The hujson package transition to just being a pure AST
parser and formatter for HuJSON and not an unmarshaler.
Thus, parse HuJSON as such, convert it to JSON,
and then use the standard JSON unmarshaler.
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
Updates #4377
Very smoky/high-level test to ensure that derphttp internals play well
with an agressive (stare + bump) meddler-in-the-middle proxy.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
I would like to do some more customized integration tests in the future,
(specifically, bringing up a mitm proxy and testing tailscaled through that)
so hoping to bring back the nixos wiring to support that.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
Also fix a somewhat related printing bug in the process where
some paths would print "Success." inconsistently even
when there otherwise was no output (in the EditPrefs path)
Fixes#3830
Updates #3702 (which broke it once while trying to fix it)
Change-Id: Ic51e14526ad75be61ba00084670aa6a98221daa5
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The existing code relied on the Go build cache to avoid
needless work when obtaining the tailscale binaries.
For non-obvious reasons, the binaries were getting re-linked
every time, which added 600ms or so on my machine to every test.
Instead, build the binaries exactly once, on demand.
This reduces the time to run 'go test -count=5' from 34s to 10s
on my machine.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
The tests build fine on other Unix's, they just can't run there.
But there is already a t.Skip by default, so `go test` ends up
working fine elsewhere and checks the code compiles.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
This uses a neat little tool to dump the output of DNS queries to
standard out. This is the first end-to-end test of DNS that runs against
actual linux systems. The /etc/resolv.conf test may look superflous,
however this will help for correlating system state if one of the DNS
tests fails.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Fix a few test printing issues when tests fail.
Qemu console output is super useful when something is wrong in the
harness and we cannot even bring up the tests.
Also useful for figuring out where all the time goes in tests.
A little noisy, but not too noisy as long as you're only running one VM
as part of the tests, which is my plan.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Also remove extra distros for now.
We can bring them back later if useful.
Though our most important distros are these two Ubuntu, debian stable,
and Raspbian (not currently supported).
And before doing more Linux, we should do Windows.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
This prevents centos tests from timing out because sshd does reverse dns
lookups on every session being established instead of doing it once on
the acutal ssh connection being established. This is odd. Appending this
to the sshd config and restarting it seems to fix it though.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This moves the distribution definitions into a maintainable hujson file
instead of just existing as constants in `distros.go`. Comments are
maintained from the inline definitions.
This uses jennifer[1] for hygenic source tree creation. This allows us
to generate a unique top-level test for each VM run. This should
hopefully help make the output of `go test` easier to read.
This also separates each test out into its own top-level test so that we
can better track the time that each distro takes. I really wish there
was a way to have the `test_codegen.go` file _always_ run as a part of
the compile process instead of having to rely on people remembering to
run `go generate`, but I am limited by my tools.
This will let us remove the `-distro-regex` flag and use `go test -run`
to pick which distros are run.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Apparently this test was flaking because I critically misunderstood how
the kernel buffers UDP packets for senders. I'm trying to send more UDP
packets and will see if that helps.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This test used to try to run this only once, but this variant of the
test attempts to run `tailscale status` up to 6 times in a loop with
exponential backoff.
This fixes the flakiness found in previous instances of this test.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
My spatial memory functions poorly with large files and the vms_test.go
file recently surpassed the point where it functions adequately. This
patch splits up vms_test.go into more files to make my spatial memory
function like I need it to.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Split from https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/2376.
This adds IPv6 support to testcontrol so each member of the tailscale
network gets an IPv6 address too.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
To avoid the generated nixos disk images from becoming immune from the
GC, I delete the symlink to the nix store at the end of tests.
`t.Cleanup` runs at the end of a test. I changed this part of the code
to have a separate timer for how long it takes to run NixOS builds, but
I did that by using a subtest. This means that it was creating the NixOS
image, deleting its symlink and then trying to use that symlink to find
the resulting disk image, making the whole thing ineffectual.
This was a mistake. I am reverting this change made in
https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/2360 to remove this layer of
subtesting.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This tests incoming and outgoing UDP traffic. It would test incoming UDP
traffic however our socks server doesn't seem to allow for connecting to
destinations over UDP. When the socks server gets that support the
incoming test should pass without issue.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This adapts the existing in-process logcatcher from tstest/integration
into a public type and uses it on the side of testcontrol. This also
fixes a bug in the Alpine Linux OpenRC unit that makes every value in
`/etc/default/tailscaled` exported into tailscaled's environment, a-la
systemd [Service].EnviromentFile.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This does a few things:
1. Rewrites the tests so that we get a log of what individual tests
failed at the end of a test run.
2. Adds a test that runs an HTTP server via the tester tailscale node and
then has the VMs connect to that over Tailscale.
3. Dials the VM over Tailscale and ensures it answers SSH requests.
4. Other minor framework refactoring.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Oracle Linux[1] is a CentOS fork. It is not very special. I am adding it
to the integration jungle because I am adding it to pkgs and the website
directions.
[1]: https://www.oracle.com/linux/
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This makes sure `tailscale status` and `tailscale ping` works. It also
switches goexpect to use a batch instead of manually banging out each
line, which makes the tests so much easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This puts nix build logs on the filesystem so that we can debug them
later. This also disables nixos unstable until
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/128783 is fixed.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Okay, so, at a high level testing NixOS is a lot different than
other distros due to NixOS' determinism. Normally NixOS wants packages to
be defined in either an overlay, a custom packageOverrides or even
yolo-inline as a part of the system configuration. This is going to have
us take a different approach compared to other distributions. The overall
plan here is as following:
1. make the binaries as normal
2. template in their paths as raw strings to the nixos system module
3. run `nixos-generators -f qcow -o $CACHE_DIR/tailscale/nixos/version -c generated-config.nix`
4. pass that to the steps that make the virtual machine
It doesn't really make sense for us to use a premade virtual machine image
for this as that will make it harder to deterministically create the image.
Nix commands generate a lot of output, so their output is hidden behind the
`-verbose-nix-output` flag.
This unfortunately makes this test suite have a hard dependency on
Nix/NixOS, however the test suite has only ever been run on NixOS (and I
am not sure if it runs on other distros at all), so this probably isn't too
big of an issue.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Previously this test would reach out to the public DERP servers in order
to help machines connect with eachother. This is not ideal given our
plans to run these tests completely disconnected from the internet. This
patch introduces an in-process DERP server running on its own randomly
assigned HTTP port.
Updates #1988
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Occasionally the test framework would fail with a timeout due to a
virtual machine not phoning home in time. This seems to be happen
whenever qemu can't bind the VNC or SSH ports for a virtual machine.
This was fixed by taking the following actions:
1. Don't listen on VNC unless the `-use-vnc` flag is passed, this
removes the need to listen on VNC at all in most cases. The option to
use VNC is still left in for debugging virtual machines, but removing
this makes it easier to deal with (VNC uses this odd system of
"displays" that are mapped to ports above 5900, and qemu doesn't
offer a decent way to use a normal port number, so we just disable
VNC by default as a compromise).
2. Use a (hopefully) inactive port for SSH. In an ideal world I'd just
have the VM's SSH port be exposed via a Unix socket, however the QEMU
documentation doesn't really say if you can do this or not. While I
do more research, this stopgap will have to make do.
3. Strictly tie more VM resource lifetimes to the tests themselves.
Previously the disk image layers for virtual machines were only
cleaned up at the end of the test and existed in the parent
test-scoped temporary folder. This can make your tmpfs run out of
space, which is not ideal. This should minimize the use of temporary
storage as much as I know how to.
4. Strictly tie the qemu process lifetime to the lifetime of the test
using testing.T#Cleanup. Previously it used a defer statement to
clean up the qemu process, however if the tests timed out this defer
was not run. This left around an orphaned qemu process that had to be
killed manually. This change ensures that all qemu processes exit
when their relevant tests finish.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Previously we used t.Logf indirectly via package log. This worked, but
it was not ideal for our needs. It could cause the streams of output to
get crossed. This change uses a logger.FuncWriter every place log.Output
was previously used, which will more correctly write log information to
the right test output stream.
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
Alpine Linux[1] is a minimal Linux distribution built around musl libc.
It boots very quickly, requires very little ram and is as close as you
can get to an ideal citizen for testing Tailscale on musl. Alpine has a
Tailscale package already[2], but this patch also makes it easier for us
to provide an Alpine Linux package off of pkgs in the future.
Alpine only offers Tailscale on the rolling-release edge branch.
[1]: https://alpinelinux.org/
[2]: https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/packages?name=tailscale&branch=edge
Updates #1988
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This runner is in my homelab while we muse about a better, more
permanent home for these tests.
Updates #1988
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>
This makes integration tests pull pristine VM images from Amazon S3 if
they don't exist on disk. If the S3 fetch fails, it will fall back to
grabbing the image from the public internet. The VM images on the public
internet are known to be updated without warning and thusly change their
SHA256 checksum. This is not ideal for a test that we want to be able to
fire and forget, then run reliably for a very long time.
This requires an AWS profile to be configured at the default path. The
S3 bucket is rigged so that the requester pays. The VM images are
currently about 6.9 gigabytes. Please keep this in mind when running
these tests on your machine.
Documentation was added to the integration test folder to aid others in
running these tests on their machine.
Some wording in the logs of the tests was altered.
Updates #1988
Signed-off-by: Christine Dodrill <xe@tailscale.com>