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systemd/test/run-unit-tests.py

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tests: add a runner for installed tests We have "installed tests", but don't provide an easy way to run them. The protocol is very simple: each test must return 0 for success, 77 means "skipped", anything else is an error. In addition, we want to print test output only if the test failed. I wrote this simple script. It is pretty basic, but implements the functions listed above. Since it is written in python it should be easy to add option parsing (like running only specific tests, or running unsafe tests, etc.) I looked at the following alternatives: - Ubuntu root-unittests: this works, but just dumps all output to the terminal, has no coloring. - @ssahani's test runner [2] It uses the unittest library and the test suite was implented as a class, and doesn't implement any of the functions listed above. - cram [3,4] cram runs our tests, but does not understand the "ignore the output" part, has not support for our magic skip code (it uses hardcoded 80 instead), and seems dead upstream. - meson test Here the idea would be to provide an almost-empty meson.build file under /usr/lib/systemd/tests/ that would just define all the tests. This would allow us to reuse the test runner we use normally. Unfortunately meson requires a build directory and configuration to be done before running tests. This would be possible, but seems a lot of effort to just run a few binaries. [1] https://salsa.debian.org/systemd-team/systemd/blob/242c96addb06480ec9cd75248a5660f37a17b4b9/debian/tests/root-unittests [2] https://github.com/systemd/systemd-fedora-ci/blob/master/upstream/systemd-upstream-tests.py [3] https://bitheap.org/cram/ [4] https://pypi.org/project/pytest-cram/ Fixes #10069.
2018-09-20 17:34:14 +03:00
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import argparse
tests: add a runner for installed tests We have "installed tests", but don't provide an easy way to run them. The protocol is very simple: each test must return 0 for success, 77 means "skipped", anything else is an error. In addition, we want to print test output only if the test failed. I wrote this simple script. It is pretty basic, but implements the functions listed above. Since it is written in python it should be easy to add option parsing (like running only specific tests, or running unsafe tests, etc.) I looked at the following alternatives: - Ubuntu root-unittests: this works, but just dumps all output to the terminal, has no coloring. - @ssahani's test runner [2] It uses the unittest library and the test suite was implented as a class, and doesn't implement any of the functions listed above. - cram [3,4] cram runs our tests, but does not understand the "ignore the output" part, has not support for our magic skip code (it uses hardcoded 80 instead), and seems dead upstream. - meson test Here the idea would be to provide an almost-empty meson.build file under /usr/lib/systemd/tests/ that would just define all the tests. This would allow us to reuse the test runner we use normally. Unfortunately meson requires a build directory and configuration to be done before running tests. This would be possible, but seems a lot of effort to just run a few binaries. [1] https://salsa.debian.org/systemd-team/systemd/blob/242c96addb06480ec9cd75248a5660f37a17b4b9/debian/tests/root-unittests [2] https://github.com/systemd/systemd-fedora-ci/blob/master/upstream/systemd-upstream-tests.py [3] https://bitheap.org/cram/ [4] https://pypi.org/project/pytest-cram/ Fixes #10069.
2018-09-20 17:34:14 +03:00
import dataclasses
import glob
import os
import subprocess
import sys
try:
import colorama as c
GREEN = c.Fore.GREEN
YELLOW = c.Fore.YELLOW
RED = c.Fore.RED
RESET_ALL = c.Style.RESET_ALL
BRIGHT = c.Style.BRIGHT
except ImportError:
GREEN = YELLOW = RED = RESET_ALL = BRIGHT = ''
@dataclasses.dataclass
class Total:
total:int
good:int = 0
skip:int = 0
fail:int = 0
def argument_parser():
p = argparse.ArgumentParser()
p.add_argument('-u', '--unsafe', action='store_true',
help='run "unsafe" tests too')
return p
opts = argument_parser().parse_args()
tests: add a runner for installed tests We have "installed tests", but don't provide an easy way to run them. The protocol is very simple: each test must return 0 for success, 77 means "skipped", anything else is an error. In addition, we want to print test output only if the test failed. I wrote this simple script. It is pretty basic, but implements the functions listed above. Since it is written in python it should be easy to add option parsing (like running only specific tests, or running unsafe tests, etc.) I looked at the following alternatives: - Ubuntu root-unittests: this works, but just dumps all output to the terminal, has no coloring. - @ssahani's test runner [2] It uses the unittest library and the test suite was implented as a class, and doesn't implement any of the functions listed above. - cram [3,4] cram runs our tests, but does not understand the "ignore the output" part, has not support for our magic skip code (it uses hardcoded 80 instead), and seems dead upstream. - meson test Here the idea would be to provide an almost-empty meson.build file under /usr/lib/systemd/tests/ that would just define all the tests. This would allow us to reuse the test runner we use normally. Unfortunately meson requires a build directory and configuration to be done before running tests. This would be possible, but seems a lot of effort to just run a few binaries. [1] https://salsa.debian.org/systemd-team/systemd/blob/242c96addb06480ec9cd75248a5660f37a17b4b9/debian/tests/root-unittests [2] https://github.com/systemd/systemd-fedora-ci/blob/master/upstream/systemd-upstream-tests.py [3] https://bitheap.org/cram/ [4] https://pypi.org/project/pytest-cram/ Fixes #10069.
2018-09-20 17:34:14 +03:00
tests = glob.glob('/usr/lib/systemd/tests/test-*')
if opts.unsafe:
tests += glob.glob('/usr/lib/systemd/tests/unsafe/test-*')
tests: add a runner for installed tests We have "installed tests", but don't provide an easy way to run them. The protocol is very simple: each test must return 0 for success, 77 means "skipped", anything else is an error. In addition, we want to print test output only if the test failed. I wrote this simple script. It is pretty basic, but implements the functions listed above. Since it is written in python it should be easy to add option parsing (like running only specific tests, or running unsafe tests, etc.) I looked at the following alternatives: - Ubuntu root-unittests: this works, but just dumps all output to the terminal, has no coloring. - @ssahani's test runner [2] It uses the unittest library and the test suite was implented as a class, and doesn't implement any of the functions listed above. - cram [3,4] cram runs our tests, but does not understand the "ignore the output" part, has not support for our magic skip code (it uses hardcoded 80 instead), and seems dead upstream. - meson test Here the idea would be to provide an almost-empty meson.build file under /usr/lib/systemd/tests/ that would just define all the tests. This would allow us to reuse the test runner we use normally. Unfortunately meson requires a build directory and configuration to be done before running tests. This would be possible, but seems a lot of effort to just run a few binaries. [1] https://salsa.debian.org/systemd-team/systemd/blob/242c96addb06480ec9cd75248a5660f37a17b4b9/debian/tests/root-unittests [2] https://github.com/systemd/systemd-fedora-ci/blob/master/upstream/systemd-upstream-tests.py [3] https://bitheap.org/cram/ [4] https://pypi.org/project/pytest-cram/ Fixes #10069.
2018-09-20 17:34:14 +03:00
total = Total(total=len(tests))
for test in tests:
name = os.path.basename(test)
ex = subprocess.run(test, stdin=subprocess.DEVNULL, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
if ex.returncode == 0:
print(f'{GREEN}PASS: {name}{RESET_ALL}')
total.good += 1
elif ex.returncode == 77:
print(f'{YELLOW}SKIP: {name}{RESET_ALL}')
total.skip += 1
else:
print(f'{RED}FAIL: {name}{RESET_ALL}')
total.fail += 1
# stdout/stderr might not be valid unicode, let's just dump it to the terminal.
# Also let's reset the style afterwards, in case our output sets something.
sys.stdout.buffer.write(ex.stdout)
print(f'{RESET_ALL}{BRIGHT}')
sys.stdout.buffer.write(ex.stderr)
print(f'{RESET_ALL}')
print(f'{BRIGHT}OK: {total.good} SKIP: {total.skip} FAIL: {total.fail}{RESET_ALL}')
sys.exit(total.fail > 0)