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mirror of https://passt.top/passt synced 2025-01-21 19:55:17 +00:00
David Gibson a8598c7e70 test: Convert distro tests to use socat instead of nc/ncat
We've recently converted most of our tests to use socat instead of
nc/netcat/ncat, because socat is more powerful and we don't need to deal
with the several possible variants of netcat.

We still use nc or ncat for the distro tests.  Because there we control
the guest environment and can pick our tools, there isn't the same reason
to switch to socat.  However, using socat here as well makes the tests
a bit easier to read, and doesn't require people reading or modifying them
to become familiar with an additional tool.

Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
[sbrivio: keep using netcat-openbsd in Ubuntu 16.04 ppc64 test, as socat
 is unavailable there]
Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
2022-08-20 19:07:12 +02:00
..
2022-07-22 19:41:42 +02:00
ci
2021-09-27 15:10:35 +02:00
2022-07-22 19:41:42 +02:00
2022-07-22 19:41:42 +02:00
2021-09-27 15:10:35 +02:00

Scope

This directory contains test cases for passt and pasta and a simple POSIX shell-based framework to define them, and run them as a suite.

These tests can be run as part of a continuous integration workflow, and are also used to provide short usage demos, with video recording, for passt and pasta basic use cases.

Run

Dependencies

Packages

The tests require some package dependencies commonly available in Linux distributions. If some packages are not available, the test groups that need them will be selectively skipped.

This is a non-exhaustive list of packages that might not commonly be installed on a system, i.e. common utilities such as a shell are not included here.

Example for Debian, and possibly most Debian-based distributions:

build-essential git jq strace iperf3 qemu-system-x86 tmux sipcalc bc
clang-tidy cppcheck isc-dhcp-common psmisc linux-cpupower socat
netcat-openbsd fakeroot lz4 lm-sensors qemu-system-arm qemu-system-ppc
qemu-system-misc qemu-system-x86 valgrind

Other tools

Test measuring request-response and connect-request-response latencies use neper, which is not commonly packaged by distributions and needs to be built and installed manually:

git clone https://github.com/google/neper
cd neper; make
cp tcp_crr tcp_rr udp_rr /usr/local/bin

Virtual machine images are built during test executions using mbuto, the shell script is sourced via git as needed, so there's no need to actually install it.

Special requirements for continuous integration and demo modes

Running the test suite as continuous integration or demo modes will record the terminal with the steps being executed, using asciinema(1), and create binary packages.

The following additional packages are commonly needed:

alien asciinema linux-perf tshark

Regular test

Just issue:

./run

from the test directory. Elevated privileges are not needed. Environment variable settings: DEBUG=1 enables debugging messages, TRACE=1 enables tracing (further debugging messages), PCAP=1 enables packet captures. Example:

PCAP=1 TRACE=1 ./run

Continuous integration

Issuing:

./ci

will run the whole test suite while recording the execution, and it will also build JavaScript fragments used on http://passt.top/ for performance data tables and links to specific offsets in the captures.

Demo mode

Issuing:

./demo

will run the demo cases under demo, with terminal captures as well.

Framework

The implementation of the testing framework is under lib, and it provides facilities for terminal and tmux session management, interpretation of test directives, video recording, and suchlike. Test cases are organised in the remaining directories.

Test cases can be implemented as POSIX shell scripts, or as a set of directives, which are not formally documented here, but should be clear enough from the existing cases. The entry point for interpretation of test directives is implemented in lib/test.