Introduction ------------ For a developer, the simplest way of running most tests on a local machine from within the git repository is: make test This runs all unit tests (onnode, takeover, tool, eventscripts) and the tests against local daemons (simple) using the script tests/run_tests.sh. When running tests against a real or virtual cluster the script tests/run_cluster_tests.sh can be used. This runs all integration tests (simple, complex). Both of these scripts can also take a list of tests to run. You can also pass options, which are then passed to run_tests. However, if you just try to pass options to run_tests then you lose the default list of tests that are run. You can't have everything... scripts/run_tests ----------------- The above scripts invoke tests/scripts/run_tests. This script has a lot of command-line switches. Some of the more useful options include: -s Print a summary of tests results after running all tests -l Use local daemons for integration tests This allows the tests in "simple" to be run against local daemons. All integration tests communicate with cluster nodes using onnode or the ctdb tool, which both have some test hooks to support local daemons. By default 3 daemons are used. If you want to use a different number of daemons then do not use this option but set TEST_LOCAL_DAEMONS to the desired number of daemons instead. The -l option just sets TEST_LOCAL_DAEMONS to 3... :-) -e Exit on the first test failure -C Clean up - kill daemons and remove $TEST_VAR_DIR when done Tests uses a temporary/var directory for test state. By default, this directory is not removed when tests are complete, so you can do forensics or, for integration tests, re-run tests that have failed against the same directory (with the same local daemons setup). So this option cleans things up. Also kills local daemons associated with directory. -V Use as $TEST_VAR_DIR Use the specified temporary temporary/var directory. -H No headers - for running single test with other wrapper This allows tests to be embedded in some other test framework and executed one-by-one with all the required environment/infrastructure. This replaces the old ctdb_test_env script. How do the tests find remote test programs? ------------------------------------------- If the all of the cluster nodes have the CTDB git tree in the same location as on the test client then no special action is necessary. The simplest way of doing this is to share the tree to cluster nodes and test clients via NFS. If cluster nodes do not have the CTDB git tree then CTDB_TEST_REMOTE_DIR can be set to a directory that, on each cluster node, contains the contents of tests/scripts/ and tests/bin/. In the future this will hopefully (also) be supported via a ctdb-test package. Running the ctdb tool under valgrind ------------------------------------ The easiest way of doing this is something like: VALGRIND="valgrind -q" scripts/run_tests ... This can be used to cause all invocations of the ctdb client (and, with local daemons, the ctdbd daemons themselves) to occur under valgrind. NOTE: Some libc calls seem to do weird things and perhaps cause spurious output from ctdbd at start time. Please read valgrind output carefully before reporting bugs. :-) How is the ctdb tool invoked? ----------------------------- $CTDB determines how to invoke the ctdb client. If not already set and if $VALGRIND is set, this is set to "$VALGRIND ctdb". If this is not already set but $VALGRIND is not set, this is simply set to "ctdb"