conformance

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Published: Apr 14, 2021 License: MIT Imports: 46 Imported by: 0

README

Conformance Tests

Tests structure

  1. tests/ directory contains the configuration and the test definition for conformance tests.
  2. All the conformance tests are within the tests/conformance directory.
  3. All the configurations are in the tests/config directory.
  4. Each of the component specific component definition are in their specific component type folder in the tests/config folder. For eg: redis statestore component definition within state directory. The component types are bindings, state, secretstores, pubsub. Cloud specific components will be within their own cloud directory within the component type folder eg: pubsub/azure/servicebus.
  5. Similar to the component definitions, each component type has its own set of the conformance tests definitions.
  6. Each component type contains a tests.yml definition that defines the component to be tested along with component specific test configuration. Nested folder names have their / in path replaced by . in the component name in tests.yml eg: azure/servicebus should be azure.servicebus
  7. All the tests configurations are defined in common.go file.
  8. Each component type has its own _test file to trigger the conformance tests. Eg: bindings_test.go.
  9. Each test added will also need to be added to the conformance.yml workflow file.

Conformance test workflow

  1. All components/services tested in the automated tests are currently manually setup by the Dapr team and run in an environment maintained by the Dapr team. As a contributor, follow the next two steps for integrating a new component with conformance tests.
  2. If the component is tested locally within a docker container requiring no secrets, then add the component to the pr-components step in conformance test workflow .github/conformance.yml. pr-components step generates the component matrix for which the conformance tests will be run on each PR.
  3. If the component is tested against a service and requires secrets, then add the component to the cron-components step in conformance test workflow .github/conformance.yml. cron-components defines the components for which the conformance test will be run against the master code in a scehduled manner.

Integrating a new component with conformance tests

  1. Add the component specific YAML to tests/config/<COMPONENT-TYPE>/<COMPONENT>/<FILE>.yaml.
  2. All passwords will be of the form ${{PASSWORD_KEY}} so that it is injected via environment variables.
  3. Register the component New** function in common.go. Eg:
...
	switch tc.Component {
	case "azure.servicebusqueues":
		binding = b_azure_servicebusqueues.NewAzureServiceBusQueues(testLogger)
	case "azure.storagequeues":
		binding = b_azure_storagequeues.NewAzureStorageQueues(testLogger)
	case "azure.eventgrid":
		binding = b_azure_eventgrid.NewAzureEventGrid(testLogger)
	case "kafka":
		binding = b_kafka.NewKafka(testLogger)
	case "new-component":
		binding = b_new_component.NewComponent(testLogger)
	default:
		return nil
	}
...
  1. Add the config to tests.yml defined inside tests/config/<COMPONENT-TYPE>/ folder. Eg:
componentType: binding
components:
   ## All other components
  - component: <COMPONENT>
    allOperations: <true/false>
    operations: <List of operations if needed>
  1. Any UUID generation for keys can be specified using $((uuid)). Eg: See ../config/bindings/tests.yml
  2. Run the specific conformance test following the process below.
  3. Follow steps 2 and 3 for changes to the workflow.

Running conformance tests

  1. Test setup is independent of the test run.
  2. Run the service that needs to conformance tested locally or in your own cloud account.
  3. Some conformance tests require credentials in the form of environment variables. For examples Azure CosmosDB conformance tests will need to have Azure CosmosDB credentials. You will need to supply them to make these tests pass.
  4. To run specific tests, run:
# TEST_NAME can be TestPubsubConformance, TestStateConformance, TestSecretStoreConformance or TestBindingsConformance
# COMPONENT_NAME is the component name from the tests.yml file eg: azure.servicebus, redis, mongodb etc.
go test -v -tags=conftests -count=1 ./tests/conformance -run="${TEST_NAME}/${COMPONENT_NAME}"

Documentation

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

func ConvertMetadataToProperties

func ConvertMetadataToProperties(items []v1alpha1.MetadataItem) (map[string]string, error)

func LoadComponents

func LoadComponents(componentPath string) ([]v1alpha1.Component, error)

func LookUpEnv

func LookUpEnv(key string) string

func ParseConfigurationMap

func ParseConfigurationMap(t *testing.T, configMap map[string]interface{})

Types

type TestComponent

type TestComponent struct {
	Component     string                 `yaml:"component,omitempty"`
	Profile       string                 `yaml:"profile,omitempty"`
	AllOperations bool                   `yaml:"allOperations,omitempty"`
	Operations    []string               `yaml:"operations,omitempty"`
	Config        map[string]interface{} `yaml:"config,omitempty"`
}

type TestConfiguration

type TestConfiguration struct {
	ComponentType string          `yaml:"componentType,omitempty"`
	Components    []TestComponent `yaml:"components,omitempty"`
}

func NewTestConfiguration

func NewTestConfiguration(configFilepath string) (*TestConfiguration, error)

NewTestConfiguration reads the tests.yml and loads the TestConfiguration

func (*TestConfiguration) Run

func (tc *TestConfiguration) Run(t *testing.T)

Directories

Path Synopsis

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