a3
Te make scripts will generate docker images like
"$username/foobar-test". When depending on an previous image,
the $username must match or the build will about with image not found.
Change-Id: Ied42c3e1de9a2ffaca22ba4cd02e6a398e48e97d
Ideally we would want to launch a group of containers with their own
private network segment and use the same static IP addresses in those
isolated networks.
The stupidity of docker is requiring unique IPv4 addresses even on
isolated (!) networks. This means we have to manually give each of our
test setups a different subnet, and then we can at least run one
instance that test in parallel to at most one instance of each other
test.
If this weird reestriction about unique IPv4 addresses didn't exist,
we could start any number of test runs in parallel.