terrain.py 19 KB

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  1. # Copyright (C) 2011 Internet Systems Consortium.
  2. #
  3. # Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
  4. # purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
  5. # copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
  6. #
  7. # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND INTERNET SYSTEMS CONSORTIUM
  8. # DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL
  9. # IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL
  10. # INTERNET SYSTEMS CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT,
  11. # INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING
  12. # FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
  13. # NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
  14. # WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
  15. #
  16. # This is the 'terrain' in which the lettuce lives. By convention, this is
  17. # where global setup and teardown is defined.
  18. #
  19. # We declare some attributes of the global 'world' variables here, so the
  20. # tests can safely assume they are present.
  21. #
  22. # We also use it to provide scenario invariants, such as resetting data.
  23. #
  24. from lettuce import *
  25. import subprocess
  26. import os
  27. import shutil
  28. import re
  29. import sys
  30. import time
  31. # lettuce cannot directly pass commands to the terrain, so we need to
  32. # use environment variables to influence behaviour
  33. KEEP_OUTPUT = 'LETTUCE_KEEP_OUTPUT'
  34. # In order to make sure we start all tests with a 'clean' environment,
  35. # We perform a number of initialization steps, like restoring configuration
  36. # files, and removing generated data files.
  37. # This approach may not scale; if so we should probably provide specific
  38. # initialization steps for scenarios. But until that is shown to be a problem,
  39. # It will keep the scenarios cleaner.
  40. # This is a list of files that are freshly copied before each scenario
  41. # The first element is the original, the second is the target that will be
  42. # used by the tests that need them
  43. copylist = [
  44. ["configurations/bindctl_commands.config.orig",
  45. "configurations/bindctl_commands.config"],
  46. ["configurations/example.org.config.orig",
  47. "configurations/example.org.config"],
  48. ["configurations/bindctl/bindctl.config.orig",
  49. "configurations/bindctl/bindctl.config"],
  50. ["configurations/auth/auth_basic.config.orig",
  51. "configurations/auth/auth_basic.config"],
  52. ["configurations/auth/auth_badzone.config.orig",
  53. "configurations/auth/auth_badzone.config"],
  54. ["configurations/resolver/resolver_basic.config.orig",
  55. "configurations/resolver/resolver_basic.config"],
  56. ["configurations/multi_instance/multi_auth.config.orig",
  57. "configurations/multi_instance/multi_auth.config"],
  58. ["configurations/ddns/ddns.config.orig",
  59. "configurations/ddns/ddns.config"],
  60. ["configurations/ddns/noddns.config.orig",
  61. "configurations/ddns/noddns.config"],
  62. ["configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master.conf.orig",
  63. "configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master.conf"],
  64. ["configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master_v4.conf.orig",
  65. "configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master_v4.conf"],
  66. ["configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master_nons.conf.orig",
  67. "configurations/xfrin/retransfer_master_nons.conf"],
  68. ["configurations/xfrin/retransfer_slave.conf.orig",
  69. "configurations/xfrin/retransfer_slave.conf"],
  70. ["configurations/xfrin/retransfer_slave_notify.conf.orig",
  71. "configurations/xfrin/retransfer_slave_notify.conf"],
  72. ["data/inmem-xfrin.sqlite3.orig",
  73. "data/inmem-xfrin.sqlite3"],
  74. ["data/xfrin-before-diffs.sqlite3.orig",
  75. "data/xfrin-before-diffs.sqlite3"],
  76. ["data/xfrin-notify.sqlite3.orig",
  77. "data/xfrin-notify.sqlite3"],
  78. ["data/ddns/example.org.sqlite3.orig",
  79. "data/ddns/example.org.sqlite3"]
  80. ]
  81. # This is a list of files that, if present, will be removed before a scenario
  82. removelist = [
  83. "data/test_nonexistent_db.sqlite3"
  84. ]
  85. # When waiting for output data of a running process, use OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL
  86. # as the interval in which to check again if it has not been found yet.
  87. # If we have waited OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS times, we will abort with an
  88. # error (so as not to hang indefinitely)
  89. OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL = 0.5
  90. OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS = 120
  91. # class that keeps track of one running process and the files
  92. # we created for it.
  93. class RunningProcess:
  94. def __init__(self, step, process_name, args):
  95. # set it to none first so destructor won't error if initializer did
  96. """
  97. Initialize the long-running process structure, and start the process.
  98. Parameters:
  99. step: The scenario step it was called from. This is used for
  100. determining the output files for redirection of stdout
  101. and stderr.
  102. process_name: The name to refer to this running process later.
  103. args: Array of arguments to pass to Popen().
  104. """
  105. self.process = None
  106. self.step = step
  107. self.process_name = process_name
  108. self.remove_files_on_exit = (os.environ.get(KEEP_OUTPUT) != '1')
  109. self._check_output_dir()
  110. self._create_filenames()
  111. self._start_process(args)
  112. # used in _wait_for_output_str, map from (filename, (strings))
  113. # to a file offset.
  114. self.__file_offsets = {}
  115. def _start_process(self, args):
  116. """
  117. Start the process.
  118. Parameters:
  119. args:
  120. Array of arguments to pass to Popen().
  121. """
  122. stderr_write = open(self.stderr_filename, "w")
  123. stdout_write = open(self.stdout_filename, "w")
  124. self.process = subprocess.Popen(args, 1, None, subprocess.PIPE,
  125. stdout_write, stderr_write)
  126. # open them again, this time for reading
  127. self.stderr = open(self.stderr_filename, "r")
  128. self.stdout = open(self.stdout_filename, "r")
  129. def mangle_filename(self, filebase, extension):
  130. """
  131. Remove whitespace and non-default characters from a base string,
  132. and return the substituted value. Whitespace is replaced by an
  133. underscore. Any other character that is not an ASCII letter, a
  134. number, a dot, or a hyphen or underscore is removed.
  135. Parameter:
  136. filebase: The string to perform the substitution and removal on
  137. extension: An extension to append to the result value
  138. Returns the modified filebase with the given extension
  139. """
  140. filebase = re.sub("\s+", "_", filebase)
  141. filebase = re.sub("[^a-zA-Z0-9.\-_]", "", filebase)
  142. return filebase + "." + extension
  143. def _check_output_dir(self):
  144. # We may want to make this overridable by the user, perhaps
  145. # through an environment variable. Since we currently expect
  146. # lettuce to be run from our lettuce dir, we shall just use
  147. # the relative path 'output/'
  148. """
  149. Make sure the output directory for stdout/stderr redirection
  150. exists.
  151. Fails if it exists but is not a directory, or if it does not
  152. and we are unable to create it.
  153. """
  154. self._output_dir = os.getcwd() + os.sep + "output"
  155. if not os.path.exists(self._output_dir):
  156. os.mkdir(self._output_dir)
  157. assert os.path.isdir(self._output_dir),\
  158. self._output_dir + " is not a directory."
  159. def _create_filenames(self):
  160. """
  161. Derive the filenames for stdout/stderr redirection from the
  162. feature, scenario, and process name. The base will be
  163. "<Feature>-<Scenario>-<process name>.[stdout|stderr]"
  164. """
  165. filebase = self.step.scenario.feature.name + "-" +\
  166. self.step.scenario.name + "-" + self.process_name
  167. self.stderr_filename = self._output_dir + os.sep +\
  168. self.mangle_filename(filebase, "stderr")
  169. self.stdout_filename = self._output_dir + os.sep +\
  170. self.mangle_filename(filebase, "stdout")
  171. def stop_process(self):
  172. """
  173. Stop this process by calling terminate(). Blocks until process has
  174. exited. If remove_files_on_exit is True, redirected output files
  175. are removed.
  176. """
  177. if self.process is not None:
  178. self.process.terminate()
  179. self.process.wait()
  180. self.process = None
  181. if self.remove_files_on_exit:
  182. self._remove_files()
  183. def _remove_files(self):
  184. """
  185. Remove the files created for redirection of stdout/stderr output.
  186. """
  187. os.remove(self.stderr_filename)
  188. os.remove(self.stdout_filename)
  189. def _wait_for_output_str(self, filename, running_file, strings, only_new,
  190. matches=1):
  191. """
  192. Wait for a line of output in this process. This will (if
  193. only_new is False) check all output from the process including
  194. that may have been checked before. If only_new is True, it
  195. only checks output that has not been covered in previous calls
  196. to this method for the file (if there was no such previous call to
  197. this method, it works same as the case of only_new=False).
  198. Care should be taken if only_new is to be set to True, as it may cause
  199. counter-intuitive results. For example, assume the file is expected
  200. to contain a line that has XXX and another line has YYY, but the
  201. ordering is not predictable. If this method is called with XXX as
  202. the search string, but the line containing YYY appears before the
  203. target line, this method remembers the point in the file beyond
  204. the line that has XXX. If a next call to this method specifies
  205. YYY as the search string with only_new being True, the search will
  206. fail. If the same string is expected to appear multiple times
  207. and you want to catch the latest one, a more reliable way is to
  208. specify the match number and set only_new to False, if the number
  209. of matches is predictable.
  210. For each line in the output, the given strings array is checked. If
  211. any output lines checked contains one of the strings in the strings
  212. array, that string (not the line!) is returned.
  213. Parameters:
  214. filename: The filename to read previous output from, if applicable.
  215. running_file: The open file to read new output from.
  216. strings: Array of strings to look for.
  217. only_new: See above.
  218. matches: Check for the string this many times.
  219. Returns a tuple containing the matched string, and the complete line
  220. it was found in.
  221. Fails if none of the strings was read after 10 seconds
  222. (OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL * OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS).
  223. """
  224. # Identify the start offset of search. if only_new=True, start from
  225. # the farthest point we've reached in the file; otherwise start from
  226. # the beginning.
  227. if not filename in self.__file_offsets:
  228. self.__file_offsets[filename] = 0
  229. offset = self.__file_offsets[filename] if only_new else 0
  230. running_file.seek(offset)
  231. match_count = 0
  232. wait_count = 0
  233. while wait_count < OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS:
  234. line = running_file.readline()
  235. where = running_file.tell()
  236. if line:
  237. for string in strings:
  238. if line.find(string) != -1:
  239. match_count += 1
  240. if match_count >= matches:
  241. # If we've gone further, update the recorded offset
  242. if where > self.__file_offsets[filename]:
  243. self.__file_offsets[filename] = where
  244. return (string, line)
  245. else:
  246. wait_count += 1
  247. time.sleep(OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL)
  248. running_file.seek(where)
  249. assert False, "Timeout waiting for process output: " + str(strings)
  250. def wait_for_stderr_str(self, strings, only_new = True, matches = 1):
  251. """
  252. Wait for one of the given strings in this process's stderr output.
  253. Parameters:
  254. strings: Array of strings to look for.
  255. only_new: See _wait_for_output_str.
  256. matches: Check for the string this many times.
  257. Returns a tuple containing the matched string, and the complete line
  258. it was found in.
  259. Fails if none of the strings was read after 10 seconds
  260. (OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL * OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS).
  261. """
  262. return self._wait_for_output_str(self.stderr_filename, self.stderr,
  263. strings, only_new, matches)
  264. def wait_for_stdout_str(self, strings, only_new = True, matches = 1):
  265. """
  266. Wait for one of the given strings in this process's stdout output.
  267. Parameters:
  268. strings: Array of strings to look for.
  269. only_new: See _wait_for_output_str.
  270. matches: Check for the string this many times.
  271. Returns a tuple containing the matched string, and the complete line
  272. it was found in.
  273. Fails if none of the strings was read after 10 seconds
  274. (OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL * OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS).
  275. """
  276. return self._wait_for_output_str(self.stdout_filename, self.stdout,
  277. strings, only_new, matches)
  278. # Container class for a number of running processes
  279. # i.e. servers like bind10, etc
  280. # one-shot programs like dig or bindctl are started and closed separately
  281. class RunningProcesses:
  282. def __init__(self):
  283. """
  284. Initialize with no running processes.
  285. """
  286. self.processes = {}
  287. def add_process(self, step, process_name, args):
  288. """
  289. Start a process with the given arguments, and store it under the given
  290. name.
  291. Parameters:
  292. step: The scenario step it was called from. This is used for
  293. determining the output files for redirection of stdout
  294. and stderr.
  295. process_name: The name to refer to this running process later.
  296. args: Array of arguments to pass to Popen().
  297. Fails if a process with the given name is already running.
  298. """
  299. assert process_name not in self.processes,\
  300. "Process " + process_name + " already running"
  301. self.processes[process_name] = RunningProcess(step, process_name, args)
  302. def get_process(self, process_name):
  303. """
  304. Return the Process with the given process name.
  305. Parameters:
  306. process_name: The name of the process to return.
  307. Fails if the process is not running.
  308. """
  309. assert process_name in self.processes,\
  310. "Process " + name + " unknown"
  311. return self.processes[process_name]
  312. def stop_process(self, process_name):
  313. """
  314. Stop the Process with the given process name.
  315. Parameters:
  316. process_name: The name of the process to return.
  317. Fails if the process is not running.
  318. """
  319. assert process_name in self.processes,\
  320. "Process " + name + " unknown"
  321. self.processes[process_name].stop_process()
  322. del self.processes[process_name]
  323. def stop_all_processes(self):
  324. """
  325. Stop all running processes.
  326. """
  327. for process in self.processes.values():
  328. process.stop_process()
  329. def keep_files(self):
  330. """
  331. Keep the redirection files for stdout/stderr output of all processes
  332. instead of removing them when they are stopped later.
  333. """
  334. for process in self.processes.values():
  335. process.remove_files_on_exit = False
  336. def wait_for_stderr_str(self, process_name, strings, only_new = True, matches = 1):
  337. """
  338. Wait for one of the given strings in the given process's stderr output.
  339. Parameters:
  340. process_name: The name of the process to check the stderr output of.
  341. strings: Array of strings to look for.
  342. only_new: See _wait_for_output_str.
  343. matches: Check for the string this many times.
  344. Returns the matched string.
  345. Fails if none of the strings was read after 10 seconds
  346. (OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL * OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS).
  347. Fails if the process is unknown.
  348. """
  349. assert process_name in self.processes,\
  350. "Process " + process_name + " unknown"
  351. return self.processes[process_name].wait_for_stderr_str(strings,
  352. only_new,
  353. matches)
  354. def wait_for_stdout_str(self, process_name, strings, only_new = True, matches = 1):
  355. """
  356. Wait for one of the given strings in the given process's stdout output.
  357. Parameters:
  358. process_name: The name of the process to check the stdout output of.
  359. strings: Array of strings to look for.
  360. only_new: See _wait_for_output_str.
  361. matches: Check for the string this many times.
  362. Returns the matched string.
  363. Fails if none of the strings was read after 10 seconds
  364. (OUTPUT_WAIT_INTERVAL * OUTPUT_WAIT_MAX_INTERVALS).
  365. Fails if the process is unknown.
  366. """
  367. assert process_name in self.processes,\
  368. "Process " + process_name + " unknown"
  369. return self.processes[process_name].wait_for_stdout_str(strings,
  370. only_new,
  371. matches)
  372. @before.each_scenario
  373. def initialize(scenario):
  374. """
  375. Global initialization for each scenario.
  376. """
  377. # Keep track of running processes
  378. world.processes = RunningProcesses()
  379. # Convenience variable to access the last query result from querying.py
  380. world.last_query_result = None
  381. # Convenience variable to access the last HTTP response from http.py
  382. world.last_http_response = None
  383. # For slightly better errors, initialize a process_pids for the relevant
  384. # steps
  385. world.process_pids = None
  386. # Some tests can modify the settings. If the tests fail half-way, or
  387. # don't clean up, this can leave configurations or data in a bad state,
  388. # so we copy them from originals before each scenario
  389. for item in copylist:
  390. shutil.copy(item[0], item[1])
  391. for item in removelist:
  392. if os.path.exists(item):
  393. os.remove(item)
  394. @after.each_scenario
  395. def cleanup(scenario):
  396. """
  397. Global cleanup for each scenario.
  398. """
  399. # Keep output files if the scenario failed
  400. if not scenario.passed:
  401. world.processes.keep_files()
  402. # Stop any running processes we may have had around
  403. world.processes.stop_all_processes()
  404. # Environment check
  405. # Checks if LETTUCE_SETUP_COMPLETED is set in the environment
  406. # If not, abort with an error to use the run-script
  407. if 'LETTUCE_SETUP_COMPLETED' not in os.environ:
  408. print("Environment check failure; LETTUCE_SETUP_COMPLETED not set")
  409. print("Please use the run_lettuce.sh script. If you want to test an")
  410. print("installed version of bind10 with these tests, use")
  411. print("run_lettuce.sh -I [lettuce arguments]")
  412. sys.exit(1)