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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>
96 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
96 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
# End-to-End VM-based Integration Testing
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This test spins up a bunch of common linux distributions and then tries to get
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them to connect to a
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[`testcontrol`](https://pkg.go.dev/tailscale.com/tstest/integration/testcontrol)
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server.
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## Running
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This test currently only runs on Linux.
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This test depends on the following command line tools:
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- [qemu](https://www.qemu.org/)
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- [cdrkit](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cdrkit)
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- [openssh](https://www.openssh.com/)
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This test also requires the following:
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- about 10 GB of temporary storage
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- about 10 GB of cached VM images
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- at least 4 GB of ram for virtual machines
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- hardware virtualization support
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([KVM](https://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Main_Page)) enabled in the BIOS
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- the `kvm` module to be loaded (`modprobe kvm`)
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- the user running these tests must have access to `/dev/kvm` (being in the
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`kvm` group should suffice)
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The `--no-s3` flag is needed to disable downloads from S3, which require
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credentials. However keep in mind that some distributions do not use stable URLs
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for each individual image artifact, so there may be spurious test failures as a
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result.
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If you are using [Nix](https://nixos.org), you can run all of the tests with the
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correct command line tools using this command:
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```console
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$ nix-shell -p nixos-generators -p openssh -p go -p qemu -p cdrkit --run "go test . --run-vm-tests --v --timeout 30m --no-s3"
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```
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Keep the timeout high for the first run, especially if you are not downloading
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VM images from S3. The mirrors we pull images from have download rate limits and
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will take a while to download.
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Because of the hardware requirements of this test, this test will not run
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without the `--run-vm-tests` flag set.
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## Other Fun Flags
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This test's behavior is customized with command line flags.
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### Don't Download Images From S3
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If you pass the `-no-s3` flag to `go test`, the S3 step will be skipped in favor
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of downloading the images directly from upstream sources, which may cause the
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test to fail in odd places.
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### Distribution Picking
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This test runs on a large number of distributions. By default it tries to run
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everything, which may or may not be ideal for you. If you only want to test a
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subset of distributions, you can use the `--distro-regex` flag to match a subset
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of distributions using a [regular expression](https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/)
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such as like this:
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```console
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$ go test -run-vm-tests -distro-regex centos
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```
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This would run all tests on all versions of CentOS.
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```console
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$ go test -run-vm-tests -distro-regex '(debian|ubuntu)'
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```
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This would run all tests on all versions of Debian and Ubuntu.
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### Ram Limiting
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This test uses a lot of memory. In order to avoid making machines run out of
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memory running this test, a semaphore is used to limit how many megabytes of ram
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are being used at once. By default this semaphore is set to 4096 MB of ram
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(about 4 gigabytes). You can customize this with the `--ram-limit` flag:
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```console
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$ go test --run-vm-tests --ram-limit 2048
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$ go test --run-vm-tests --ram-limit 65536
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```
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The first example will set the limit to 2048 MB of ram (about 2 gigabytes). The
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second example will set the limit to 65536 MB of ram (about 65 gigabytes).
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Please be careful with this flag, improper usage of it is known to cause the
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Linux out-of-memory killer to engage. Try to keep it within 50-75% of your
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machine's available ram (there is some overhead involved with the
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virtualization) to be on the safe side.
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