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How to run

  • yarn test
  • yarn test:debug
  • yarn test:node (or SDK=node yarn test:debug for debugging)
  • CONFIG=all-against-mock yarn test (or CONFIG=all-against-mock yarn test:debug)

Note that many options can be combined. This is still a work in progress but as of today you can use SERVER to define the backend you want to use and SDK to pin one SDK implementation. Tests by default will run against all SDKs

Ideas:

  • Each container needs to comply with a pre-defined API contract (this could be defined by OpenAPI, we don't need tests validating they comply because the main tests will fail anyway if they don't)

Conventions

Defining new components to test

Inside src folder you'll find sdks and servers. Both allow us to run tests against different configuration setups.

To add a new server or sdk, you only need to add a folder containing a container.ts file. The folder name will work as its name.

Each container.ts file has to export a function called create. The interfaces vary for each case and this is one thing that can be improved.

For sdks:

export function create(
    options: SDKOptions): ContainerInstance {
        // define your implementation
}

For servers:

export function create(
    config: TestConfiguration, 
    options: ContainerOptions): UnleashServerInterface {
        // define your implementation
}

SDK API

Since SDKs we've defined an ad-hoc one that helps us test these SDKs by means of HTTP calls while these SDKs run inside a containerized environment.

It's up to each SDK to implement this interface and properly use the SDK. This adds another layer of complexity, but helps us standardize the tests that have to talk to a single HTTP API rather than having to write tests in multiple languages

Debugging the http requests

The easy way

You can enable ngrep output by declaring the DEBUG environment variable DEBUG=true CONFIG=only-valid yarn test

The hardcore way

You can use wireshark to inspect the communication between the servers and the SDKs as follows while the tests are running:

docker network ls | grep from-config-test | awk '{ print $1 }' | sort -u | head -n 1 | xargs -i sudo wireshark -k -Y http -i br-{}

or using ngrep:

docker network ls | grep from-config-test | awk '{ print $1 }' | sort -u | head -n 1 | xargs -i sudo ngrep -q -W byline -d br-{}

Breaking the command down:

  1. docker network ls list all docker networks. Since tests open a new network everytime they run, while the tests are running this allow us to see what network the tests are using
  2. grep from-config-test we gave a name to the network where the tests run so we can easily get it by this name
  3. awk '{ print $1 }' gets the network id
  4. sort -u | head -n 1 keeps only the first appearence
  5. Options:
    1. xargs -i sudo wireshark -k -Y http -i br-{} takes the id and sends it to wireshark. -k jumps directly to the watch screen. -Y http applies an http filter. -i br-{} specifies the bridge interface which is a combination of br- plus the network id
    2. xargs -i sudo ngrep -q -W byline -d br-{} takes the id and sends it to ngrep. -W byline specifies the output. -d br-{} specifies the interface which is a combination of br- plus the network id. You can forward the output to a file