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* Handle properly and reply on execution paths that throw std::bad_alloc within AddOrFind |
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dragonfly | ||
integration | ||
pytest.ini | ||
README.md |
System tests
Pytest
The tests assume you have the "dragonfly" binary in <root>/build-dbg
directory.
You can override the location of the binary using DRAGONFLY_PATH
environment var.
Important fixtures
df_server
is the default instance that is available for testing. Use thedfly_args
decorator to change its default arguments.client
andasync_client
are clients to the default instance. The default instance is re-used accross tests with the same arguments, but each new client flushes the instance.pool
andasync_pool
are client pools that are connected to the default instance
Custom arguments
- use
--gdb
to start all instances inside gdb. - use
--df arg=val
to pass custom arguments to all dragonfly instances. Can be used multiple times. - use
--log-seeder file
to store all single-db commands from the lastest tests seeder inside file. - use
--existing-port
to use an existing instance for tests instead of starting one - use
--rand-seed
to set the global random seed. Makes the seeder predictable.
for example,
pytest dragonfly/connection_test.py -s --df logtostdout --df vmodule=dragonfly_connection=2 -k test_subscribe
Before you start
Please make sure that you have python 3 installed on you local host. If have more both python 2 and python 3 installed on you host, you can run the tests with the following command:
python3 -m pytest -xv dragonfly
It is advisable to use you python virtual environment: python virtual environment. To activate it, run:
source <virtual env name>/bin/activate
Then install all the required dependencies for the tests:
pip3 install -r dragonfly/requirements.txt
Running the tests
to run pytest, run:
pytest -xv dragonfly
to run selectively, use:
pytest -xv dragonfly -k <substring>
For more pytest flags check here.
Writing tests
The Getting Started guide is a great resource to become familiar with writing pytest test cases.
Pytest will recursively search the tests/dragonfly
directory for files matching the patterns test_*.py
or *_test.py
for functions matching these rules:
- Functions or methods outside of a class prefixed by
test
- Functions or methods prefixed by
test
inside a class prefixed byTest
(without an__init__
method)
Note: When making a new directory in tests/dragonfly
be sure to create an __init__.py
file to avoid name conflicts
Passing CLI commands to Dragonfly
To pass custom flags to the Dragonfly executable two class decorators have been created. @dfly_args
allows you to pass a list of parameters to the Dragonfly executable, similarly @dfly_multi_test_args
allows you to specify multiple parameter configurations to test with a given test class.
In the case of @dfly_multi_test_args
each parameter configuration will create one Dragonfly instance which each test will receive a client to as described in the above section
Parameters can use environmental variables with a formatted string where "{<VAR>}"
will be replaced with the value of the <VAR>
environment variable. Due to current pytest limtations fixtures cannot be passed to either of these decorators, this is currently the provided way to pass the temporary directory path in a CLI parameter.
Test Examples
- snapshot_test: Example test using
@dfly_args
, environment variables and pre-test setup - generic_test: Example test using
@dfly_multi_test_args
- connection_test: Example for testing running with multiple asynchronous connections.
Writing your own fixtures
The fixture functions located in conftest.py. You can write your own fixture inside this file, as seem fit. Just make sure, before adding new fixture that there maybe one already written. Try to make the fixture running at the smallest scope possible to ensure that the test can be independent of each other (this will ensure no side effect - match our policy of "share nothing").
Managing test environment
Do forget to add any new dependency that you may created to dragonfly/requirement.txt file. You can do so by running
pip3 freeze > requirements.txt
from dragonfly directory.
Integration tests
Integration tests are located in the integration
folder.
To simplify running integration test each package should have its own Dockerfile. The Dockerfile should contain everything needed in order to test the package against Dragonfly. Docker can assume Dragonfly is running on localhost:6379. To run the test:
docker build -t [test-name] -f [test-dockerfile-name] .
docker run --network=host [test-name]
Node-Redis
Integration test for node-redis client. Build:
docker build -t node-redis-test -f ./node-redis.Dockerfile .
Run:
docker run --network=host node-redis-test
to run only selected tests use:
docker run --network=host node-redis-test npm run test -w ./packages/client -- --redis-version=2.8 -g <regex>
In general, you can add this way any option from mocha framework.
ioredis
NOTE: we are depending on some changes to ioredis test, in order to pass more tests, as we are currently failing because in monitor command we always returning the command name in upper case, and the tests expected it to be in lower case.
Integration tests for ioredis client. ioredis is a robust, performance-focused and full-featured Redis client for Node.js. It contains a very extensive test coverage for Redis. Currently not all features are supported by Dragonfly. As such please use the scripts for running the test successfully - run_ioredis_on_docker.sh: to run the supported tests on a docker image Please note that you can run this script in two forms:
If the image is already build:
./integration/run_ioredis_on_docker.sh
A more safe way is to build the image (or ensure that it is up to date), and then execute the tests:
./integration/run_ioredis_on_docker.sh --build
The the "--build" first build the image and then execute the tests. Please do not try to run out of docker image as this brings the correct version and patch some tests. Please note that the script only run tests that are currently supported You can just build the image with
Build:
docker build -t ioredis-test -f ./ioredis.Dockerfile .
For more details on the entrypoint setup, compare the ioredis.Dockerfile
with the npm test script located on the package.json
of the ioredis project.
Jedis
Integration test for the Jedis client. Build:
docker build -t jedis-test -f ./jedis.Dockerfile .
Run:
docker run --network=host jedis-test