This document provides descriptions of Gerrit end-to-end (e2e
) test scenarios implemented using
the Gatling framework.
Similar scenarios have been successfully used to compare performance of different Gerrit versions or study the Gerrit response under different load profiles. Although mostly for load, scenarios can either be for load or functional (e2e) testing purposes. Functional scenarios may then reuse this framework and Gatling’s usability features such as its protocols (more below) and DSL.
That cross test-scope reusability applies to both Gerrit core scenarios and non-core ones, such as
for Gerrit plugins or other potential extensions. End-to-end testing may then include scopes like
feature integration, deployment, smoke (and load) testing. These load and functional test scopes
should remain orthogonal to the unit and component (aka Gerrit IT
-suffixed or acceptance
) ones.
The term acceptance
though may still be coined by organizations to target e2e functional testing.
What is Gatling?
Gatling is mostly a load testing tool which provides out of the box support for the HTTP protocol. Documentation on how to write an HTTP load test can be found here. However, in the scenarios that were initially proposed, the Gatling Git extension was leveraged to run tests at the Git protocol level.
Gatling is written in Scala, but the abstraction provided by the Gatling DSL makes the scenarios implementation easy even without any Scala knowledge. The Stress your Gerrit with Gatling blog post has more introductory information.
Examples of scenarios can be found in the e2e-tests
directory. The files in that directory should
be formatted using the mainstream
Scala plugin for IntelliJ. The latter is not
mandatory but preferred for sbt
and Scala IDE purposes in this project.
How to build the tests
An sbt-based installation of Scala is required.
The scalaVersion
used by sbt
once installed is defined in the build.sbt
file. That specific
version of Scala is automatically used by sbt
while building:
sbt compile
The following warning, if present when executing sbt
commands, can be removed by creating the
related credentials file
locally. Dummy values for user
and password
in that file can be used initially.
[warn] Credentials file ~/.sbt/sonatype_credentials does not exist
Every sbt
command can include an optional log level
argument.
Below, [info]
logs are no longer shown:
sbt --warn compile
How to build using Docker
docker build . -t e2e-tests
How to set-up
SSH keys
If you are running SSH commands, the private keys of the users used for testing need to go in
/tmp/ssh-keys
. The keys need to be generated this way (JSch won’t validate them
otherwise):
mkdir /tmp/ssh-keys ssh-keygen -m PEM -t rsa -C "test@mail.com" -f /tmp/ssh-keys/id_rsa
The public key in /tmp/ssh-keys/id_rsa.pub
has to be added to the test user(s) SSH Keys
in
Gerrit. Now, the host from which the latter runs may need public key scanning to become known.
This applies to the local user that runs the forthcoming sbt
testing commands. An example
assuming localhost
follows:
ssh-keyscan -t rsa -p 29418 localhost > ~/.ssh/known_hosts
Input file
The CloneUsingBothProtocols
scenario is fed with the data coming from the
src/test/resources/data/com/google/gerrit/scenarios/CloneUsingBothProtocols.json
file. Such a
file contains the commands and repository used during the e2e test. That file currently looks like
below. This scenario serves as a simple example with no actual load in it. It can be used to test
or validate the local setup. More complex scenarios can be further developed, under the
com.google.gerrit.scenarios
package.
[ { "url": "ssh://admin@localhost:29418/loadtest-repo", "cmd": "clone" }, { "url": "http://localhost:8080/loadtest-repo", "cmd": "clone" } ]
Valid commands are:
-
clone
-
fetch
-
pull
-
push
Project and HTTP credentials
The example above assumes that the loadtest-repo
project exists in the Gerrit under test. The
CloneUsingBothProtocols
scenario already includes creating that project and deleting it once done
with it. That scenario class can be used as an example of how a scenario can compose itself
alongside other scenarios (here, CreateProject
and DeleteProject
).
The HTTP Credentials
or password obtained from test user’s Settings
(in Gerrit) may be
required, in src/test/resources/application.conf
, depending on the above commands used. That
file’s http
section shows which shell environment variables can be used to set those credentials.
Executing the CloneUsingBothProtocols
scenario, as is, does require setting the http credentials.
That is because of the aforementioned create/delete project (http) scenarios composed within it.
How to run tests
Run all tests:
sbt "gatling:test"
Run a single test:
sbt "gatling:testOnly com.google.gerrit.scenarios.CloneUsingBothProtocols"
Generate the last report:
sbt "gatling:lastReport"
The src/test/resources/logback.xml
file
configures Gatling’s logging level.
How to run using Docker
docker run -it e2e-tests -s com.google.gerrit.scenarios.CloneUsingBothProtocols
How to run non-core scenarios
Locally adding non-core scenarios, for example from Gerrit plugins, is as simple as copying such files in. Copying is necessary over linking, unless running using Docker (above) is not required. Docker does not support links for files it has to copy over through the Dockerfile (here, the scenario files). Here is how to proceed for adding such external (e.g., plugin) scenario files in:
pushd e2e-tests/src/test/scala cp -r (or, ln -s) scalaPackageStructure . popd pushd e2e-tests/src/test/resources/data cp -r (or, ln -s) jsonFilesPackageStructure . popd
The destination folders above readily git-ignore every non-core scenario file added under them. If
running using Docker, e2e-tests/Dockerfile
may require another COPY
line for the hereby added
scenarios. Aforementioned sbt
or docker
commands can then be used to run the added tests.
Part of Gerrit Code Review
[scala]: