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ce9ac3a685
A side effect of this change is that RAW-SFILEINFO now runs the whole suite instead of just the first test. I changed the name of the first test to RAW-SFILEINFO-BASE and changed all of the selftest scripts that call it. |
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.. | ||
common.exp | ||
README | ||
test_win.conf | ||
vm_get_ip.pl | ||
vm_load_snapshot.pl | ||
VMHost.pm | ||
wintest_2k3_dc.sh | ||
wintest_base.sh | ||
wintest_client.exp | ||
wintest_client.sh | ||
wintest_functions.sh | ||
wintest_net.sh | ||
wintest_raw.sh | ||
wintest_remove.exp | ||
wintest_rpc.sh | ||
wintest_setup.exp |
This framework uses a VMware Server hosted Windows guest VM to test the behaviour of Windows -> Samba and Samba -> Windows interactions. To setup a Windows host for testing, vm_setup.tar.gz contain some scripts which create an administrative user account, and enable and start the installed telnet service on the Windows host. Optionally, the hostname and workgroup name can also be set. vm_setup.tar.gz is currently located in the SOC/bnh branch of Samba's SVN repository. PREREQUISITES To use these scripts, VMware Server needs to be running with a Windows guest VM installed, IP addressed, and VMware tools needs to be installed and running on the guest VM. The Windows OS I used to test with was Windows Server 2003, but I think this should work with any version of Windows that has the Microsoft telnet service installed. The VMware Server versions I used for testing was 1.0.0 build-27828, and 1.0.0 build-28343. PLEASE NOTE: Due to problems with my original revert_snapshot() code, the initial setup now requires that the VM configuration setting 'When Powering Off' is manually set to 'Revert to snapshot' (snapshot.action="autoRevert" in the guest's .vmx file). This should not be a permanent change, but the original revert_snapshot() code I wrote no longer works and i'm not sure why. On the machine that these scripts are running on (this need not be the same machine as the VMware host), the VMware perl scripting api needs to be installed, as well as the vix-perl api. These come with the VMware Server console package. After unzipping this file, the libraries are installed by extracting the VMware-vix-e.x.p-<revision number>.tar.gz and VMware-VmPerlAPI-e.x.p-<revision number>.tar.gz archives, and running the vmware-install.pl scripts inside their respective directories. On Slackware 10.2, I encountered a problem in that when I tried to use the vix api libraries, I would get the following error: SSLLoadSharedLibrary: Failed to load library /<client program directory>/libcrypto.so.0.9.7:/<client program directory>/libcrypto.so.0.9.7: cannot open a shared object file: No such file or directory. The fix found on the VMware knowledge base (search http://kb.vmware.com for Doc ID: 1837104) states that it's a known problem with the scripting libraries, and can be resolved by installing VMware Server on the host, which properly sets up the SSL module loader. This is what I would suggest if you encounter this, as it solved the problem for me (I don't have VMware Server actually running on that host though). INSTALLATION To use these scripts, modify initial_setup.conf to match your environment. The GUEST_HOSTNAME, GUEST_WORKGROUP, HOST_SERVER_NAME, HOST_SERVER_PORT, HOST_USERNAME, and HOST_PASSWORD variables are optional, and are commented out in this release. Running initial_setup.sh will: * Get the IP address of the Windows guest VM. * Take a snapshot of the pristine Windows guest. * Copy the windows scripts from the windows-scripts directory on the unix host to the directory on the Windows guest specified by the GUEST_SCRIPT_PATH option. This path will be created on the guest if it does not already exist. * Execute win_setup.wsf on the Windows guest in order to create the administrator account specified by GUEST_USERNAME and GUEST_PASSWORD, enable and start the telnet service, and set the GUEST_HOSTNAME and GUEST_WORKGROUP if configured. * If these operations are successful so far, another snapshot is taken at this point. This is the snapshot which is restored if the tests encounter problems they are unable to recover from. These operations leave the Windows guest in a state such that it can be remotely administered with telnet. Specifically, this will allow us to use 'make wintest' in Samba 4 to perform smbtorture tests against a Windows host, and perform tests from a Windows client to a Samba server. INTEGRATING WITH THE BUILD FARM Follow the standard steps to add a host to the build farm. The major difference is that we will need to run these tests as root. To run the Windows tests in the build farm, a .fns file will need to be created for your new host that exports a WINTESTCONF environment variable pointing to a config file used by 'make wintest'. An example of this config file can be found at source/selftest/win/test_win.conf in the Samba 4 source tree. I've also included the bnhtest.fns file that I'm using for my build farm host below, as an example. It was modified from generic.fns. action_test_windows() { do_make wintest w_status=$? echo "WINTEST STATUS: $w_status" return $w_status; } per_run_hook system=`uname` export WINTESTCONF="/home/build/win/test_win.conf" for compiler in gcc cc icc; do # arrgh, "which" gives no err code on solaris path=`which $compiler` if [ -x "$path" ]; then if $compiler -v 2>&1 | grep gcc.version > /dev/null; then isgcc=1 CFLAGS="-Wall" export CFLAGS else CFLAGS="" export CFLAGS isgcc=0 fi if [ $compiler = gcc -o $isgcc = 0 ]; then # only attempt samba4 if we have perl if which perl > /dev/null; then test_tree samba4 source $compiler configure build install test_windows test fi fi fi done