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open-component-model/ocm-e2e-framework

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OCM e2e Framework

This repository contains the testing infrastructure for OCM controllers. It contains e2e tests which run scenarios that involves multiple controllers working together. It's built around reusable steps to minimize the amount of testing code that has to be written.

Architecture

This framework is built around Tilt and e2e-framework from Kubernetes.

A basic flow is outlined as such:

architecture

Tilt

Why is Tilt involved in all of this? Tilt was added to greatly simplify setting up a dev environment. For a longer explanation read this wiki post.

It's a convenient way to set up the controllers and their dependencies such as RBAC, CRDs, Deployment, patches, etc.

Alternatives were considered, such as building test images and pushing to local registry. This was found suboptimal in cases of using CI vs. a local environment. The problem is to get the manifest files. If we download them, you might be testing the incorrect files locally when changing them.

Using Tilt you can be assured that you are testing the correct files and gives a lot of flexibility in configuring the controllers.

e2e-framework

This framework provides capabilities to interact with a cluster including creating and destroying them using kind. Each suite contains a TestMain which sets up things that the tests themselves will require. Such as:

  • what controllers should be started
  • port forward the registry
  • ...

The framework provides clear setup and teardown functions like this one:

func TestMain(m *testing.M) {
	cfg, _ := envconf.NewFromFlags()
	testEnv = env.NewWithConfig(cfg)
	kindClusterName = envconf.RandomName("component-version", 32)
	namespace = "ocm-system"

	testEnv.Setup(
		envfuncs.CreateKindCluster(kindClusterName),
		envfuncs.CreateNamespace(namespace),
		shared.RunTiltForControllers("ocm-controller", "replication-controller"),
		shared.ForwardRegistry(),
	)

	testEnv.Finish(
		shared.ShutdownPortForward(),
		envfuncs.DeleteNamespace(namespace),
		envfuncs.DestroyKindCluster(kindClusterName),
	)

	os.Exit(testEnv.Run(m))
}

Further Setup and Teardown functions can be added under shared/.

Details about writing tests can be read under Implementation.

Running the tests

Prerequisites and project structure

Any environment MUST have tilt and kind installed. To install them, run make prepare.

Another requirement is the controllers that are used in the test MUST be checked out next to this project. ocm-e2e-framework will gradually do cd .. to find any controllers it needs.

Simply go test

To run all tests, simply run make test. To run an individual suite, run:

go test -v -count=1 ./test/component_version

For a little while, it can seem like the test is hanging. This is the setup phase. You should see activity once the test enters the running phase. In the meantime, you can monitor progress with kind get clusters. e2e-framework sets up the kubernetes context to the kind cluster so, you should also be able to see pods by running kubectl get pods -A.

Parallel running

For now, this framework doesn't support running the suites in parallel and neither does e2e-framework. It uses the kube context to set up context to the current cluster. There are some workarounds, but doing that was not priority at the time of this writing. Tilt also can be told to use a different kube config and to run on a different port. This is future work.

Implementations

Writing tests in a declarative manner

The tests should try to follow a narrative. At the time of this writing, only two, very basic tests are available.

TODO: Fill this out with some concrete examples once we have them.

Using shared steps

There a number of steps like, setup and assesses that can be used to construct a test. If a step is not found under shared/steps/* consider adding it if you think that it might be reused.

Waiting for objects or conditions

To wait for an object to has certain property:

wait.For(conditions.New(config.Client().Resources()).ResourceScaled(deployment, func(object k8s.Object) int32 {
    return object.(*appsv1.Deployment).Status.ReadyReplicas
}, 2))

To wait on a condition to be fulfilled:

// wait for component version to be reconciled
err = wait.For(conditions.New(client.Resources()).ResourceMatch(cv, func(object k8s.Object) bool {
    cvObj := object.(*v1alpha1.ComponentVersion)
    return fconditions.IsTrue(cvObj, meta.ReadyCondition)
}), wait.WithTimeout(time.Minute*2))

Adding Setup functions

Using Context to share values between steps

The context in the Assess and Setup can be used to pass around certain values and objects which the next Assess can use. For example, passing around a whole object:

	createDeployment := features.New("Create Deployment").
		Assess("Create Nginx Deployment 1", func(ctx context.Context, t *testing.T, config *envconf.Config) context.Context {
			deployment := newDeployment(namespace, "deployment-1", 2)
			err := config.Client().Resources().Create(ctx, deployment)
			if err != nil {
				t.Error("failed to create test pod for deployment-1")
			}
			ctx = context.WithValue(ctx, "DEPLOYMENT", deployment)
			return ctx
		}).
		Assess("Wait for Nginx Deployment 1 to be scaled up", func(ctx context.Context, t *testing.T, config *envconf.Config) context.Context {
			deployment := ctx.Value("DEPLOYMENT").(*appsv1.Deployment)
			err := wait.For(conditions.New(config.Client().Resources()).ResourceScaled(deployment, func(object k8s.Object) int32 {
				return object.(*appsv1.Deployment).Status.ReadyReplicas
			}, 2))
			if err != nil {
				t.Error("failed waiting for deployment to be scaled up")
			}
			return ctx
		}).Feature()

Then, this feature can be executed together with others.

	testEnv.TestInParallel(t, createDeployment, checkDeployment, deleteDeployment)

Using ocm-e2e-framework as a library

Release Process

To release a new version of this library, simply make sure everything is pushed that you would like to release, than push a new tag. The release job should take care of the rest.

Contributing

Code contributions, feature requests, bug reports, and help requests are very welcome. Please refer to the Contributing Guide in the Community repository for more information on how to contribute to OCM.

OCM follows the CNCF Code of Conduct.

Licensing

Copyright 2022-2023 SAP SE or an SAP affiliate company and Open Component Model contributors. Please see our LICENSE for copyright and license information. Detailed information including third-party components and their licensing/copyright information is available via the REUSE tool.