This library is designed to assist in testing distributed states in Elixir which require a number of local nodes.
The aim is to provide a small set of functions which hide the complexity of spawning local nodes, as well as providing the ease of cleaning up the started nodes. The entire library is simple shimming around the Erlang APIs for dealing with distributed nodes, As some of it is non-obvious, and as I need this code for several projects, I span it out as a smaller project.
To install it for your project, you can pull it directly from Hex. Rather than use the version shown below, you can use the the latest version from Hex (shown at the top of this README).
def deps do
[{:local_cluster, "~> 1.2", only: [:test]}]
end
Documentation and examples can be found on Hexdocs
as they're updated automatically alongside each release. Note that you should only
use the :test
flag in your dependency if you're not using it for other environments.
To configure your test suites for cluster testing, you need to run through a one-time
setup to change some stuff in your test_helper.exs
. This is required to avoid some
potential issues with your node name changing after your application tree has already
stated. This also reduces some bloat due to having LocalCluster.start/0
in most test
cases. The snippet below can be used as a sample helper file. Make sure to change the
application name to match your application name.
# start the current node as a manager
:ok = LocalCluster.start()
# start your application tree manually
Application.ensure_all_started(:my_app)
# run all tests!
ExUnit.start()
You will also need to pass the --no-start
flag to mix test
. Fortunately this is
easy enough, as you can add an alias in your mix.exs
to do this automatically:
def project do
[
# ...
aliases: [
test: "test --no-start"
]
# ...
]
end
This library itself uses this setup, so you can copy/paste as needed or use as an
example when integrating into your own codebase. Note that you must have ensured
that epmd
has been started before using this lib; typically with epmd -daemon
.
As mentioned above, the API is deliberately tiny to make it easier to use this library when testing. Below is an example of using this library to spawn a set of child nodes for testing:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case
test "something with a required cluster" do
nodes = LocalCluster.start_nodes("my-cluster", 3)
[node1, node2, node3] = nodes
assert Node.ping(node1) == :pong
assert Node.ping(node2) == :pong
assert Node.ping(node3) == :pong
:ok = LocalCluster.stop_nodes([node1])
assert Node.ping(node1) == :pang
assert Node.ping(node2) == :pong
assert Node.ping(node3) == :pong
:ok = LocalCluster.stop()
assert Node.ping(node1) == :pang
assert Node.ping(node2) == :pang
assert Node.ping(node3) == :pang
end
end
After calling start_nodes/2
, you will receive a list of node names you can then use
to communicate with via RPC or however you'd like. Although they're automatically cleaned
up when the calling process dies, you can manually stop nodes as well to test disconnection.
In the case you need to control application startup manually, you can make use of the
:applications
option. This option determines startup order of your applications, and allows
you to exclude applications from the startup sequence. If this is not provided, the default
behaviour will be to start the same applications as are running on the local node. These
applications are loaded with all dependencies via Application.ensure_all_started/2
.
LocalCluster.start_nodes(:spawn, 3, [
applications: [
:start_this_application,
:and_then_this_one
]
])
If you need to load any additional files onto the remote nodes, you can make use of the
:files
option at startup time by providing an absolute file path to compile on the
cluster. This is necessary if you wish to spawn tasks onto the cluster from inside your
test code, as your test code is not loaded into the cluster automatically:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case
test "spawning tasks on a cluster" do
nodes = LocalCluster.start_nodes(:spawn, 3, [
files: [
__ENV__.file
]
])
[node1, node2, node3] = nodes
assert Node.ping(node1) == :pong
assert Node.ping(node2) == :pong
assert Node.ping(node3) == :pong
caller = self()
Node.spawn(node1, fn ->
send(caller, :from_node_1)
end)
Node.spawn(node2, fn ->
send(caller, :from_node_2)
end)
Node.spawn(node3, fn ->
send(caller, :from_node_3)
end)
assert_receive :from_node_1
assert_receive :from_node_2
assert_receive :from_node_3
end
end
If you need to override the application environment inherrited by the remote nodes,
you can use the :environment
option at startup. This koption set is merged over
the environment inside the started nodes:
LocalCluster.start_nodes(:spawn, 1, [
environment: [
my_app: [
port: 9999
]
]
])