.. _yaml-to-mux-plugin:
YAML to Mux plugin
avocado_varianter_yaml_to_mux
This plugin utilizes the multiplexation
mechanism to
produce variants out of a yaml file. This section is example-based,
if you are interested in test parameters and/or multiplexation
overview, please take a look at test-parameter
.
As mentioned earlier, it inherits from the
avocado_varianter_yaml_to_mux.mux.MuxPlugin
and the only thing it implements is the argument parsing
to get some input and a custom yaml
parser (which is also capable of parsing json
).
The YAML file is perfect for this task as it's easily read by
both, humans and machines. Let's start with an example (line
numbers at the first columns are for documentation purposes only,
they are not part of the multiplex file format):
.. code-block:: yaml
1 hw:
2 cpu: !mux
3 intel:
4 cpu_CFLAGS: '-march=core2'
5 amd:
6 cpu_CFLAGS: '-march=athlon64'
7 arm:
8 cpu_CFLAGS: '-mabi=apcs-gnu -march=armv8-a -mtune=arm8'
9 disk: !mux
10 scsi:
11 disk_type: 'scsi'
12 virtio:
13 disk_type: 'virtio'
14 distro: !mux
15 fedora:
16 init: 'systemd'
17 mint:
18 init: 'systemv'
19 env: !mux
20 debug:
21 opt_CFLAGS: '-O0 -g'
22 prod:
23 opt_CFLAGS: '-O2'
.. warning:: On some architectures misbehaving versions of CYaml
Python library were reported and Avocado always fails with
unacceptable character #x0000: control characters are not allowed
. To workaround this issue you need to either update
the PyYaml to the version which works properly, or you need
to remove the python2.7/site-packages/yaml/cyaml.py
or
disable CYaml import in Avocado sources. For details check
out the Github issue <https://github.com/avocado-framework/avocado/issues/1190>
_
There are couple of key=>value
pairs (lines 4,6,8,11,13,...) and there are
named nodes which define scope (lines 1,2,3,5,7,9,...). There are also additional
flags (lines 2, 9, 14, 19) which modifies the behavior.
Nodes
They define context of the key=>value
pairs allowing us to easily identify
for what this values might be used for and also it makes possible to define
multiple values of the same keys with different scope.
Due to their purpose the YAML automatic type conversion for nodes names
is disabled, so the value of node name is always as written in the YAML
file (unlike values, where yes
converts to True
and such).
Nodes are organized in parent-child relationship and together they create
a tree. To view this structure use avocado variants --tree -m <file>
::
┗━━ run
┣━━ hw
┃ ┣━━ cpu
┃ ┃ ╠══ intel
┃ ┃ ╠══ amd
┃ ┃ ╚══ arm
┃ ┗━━ disk
┃ ╠══ scsi
┃ ╚══ virtio
┣━━ distro
┃ ╠══ fedora
┃ ╚══ mint
┗━━ env
╠══ debug
╚══ prod
You can see that hw
has 2 children cpu
and disk
. All parameters
defined in parent node are inherited to children and extended/overwritten by
their values up to the leaf nodes. The leaf nodes (intel
, amd
, arm
,
scsi
, ...) are the most important as after multiplexation they form the
parameters available in tests.
Keys and Values
Every value other than dict (4,6,8,11) is used as value of the antecedent
node.
Each node can define key/value pairs (lines 4,6,8,11,...). Additionally
each children node inherits values of it's parent and the result is called
node environment
.
Given the node structure below:
.. code-block:: yaml
devtools:
compiler: 'cc'
flags:
- '-O2'
debug: '-g'
fedora:
compiler: 'gcc'
flags:
- '-Wall'
osx:
compiler: 'clang'
flags:
- '-arch i386'
- '-arch x86_64'
And the rules defined as:
- Scalar values (Booleans, Numbers and Strings) are overwritten by walking from the root until the final node.
- Lists are appended (to the tail) whenever we walk from the root to the final node.
The environment created for the nodes fedora
and osx
are:
- Node
//devtools/fedora
environment compiler: 'gcc'
, flags: ['-O2', '-Wall']
- Node
//devtools/osx
environment compiler: 'clang'
, flags: ['-O2', '-arch i386', '-arch x86_64']
Note that due to different usage of key and values in environment we disabled
the automatic value conversion for keys while keeping it enabled for values.
This means that the key is always a string and the value can be YAML value,
eg. bool, list, custom type, or string. Please be aware that due to limitation
None type can be provided in yaml specifically as string 'null'.
Variants
In the end all leaves are gathered and turned into parameters, more specifically into
AvocadoParams
:
.. code-block:: yaml
setup:
graphic:
user: "guest"
password: "pass"
text:
user: "root"
password: "123456"
produces [graphic, text]
. In the test code you'll be able to query only
those leaves. Intermediary or root nodes are available.
The example above generates a single test execution with parameters separated
by path. But the most powerful multiplexer feature is that it can generate
multiple variants. To do that you need to tag a node whose children are
meant to be multiplexed. Effectively it returns only leaves of one child at the
time.In order to generate all possible variants multiplexer creates cartesian
product of all of these variants:
.. code-block:: yaml
cpu: !mux
intel:
amd:
arm:
fmt: !mux
qcow2:
raw:
Produces 6 variants::
/cpu/intel, /fmt/qcow2
/cpu/intel, /fmt/raw
...
/cpu/arm, /fmt/raw
The !mux evaluation is recursive so one variant can expand to multiple
ones:
.. code-block:: yaml
fmt: !mux
qcow: !mux
2:
2v3:
raw:
Results in::
/fmt/qcow2/2
/fmt/qcow2/2v3
/raw
.. _yaml-to-mux-resolution-order:
Resolution order
You can see that only leaves are part of the test parameters. It might happen
that some of these leaves contain different values of the same key. Then
you need to make sure your queries separate them by different paths. When
the path matches multiple results with different origin, an exception is raised
as it's impossible to guess which key was originally intended.
To avoid these problems it's recommended to use unique names in test parameters if
possible, to avoid the mentioned clashes. It also makes it easier to extend or mix
multiple YAML files for a test.
For multiplex YAML files that are part of a framework, contain default
configurations, or serve as plugin configurations and other advanced setups it is
possible and commonly desirable to use non-unique names. But always keep those points
in mind and provide sensible paths.
Multiplexer also supports default paths. By default it's /run/*
but it can
be overridden by --mux-path
, which accepts multiple arguments. What it does
it splits leaves by the provided paths. Each query goes one by one through
those sub-trees and first one to hit the match returns the result. It might not
solve all problems, but it can help to combine existing YAML files with your
ones:
.. code-block:: yaml
qa: # large and complex read-only file, content injected into /qa
tests:
timeout: 10
...
my_variants: !mux # your YAML file injected into /my_variants
short:
timeout: 1
long:
timeout: 1000
You want to use an existing test which uses params.get('timeout', '*')
. Then you
can use --mux-path '/my_variants/*' '/qa/*'
and it'll first look in your
variants. If no matches are found, then it would proceed to /qa/*
Keep in mind that only slices defined in mux-path are taken into account for
relative paths (the ones starting with *
)
Injecting files
You can run any test with any YAML file by::
avocado run sleeptest.py --mux-yaml file.yaml
This puts the content of file.yaml
into /run
location, which as mentioned in previous section, is the default mux-path
path. For most simple cases this is the expected behavior as your files
are available in the default path and you can safely use params.get(key)
.
When you need to put a file into a different location, for example
when you have two files and you don't want the content to be merged into
a single place becoming effectively a single blob, you can do that by
giving a name to your YAML file::
avocado run sleeptest.py --mux-yaml duration:duration.yaml
The content of duration.yaml
is injected into /run/duration
. Still when
keys from other files don't clash, you can use params.get(key)
and retrieve
from this location as it's in the default path, only extended by the
duration
intermediary node. Another benefit is you can merge or separate
multiple files by using the same or different name, or even a complex
(relative) path.
Last but not least, advanced users can inject the file into whatever location
they prefer by::
avocado run sleeptest.py --mux-yaml /my/variants/duration:duration.yaml
Simple params.get(key)
won't look in this location, which might be the
intention of the test writer. There are several ways to access the values:
- absolute location
params.get(key, '/my/variants/duration')
- absolute location with wildcards
params.get(key, '/my/*)
(or /*/duration/*
...) - set the mux-path
avocado run ... --mux-path /my/*
and use relative path
It's recommended to use the simple injection for single YAML files, relative
injection for multiple simple YAML files and the last option is for very
advanced setups when you either can't modify the YAML files and you need to
specify custom resolution order or you are specifying non-test parameters, for
example parameters for your plugin, which you need to separate from the test
parameters.
Special values
As you might have noticed, we are using mapping/dicts to define the structure
of the params. To avoid surprises we disallowed the smart typing of mapping
keys so:
.. code-block:: yaml
on: on
Won't become True: True
, but the key will be preserved as string
on: True
.
You might also want to use dict as values in your params. This is also
supported but as we can't easily distinguish whether that value is
a value or a node (structure), you have to either embed it into another
object (list, ..) or you have to clearly state the type (yaml tag
!!python/dict
). Even then the value won't be a standard dictionary,
but it'll be collections.OrderedDict
and similarly to nodes
structure all keys are preserved as strings and no smart type detection
is used. Apart from that it should behave similarly as dict, only you
get the values ordered by the order they appear in the file.
Multiple files
You can provide multiple files. In such scenario final tree is a combination
of the provided files where later nodes with the same name override values of
the preceding corresponding node. New nodes are appended as new children:
.. code-block:: yaml
file-1.yaml:
debug:
CFLAGS: '-O0 -g'
prod:
CFLAGS: '-O2'
file-2.yaml:
prod:
CFLAGS: '-Os'
fast:
CFLAGS: '-Ofast'
results in:
.. code-block:: yaml
debug:
CFLAGS: '-O0 -g'
prod:
CFLAGS: '-Os' # overridden
fast:
CFLAGS: '-Ofast' # appended
It's also possible to include existing file into another a given node in another
file. This is done by the !include : $path
directive:
.. code-block:: yaml
os:
fedora:
!include : fedora.yaml
gentoo:
!include : gentoo.yaml
.. warning:: Due to YAML nature, it's mandatory to put space between
!include
and the colon (:
) that must follow it.
The file location can be either absolute path or relative path to the YAML
file where the !include
is called (even when it's nested).
Whole file is merged into the node where it's defined.
Advanced YAML tags
There are additional features related to YAML files. Most of them require values
separated by ":"
. Again, in all such cases it's mandatory to add a white space
(" "
) between the tag and the ":"
, otherwise ":"
is part of the tag
name and the parsing fails.
!include
^^^^^^^^
Includes other file and injects it into the node it's specified in:
.. code-block:: yaml
my_other_file:
!include : other.yaml
The content of /my_other_file
would be parsed from the other.yaml
. It's
the hardcoded equivalent of the -m $using:$path
.
Relative paths start from the original file's directory.
!using
^^^^^^
Prepends path to the node it's defined in:
.. code-block:: yaml
!using : /foo
bar:
!using : baz
bar
is put into baz
becoming /baz/bar
and everything is put into
/foo
. So the final path of bar
is /foo/baz/bar
.
!remove_node
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Removes node if it existed during the merge. It can be used to extend
incompatible YAML files:
.. code-block:: yaml
os:
fedora:
windows:
3.11:
95:
os:
!remove_node : windows
windows:
win3.11:
win95:
Removes the windows
node from structure. It's different from filter-out
as it really removes the node (and all children) from the tree and
it can be replaced by you new structure as shown in the example. It removes
windows
with all children and then replaces this structure with slightly
modified version.
As !remove_node
is processed during merge, when you reverse the order,
windows is not removed and you end-up with /windows/{win3.11,win95,3.11,95}
nodes.
!remove_value
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It's similar to !remove_node
_ only with values.
!mux
^^^^
Children of this node will be multiplexed. This means that in first variant
it'll return leaves of the first child, in second the leaves of the second
child, etc. Example is in section Variants
_
!filter-only
Defines internal filters. They are inherited by children and evaluated
during multiplexation. It allows one to specify the only compatible branch
of the tree with the current variant, for example::
cpu:
arm:
!filter-only : /disk/virtio
disk:
virtio:
scsi:
will skip the [arm, scsi]
variant and result only in [arm, virtio]
Note: It's possible to use !filter-only
multiple times with the same
parent and all allowed variants will be included (unless they are
filtered-out by !filter-out
)
Note2: The evaluation order is 1. filter-out, 2. filter-only. This means when
you booth filter-out and filter-only a branch it won't take part in the
multiplexed variants.
!filter-out
Similarly to !filter-only
_ only it skips the specified branches and leaves
the remaining ones. (in the same example the use of
!filter-out : /disk/scsi
results in the same behavior). The difference
is when a new disk type is introduced, !filter-only
still allows just
the specified variants, while !filter-out
only removes the specified
ones.
As for the speed optimization, currently Avocado is strongly optimized
towards fast !filter-out
so it's highly recommended using them
rather than !filter-only
, which takes significantly longer to
process.
Complete example
Let's take a second look at the first example::
1 hw:
2 cpu: !mux
3 intel:
4 cpu_CFLAGS: '-march=core2'
5 amd:
6 cpu_CFLAGS: '-march=athlon64'
7 arm:
8 cpu_CFLAGS: '-mabi=apcs-gnu -march=armv8-a -mtune=arm8'
9 disk: !mux
10 scsi:
11 disk_type: 'scsi'
12 virtio:
13 disk_type: 'virtio'
14 distro: !mux
15 fedora:
16 init: 'systemd'
17 mint:
18 init: 'systemv'
19 env: !mux
20 debug:
21 opt_CFLAGS: '-O0 -g'
22 prod:
23 opt_CFLAGS: '-O2'
After filters are applied (simply removes non-matching variants), leaves
are gathered and all variants are generated::
$ avocado variants -m selftests/.data/mux-environment.yaml
Variants generated:
Variant 1: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 2: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 3: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 4: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Variant 5: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 6: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 7: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 8: /hw/cpu/intel, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Variant 9: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 10: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 11: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 12: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Variant 13: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 14: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 15: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 16: /hw/cpu/amd, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Variant 17: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 18: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 19: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 20: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/scsi, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Variant 21: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/debug
Variant 22: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/fedora, /env/prod
Variant 23: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/debug
Variant 24: /hw/cpu/arm, /hw/disk/virtio, /distro/mint, /env/prod
Where the first variant contains::
/hw/cpu/intel/ => cpu_CFLAGS: -march=core2
/hw/disk/ => disk_type: scsi
/distro/fedora/ => init: systemd
/env/debug/ => opt_CFLAGS: -O0 -g
The second one::
/hw/cpu/intel/ => cpu_CFLAGS: -march=core2
/hw/disk/ => disk_type: scsi
/distro/fedora/ => init: systemd
/env/prod/ => opt_CFLAGS: -O2
From this example you can see that querying for /env/debug
works only in
the first variant, but returns nothing in the second variant. Keep this in mind
and when you use the !mux
flag always query for the pre-mux path,
/env/*
in this example.
Injecting values
Beyond the values injected by YAML files specified it's also possible
inject values directly from command line to the final multiplex tree.
It's done by the argument --mux-inject
. The format of expected
value is [path:]key:node_value
.
.. warning:: When no path is specified to --mux-inject
the parameter
is added under tree root /
. For example: running avocado passing
--mux-inject my_key:my_value
the parameter can be accessed calling
self.params.get('my_key')
. If the test writer wants to put the injected
value in any other path location, like extending the /run
path, it needs
to be informed on avocado run call. For example: --mux-inject /run/:my_key:my_value
makes possible to access the parameters
calling self.params.get('my_key', '/run')
A test that gets parameters without a defined path, such as
examples/tests/multiplextest.py
::
os_type = self.params.get('os_type', default='linux')
Running it::
$ avocado --show=test run -- examples/tests/multiplextest.py | grep os_type
PARAMS (key=os_type, path=*, default=linux) => 'linux'
Now, injecting a value, by default will put it in /, which is not in the
default list of paths searched for::
$ avocado --show=test run --mux-inject os_type:myos -- examples/tests/multiplextest.py | grep os_type
PARAMS (key=os_type, path=*, default=linux) => 'linux'
A path that is searched for by default is /run. To set the value to that path use::
$ avocado --show=test run --mux-inject /run:os_type:myos -- examples/tests/multiplextest.py | grep os_type
PARAMS (key=os_type, path=*, default=linux) => 'myos'
Or, add the / to the list of paths searched for by default::
$ avocado --show=test run --mux-inject os_type:myos --mux-path / -- examples/tests/multiplextest.py | grep os_type
PARAMS (key=os_type, path=*, default=linux) => 'myos'
.. warning:: By default, the values are parsed for the respective data types.
When not possible, it falls back to string. If you want to maintain some
value as string, enclose within quotes, properly escaped, and eclose that
again in quotes.
For example: a value of 1
is treated as integer, a value of 1,2
is
treated as list, a value of abc
is treated as string, a value of
1,2,5-10
is treated as list of integers as 1,2,-5
. If you want to
maintain this as string, provide the value as "\"1,2,5-10\""
.. _mutliplexer:
Multiplexer
avocado_varianter_yaml_to_mux.mux
Multiplexer
or simply Mux
is an abstract concept, which was
the basic idea behind the tree-like params structure with the support
to produce all possible variants. There is a core implementation of
basic building blocks that can be used when creating a custom plugin.
There is a demonstration version of plugin using this concept in
avocado_varianter_yaml_to_mux
which adds a parser and then
uses this multiplexer concept to define an Avocado plugin to produce
variants from yaml
(or json
) files.
Multiplexer concept
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
As mentioned earlier, this is an in-core implementation of building
blocks intended for writing varianter-plugins
based on a tree
with Multiplex domains
_ defined. The available blocks are:
MuxTree
_ - Object which represents a part of the tree and handles
the multiplexation, which means producing all possible variants
from a tree-like object.MuxPlugin
_ - Base class to build varianter-plugins
MuxTreeNode
- Inherits from tree-node
and adds the support for
control flags (MuxTreeNode.ctrl
) and multiplex domains
(MuxTreeNode.multiplex
).
And some support classes and methods eg. for filtering and so on.
Multiplex domains
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A default avocado-params
tree with variables could look like this::
Multiplex tree representation:
┣━━ paths
┃ → tmp: /var/tmp
┃ → qemu: /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm
┗━━ environ
→ debug: False
The multiplexer wants to produce similar structure, but also to be able
to define not just one variant, but to define all possible combinations
and then report the slices as variants. We use the term
Multiplex domains
_ to define that children of this node are not just
different paths, but they are different values and we only want one at
a time. In the representation we use double-line to visibly distinguish
between normal relation and multiplexed relation. Let's modify our
example a bit::
Multiplex tree representation:
┣━━ paths
┃ → tmp: /var/tmp
┃ → qemu: /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm
┗━━ environ
╠══ production
║ → debug: False
╚══ debug
→ debug: True
The difference is that environ
is now a multiplex
node and it's
children will be yielded one at a time producing two variants::
Variant 1:
┣━━ paths
┃ → tmp: /var/tmp
┃ → qemu: /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm
┗━━ environ
┗━━ production
→ debug: False
Variant 2:
┣━━ paths
┃ → tmp: /var/tmp
┃ → qemu: /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm
┗━━ environ
┗━━ debug
→ debug: False
Note that the multiplex
is only about direct children, therefore
the number of leaves in variants might differ::
Multiplex tree representation:
┣━━ paths
┃ → tmp: /var/tmp
┃ → qemu: /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm
┗━━ environ
╠══ production
║ → debug: False
╚══ debug
┣━━ system
┃ → debug: False
┗━━ program
→ debug: True
Produces one variant with /paths
and /environ/production
and
other variant with /paths
, /environ/debug/system
and
/environ/debug/program
.
As mentioned earlier the power is not in producing one variant, but
in defining huge scenarios with all possible variants. By using
tree-structure with multiplex domains you can avoid most of the
ugly filters you might know from Jenkins sparse matrix jobs.
For comparison let's have a look at the same example in Avocado::
Multiplex tree representation:
┗━━ os
┣━━ distro
┃ ┗━━ redhat
┃ ╠══ fedora
┃ ║ ┣━━ version
┃ ║ ┃ ╠══ 20
┃ ║ ┃ ╚══ 21
┃ ║ ┗━━ flavor
┃ ║ ╠══ workstation
┃ ║ ╚══ cloud
┃ ╚══ rhel
┃ ╠══ 5
┃ ╚══ 6
┗━━ arch
╠══ i386
╚══ x86_64
Which produces::
Variant 1: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/20, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/workstation, /os/arch/i386
Variant 2: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/20, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/workstation, /os/arch/x86_64
Variant 3: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/20, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/cloud, /os/arch/i386
Variant 4: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/20, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/cloud, /os/arch/x86_64
Variant 5: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/21, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/workstation, /os/arch/i386
Variant 6: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/21, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/workstation, /os/arch/x86_64
Variant 7: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/21, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/cloud, /os/arch/i386
Variant 8: /os/distro/redhat/fedora/version/21, /os/distro/redhat/fedora/flavor/cloud, /os/arch/x86_64
Variant 9: /os/distro/redhat/rhel/5, /os/arch/i386
Variant 10: /os/distro/redhat/rhel/5, /os/arch/x86_64
Variant 11: /os/distro/redhat/rhel/6, /os/arch/i386
Variant 12: /os/distro/redhat/rhel/6, /os/arch/x86_64
Versus Jenkins sparse matrix::
os_version = fedora20 fedora21 rhel5 rhel6
os_flavor = none workstation cloud
arch = i386 x86_64
filter = ((os_version == "rhel5").implies(os_flavor == "none") &&
(os_version == "rhel6").implies(os_flavor == "none")) &&
!(os_version == "fedora20" && os_flavor == "none") &&
!(os_version == "fedora21" && os_flavor == "none")
Which is still relatively simple example, but it grows dramatically with
inner-dependencies.
MuxPlugin
^^^^^^^^^
avocado_varianter_yaml_to_mux.mux.MuxPlugin
Defines the full interface required by
avocado.core.plugin_interfaces.Varianter
. The plugin writer
should inherit from this MuxPlugin
, then from the Varianter
and call the::
self.initialize_mux(root, paths, debug)
Where:
- root - is the root of your params tree (compound of
tree-node
-like
nodes) - paths - is the
parameter-paths
to be used in test with all variants - debug - whether to use debug mode (requires the passed tree to be
compound of
TreeNodeDebug
-like nodes which stores the origin
of the variant/value/environment as the value for listing purposes
and is NOT intended for test execution.
This method must be called before the varianter
's second
stage. The MuxPlugin
_'s code will take care of the rest.
MuxTree
^^^^^^^
This is the core feature where the hard work happens. It walks the tree
and remembers all leaf nodes or uses list of MuxTrees
when another
multiplex domain is reached while searching for a leaf.
When it's asked to report variants, it combines one variant of each
remembered item (leaf node always stays the same, but MuxTree
circles
through it's values) which recursively produces all possible variants
of different multiplex domains
_.