Currently we don't have anything that ensures we stabilize a Butane openshift spec every OCP release cycle. Per discussion with @dustymabe, we could add a test so we don't forget to do this.
Butane is invoked by users, not by tools, and the user also selects the spec to be used. Also, Butane isn't in the OS or the release payload, nor does it have a downstream container image. As a result, figuring out what to check isn't completely trivial.
Proposal:
- Compute the OCP version from the RHCOS version.
- Generate an
openshift Butane config with a non-experimental version matching the OCP version.
- Download the latest Butane from the mirror.
- See if the config transpiles. In Git
master, it probably never will, assuming RHCOS is branched before Butane stabilizes the new spec. But in the release branch, it eventually will, late in the OCP development cycle.
- Use a snooze to disable the test until after the expected spec stabilization date. When tests fail on
master, bump the snooze. When they fail on the branch, there's an actual problem.
This is all a bit awkward, though, since it would fail RHCOS builds solely to draw attention to an unrelated problem.
Currently we don't have anything that ensures we stabilize a Butane
openshiftspec every OCP release cycle. Per discussion with @dustymabe, we could add a test so we don't forget to do this.Butane is invoked by users, not by tools, and the user also selects the spec to be used. Also, Butane isn't in the OS or the release payload, nor does it have a downstream container image. As a result, figuring out what to check isn't completely trivial.
Proposal:
openshiftButane config with a non-experimentalversionmatching the OCP version.master, it probably never will, assuming RHCOS is branched before Butane stabilizes the new spec. But in the release branch, it eventually will, late in the OCP development cycle.master, bump the snooze. When they fail on the branch, there's an actual problem.This is all a bit awkward, though, since it would fail RHCOS builds solely to draw attention to an unrelated problem.