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569ea5c4e1
(This used to be ctdb commit 4e670d9bc1bdeb2abd7e846bc36e02f0aa0d7309) |
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complex | ||
events.d | ||
eventscripts | ||
onnode | ||
scripts | ||
simple | ||
src | ||
takeover | ||
README | ||
recover.sh | ||
run_tests.sh | ||
test_check_tcp_ports.sh | ||
TODO |
Introduction ------------ The run_tests script can be run as follows: scripts/run_tests simple/*.sh It can also be run from other places (e.g. the top level ctdb source directory), as it works out where the tree is. The pseudo-test simple/00_ctdb_init.sh causes ctdb to be (re)started on all nodes to attempt to force the cluster into a healthy state. By default (i.e. if CTDB_TEST_REAL_CLUSTER is unset - see below) this causes some local daemons to be started on the local machine. Tests can also be run against a real or virtual cluster. All tests communicate with cluster nodes using onnode - when using local daemons this is accomplished via some test hooks in onnode and the ctdb client. Command-line options -------------------- The most useful option is "-s", which causes a summary of test results to be printed at the end of testing. Environment variables --------------------- run_tests supports several environment variables, mostly implemented in scripts/ctdb_test_env. These are: * CTDB_TEST_REAL_CLUSTER If set, testing will occur on a real or virtual cluster. Assumptions: - The ctdb client command can be found via $PATH on the nodes. - Password-less ssh access to the cluster nodes is permitted from the test host. - $CTDB_NODES_FILE is set to the location of a file similar to /etc/ctdb/nodes. The file can be obtained by scping it from one of the cluster nodes. - See CTDB_TEST_REMOTE_DIR. If not set, testing will proceed against local daemons. * CTDB_TEST_REMOTE_DIR This may be required when running against a real or virtual cluster (as opposed to local daemons). If set, this points to a directory containing the contents of the tests/scripts/ directory, as well as all of the test binaries. This can be accomplished in a couple of ways: * By copying the relevant scripts/binaries to some directory. * Building an RPM containing all of the test code that is required on the cluster nodes and installing it on each node. Hopefully this will be supported in a future version of the CTDB packaging process. If not set, the test system assumes that the CTDB tree is available in the same location on the cluster nodes as on the test host. This could be accomplished by copying or by sharing with NFS (or similar). * VALGRIND This can be used to cause all invocations of the ctdb client (and, with local daemons, the ctdbd daemons themselves) to occur under valgrind. The easiest way of doing this is something like: VALGRIND="valgrind -q" scripts/run_tests ... NOTE: Some libc calls seem to do weird things and perhaps cause spurious output from ctdbd at start time. Please read valgrind output carefully before reporting bugs. :-) * CTDB How to invoke the ctdb client. If not already set and if $VALGRIND is set, this is set to "$VALGRIND ctdb". If this is not already set but $VALGRIND is not set, this is simply set to "ctdb" Look, no run_test! ------------------ If you want to integrate individual tests into some other test environment you can use scripts/ctdb_test_env to wrap individual tests. They will return 0 on success, non-zero otherwise, and will print the output omitting the test header/footer that surrounds test output when tests are run using run_tests. So, you can do something like: for i in simple/*.sh ; do my_test_framework_wrapper scripts/ctdb_test_env $i done to have your own framework process the test results and output.