To scale our deployment of Android and iPhone test devices we need an easier and faster way to deploy, manage, and monitor RPis and their attached devices.
This design presumes that the jupmhost management outlined in DESIGN is complete. The RPis will be added to the k3s cluster managed by the jumphost.
This image is the image that runs swarming on the RPi. It contains most of the same machinery that the current RPi bots contain.
/etc/swarming_config/oauth2_access_token_config.json
tells swarming where to get auth tokens./usr/bin/bot_config
is our Go application that handles downloading the swarming_bot.zip
file from swarming and running it as a sub-process.For RPis that are running under this system their names begin with “skia-rpi2”, which causes them to use the skia_mobile2.py
script. This is a very simple script that just bounces all swarming bot_config requests back to the Golang bot_config as HTTP requests. That allows bot_config to be a long running process that can emit logs and also report metrics.
bot_config Swarming Server python swarming_bot.zip + + + | | | | | | +-------------------->+ | | Download | | | swarming_bot.zip | | | | | | | | +----------------------------------------------->+ | | Launch() | | | | | | | | | | +<-----------------------------------------------+ | | HTTP Requests | | | /get_state | | | /get_dimensions | | | /get_settings | | | | | | |
The image runs as root and in privileged mode so that it can run adb.
The rpi-swarming-client image is run as a daemonset so that each and every RPi runs just one copy of the image. See the YAML file for the selectors that also stop it from running on the jumphost.
There are a couple files in the image that should be highlighted:
sudo
The swarming client is very opinionated and believes it should be able to reboot the machine any time it wants. This is the only time the swarming client attempts to use or needs to use sudo. A typical swarming install on a normal machine adds a sudo reboot
to the sudoers file to accomplish this. Since we are running in a container this is a useless feature and we take that away swarming by adding a sudo
script on the PATH, which is just a simple bash script that kill -9
s any process that runs the script. Since the image runs as root a user that kubectl exec
s into a running image doesn't need to use sudo.
qemu-arm-static
This file allows an arm7 image to be run on x86 machine, allowing the image build process to be run on an x86 desktop and the resulting image to also be run on an x86 desktop as well as an arm7 device. Note that anything to do with running adb will probably not work on an x86 machine.