Test utils provide common functions and structs for testing. It includes two structs:
-
PodmanTest
: Handle the podman command and other global resources like temporary directory. It provides basic methods, like checking podman image and pod status. Test suites should create their owner test struct as a composite ofPodmanTest
, and their owner PodmanMakeOptions(). -
PodmanSession
: Store execution session data and related methods. Such like get command output and so on. It can be used directly in the test suite, only embed it to your owner session struct if you need expend it.
To ensure neither tests nor utils break, There are unit-tests for each functions and
structs in test/utils
. When you adding functions or structs to this package, please
update both unit-tests for it and this documentation.
Run unit test for test/utils.
make localunit
The test utils package is at the same level of test suites. Each test suites also have their
owner common functions and structs stored in libpod_suite_test.go
.
Ginkgo is a BDD testing framework. This allows us to use native Golang to perform our tests and there is a strong affiliation between Ginkgo and the Go test framework.
Some external binaries are required to successfully run the tests. The test currently depend on:
- normal podman runtime dependencies
- coreutils
- ncat
- gzip
- xz
- htpasswd
- iproute2
- iptables
- util-linux
- tar
- docker
- systemd/systemctl
Most of these are only required for a few tests so it is not a big issue if not everything is installed. Only a few test should fail then.
Build ginkgo and install it under ./test/tools/build/ginkgo with the following command:
make .install.ginkgo
Test suite for integration test for podman command line. It has its own structs:
-
PodmanTestIntegration
: Integration test struct as a composite ofPodmanTest
. It set up the global options for podman command to ignore the environment influence from different test system. -
PodmanSessionIntegration
: This struct has it own methods for checking command output with given format JSON by using structs defined in inspect package.
You can run the entire suite of integration tests with the following command:
make localintegration
To run the remote tests use:
make remoteintegration
Some test only work as rootless while others only work as root. So to test everything you should make sure to run the make command above as normal user and root.
The following environment variables are supported by the test setup:
PODMAN_BINARY
: path to the podman binary, defaults tobin/podman
in the repository root.PODMAN_REMOTE_BINARY
: path to the podman-remote binary, defaults tobin/podman-remote
in the repository root.QUADLET_BINARY
: path to the quadlet binary, defaults tobin/quadlet
in the repository root.CONMON_BINARY
: path to th conmon binary, defaults to/usr/libexec/podman/conmon
.OCI_RUNTIME
: which oci runtime to use, defaults tocrun
.NETWORK_BACKEND
: the network backend, eithernetavark
(default) orcni
.PODMAN_DB
: the database backendsqlite
(default) orboltdb
.PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_CACHE_DIR
: path were the container images should be cached, defaults to/tmp
.
You can run a single file of integration tests using the go test command:
make localintegration FOCUS_FILE=your_test.go
FOCUS_FILE
file maps to ginkgo's --focus-file
option, see the ginkgo
docs for the accepted syntax.
For remote tests use the remoteintegration
Makefile target instead.
Before running the test suite, you have to declare which test you want run in the test file itself. Consider the following actual test:
It("podman inspect bogus pod", func() {
session := podmanTest.Podman([]string{"pod", "inspect", "foobar"})
session.WaitWithDefaultTimeout()
Expect(session).To(ExitWithError(125, "no such pod foobar"))
})
To mark this as the test you want run, you simply change the It description to FIt. Please note how
both the F
and I
are capitalized. Also see the ginkgo docs.
Note: Be sure you remove the F
from the tests before committing your changes or you will skip all tests
in that file except the one with the FIt
denotation.
Alternatively you can use the FOCUS
option which maps to --focus
, again see the ginkgo
docs for more info about the syntax.
make localintegration FOCUS="podman inspect bogus pod"
You can control the parameters passed to Ginkgo.
The flags already used can be set by their corresponding environment variable:
- Disable parallel tests by setting
GINKGO_PARALLEL=n
- Set flake retry count (default 0) to one by setting
GINKGO_FLAKE_ATTEMPTS=1
- Produce colorful tests report by setting
GINKGO_NO_COLOR=n
For anything else, use TESTFLAGS
.
For example for failing fast, set TESTFLAGS=--fail-fast
System tests are used for testing the podman CLI in the context of a complete system. It requires that podman, all dependencies, and configurations are in place. The intention of system testing is to match as closely as possible with real-world user/developer use-cases and environments. The orchestration of the environments and tests is left to external tooling.
System tests use Bash Automated Testing System (bats
) as a testing framework.
Install it via your package manager or get latest stable version
directly from the repository, e.g.:
mkdir -p ~/tools/bats
git clone --single-branch --branch v1.1.0 https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core.git ~/tools/bats
Make sure that bats
binary (bin/bats
in the repository) is in your PATH
, if not - add it:
PATH=$PATH:~/tools/bats/bin
System tests also rely on jq
, socat
, nmap
, and other tools. For a
comprehensive list, see the %package tests
section in the
fedora specfile.
When bats
is installed and is in your PATH
, you can run the test suite with following command:
make localsystem
If you would like to run a subset of the system tests, or configure the environment (e.g. root vs rootless, local vs remote),
use hack/bats
.
For usage run:
hack/bats --help