| name | pipeline-test-triage |
| description | Triage test failures in an Azure DevOps pipeline run for Fluid Framework. Use when the user shares an ADO build/pipeline URL or build ID and wants failures analyzed, when they ask "why did this pipeline fail", "summarize the test failures", "is this test flaky or a real bug", "compare these runs", or wants bugs filed for genuine failures. Covers the Real Service End to End Tests pipeline as the worked example but applies to any FF test pipeline.
|
Pipeline Test Triage
Analyze test failures for a given ADO pipeline run, classify them (service flakiness vs.
infra/harness vs. deterministic product/test bug), compare against adjacent runs to tell
flaky from deterministic, and optionally file well-formed ADO bugs for the real ones.
Org: fluidframework · Project: internal (work items and pipelines) · Repo on GitHub: microsoft/FluidFramework.
Prefer the cheapest source that answers the question
Reach for the smallest, most-structured source first, and escalate only when it can't answer the
question. A single Real Service E2E run has ~660 logs and tens of MB, almost all of which are
passing "Container" logs — so bulk-downloading logs works but is the slow, expensive option;
treat it as a last resort, not a first move.
| Tier | Source | Gets you | Auth | Use when |
|---|
| 1 (primary) | Playwright on the Tests tab | Grouped failures + error/stack + per-test run history | Signed-in browser (one-time) | Almost always — start here |
| 2 (fallback) | ADO MCP (ado-pipelines_*) | Failing leg names + targeted report-log parsing | Pre-authed MCP (zero setup) | No browser session, or need raw log context (npm exit codes, infra) |
| 3 (optional) | Test Results / Timeline REST | Failed-tests-only + per-test history + exact failing log.id + retried-attempt failures | MCP tool if exposed; else az token (verified working) | Bulk multi-run history, pinpoint the failing log, or surface failures hidden in retried attempts |
| 4 (last resort) | Bulk log download (MCP build_log get_content) | Everything, unstructured | Pre-authed MCP | Nothing above resolved it — targeted fetches missed, or you need to search across many logs |
Descend a tier only when the one above can't answer the question. Tier 2 already lets you fetch just
the relevant report log(s); Tier 4 (grab many/all logs and grep) is fine when targeting fails —
just know it's the costly path, so exhaust cheaper options first.
Mental model: the failure taxonomy
Every failure sorts into one of three buckets. Classification is the deliverable.
- Service flakiness — real backing service was unhappy. Ignore / no bug (or a service bug, not a code bug).
Signatures (FF Real Service E2E): FRS
Document not found / service degradation; [r11s-frs] stashed ops blob-upload timeouts; [t9s] (tinylicious) Timeout of 5000ms exceeded; undici Cannot destructure property 'socket' of 'parser.deref(...)'; sporadic connect/socket errors. These usually differ run-to-run and often pass on auto-rerun.
- Infra / harness — the run's plumbing broke:
Npm failed with return code: N, container/docker setup, artifact/publish steps. The npm rc on a leg is a symptom — find the actual failing test inside that leg.
- Deterministic product / test bug — the same test fails with the same assertion/stack across adjacent runs. This is the high-value find. File a bug.
Green builds hide failures too. A test can fail on Attempt 1 and pass on the auto-retry, leaving the build
green and resultsbybuild reporting 0 failures — yet the Tests tab still shows the Attempt-1 failure.
Never conclude "no failures" from a green status alone; check for retried attempts (Tier 3 recipe).
Driver awareness (critical for FF): the same spec runs per driver and is prefixed in the report:
[odsp], [r11s-frs], [r11s-docker], [t9s], [local]. A test may be pending (skipped, shown as -)
on some drivers and only actually execute on one. When comparing runs you must match the same task
(e.g. test:realsvc:odsp:report --compatVersion=0 --tenantIndex=0), not just the test name.
Tier 1 — Playwright on the Tests tab (primary)
Prereq: a browser signed into dev.azure.com/fluidframework (same one the loop/expense-report
skills use). If auth is missing you'll land on a login page — pause and let the user sign in, then continue.
Single-run triage
playwright-browser_navigate →
https://dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_build/results?buildId={ID}&view=ms.vss-test-web.build-test-results-tab
playwright-browser_snapshot to read the summary. Filter/click Outcome = Failed. The tab groups
failures and flags each New / Existing / Fixed vs. prior runs — that flag alone hints flaky vs. regression.
- For each failed test, click it to expand the error message + stack. Capture: full test name (with
[driver]
prefix), the assertion/error, top 2–3 stack frames, and the owning file. playwright-browser_take_screenshot
for the record if filing a bug.
- Note the leg/stage (e.g. "Run Non-compat") and the driver — the tab shows these per result.
Flaky vs. deterministic (the key question)
- Open the failed test's history (the per-test view has a pass/fail sparkline across recent runs), or use
the pipeline's Analytics → Test results trend / the "failing since" column. Read whether this exact test
has been failing on consecutive runs (deterministic) or intermittently (flaky).
- If the history view is awkward to read, drop to Tier 2/3 to compare the specific runs directly.
Notes
- ADO tabs render lazily and paginate — always
snapshot before clicking; don't assume off-screen rows exist.
- Prefer reading grouped/expanded panels over scraping; screenshot anything you'll cite in a bug.
Tier 2 — ADO MCP fallback (zero setup, always works)
Use when there's no browser session, or you need raw log context the Tests tab doesn't show. This is the
approach used in the reference triage; it works but is heavier, so stay surgical.
Step 1 — find the failing legs (cheap)
ado-pipelines_build action=get_status buildId={ID} project=internal → the Issues section lists failing
task names + error summaries, e.g. Run Non-compat … Npm failed with return code: 2. This tells you which
legs failed without reading a single big log.
Step 2 — locate the right report log (don't guess by size)
ado-pipelines_build_log action=list buildId={ID} project=internal. Report-step logs are separate from the
job "Container" aggregate and start with ##[section]Starting: [test] test:realsvc:<driver>:report ….
For each failing leg, the driver-specific report log is a medium log (~2.5–4k lines), not the biggest
(the biggest are usually passing job aggregates). Fetch a few medium candidates and match on the first line /
the test:realsvc:<driver>:report command rather than trusting size.
Gotcha proven in practice: the odsp Non-compat failure lived in a ~3.4k-line report log, while the 15–19k-line
logs were all passing legs. Biggest ≠ failing.
Step 3 — parse the failing report log
Fetch the matched log's content and run the helper (handles the get_content temp-file JSON, ANSI/timestamp
stripping, and pulls the mocha summary + numbered failure block):
scripts/Parse-AdoTestLog.ps1 -Path <temp-file-from-get_content> [-Context 30]
Or inline: Get-Content <file> -Raw | ConvertFrom-Json → strip \u001b\[[0-9;]*m and leading ^.*?Z →
grep ^\s*\d+ (passing|failing|pending) and the N) numbered failure entries. The 1-based array index is the
log line number (use it to build a direct link).
Step 4 — compare across adjacent runs (flaky vs. deterministic)
ado-pipelines_build action=list definitionId={DEF} project=internal top=100 → filter client-side by
definitionId (the MCP param does not reliably filter) and by branch. For Real Service E2E: definitionId = 56.
- Take the previous few runs (include
PartiallySucceeded, not just Failed — a real failure can still leave a
run "partially succeeded"). For each, find the same report task (Step 2) and re-parse (Step 3).
- Verdict:
- Deterministic if the same test + same assertion/stack fails in every run where that task actually executed.
- Flaky if it appears in some runs and not others, or the errors are timeouts/service errors that vary.
Tier 3 — Test Results / Timeline (the high-payoff endpoints)
These endpoints return exactly the relevant rows (a few KB, no MB log downloads) and are the right
path when they're reachable. All are verified working (see the auth block for the exact token recipe):
- Failed tests only (fast, modern host): use the
vstmr.dev.azure.com Test Results Management host, not
the legacy dev.azure.com/.../test/runs path (that one hangs):
GET https://vstmr.dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/testresults/resultsbybuild?buildId={ID}&outcomes=Failed&api-version=7.1-preview.1
- Summary/counts:
…/testresults/resultsummarybybuild?buildId={ID}&api-version=7.1-preview.1
- Gotcha: these require
-preview.1 in the api-version — plain 7.1 returns HTTP 400 VssInvalidPreviewVersionException.
- Per-test history across builds (direct flaky-vs-deterministic answer, avoids re-parsing N runs):
POST https://vstmr.dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/testresults/results/testhistory?api-version=7.1-preview.1
with a body carrying the test's automatedTestName ({ "automatedTestName": "…", "groupBy": "branch", … }).
- Timeline — maps each failing task to its exact
log.id and yields the job/task GUIDs for deep links:
GET https://dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/build/builds/{ID}/timeline?api-version=7.1 — filter
records[] to result == 'failed'. This removes the Tier-2 "which of ~660 logs is the failing report?" guessing.
⚠️ Green builds can still hide failures (retried attempts). resultsbybuild and the default timeline only
report the latest attempt. A test that failed on Attempt 1 and passed on the auto-retry (Attempt 2) shows
0 failures in both — the build is green, yet the Tests tab still surfaces the Attempt-1 failure. To find these,
see "Finding failures hidden in retried attempts" below. Always check for retries before declaring a build clean.
Preferred access — via the ADO MCP, if it exposes these. The MCP is already authenticated (zero setup), but
today its surface only covers build/log listing + raw log content, not test-results or timeline. If/when the
MCP gains timeline or test-results reader tools, use those — no token needed. Re-check the available
ado-* tools before assuming you must go direct.
Fallback access — direct REST with your own token. Needed only because calling these URLs yourself (outside
the MCP) has no credential attached — the MCP's credential can't be borrowed for endpoints it doesn't implement.
Probe for a token; if none exists, stay on Tier 1/2 rather than prompting for setup mid-task:
# AAD token via Azure CLI (preferred: no stored secret, short-lived, auto-refreshed).
# NOTE the ADO resource ID below — this exact GUID works against the fluidframework org.
$tok = az account get-access-token --resource 499b84ac-1321-427f-aa17-267ca6975798 --query accessToken -o tsv
$headers = @{ Authorization = "Bearer $tok" }
# — or — least-privilege PAT (Build:Read + Test:Read) from an env var:
$pat = $env:AZURE_DEVOPS_EXT_PAT
$headers = @{ Authorization = "Basic " + [Convert]::ToBase64String([Text.Encoding]::ASCII.GetBytes(":$pat")) }
Invoke-RestMethod "https://dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/build/builds/$ID/Timeline?api-version=7.1" -Headers $headers
Never print the token/PAT; read it only from az/env. See "Enabling REST auth" below for one-time setup.
Auth gotchas (both verified in practice):
- Resource ID must be
499b84ac-1321-427f-aa17-267ca6975798. The commonly-cited well-known ADO GUID
(499b84ac-1332-4a5e-9d67-b18d6c8a1c66) returns AADSTS500011: resource principal … not found in tenant here.
- If the token call errors or returns an HTML sign-in page, the shell is on the wrong tenant — run
az login --tenant 72f988bf-86f1-41af-91ab-2d7cd011db47 --allow-no-subscriptions first
(the fluidframework org is backed by the corp tenant 72f988bf…, confirmed via the X-VSS-ResourceTenant header).
- The Azure CLI may not be on
PATH; call it by full path if needed
("$env:ProgramFiles\Microsoft SDKs\Azure\CLI2\wbin\az.cmd"). Each PowerShell call is a fresh process.
Timeline → deep link recipe
GET …/builds/{ID}/timeline?api-version=7.1 → records[], each with id (GUID), parentId, type
(Stage/Phase/Job/Task), name, result, and (Task records) log: { id }.
- Failing Task record (
result=='failed', name matches the report step): its id = t, its log.id
= the exact log to read.
- Walk
parentId up to the enclosing Job record: its id = j.
l = failing line number (from parsing that log — grep the log for the mocha ● … / N failing /
FAIL <spec> marker; the 1-based line index is l).
- Assemble:
…/_build/results?buildId={ID}&view=logs&j={j}&t={t}&l={l}.
Param names drift across ADO versions (older builds used lineStart/lineEnd), so keep the raw-log-range URL
as the always-safe fallback.
Finding failures hidden in retried attempts (green build, but Tests tab shows a failure)
When the build is green and resultsbybuild?outcomes=Failed returns 0, but a failure is still visible, an
earlier attempt failed and the auto-retry passed. The failing job/task GUIDs live in a separate sub-timeline,
not the main one. Recipe (verified on build 409208 — a JestTest failure hidden in Attempt 1 of a green build):
GET …/builds/{ID}/timeline?api-version=7.1 (main timeline).
- Find records with a non-empty
previousAttempts array (these were retried); each entry has a
timelineId pointing at the earlier attempt's sub-timeline. Collect the distinct timelineIds.
- For each:
GET …/builds/{ID}/timeline/{timelineId}?api-version=7.1 → filter records[] to result == 'failed'.
That sub-timeline holds the real failing Task (→ t, log.id) and its parent Job (→ j).
- Fetch that
log.id, grep for the failure marker to get l, and build the deep link as above.
$base = "https://dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/build/builds/$ID"
$main = Invoke-RestMethod -Headers $headers "$base/timeline?api-version=7.1"
$retryTimelines = $main.records | ForEach-Object { $_.previousAttempts.timelineId } | Sort-Object -Unique
foreach ($tid in $retryTimelines) {
$sub = Invoke-RestMethod -Headers $headers "$base/timeline/$tid`?api-version=7.1"
$sub.records | Where-Object result -eq 'failed' |
Select-Object type,name,@{n='logId';e={$_.log.id}},id,parentId
}
Enabling REST auth (one-time; optional but high payoff)
The gain is large exactly where this task is slowest: a full triage (~dozens of log fetches, tens of MB) collapses
to ~3 REST calls, and cross-run flakiness becomes one Test History call instead of re-parsing N runs. To enable:
- Preferred —
az login: install Azure CLI, run az login once. No stored secret; tokens are short-lived and
the CLI refreshes them silently for weeks. The skill mints a fresh token per call.
- Fallback — PAT: create a least-privilege PAT (Build Read + Test Management Read only), short
expiry, scoped to the
fluidframework org; store it in the AZURE_DEVOPS_EXT_PAT user env var (not the repo,
not shell history). Rotate on expiry.
- Prefer
az (AAD) over PAT: short-lived and no secret at rest. Either way, the skill must read the credential
only from az/env and must never echo it.
Building direct links (put these in the summary / bug)
- Tests tab:
…/_build/results?buildId={ID}&view=ms.vss-test-web.build-test-results-tab
- Raw log line range (constructible without auth; opening it needs a signed-in session):
https://dev.azure.com/fluidframework/internal/_apis/build/builds/{ID}/logs/{LOG}?startLine={A}&endLine={B}
- Nice UI log deep link (needs Timeline job/task GUIDs — Tier 3):
…/_build/results?buildId={ID}&view=logs&j={jobGuid}&t={taskGuid}&l={line}
Filing bugs (when a failure is a real, deterministic bug)
Confirm scope with the user first (project, tag, assignee). Defaults that have been used: project internal,
tag Flaky Test (reconsider this tag if the failure is deterministic — say so), unassigned.
- Create:
ado-wit_work_item_write action=create with a fields array. Bugs in internal REQUIRE
System.Description. This ADO instance does not display the Repro Steps field — put everything in
Description (Markdown), not Microsoft.VSTS.TCM.ReproSteps.
- Update:
ado-wit_work_item_write action=update with an updates array of JSON-Patch ops
({op:"Replace", path:"/fields/System.Description", value:…}, format:"Markdown"). Do not use fields for update.
- GitHub link gotcha: in ADO text a bare
#12345 (and AB#12345) auto-links to a work item, not a GitHub
PR/issue. Always use a full URL, e.g. [PR #27637](https://github.com/microsoft/FluidFramework/pull/27637).
- Angle-bracket gotcha: ADO strips
<...> tokens as HTML even inside Markdown code fences — a stack frame like
at Object.<anonymous> (…) loses the <anonymous>. HTML-escape them in the source: write <anonymous>
(renders as <anonymous>). Same for any <T> / html-ish text in error output.
Description template
## Summary
<one line: which leg/driver, what consistently fails, deterministic vs. flaky>
## Failing test
`<full test name including [driver] prefix>`
- Task: `test:realsvc:<driver>:report --compatVersion=<n> --tenantIndex=<n>`
- Driver: <driver> only (pending/skipped elsewhere, if applicable)
## Error
<trimmed error + top stack frames>
## Reproducibility
<table of the runs checked, each row linking to the error line>
| Build | Date | Result | Error line |
|-------|------|--------|-----------|
| 409255 | … | Failed | [log 400](…/logs/400?startLine=…&endLine=…) |
## Suspected root cause
<1–2 concrete hypotheses; link suspect PRs with full GitHub URLs>
## Links
- [Build … – test results](…&view=ms.vss-test-web.build-test-results-tab)
Output contract (what to hand back)
- Failure-mode summary — grouped and classified (service-flakiness / infra / deterministic), with counts and
which legs/drivers, not a raw dump.
- Flaky-vs-deterministic verdict for anything ambiguous, backed by the specific runs compared.
- Recommended actions — ignore (flaky/service), retry, or file a bug; and for bugs, a ready-to-paste
Description with direct error-line links.
Keep the narrative tight; lean on links for depth.
Reference specifics — Real Service End to End Tests
- Pipeline definitionId 56 ("Real Service End to End Tests"), runs on
main (and release branches) on a schedule.
- Legs (matrix, one job per driver): Run (default), Oldest-Compatible-Version, N-2ToLTS+1-back-compat,
Non-compat, N-1, Cross-Client. Each leg fans out across drivers via
test:realsvc:<driver>:report.
- Known flaky signatures to discount: FRS
Document not found; [r11s-frs] stashed-ops blob-upload timeouts;
[t9s] 5000ms timeouts; undici parser.deref(...) socket destructure.
- The mocha report per driver ends with
N passing / N pending / N failing followed by a numbered failure list —
that block is the payload; everything above it is noise.