Here's a talk suggestion for the CentOS Dojo, Developer track: Automated Infrastructure Testing with Oh-My-Vagrant and the CentOS CI (please feel free to suggest a better title) Oh-My-Vagrant (OMV) is a tool built on top of Vagrant that makes it easier and faster to deploy a cluster of virtual machines and containers than with Vagrant alone. OMV also provides facilities to run a test suite across the entire set of machines and containers in your cluster, thus giving you a way to test on a representative simulation of your production infrastructure. Lastly, this can all be run in an automated fashion on top of the CentOS CI infrastructure. I'll explain how I integrated the automatic testing, and the features that made the CentOS infra uniquely able to run OMV tests. This talk will start with OMV basics and then switch to focus on the automated testing specifics, as well as point out the aspects of the CentOS CI infrastructure that make it a model setup. This talk will include a number of live demos (with or without internet). It will also include demos involving the CentOS CI infrastructure assuming it (and the internet) are available. Speaker: James Shubin (purpleidea) James Shubin is best known for his work on Configuration Management, his Technical Blog, Oh-My-Vagrant, (a tool he started) and other related DevOps friendly projects. He writes a technical blog called: The Technical Blog of James (https://ttboj.wordpress.com/), he sometimes says things as @purpleidea on Twitter, and he currently works for Red Hat doing Systems Engineering. He studied Physiology at university and sometimes likes to talk about cardiology. Length: 1 hour including Q&A (alternate lengths available on request) * Note for clarification: In case it's not abundantly clear: I did not setup the CentOS CI infrastructure, nor am I trying to take credit for that. This is a talk about how I setup automated testing with the OMV "tests" feature, on top of it. * Note for clarification: One aspect of my talk is still blocked, but it's an open issue I expect kbsingh and bstinson will help me resolve before the event. Cheers, James @purpleidea -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 819 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-promo/attachments/20151128/b7daf311/attachment-0005.sig>