// Copyright (C) 2015-2016 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
//
// This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
// License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
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/**
@page unitTests Building Kea with Unit Tests
@section unitTestsIntroduction Introduction
Kea uses the Google C++ Testing Framework (also called googletest or gtest) as a
base for our C++ unit-tests. See https://github.com/google/googletest for
details. We used to have Python unit-tests inherited from BIND10
days but have been removed, so please do not write any new Kea unit
tests in Python. If you want to write DHCP tests in Python, we encourage you to
take a look at ISC Forge: http://kea.isc.org/wiki/IscForge .
You must have \c gtest installed or at least extracted in a directory
before compiling Kea unit-tests. To enable unit-tests in Kea, use:
@code
./configure --with-gtest=/path/to/your/gtest/dir
@endcode
or
@code
./configure --with-gtest-source=/path/to/your/gtest/dir
@endcode
Depending on how you compiled or installed \c gtest (e.g. from sources
or using some package management system) one of those two switches will
find \c gtest. After that you make and run the unit-tests with:
@code
make check
@endcode
@section unitTestsEnvironmentVariables Environment Variables
The following environment variable can affect the unit tests:
- KEA_LOCKFILE_DIR - Specifies a directory where the logging system should
create its lock file. If not specified, it is prefix/var/run/kea,
where prefix defaults to /usr/local. This variable must not end
with a slash. There is one special value, "none", which instructs Kea to
not create a lock file at all. This may cause issues if several processes
log to the same file. (Also see the Kea User's Guide, section 15.3.)
- KEA_LOGGER_DESTINATION - Specifies the logging destination. If not set, logged
messages will not be recorded anywhere. There are three special values:
stdout, stderr and syslog. Any other value is interpreted as a filename.
(Also see Kea User's Guide, section 15.3.)
- KEA_PIDFILE_DIR - Specifies the directory which should be used for PID files
as used by dhcp::Daemon or its derivatives. If not specified, the
default is prefix/var/run/kea, where prefix defaults to
/usr/local. This variable must not end with a slash.
- KEA_SOCKET_TEST_DIR - if set, it specifies the directory where Unix
sockets are created. There is an operating system limitation on how
long a Unix socket path can be, typically slightly over 100
characters. If you happen to build and run unit-tests in deeply nested
directories, this may become a problem. KEA_SOCKET_TEST_DIR can be
specified to instruct unit-test to use a different directory. It must
not end with slash.
@section unitTestsDatabaseConfig Databases Configuration for Unit Tests
With the use of databases requiring separate authorisation, there are
certain database-specific pre-requisites for successfully running the unit
tests. These are listed in the following sections.
@subsection unitTestsDatabaseUsers Database Users Required for Unit Tests
Unit tests validating database backends require that the keatest
database is created. This database should be empty. The unit tests
also require that the keatest user is created and that this user
is configured to access the database with a password of keatest.
Unit tests use these credentials to create database schema, run test cases
and drop the schema. Thus, the keatest user must have sufficiently
high privileges to create and drop tables, as well as insert and modify the
data within those tables.
The database backends which support read only access to the host
reservations databases (currently MySQL and PostgreSQL) include unit
tests verifying that a database user with read-only privileges can be
used to retrieve host reservations. Those tests require another user,
keatest_readonly, with SQL SELECT privilege to the keatest
database (i.e. without INSERT, UPDATE etc.), is also created.
keatest_readonly should also have the password keatest.
The following sections provide step-by-step guidelines how to setup the
databases for running unit tests.
@subsection mysqlUnitTestsPrerequisites MySQL Database
The steps to create the database and users are:
-# Log into MySQL as root:
@verbatim
% mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
:
mysql>@endverbatim\n
-# Create the test database. This must be called "keatest":
@verbatim
mysql> CREATE DATABASE keatest;
mysql>@endverbatim\n
-# Create the users under which the test client will connect to the database
(the apostrophes around the words keatest, keatest_readonly, and
localhost are required):
@verbatim
mysql> CREATE USER 'keatest'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'keatest';
mysql> CREATE USER 'keatest_readonly'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'keatest';
mysql>@endverbatim\n
-# Grant the created users permissions to access the keatest database
(again, the apostrophes around the user names and localhost
are required):
@verbatim
mysql> GRANT ALL ON keatest.* TO 'keatest'@'localhost';
mysql> GRANT SELECT ON keatest.* TO 'keatest_readonly'@'localhost';
mysql>@endverbatim\n
-# Exit MySQL:
@verbatim
mysql> quit
Bye
%@endverbatim
The unit tests are run automatically when "make check" is executed (providing
that Kea has been build with the \c --with-dhcp-mysql switch (see the installation
section in the Kea Administrator
Reference Manual).
@subsection pgsqlUnitTestsPrerequisites PostgreSQL Database
PostgreSQL set up differs from system to system. Please consult your
operating system-specific PostgreSQL documentation. The remainder of
that section uses Ubuntu 13.10 x64 (with PostgreSQL 9.0+) as an example.
On Ubuntu, PostgreSQL is installed (with sudo apt-get install
postgresql) under user postgres. To create new databases
or add new users, initial commands must be issued under this username:
@verbatim
$ sudo -u postgres psql postgres
[sudo] password for thomson:
psql (9.1.12)
Type "help" for help.
postgres=# CREATE USER keatest WITH PASSWORD 'keatest';
CREATE ROLE
postgres=# CREATE DATABASE keatest;
CREATE DATABASE
postgres=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE keatest TO keatest;
GRANT
postgres=# \q
@endverbatim
PostgreSQL versions earlier than 9.0 don't provide an SQL statement for granting
privileges on all tables in a database. In newer PostgreSQL versions, it is
possible to grant specific privileges on all tables within a schema.
However, this only affects tables which exist when the privileges are granted.
To ensure that the user has specific privileges to tables dynamically created
by the unit tests, the default schema privileges must be altered.
The following example demonstrates how to create the user keatest_readonly,
which has SELECT privilege to the tables within the keatest database,
in Postgres 9.0+. For earlier versions of Postgres, it is recommended to
simply grant full privileges to keatest_readonly, using the
same steps as for the keatest user.
@verbatim
$ psql -U postgres
Password for user postgres:
psql (9.1.12)
Type "help" for help.
postgres=# CREATE USER keatest_readonly WITH PASSWORD 'keatest';
CREATE ROLE
postgres=# \q
$ psql -U keatest
Password for user keatest:
psql (9.1.12)
Type "help" for help.
keatest=> ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA public GRANT SELECT ON TABLES to keatest_readonly;
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
keatest=> \q
@endverbatim
Note that the keatest user (rather than postgres) is used to grant
privileges to the keatest_readonly user. This ensures that the SELECT
privilege is granted only on the tables that the keatest user can access
within the public schema.
Now we should be able to log into the newly created database using both user
names:
@verbatim
$ psql -d keatest -U keatest
Password for user keatest:
psql (9.1.12)
Type "help" for help.
keatest=> \q
$ psql -d keatest -U keatest_readonly
Password for user keatest_readonly:
psql (9.1.12)
Type "help" for help.
keatest=>
@endverbatim
If instead of seeing keatest=> prompt, your login is refused with an error
code about failed peer or indent authentication, it means that PostgreSQL is
configured to check unix username and reject login attempts if PostgreSQL names
are different. To alter that, the PostgreSQL configuration must be changed -
the /etc/postgresql/9.1/main/pg_hba.conf config file
has to be altered. (It may be in a different location in your system.) The following
lines:
@verbatim
local all all peer
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 md5
host all all ::1/128 md5
@endverbatim
need to be replaced with:
@verbatim
local all all password
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 password
host all all ::1/128 password
@endverbatim
Another possible problem is that you get no password prompt. This is
most probably because you have no pg_hba.conf config file
and everybody is by default trusted. As it has a very bad effect
on the security you should have been warned this is a highly unsafe
configuration. The solution is the same, i.e., require password or
md5 authentication method.
If you lose the postgres user access you can first add:
@verbatim
local all postgres trust
@endverbatim
to trust only the local postgres user. Note the postgres user can
be pgsql on some systems.
Please consult your PostgreSQL user manual before applying those changes as
those changes may expose your other databases that you run on the same system.
In general case, it is a poor idea to run anything of value on a system
that runs tests. Use caution!
The unit tests are run automatically when "make check" is executed (providing
that Kea has been build with the \c --with-dhcp-pgsql switch (see the installation
section in the Kea Administrator
Reference Manual).
@subsection cqlUnitTestsPrerequisites Cassandra database
@todo: Describe steps necessary to set up Cassandra database suitable for running
unittests.
*/