JINMEI Tatuya d01a04e0f5 [1836] added a lettuce test case for delegation from unsigned zone with DO bit. 13 years ago
..
configurations 3e344c14a1 [1747] add a lettuce test for multiple queries 13 years ago
data 3e344c14a1 [1747] add a lettuce test for multiple queries 13 years ago
features d01a04e0f5 [1836] added a lettuce test case for delegation from unsigned zone with DO bit. 13 years ago
.gitignore 2b13ceb687 Add more .gitignore files for the rest of generated stuff 13 years ago
README 1a5bd80bbe [1290] update readmes 13 years ago
README.tutorial 7515af0e50 [1314] address review comments 13 years ago
setup_intree_bind10.sh.in 2103ad2196 [1451] address some of the review comments 13 years ago

README

BIND10 system testing with Lettuce
or: to BDD or not to BDD

In this directory, we define a set of behavioral tests for BIND 10. Currently,
these tests are specific for BIND10, but we are keeping in mind that RFC-related
tests could be separated, so that we can test other systems as well.

Prerequisites:
- Installed version of BIND 10 (but see below how to run it from source tree)
- dig
- lettuce (http://lettuce.it)

To install lettuce, if you have the python pip installation tool, simply do
pip install lettuce
See http://lettuce.it/intro/install.html

Most systems have the pip tool in a separate package; on Debian-based systems
it is called python-pip. On FreeBSD the port is devel/py-pip.

Running the tests
-----------------

At this moment, we have a fixed port for local tests in our setups, port 47806.
This port must be free. (TODO: can we make this run-time discovered?).
Port 47805 is used for cmdctl, and must also be available.
(note, we will need to extend this to a range, or if possible, we will need to
do some on-the-fly available port finding)

The bind10 main program, bindctl, and dig must all be in the default search
path of your environment, and BIND 10 must not be running if you use the
installed version when you run the tests.

If you want to test an installed version of bind 10, just run 'lettuce' in
this directory.

We have provided a script that sets up the shell environment to run the tests
with the build tree version of bind. If your shell uses export to set
environment variables, you can source the script setup_intree_bind10.sh, then
run lettuce.

Due to the default way lettuce prints its output, it is advisable to run it
in a terminal that is wide than the default. If you see a lot of lines twice
in different colors, the terminal is not wide enough.

If you just want to run one specific feature test, use
lettuce features/

To run a specific scenario from a feature, use
lettuce features/ -s

We have set up the tests to assume that lettuce is run from this directory,
so even if you specify a specific feature file, you should do it from this
directory.

What to do when a test fails
----------------------------

First of all, look at the error it printed and see what step it occurred in.
If written well, the output should explain most of what went wrong.

The stacktrace that is printed is *not* of bind10, but of the testing
framework; this helps in finding more information about what exactly the test
tried to achieve when it failed (as well as help debug the tests themselves).

Furthermore, if any scenario fails, the output from long-running processes
will be stored in the directory output/. The name of the files will be
--.stdout and
--.stderr
Where spaces and other non-standard characters are replaced by an underscore.
The process name is either the standard name for said process (e.g. 'bind10'),
or the name given to it by the test ('when i run bind10 as ').

These files *will* be overwritten or deleted if the same scenarios are run
again, so if you want to inspect them after a failed test, either do so
immediately or move the files.

Adding and extending tests
--------------------------

If you want to add tests, it is advisable to first go through the examples to
see what is possible, and read the documentation on http://www.lettuce.it

There is also a README.tutorial file here.

We have a couple of conventions to keep things manageable.

Configuration files go into the configurations/ directory.
Data files go into the data/ directory.
Step definition go into the features/terrain/ directory (the name terrain is
chosen for the same reason Lettuce chose terrain.py, this is the place the
tests 'live' in).
Feature definitions go directly into the features/ directory.

These directories are currently not divided further; we may want to consider
this as the set grows. Due to a (current?) limitation of Lettuce, for
feature files this is currently not possible; the python files containing
steps and terrain must be below or at the same level of the feature files.

Long-running processes should be started through the world.RunningProcesses
instance. If you want to add a process (e.g. bind9), create start, stop and
control steps in terrain/_control.py, and let it use the
RunningProcesses API (defined in terrain.py). See bind10_control.py for an
example.

For sending queries and checking the results, steps have been defined in
terrain/querying.py. These use dig and store the results split up into text
strings. This is intentionally not parsed through our own library (as that way
we might run into a 'symmetric bug'). If you need something more advanced from
query results, define it here.

Some very general steps are defined in terrain/steps.py.
Initialization code, cleanup code, and helper classes are defined in
terrain/terrain.py.

To find the right steps, case insensitive matching is used. Parameters taken
from the steps are case-sensitive though. So a step defined as
'do foo with value (bar)' will be matched when using
'Do Foo with value xyz', but xyz will be taken as given.

If you need to add steps that are very particular to one test, create a new
file with a name relevant for that test in terrain. We may want to consider
creating a specific subdirectory for these, but at this moment it is unclear
whether we need to.

We should try to keep steps as general as possible, while not making them to
complex and error-prone.