Frederik Ring
f64aaa6e24
* Allow backup to be run as non-root user * Document usage as non-root user * Also test /etc access * Choose better name for doc |
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.. | ||
azure | ||
certs | ||
cli | ||
collision | ||
commands | ||
confd | ||
dropbox | ||
extend | ||
gpg | ||
ignore | ||
local | ||
lock | ||
nonroot | ||
notifications | ||
ownership | ||
pgzip | ||
proxy | ||
pruning | ||
s3 | ||
secrets | ||
services | ||
ssh | ||
swarm | ||
user | ||
webdav | ||
zstd | ||
Dockerfile | ||
README.md | ||
test.sh | ||
util.sh |
Integration Tests
Running tests
The main entry point for running tests is the ./test.sh
script.
It can be used to run the entire test suite, or just a single test case.
Run all tests
./test.sh
Run a single test case
./test.sh <directory-name>
Configuring a test run
In addition to the match pattern, which can be given as the first positional argument, certain behavior can be changed by setting environment variables:
BUILD_IMAGE
When set, the test script will build an up-to-date docker-volume-backup
image from the current state of your source tree, and run the tests against it.
BUILD_IMAGE=1 ./test.sh
The default behavior is not to build an image, and instead look for a version on your host system.
IMAGE_TAG
Setting this value lets you run tests against different existing images, so you can compare behavior:
IMAGE_TAG=v2.30.0 ./test.sh
NO_IMAGE_CACHE
When set, images from remote registries will not be cached and shared between sandbox containers.
NO_IMAGE_CACHE=1 ./test.sh
By default, two local images are created that persist the image data and provide it to containers at runtime.
Understanding the test setup
The test setup runs each test case in an isolated Docker container, which itself is running an otherwise unused Docker daemon. This means, tests can rely on noone else using that daemon, making expectations about the number of running containers and so forth. As the sandbox container is also expected to be torn down post test, the scripts do not need to do any clean up or similar.
Anatomy of a test case
The test.sh
script looks for an exectuable file called run.sh
in each directory.
When found, it is executed and signals success by returning a 0 exit code.
Any other exit code is considered a failure and will halt execution of further tests.
There is an util.sh
file containing a few commonly used helpers which can be used by putting the following prelude to a new test case:
cd "$(dirname "$0")"
. ../util.sh
current_test=$(basename $(pwd))