go-ceph/cephfs/admin/fsadmin_test.go

183 lines
4.7 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// +build !luminous,!mimic
package admin
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"os"
"strconv"
"testing"
"time"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/require"
)
var (
cachedFSAdmin *FSAdmin
// set debugTrace to true to use tracing in tests
debugTrace = false
// some tests are sensitive to the server version
serverIsNautilus = false
serverIsOctopus = false
)
func init() {
dt := os.Getenv("GO_CEPH_TEST_DEBUG_TRACE")
if ok, err := strconv.ParseBool(dt); ok && err == nil {
debugTrace = true
}
switch os.Getenv("CEPH_VERSION") {
case "nautilus":
serverIsNautilus = true
case "octopus":
serverIsOctopus = true
}
}
func TestServerSentinel(t *testing.T) {
// there probably *is* a better way to do this but I'm doing what's easy
// and expedient at the moment. That's tying the tests to the environment
// var to tell us what version of the *server* we are testing against. The
// build tags control what version of the *client libs* we use. These
// happen to be the same for our CI tests today, but its a lousy way to
// organize things IMO.
// This check is intended to fail the test suite if you don't tell it a
// server version it expects and force us to update the tests if a new
// version of ceph is added.
if !serverIsNautilus && !serverIsOctopus {
t.Fatalf("server must be nautilus or octopus (do the tests need updating?)")
}
}
// tracingCommander serves two purposes: first, it allows one to trace the
// input and output json when running the tests. It can help with actually
// debugging the tests. Second, it demonstrates the rationale for using an
// interface in FSAdmin. You can layer any sort of debugging, error injection,
// or whatnot between the FSAdmin layer and the RADOS layer.
type tracingCommander struct {
conn RadosCommander
}
func tracer(c RadosCommander) RadosCommander {
return &tracingCommander{c}
}
func (t *tracingCommander) MgrCommand(buf [][]byte) ([]byte, string, error) {
fmt.Println("(MGR Command)")
for i := range buf {
fmt.Println("IN:", string(buf[i]))
}
r, s, err := t.conn.MgrCommand(buf)
fmt.Println("OUT(result):", string(r))
if s != "" {
fmt.Println("OUT(status):", s)
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("OUT(error):", err.Error())
}
return r, s, err
}
func (t *tracingCommander) MonCommand(buf []byte) ([]byte, string, error) {
fmt.Println("(MON Command)")
fmt.Println("IN:", string(buf))
r, s, err := t.conn.MonCommand(buf)
fmt.Println("OUT(result):", string(r))
if s != "" {
fmt.Println("OUT(status):", s)
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("OUT(error):", err.Error())
}
return r, s, err
}
func getFSAdmin(t *testing.T) *FSAdmin {
if cachedFSAdmin != nil {
return cachedFSAdmin
}
fsa, err := New()
require.NoError(t, err)
require.NotNil(t, fsa)
// We steal the connection set up by the New() method and wrap it in an
// optional tracer.
c := fsa.conn
if debugTrace {
c = tracer(c)
}
cachedFSAdmin = NewFromConn(c)
// We sleep briefly before returning in order to ensure we have a mgr map
// before we start executing the tests.
time.Sleep(50 * time.Millisecond)
return cachedFSAdmin
}
func TestInvalidFSAdmin(t *testing.T) {
fsa := &FSAdmin{}
res := fsa.rawMgrCommand([]byte("FOOBAR!"))
assert.Error(t, res.Unwrap())
}
type badMarshalType bool
func (badMarshalType) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
return nil, errors.New("Zowie! wow")
}
func TestBadMarshal(t *testing.T) {
fsa := getFSAdmin(t)
var bad badMarshalType
res := fsa.marshalMgrCommand(bad)
assert.Error(t, res.Unwrap())
}
func TestParseListNames(t *testing.T) {
R := newResponse
t.Run("error", func(t *testing.T) {
_, err := parseListNames(R(nil, "", errors.New("bonk")))
assert.Error(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, "bonk", err.Error())
})
t.Run("statusSet", func(t *testing.T) {
_, err := parseListNames(R(nil, "unexpected!", nil))
assert.Error(t, err)
})
t.Run("badJSON", func(t *testing.T) {
_, err := parseListNames(R([]byte("Foo[[["), "", nil))
assert.Error(t, err)
})
t.Run("ok", func(t *testing.T) {
l, err := parseListNames(R([]byte(`[{"name":"bob"}]`), "", nil))
assert.NoError(t, err)
if assert.Len(t, l, 1) {
assert.Equal(t, "bob", l[0])
}
})
}
func TestCheckEmptyResponseExpected(t *testing.T) {
R := newResponse
t.Run("error", func(t *testing.T) {
err := R(nil, "", errors.New("bonk")).noData().End()
assert.Error(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, "bonk", err.Error())
})
t.Run("statusSet", func(t *testing.T) {
err := R(nil, "unexpected!", nil).noData().End()
assert.Error(t, err)
})
t.Run("someJSON", func(t *testing.T) {
err := R([]byte(`{"trouble": true}`), "", nil).noData().End()
assert.Error(t, err)
})
t.Run("ok", func(t *testing.T) {
err := R([]byte{}, "", nil).noData().End()
assert.NoError(t, err)
})
}