此内容没有您所选择的语言版本。

Chapter 6. Cleaning Tempest Resources


After running tempest, there will be files, users and tenants created in the testing process that need to be deleted. The ability to self-clean is one of the design principles of tempest.

6.1. Performing a Clean Up

First you must initialize the saved state. This creates the file saved_state.json, which prevents the cleanup from deleting objects that need to be kept. Typically you would run cleanup with --init-saved-state prior to a tempest run. If this is not the case, saved_state.json must be edited to remove objects you want cleanup to delete.

$ tempest cleanup --init-saved-state

Run the cleanup:

$ tempest cleanup

6.2. Performing a Dry Run

A dry run lists the files that would be deleted by a cleanup, but does not delete any files. The files are listed in the dry_run.json file.

$ tempest cleanup --dry-run

6.3. Deleting Tempest Objects

Delete users and tenants created by tempest:

$ tempest cleanup --delete-tempest-conf-objects
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

学习

尝试、购买和销售

社区

关于红帽文档

通过我们的产品和服务,以及可以信赖的内容,帮助红帽用户创新并实现他们的目标。

让开源更具包容性

红帽致力于替换我们的代码、文档和 Web 属性中存在问题的语言。欲了解更多详情,请参阅红帽博客.

關於紅帽

我们提供强化的解决方案,使企业能够更轻松地跨平台和环境(从核心数据中心到网络边缘)工作。

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.