# Which Problems Are Solved
Eventual consistency is handled wrongly in the newly improved
integration tests.
# How the Problems Are Solved
Correct the usage of the require package with the assert package where
necessary, to remove the panics where the EventuallyWithT functions can
rerun.
# Additional Changes
Modify the timeout values for some EventuallyWithT which can vary when a
instance is freshly setup.
# Additional Context
None
Improve integration tests:
- spliting the tests in TokenExchange to isolated instances and in
parallel
- corrected some test structure so that the check for Details is no done
anymore if the test already failed
- replace required-calls with assert-calls to not stop the testing
- add gofakeit for application, project and usernames(emails)
- add eventually checks for testing in actions v2, so the request only
get called when the execution is defined
- check for length of results in list/search endpoints to avoid index
errors
# Which Problems Are Solved
Use a single server instance for API integration tests. This optimizes
the time taken for the integration test pipeline,
because it allows running tests on multiple packages in parallel. Also,
it saves time by not start and stopping a zitadel server for every
package.
# How the Problems Are Solved
- Build a binary with `go build -race -cover ....`
- Integration tests only construct clients. The server remains running
in the background.
- The integration package and tested packages now fully utilize the API.
No more direct database access trough `query` and `command` packages.
- Use Makefile recipes to setup, start and stop the server in the
background.
- The binary has the race detector enabled
- Init and setup jobs are configured to halt immediately on race
condition
- Because the server runs in the background, races are only logged. When
the server is stopped and race logs exist, the Makefile recipe will
throw an error and print the logs.
- Makefile recipes include logic to print logs and convert coverage
reports after the server is stopped.
- Some tests need a downstream HTTP server to make requests, like quota
and milestones. A new `integration/sink` package creates an HTTP server
and uses websockets to forward HTTP request back to the test packages.
The package API uses Go channels for abstraction and easy usage.
# Additional Changes
- Integration test files already used the `//go:build integration`
directive. In order to properly split integration from unit tests,
integration test files need to be in a `integration_test` subdirectory
of their package.
- `UseIsolatedInstance` used to overwrite the `Tester.Client` for each
instance. Now a `Instance` object is returned with a gRPC client that is
connected to the isolated instance's hostname.
- The `Tester` type is now `Instance`. The object is created for the
first instance, used by default in any test. Isolated instances are also
`Instance` objects and therefore benefit from the same methods and
values. The first instance and any other us capable of creating an
isolated instance over the system API.
- All test packages run in an Isolated instance by calling
`NewInstance()`
- Individual tests that use an isolated instance use `t.Parallel()`
# Additional Context
- Closes#6684
- https://go.dev/doc/articles/race_detector
- https://go.dev/doc/build-cover
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Co-authored-by: Stefan Benz <46600784+stebenz@users.noreply.github.com>