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075abd8ec1
The panicLogWriter is too strict, and any panics that occur get wrapped up in quotes. This makes it so that it will allow panics to continue writing to Stderr without going through logger.Logf. Updates #cleanup Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
194 lines
4.8 KiB
Go
194 lines
4.8 KiB
Go
// Copyright (c) Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
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package tstest
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import (
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"bytes"
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"fmt"
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"log"
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"os"
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"sync"
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"testing"
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"go4.org/mem"
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"tailscale.com/types/logger"
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)
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type testLogWriter struct {
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t *testing.T
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}
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func (w *testLogWriter) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
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w.t.Helper()
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w.t.Logf("%s", b)
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return len(b), nil
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}
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func FixLogs(t *testing.T) {
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log.SetFlags(log.Ltime | log.Lshortfile)
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log.SetOutput(&testLogWriter{t})
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}
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func UnfixLogs(t *testing.T) {
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defer log.SetOutput(os.Stderr)
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}
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type panicLogWriter struct{}
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func (panicLogWriter) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
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// Allow certain phrases for now, in the interest of getting
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// CI working on Windows and not having to refactor all the
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// interfaces.GetState & tshttpproxy code to allow pushing
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// down a Logger yet. TODO(bradfitz): do that refactoring once
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// 1.2.0 is out.
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if bytes.Contains(b, []byte("tshttpproxy: ")) || bytes.Contains(b, []byte("runtime/panic.go:")) {
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os.Stderr.Write(b)
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return len(b), nil
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}
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panic(fmt.Sprintf("please use tailscale.com/logger.Logf instead of the log package (tried to log: %q)", b))
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}
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// PanicOnLog modifies the standard library log package's default output to
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// an io.Writer that panics, to root out code that's not plumbing their logging
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// through explicit tailscale.com/logger.Logf paths.
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func PanicOnLog() {
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log.SetOutput(panicLogWriter{})
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}
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// NewLogLineTracker produces a LogLineTracker wrapping a given logf that tracks whether expectedFormatStrings were seen.
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func NewLogLineTracker(logf logger.Logf, expectedFormatStrings []string) *LogLineTracker {
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ret := &LogLineTracker{
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logf: logf,
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listenFor: expectedFormatStrings,
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seen: make(map[string]bool),
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}
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for _, line := range expectedFormatStrings {
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ret.seen[line] = false
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}
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return ret
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}
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// LogLineTracker is a logger that tracks which log format patterns it's
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// seen and can report which expected ones were not seen later.
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type LogLineTracker struct {
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logf logger.Logf
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listenFor []string
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mu sync.Mutex
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closed bool
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seen map[string]bool // format string => false (if not yet seen but wanted) or true (once seen)
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}
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// Logf logs to its underlying logger and also tracks that the given format pattern has been seen.
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func (lt *LogLineTracker) Logf(format string, args ...any) {
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lt.mu.Lock()
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if lt.closed {
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lt.mu.Unlock()
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return
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}
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if v, ok := lt.seen[format]; ok && !v {
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lt.seen[format] = true
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}
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lt.mu.Unlock()
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lt.logf(format, args...)
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}
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// Check returns which format strings haven't been logged yet.
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func (lt *LogLineTracker) Check() []string {
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lt.mu.Lock()
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defer lt.mu.Unlock()
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var notSeen []string
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for _, format := range lt.listenFor {
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if !lt.seen[format] {
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notSeen = append(notSeen, format)
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}
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}
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return notSeen
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}
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// Reset forgets everything that it's seen.
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func (lt *LogLineTracker) Reset() {
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lt.mu.Lock()
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defer lt.mu.Unlock()
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for _, line := range lt.listenFor {
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lt.seen[line] = false
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}
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}
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// Close closes lt. After calling Close, calls to Logf become no-ops.
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func (lt *LogLineTracker) Close() {
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lt.mu.Lock()
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defer lt.mu.Unlock()
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lt.closed = true
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}
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// MemLogger is a bytes.Buffer with a Logf method for tests that want
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// to log to a buffer.
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type MemLogger struct {
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sync.Mutex
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bytes.Buffer
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}
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func (ml *MemLogger) Logf(format string, args ...any) {
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ml.Lock()
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defer ml.Unlock()
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fmt.Fprintf(&ml.Buffer, format, args...)
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if !mem.HasSuffix(mem.B(ml.Buffer.Bytes()), mem.S("\n")) {
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ml.Buffer.WriteByte('\n')
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}
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}
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func (ml *MemLogger) String() string {
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ml.Lock()
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defer ml.Unlock()
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return ml.Buffer.String()
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}
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// WhileTestRunningLogger returns a logger.Logf that logs to t.Logf until the
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// test finishes, at which point it no longer logs anything.
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func WhileTestRunningLogger(t testing.TB) logger.Logf {
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var (
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mu sync.RWMutex
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done bool
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)
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logger := func(format string, args ...any) {
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t.Helper()
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mu.RLock()
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defer mu.RUnlock()
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if done {
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return
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}
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t.Logf(format, args...)
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}
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// t.Cleanup is run before the test is marked as done, so by acquiring
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// the mutex and then disabling logs, we know that all existing log
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// functions have completed, and that no future calls to the logger
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// will log something.
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//
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// We can't do this with an atomic bool, since it's possible to
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// observe the following race:
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//
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// test goroutine goroutine 1
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// -------------- -----------
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// check atomic, testFinished = no
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// test finishes
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// run t.Cleanups
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// set testFinished = true
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// call t.Logf
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// panic
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//
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// Using a mutex ensures that all actions in goroutine 1 in the
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// sequence above occur atomically, and thus should not panic.
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t.Cleanup(func() {
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mu.Lock()
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defer mu.Unlock()
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done = true
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})
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return logger
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}
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