SosreportUpdates

Revision 57 as of 2020-06-23 13:51:57

Clear message

This document describes the policy for updating sosreport package in a stable supported distro, including LTS. It is also the aim of this document to provide an example for any upstream project that wants to push updates to an Ubuntu stable release.

Sosreport is an extensible, portable, support data collection tool primarily aimed at Linux distributions and other UNIX-like operating systems. This tool is mission critical for Canonical to support UA (Ubuntu Advantage) customer, partners and community. Sosreport is also widely used by other third party vendors.

Therefore, in addition to bug fixes, new features are allowed in an update as long as the conditions outlined below are met.

Process

This is the mandatory process that the proposed packages have to pass. The following requirements must be met:

  • Sosreport needs to be tested
    • By a reasonable amount of Canonical Support team members with positive and detailed feedbacks (documented in an LP bug)
    • On physical hardware, container and virtual machine.
    • Under various UA customer similar environment and context: Cloud, Landscape, MAAS, juju, ....
    • On as much architecture as available to the testers.
    • For commonly used parameters : -a, --all-logs, --upload, --batch, ...
  • For each test above
    • Make sure sosreport generates an archive under /tmp in the form of "sosreport-<HOSTNAME>-2020-06-19-ogwtrgb.tar.xz" with its accompanied md5 checksum "sosreport-<HOSTNAME>-2020-06-19-ogwtrgb.tar.xz.md5" (The naming pattern may vary depending on the options and versions used)

    • Extract the archive
      • Validate its content and make sure it is sane and accurate.
      • Validate that sosreport obfuscates sensible information for plugins instructed to do so
        • (e.g. landscape plugin: should obfuscate password(s) and secret-token from config file and any plugins using do_file_sub() function)
      • Check for 0 size file(s) (and use common sense if legit or not)
      • Look under "sos_reports" for full report.
      • Look under "sos_logs" for WARN and/or ERROR
        • $ grep -v "INFO:" sos_logs/sos.log
        • Look under "sos_logs" for error files (e.g. sos_logs/systemd-plugin-errors.txt).
  • Run "simple.sh": An upstream port of the Travis tests to bash. Generating various type of sosreport collections (which is part of the autopkgtest (d/test/simple.sh)) now.

Requesting the SRU

The SRU should be requested as usual (StableReleaseUpdates) with the additional note about having the above steps being completed.