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Adding a sandbox example

Add a verify.sh test to your sandbox

Sandboxes are tested as part of the continuous integration process, which expects each sandbox to have a verify.sh script containing tests for the example.

Basic layout of the verify.sh script

At a minimum the verify.sh script should include the necessary parts to start and stop your sandbox.

Given a sandbox with a single docker composition, adding the following to verify.sh will test that the sandbox can be started and stopped.

#!/bin/bash -e

export NAME=example-sandbox

# shellcheck source=examples/verify-common.sh
. "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../verify-common.sh"

# add example tests here...

The $NAME variable is used for logging when testing the example, and will often be the same as the directory name.

Log before running each test

There is a utility function run_log that can be used to indicate in test logs what is being executed and why, for example:

run_log "Checking foo.txt was created"
ls foo.txt

run_log "Checking bar.txt was created"
ls bar.txt

Add tests reflecting the documented examples

The tests should follow the steps laid out in the documentation.

For example, if the documentation provides a series of bash commands to execute, add these in order to verify.sh.

You may wish to grep the responses, or check return codes to ensure the commands respond as expected.

Likewise, if the documentation asks the user to browse to a page - for example http://localhost:8000 - then you should add a test to ensure that the given URL responds as expected.

If an example web page is also expected to make further JavaScript HTTP requests in order to function, then add tests for requests that mimick this interaction.

A number of utility functions have been added to simplify browser testing.

Utility functions: responds_with

The responds_with function can be used to ensure a request to a given URL responds with expected HTTP content.

It follows the form responds_with <expected_content> <url> [<curl_args>]

For example, a simple GET request:

responds_with \
    "Hello, world" \
    http://localhost:8000

This is a more complicated example that uses an HTTPS POST request and sends some additional headers:

responds_with \
    "Hello, postie" \
    https://localhost:8000/some-endpoint \
    -k \
    -X POST \
    -d 'data=hello,rcpt=service' \
    -H 'Origin: https://example-service.com'

Utility functions: responds_without

You can also check that a request does not respond with given HTTP content:

responds_without \
    "Anything unexpected" \
    "http://localhost:8000"

responds_without can accept additional curl arguments like responds_with

Utility functions: responds_with_header

You can check that a request responds with an expected header as follows:

responds_with_header \
    "HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden" \
    "http://localhost:8000/?name=notdown"

responds_with_header can accept additional curl arguments like responds_with

Utility functions: responds_without_header

You can also check that a request does not respond with a given header:

responds_without_header \
    "X-Secret: treasure" \
    "http://localhost:8000"

responds_without_header can accept additional curl arguments like responds_with

Utility functions: wait_for

You can wait for some amount of time (specified in seconds) for a command to return 0.

The following example will wait for 20 seconds for a service my-service to become healthy.

wait_for 20 sh -c "docker-compose ps my-service | grep healthy | grep -v unhealthy"

Slow starting docker compositions

Unless your example provides a way for ensuring that all containers are healthy by the time docker-compose up -d returns, you may need to add a DELAY before running the steps in your verify.sh

For example, to wait 10 seconds after docker-compose up -d has been called, set the following:

#!/bin/bash -e

export NAME=example-sandbox
export DELAY=10

# shellcheck source=examples/verify-common.sh
. "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../verify-common.sh"

# add example tests here...

Examples with multiple docker compositions

For your example to work it may need more than one docker composition to be run.

You can set where to find the docker-compose.yaml files with the PATHS argument.

By default PATHS=., but you can change this to a comma-separated list of paths.

For example a sandbox containing frontend/docker-compose.yaml and backend/docker-compose.yaml, might use a verify.sh with:

#!/bin/bash -e

export NAME=example-sandbox
export PATHS=frontend,backend

# shellcheck source=examples/verify-common.sh
. "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../verify-common.sh"

# add example tests here...

Bringing stacks up manually

You may need to bring up the stack manually, in order to run some steps beforehand.

Sourcing verify-common.sh will always leave you in the sandbox directory, and from there you can use the bring_up_example function.

For example:

#!/bin/bash -e

export NAME=example-sandbox
export MANUAL=true

# shellcheck source=examples/verify-common.sh
. "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../verify-common.sh"

run_log "Creating bar.txt before starting containers"
echo foo > bar.txt

bring_up_example

# add example tests here...

If your sandbox has multiple compositions, and uses the $PATHS env var described above, bring_up_example will bring all of your compositions up.

Additional arguments to docker-compose up -d

If you need to pass additional arguments to compose you can set the UPARGS env var.

For example, to scale a composition with a service named http_service, you should add the following:

#!/bin/bash -e

export NAME=example-sandbox
export UPARGS="--scale http_service=2"

# shellcheck source=examples/verify-common.sh
. "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../verify-common.sh"

# add example tests here...

Running commands inside docker containers

If your example asks the user to run commands inside containers, you can mimick this using docker-compose exec -T. The -T flag is necessary as the tests do not have access to a tty in the CI pipeline.

Note on permissions and configuration

The sandbox tests are run with a umask setting of 027 to ensure they will run in environments where this is the case.

As the Envoy containers run as non-root, it is essential that any configurations required by the daemon are included in the relevant example Dockerfile rather than mounted in any docker-compose.yaml files.

The Docker recipe should also ensure that added configurations are world-readable.

For example, with an added configuration file named front-envoy.yaml, you should add the following in the Docker recipe:

RUN chmod go+r /etc/front-envoy.yaml

Sandbox configuration tests

Example configuration files are tested to ensure they are valid and well-formed, and do not contain deprecated features.

Exclude configs from example configuration tests

The CI script searches for all files in the examples folders with a yaml or lua extension.

These files are bundled into a test and the yaml files are used to try to start an Envoy server.

If your example includes yaml files that are either not Envoy configuration, or for some reason cannot be tested in this way, you should add the files to the exclude list in the filegroup.srcs section of the examples/BUILD file.

The exclude patterns are evaluated as globs in the context of the examples folder.

Verifying your sandbox

Once you have built your sandbox, and added the verify.sh script you can run it directly in the sandbox folder.

For example:

cd examples/example-sandbox
./verify.sh

You should see the docker composition brought up, your tests run, and the composition brought down again.

The script should exit with 0 for the tests to pass.

Verifying multiple/all sandboxes

In continuous integration, all of the sandboxes are checked using the ci/verify-examples.sh.

This can also be called with a filter argument, which is a glob evaluated in the context of the examples folder.

For example, to run all sandboxes with names beginning jaeger:

./ci/verify-examples.sh jaeger*

NOTE

You can use this script locally to test the sandboxes on your platform, but you should be aware that it requires a lot of resources as it downloads and builds many Docker images, and then runs them in turn.


One way to run the tests in an isolated environment is to mount the envoy source into a docker-in-docker container or similar, and then run the script from inside that container.