yaks

module
v0.0.48 Latest Latest
Warning

This package is not in the latest version of its module.

Go to latest
Published: Jul 24, 2020 License: Apache-2.0

README

build

logo

YAKS

YAKS Cloud-Native BDD testing or simply: Yet Another Kubernetes Service

Getting Started

YAKS allows you to perform Could-Native BDD testing. Cloud-Native here means that your tests execute within a POD in a Kubernetes cluster. All you need to do is to write some BDD feature specs using the Gherkin syntax from Cucumber.

Windows prerequisite

For full support of Yaks on Windows please enable "Windows Subsystem for Linux". You can do it manually by heading to Control Panel > Programs > Turn Windows Features On or Off and checking "Windows Subsystem for Linux". Or you can simply execute this command in powershell:

Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux

This action requires a full reboot of the system.

Installation

The easiest way to getting started with YAKS is using the YAKS CLI. You can download the CLI from the release page.

To install the yaks binary, just make it runnable and move it to a location in your $PATH, e.g. on linux:

# Make executable and move to usr/local/bin
$ chmod a+x yaks-0.0.x-linux-64bit
$ mv yaks-0.0.x-linux-64bit /usr/local/bin/yaks

# Alternatively, set a symbolic link to "yaks" 
$ mv yaks-0.0.x-linux-64bit yaks
$ ln -s $(pwd)/yaks /usr/local/bin

YAKS tests can be executed on any Kubernetes or OpenShift environment.

You need to connect to the cluster and switch to the namespace where you want YAKS to be installed. You can also create a new namespace:

oc new-project my-yaks-project

To install YAKS into your namespace, just run:

# If it's the first time you install it on a cluster, make sure you're cluster admin.

yaks install

This will install the YAKS operator in the selected namespace. If not already installed, the command will also install the YAKS custom resource definitions in the cluster (in this case, the user needs cluster-admin permissions).

Running the Hello World!

examples/helloworld.feature

Feature: hello world

  Scenario: print slogan
    Given YAKS does Cloud-Native BDD testing
    Then YAKS rocks!

The helloworld.feature file is present in the examples directory of this repository: you can clone the repo or just download it to your host.

Once you have your first test in the helloworld.feature file, you can run it using:

yaks test helloworld.feature

This is an example of output you should get:

[user@localhost yaks]$ ./yaks test hello.feature 
test "hello" created
+ test-hello-bldrmuj9nakdqqrj7eag › test
[INFO] Scanning for projects...
[INFO] Add dynamic project dependencies ...
[INFO] Add mounted test resources in directory: /deployments
[INFO] 
[INFO] ------------< org.citrusframework.yaks:yaks-runtime-maven >-------------
[INFO] Building YAKS :: Runtime :: Maven 1.0.0-SNAPSHOT
[INFO] --------------------------------[ jar ]---------------------------------
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-enforcer-plugin:1.4.1:enforce (enforce-maven-version) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-remote-resources-plugin:1.5:process (default) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-remote-resources-plugin:1.5:process (process-resource-bundles) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-resources-plugin:3.1.0:resources (default-resources) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] Using 'UTF-8' encoding to copy filtered resources.
[INFO] skip non existing resourceDirectory /deployments/data/yaks-runtime-maven/src/main/resources
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-compiler-plugin:3.8.1:compile (default-compile) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] No sources to compile
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-resources-plugin:3.1.0:testResources (default-testResources) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] Using 'UTF-8' encoding to copy filtered resources.
[INFO] Copying 4 resources
[INFO] skip non existing resourceDirectory /deployments/..data
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-compiler-plugin:3.8.1:testCompile (default-testCompile) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] Nothing to compile - all classes are up to date
[INFO] 
[INFO] --- maven-surefire-plugin:2.22.2:test (default-test) @ yaks-runtime-maven ---
[INFO] 
[INFO] -------------------------------------------------------
[INFO]  T E S T S
[INFO] -------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Running org.citrusframework.yaks.YaksTest
2020-03-06 15:30:51.125|INFO |main|CitrusObjectFactory - Initializing injection mode 'RUNNER' for Citrus 2.8.0
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:51 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:51 UTC 2020]; root of context hierarchy
2020-03-06 15:30:52.711|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.711|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:52.711|INFO |main|LoggingReporter -        .__  __                       
2020-03-06 15:30:52.711|INFO |main|LoggingReporter -   ____ |__|/  |________ __ __  ______
2020-03-06 15:30:52.711|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - _/ ___\|  \   __\_  __ \  |  \/  ___/
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - \  \___|  ||  |  |  | \/  |  /\___ \ 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter -  \___  >__||__|  |__|  |____//____  >
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter -      \/                           \/
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - C I T R U S  T E S T S  2.8.0
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.712|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - BEFORE TEST SUITE: SUCCESS
2020-03-06 15:30:52.713|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:52.713|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:52.713|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:com/consol/citrus/cucumber/step/runner/core/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@5d52e3ef: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.729|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:org/citrusframework/yaks/http/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@2c0f7678: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.732|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:org/citrusframework/yaks/swagger/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@23c650a3: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.734|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:org/citrusframework/yaks/camel/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@50b1f030: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.736|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:org/citrusframework/yaks/jdbc/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@3e681bc: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.739|INFO |main|CitrusBackend - Loading XML step definitions classpath*:org/citrusframework/yaks/standard/**/*Steps.xml
Mar 06, 2020 3:30:52 PM org.springframework.context.support.AbstractApplicationContext prepareRefresh
INFO: Refreshing org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext@5f574cc2: startup date [Fri Mar 06 15:30:52 UTC 2020]; parent: org.springframework.context.annotation.AnnotationConfigApplicationContext@6f7923a5
2020-03-06 15:30:52.930|INFO |main|EchoAction - YAKS does Cloud-Native BDD testing
.2020-03-06 15:30:52.931|INFO |main|EchoAction - YAKS rocks!
.2020-03-06 15:30:53.077|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.077|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - TEST SUCCESS org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:3 (com.consol.citrus.dsl.runner)
2020-03-06 15:30:53.077|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:53.078|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 

2020-03-06 15:30:53.082|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.082|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - AFTER TEST SUITE: SUCCESS
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:53.083|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.084|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - CITRUS TEST RESULTS
2020-03-06 15:30:53.084|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.087|INFO |main|LoggingReporter -  org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:3 .................. SUCCESS
2020-03-06 15:30:53.087|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.087|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - TOTAL:	1
2020-03-06 15:30:53.088|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - FAILED:	0 (0.0%)
2020-03-06 15:30:53.088|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - SUCCESS:	1 (100.0%)
2020-03-06 15:30:53.088|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - 
2020-03-06 15:30:53.088|INFO |main|LoggingReporter - ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-03-06 15:30:53.122|INFO |main|AbstractOutputFileReporter - Generated test report: target/citrus-reports/citrus-test-results.html

1 Scenarios (1 passed)
2 Steps (2 passed)
0m1.711s

[INFO] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 3.274 s - in org.citrusframework.yaks.YaksTest
[INFO] 
[INFO] Results:
[INFO] 
[INFO] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0
[INFO] 
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 6.453 s
[INFO] Finished at: 2020-03-06T15:30:53Z
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Test result: Passed

The log ends with the result of the tests you've executed.

To check the status of all tests in the namespace, you can run:

oc get test

This is an example of output you should get:

[user@localhost yaks]$ kubectl get test
NAME    PHASE
hello   Passed

You can now change the test to use more complex steps and run it again with ./yaks test hello.feature.

Steps

Each line in a BDD feature file is backed by a step implementation that covers the actual runtime logic executed. YAKS provides a set of out-of-the-box step implementations that you can just use in your feature file.

Citrus steps

The Citrus framework provides a lot of features and predefined steps that can be used to write feature files.

More details can be found in the official Citrus documentation on BDD testing.

YAKS provide by default the Citrus Cucumber HTTP steps. The http binding allows to test some REST API, writing feature files like:

Feature: Integration Works

  Background:
    Given URL: https://swapi.co/api/films

  Scenario: Get a result from API
    When send GET /
    Then receive HTTP 200 OK

Camel K steps

If the subject under test is a Camel K integration, you can leverage the YAKS Camel K bindings that provide useful steps for checking the status of integrations.

For example:

   ...
   Given integration xxx is running
   Then integration xxx should print Hello world!

The Camel K extension library is provided by default in YAKS.

JDBC steps

YAKS provides a library that allows to execute SQL actions on relational DBs (limited to PostgreSQL for this POC).

You can find examples of JDBC steps in the examples file.

There's also an example that uses JDBC and REST together and targets the Syndesis TODO App database.

Http steps

The Http protocol is a widely used communication protocol when it comes to exchanging data between systems. REST Http services are very prominent and producing/consuming those services is a common task in software development these days. YAKS provides ready to use steps that are able to exchange request/response messages via Http during the test.

As a client you can specify the server URL and send requests to it.

Feature: Http client

  Background:
    Given URL: http://localhost:8080

  Scenario: Health check
    Given path /health is healthy

  Scenario: GET request
    When send GET /todo
    Then verify HTTP response body: {"id": "@ignore@", "task": "Sample task", "completed": 0}
    And receive HTTP 200 OK

The example above sets a base request URL to http://localhost:8080 and performs a health check on path /health. After that we can send any request to the server and verify the response body and status code.

All these steps are part of the core YAKS framework and you can just use them.

On the server side we can start a new Http server instance on a given port and listen for incoming requests. These request can be verified and the test can provide a simulated response message with body and header data.

Feature: Http server

  Background:
    Given HTTP server listening on port 8080 

  Scenario: Expect GET request
    When receive GET /todo
    Then HTTP response body:  {"id": 1000, "task": "Sample task", "completed": 0}
    And send HTTP 200 OK

  Scenario: Expect POST request
    Given expect HTTP request body: {"id": "@isNumber()@", "task": "New task", "completed": "@matches(0|1)@"}
    When receive POST /todo
    Then send HTTP 201 CREATED

In the HTTP server sample above we create a new server instance listening on port 8080. Then we expect a GET request on path /todo. The server responds with a Http 200 OK response message and given Json body as payload.

The second scenario expects a POST request with a given body as Json payload. The expected request payload is verified with the powerful Citrus JSON message validator being able to compare JSON tree structures in combination with validation matchers such as isNumber() or matches(0|1).

Once the request is verified the server responds with a simple Http 201 CREATED.

OpenAPI steps

OpenAPI documents specify RESTful Http services in a standardized, language-agnostic way. The specifications describe resources, path items, operations, security schemes and many more components that are part of the REST service. YAKS as a framework is able to use these information in order to generate proper request and response data for your test.

You can find examples of how to use OpenAPI specifications in YAKS in the examples.

Given an OpenAPI specification that you can access via Http URL or local file system you can load all available operations into the test. Once this is completed you can invoke operations by name and verify the response status codes. YAKS will automatically generate proper request/response data for you.

Feature: Petstore API V3

  Background:
    Given OpenAPI specification: http://localhost:8080/petstore/v3/openapi.json

  Scenario: getPet
    When invoke operation: getPetById
    Then verify operation result: 200 OK

  Scenario: petNotFound
    Given variable petId is "0"
    When invoke operation: getPetById
    Then verify operation result: 404 NOT_FOUND

  Scenario: addPet
    When invoke operation: addPet
    Then verify operation result: 201 CREATED

  Scenario: updatePet
    When invoke operation: updatePet
    Then verify operation result: 200 OK

  Scenario: deletePet
    When invoke operation: deletePet
    Then verify operation result: 204 NO_CONTENT

The request/response data is generated from the OpenAPI specification rules and holds randomized values. The following sample shows a generated request for the addPet operation where a new pet is transmitted via Http POST.

{
  "photoUrls": [
    "XHAGIyFcyh"
  ],
  "name": "mGNTgkfxgg",
  "id": 26866048,
  "category": {
    "name": "konwOUYwMo",
    "id": 18676332
  },
  "tags": [
    {
      "name": "KDnoWCfUBn",
      "id": 31444049
    }
  ],
  "status": "sold"
}

The generated request should be valid according to the rules in the OpenAPI specification. You can overwrite the randomized values with test variables and inbound/outbound data dictionaries in order to have more human readable test data.

Feature: Petstore API V3

  Background:
    Given OpenAPI specification: http://localhost:8080/petstore/v3/openapi.json
    Given variable petId is "citrus:randomNumber(5)"
    Given inbound dictionary
      | $.name          | @assertThat(anyOf(is(hasso),is(cutie),is(fluffy)))@ |
      | $.category.name | @assertThat(anyOf(is(dog),is(cat),is(fish)))@ |
    Given outbound dictionary
      | $.name          | citrus:randomEnumValue('hasso','cutie','fluffy') |
      | $.category.name | citrus:randomEnumValue('dog', 'cat', 'fish') |
 
  [...]

With this data dictionaries in place the generated request looks like follows:

{
  "photoUrls": [
    "aaKoEDhLYc"
  ],
  "name": "hasso",
  "id": 12337393,
  "category": {
    "name": "cat",
    "id": 23927231
  },
  "tags": [
    {
      "name": "FQxvuCbcqT",
      "id": 58291150
    }
  ],
  "status": "pending"
}

You see that we are now using more human readable values for $.name and $.category.name.

The same mechanism applies for inbound messages that are verified by YAKS. The framework will generate an expected response data structure coming from the OpenAPI specification. Below is a sample Json payload that verifies the response for the getPetById operation.

{
  "photoUrls": "@ignore@",
  "name": "@assertThat(anyOf(is(hasso),is(cutie),is(fluffy)))@",
  "id": "@isNumber()@",
  "category": {
    "name": "@assertThat(anyOf(is(dog),is(cat),is(fish)))@",
    "id": "@isNumber()@"
  },
  "tags": "@ignore@",
  "status": "@matches(available|pending|sold)@"
}

All mandatory fields need to be in the received json document. Also enumerations and number values are checked to meet the expected values coming form the OpenAPI specification (e.g. status=@matches(available|pending|sold)@). This ensures that the response respects the rules defined in the specification.

In case you also want to validate the exact values on each field please use the generic Http steps where you can provide a complete expected Http response with payload and header data.

Custom steps

It's often useful to plug some custom steps into the testing environment. Custom steps help keeping the tests short and self-explanatory and at the same time help teams to add generic assertions that are meaningful in their environment.

To add custom steps in YAKS, you can look at the example provided in the examples/extension directory. The example consists of a feature file (examples/extension/extension.feature) using a custom step from a local project (examples/extension/steps).

To run the example:

yaks test extension.feature -u steps/

The -u flag stands for "upload". The steps project is built before running the test and the artifacts are uploaded to a Snap Minio server, in order for the test to retrieve them when needed. This happens transparently to the user.

The local library can also be uploaded to the Snap Minio server prior to running the test, using the yaks upload command.

Runtime configuration

There are several runtime options that you can set in order to configure which tests to run for instance. Each test directory can have its own yaks-config.yaml configuration file that holds the runtime options for this specific test suite.

config:
  runtime:
    cucumber:
      tags:
      - "not @ignored"
      glue:
      - "org.citrusframework.yaks"
      - "com.company.steps.custom"

The sample above uses different runtime options for Cucumber to specify a tag filter and some custom glue packages that should be loaded. The given runtime options will be set as environment variables in the YAKS runtime pod.

You can also specify the Cucumber options that get passed to the Cucumber runtime.

config:
  runtime:
    cucumber:
      options: "--strict --monochrome --glue org.citrusframework.yaks"

Also we can make use of command line options when using the yaks binary.

$ yaks test hello-world.feature --tag @regression --glue org.citrusframework.yaks
Add custom runtime dependencies

The YAKS testing framework provides a base runtime image that holds all required libraries and artifacts to execute tests. You may need to add additional runtime dependencies though in order to extend the framework capabilities.

For instance when using a Camel route in your test you may need to add additional Camel components that are not part in the basic YAKS runtime (e.g. camel-groovy). You can add the runtime dependency to the YAKS runtime image in multiple ways:

Load dependencies via Cucumber tags

You can simply add a tag to your BDD feature specification in order to declare a runtime dependency for your test.

@require('org.apache.camel:camel-groovy:@camel.version@')
Feature: Camel route testing

  Background:
    Given Camel route hello.xml
    """
    <route>
      <from uri="direct:hello"/>
      <filter>
        <groovy>request.body.startsWith('Hello')</groovy>
        <to uri="log:org.citrusframework.yaks.camel?level=INFO"/>
      </filter>
      <split>
        <tokenize token=" "/>
        <to uri="seda:tokens"/>
      </split>
    </route>
    """

  Scenario: Hello route
    When send to route direct:hello body: Hello Camel!
    And receive from route seda:tokens body: Hello
    And receive from route seda:tokens body: Camel!

The given Camel route uses the groovy language support and this is not part in the basic YAKS runtime image. So we add the tag @require('org.apache.camel:camel-groovy:@camel.version@'). This tag will load the Maven dependency at runtime before the test is executed in the YAKS runtime image.

Note that you have to provide proper Maven artifact coordinates with proper groupId, artifactId and version. You can make use of version properties for these versions available in the YAKS base image:

  • citrus.version
  • camel.version
  • spring.version
  • cucumber.version
Load dependencies via System property or environment setting

You can add dependencies also by specifying the dependencies as command line parameter when running the test via yaks CLI.

$ yaks test --dependency org.apache.camel:camel-groovy:@camel.version@ camel-route.feature

This will add a environment setting in the YAKS runtime container and the dependency will be loaded automatically at runtime.

Load dependencies via property file

YAKS supports adding runtime dependency information to a property file called yaks.properties. The dependency is added through Maven coordinates in the property file using a common property key prefix yaks.dependency.

# include these dependencies
yaks.dependency.foo=org.foo:foo-artifact:1.0.0
yaks.dependency.bar=org.bar:bar-artifact:1.5.0

You can add the property file when running the test via yaks CLI like follows:

$ yaks test --settings yaks.properties camel-route.feature
Load dependencies via configuration file

When more dependencies are required to run a test you may consider to add a configuration file as .yaml or .json.

The configuration file is able to declare multiple dependencies:

dependencies:
  - groupId: org.foo
    artifactId: foo-artifact
    version: 1.0.0
  - groupId: org.bar
    artifactId: bar-artifact
    version: 1.5.0
{
  "dependencies": [
    {
      "groupId": "org.foo",
      "artifactId": "foo-artifact",
      "version": "1.0.0"
    },
    {
      "groupId": "org.bar",
      "artifactId": "bar-artifact",
      "version": "1.5.0"
    }
  ]
}

You can add the configuration file when running the test via yaks CLI like follows:

$ yaks test --settings yaks.settings.yaml camel-route.feature
Add custom Maven repositories

When adding custom runtime dependencies those artifacts might not be available on the public central Maven repository. Instead you may need to add a custom repository that holds your artifacts.

You can do this with several configuration options:

Add Maven repository via System property or environment setting

You can add repositories also by specifying the repositories as command line parameter when running the test via yaks CLI.

$ yaks test --maven-repository jboss-ea=https://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/groups/ea/ my.feature

This will add a environment setting in the YAKS runtime container and the repository will be added to the Maven runtime project model.

Add Maven repository via property file

YAKS supports adding Maven repository information to a property file called yaks.properties. The dependency is added through Maven repository id and url in the property file using a common property key prefix yaks.repository.

# Maven repositories
yaks.repository.central=https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/
yaks.repository.jboss-ea=https://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/groups/ea/

You can add the property file when running the test via yaks CLI like follows:

$ yaks test --settings yaks.properties my.feature
Add Maven repository via configuration file

More complex repository configuration might require to add a configuration file as .yaml or .json.

The configuration file is able to declare multiple repositories:

repositories:
  - id: "central"
    name: "Maven Central"
    url: "https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/"
    releases:
      enabled: "true"
      updatePolicy: "daily"
    snapshots:
      enabled: "false"
  - id: "jboss-ea"
    name: "JBoss Community Early Access Release Repository"
    url: "https://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/groups/ea/"
    layout: "default"
{
  "repositories": [
      {
        "id": "central",
        "name": "Maven Central",
        "url": "https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/",
        "releases": {
          "enabled": "true",
          "updatePolicy": "daily"
        },
        "snapshots": {
          "enabled": "false"
        }
      },
      {
        "id": "jboss-ea",
        "name": "JBoss Community Early Access Release Repository",
        "url": "https://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/groups/ea/",
        "layout": "default"
      }
    ]
}

You can add the configuration file when running the test via yaks CLI like follows:

$ yaks test --settings yaks.settings.yaml my.feature

Pre/Post scripts

You can run scripts before/after a test group. Just add your commands to the yaks-config.yaml configuration for the test group.

config:
  namespace:
    temporary: false
    autoRemove: true
pre:
  - script: prepare.sh
  - run: echo Start!
  - name: Optional name
    timeout: 30m
    run: |
      echo "Multiline"
      echo "Commands are also"
      echo "Supported!"
post:
  - script: finish.sh
  - run: echo Bye!

The section pre runs before a test group and post is added after the test group has finished. The post steps are run even if the tests or pre steps fail for some reason. This ensures that cleanup tasks are performed also in case of errors.

The script option provides a file path to bash script to execute. The user has to make sure that the script is executable. If no absolute file path is given it is assumed to be a file path relative to the current test group directory.

With run you can add any shell command. At the moment only single line commands are supported here. You can add multiple run commands in a pre or post section.

Each step can also define a human readable name that will be printed before its execution.

By default a step must complete within 30 minutes (30m). The timeout can be changed using the timeout option in the step declaration (in Golang duration format).

Scripts can leverage the following environment variables that are set automatically by the Yaks runtime:

  • YAKS_NAMESPACE: always contains the namespace where the tests will be executed, no matter if the namespace is fixed or temporary

Reporting options

After running some YAKS tests you may want to review the test results and generate a summary report. As we are using CRDs on the Kubernetes or OpenShift platform we can review the status of the custom resources after the test run in order to get some test results.

$ oc get tests

NAME         PHASE     TOTAL     PASSED    FAILED    SKIPPED
helloworld   Passed    2         2         0         0
foo-test     Passed    1         1         0         0
bar-test     Passed    1         1         0         0

You can also view error details when adding the wide option

$ oc get tests -o wide

NAME         PHASE     TOTAL     PASSED    FAILED    SKIPPED    ERRORS
helloworld   Passed    2         1         1         0          [ "helloworld.feature:10 Failed caused by ValidationException - Expected 'foo' but was 'bar'" ]
foo-test     Passed    1         1         0         0
bar-test     Passed    1         1         0         0

The YAKS CLI is able to fetch those results in order to generate a summary report locally:

$ yaks report --fetch

Test results: Total: 4, Passed: 4, Failed: 0, Skipped: 0
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:3: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:7: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/foo-test.feature:3: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/bar-test.feature:3: Passed

The report supports different output formats (summary, json, junit). For JUnit style reports use the junit output.

$ yaks report --fetch --output junit

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><testsuite name="org.citrusframework.yaks.JUnitReport" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" tests="4" time="0">
  <testcase name="helloworld.feature:3" classname="classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:3" time="0"></testcase>
  <testcase name="helloworld.feature:7" classname="classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:7" time="0"></testcase>
  <testcase name="foo-test.feature:3" classname="classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/foo-test.feature:3" time="0"></testcase>
  <testcase name="bar-test.feature:3" classname="classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/bar-test.feature:3" time="0"></testcase>
</testsuite>

The JUnit report is also saved to the local disk in the file _output/junit-reports.xml.

The _output directory is also used to store individual test results for each test executed via the YAKS CLI. So after a test run you can also review the results in that _output directory. The YAKS report command can also view those results in _output directory in any given output format. Simply leave out the --fetch option when generating the report and YAKS will use the test results stored in the local _output folder.

$ yaks report
Test results: Total: 5, Passed: 5, Failed: 0, Skipped: 0
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:3: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/helloworld.feature:7: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/test1.feature:3: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/test2.feature:3: Passed
	classpath:org/citrusframework/yaks/test3.feature:3: Passed

For YAKS developers

Requirements:

  • Go 1.12+
  • Operator SDK 0.9.0
  • Maven 3.5.0+
  • Git client
  • Mercurial client (ng)

You can build the YAKS project and get the yaks CLI by running:

make build

If you want to build the operator image locally for development in Minishift for instance, then:

# Build binaries and images
eval $(minishift docker-env)
make clean images-no-test

If the operator pod is running, just delete it to let it grab the new image.

oc delete pod yaks

Directories

Path Synopsis
cmd
pkg
apis/yaks
Package yaks contains yaks API versions.
Package yaks contains yaks API versions.
apis/yaks/v1alpha1
Package v1alpha1 contains API Schema definitions for the yaks v1alpha1 API group +k8s:deepcopy-gen=package,register +groupName=org.citrusframework.yaks Package v1alpha1 contains API Schema definitions for the yaks v1alpha1 API group +k8s:deepcopy-gen=package,register +groupName=org.citrusframework.yaks
Package v1alpha1 contains API Schema definitions for the yaks v1alpha1 API group +k8s:deepcopy-gen=package,register +groupName=org.citrusframework.yaks Package v1alpha1 contains API Schema definitions for the yaks v1alpha1 API group +k8s:deepcopy-gen=package,register +groupName=org.citrusframework.yaks
cmd

Jump to

Keyboard shortcuts

? : This menu
/ : Search site
f or F : Jump to
y or Y : Canonical URL