# Riak Test Welcome to the exciting world of `riak_test`. ## What is Riak Test? `riak_test` is a system for testing Riak clusters. Tests are written in Erlang, and can interact with the cluster using distributed Erlang. ### How does it work? `riak_test` runs tests in a sandbox, typically `$HOME/rt/riak`. The sanbox uses `git` to reset back to a clean state after tests are run. The contents of `$HOME/rt/riak` might look something like this: ``` $ ls $HOME/rt/riak current riak-1.1.4 riak-1.2.1 riak-1.3.2 ``` Inside each of these directories is a `dev` folder, typically created with your normal `make [stage]devrel`. So how does this sandbox get populated to begin with? You'll create another directory that will contain full builds of different version of Riak for your platform. Typically this directory has been `~/test-releases` but it can be called anything and be anywhere that you'd like. The `dev/` directory from each of these releases will be copied into the sandbox (`$HOME/rt/riak`). There are helper scripts in `bin/` which will help you get both `~/test-releases` and `$HOME/rt/riak` all set up. A full tutorial for using them exists further down in this README. There is one folder in `$HOME/rt/riak` that does not come from `~/test-releases`: `current`. The `current` folder can refer to any version of Riak, but is typically used for something like the `master` branch, a feature branch, or a release candidate. The `$HOME/rt/riak/current` dev release gets populated from a devrel of Riak that can come from anywhere, but is usually your 'normal' git checkout of Riak. The `bin/rtdev-current.sh` can be run from within that folder to copy `dev/` into `$HOME/rt/riak/current`. Once you have everything set up (again, instructions for this are below), you'll want to run and write tests. This repository also holds code for an Erlang application called `riak_test`. The actual tests exist in the `test/` directory. ## Bootstraping Your Test Environment Running tests against a development version of Riak is just one of the things that you can do with riak_test. You can also test things involving upgrading from previous versions of Riak. Together, we'll get your test environment up and running. Scripts to help in this process are located in the `bin` directory of this project. ### rtdev-all.sh This script is for the lazy. It performs all of the setup steps described in the other scripts, including installing the current "master" branch from Github into "current". The releases will be built in your current working directory, so create an empty one in a place you'd like to store these builds for posterity, so that you don't have to rebuild them if your installation path (`$HOME/rt/riak` by the way this script installs it) gets into a bad state. If you do want to restore your `$HOME/rt/riak` folder to factory condition, see `rtdev-setup-releases.sh` and if you want to change the current riak under test, see `rtdev-current.sh`. ### rtdev-build-releases.sh The first one that we want to look at is `rtdev-build-releases.sh`. If left unchanged, this script is going to do the following: 1. Download the source for the past three major Riak versions (e.g. 1.1.4, 1.2.1 and 1.3.2) 1. Build the proper version of Erlang that release was built with, using kerl (which it will also download) 1. Build those releases of Riak. You'll want to run this script from an empty directory. Also, you might be thinking that you already have all the required versions of erlang. Great! You can crack open the script and set the paths to your installation or set them from the command-line: ```bash R14B04=${R14B04:-$HOME/erlang-R14B04} R15B01=${R15B01:-$HOME/erlang-R15B01} ``` **Kerlveat**: If you want kerl to build erlangs with serious 64-bit macintosh action, you'll need a `~/.kerlrc` file that looks like this: ``` KERL_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS="--disable-hipe --enable-smp-support --enable-threads --enable-kernel-poll --enable-darwin-64bit" ``` The script will check that all these paths exist. If even one of them is missing, it will prompt you to install kerl, even if you already have kerl. If you say no, the script quits. If you say yes, or all of your erlang paths check out, then go get a cup of coffee, you'll be building for a little while. ### rtdev-setup-releases.sh The `rtdev-setup-releases.sh` will get the releases you just built into a local git repository. Run this script from the same directory that you just built all of your releases into. By default this script initializes the repository into `$HOME/rt/riak` but you can override [`$RT_DEST_DIR`](https://github.com/basho/riak_test/blob/master/bin/rtdev-setup-releases.sh#L11). ### rtdev-current.sh `rtdev-current.sh` is where it gets interesting. You need to run that from the Riak source folder you're wanting to test as the current version of Riak. Also, make sure that you've already run `make devrel` or `make stagedevrel` before you run `rtdev-current.sh`. Like setting up releases you can override [`$RT_DEST_DIR`](https://github.com/basho/riak_test/blob/master/bin/rtdev-current.sh#L6) so all your riak builds are in one place. ### Config file. Now that you've got your releases all ready and gitified, you'll need to tell riak_test about them. The method of choice is to create a `~/.riak_test.config` that looks something like this: ```erlang {default, [ {giddyup_host, "localhost:5000"}, {giddyup_user, "user"}, {giddyup_password, "password"}, {rt_max_wait_time, 600000}, {rt_retry_delay, 1000}, {rt_harness, rtdev}, {rt_scratch_dir, "/tmp/riak_test_scratch"}, {basho_bench, "/home/you/basho/basho_bench"}, {spam_dir, "/home/you/basho/riak_test/search-corpus/spam.0"}, {platform, "osx-64"} ]}. {rtdev, [ {rt_project, "riak"}, {rtdev_path, [{root, "/home/you/rt/riak"}, {current, "/home/you/rt/riak/current"}, {previous, "/home/you/rt/riak/riak-1.3.2"}, {legacy, "/home/you/rt/riak/riak-1.2.1"} ]} ]}. ``` The `default` section of the config file will be overridden by the config name you specify. For example, running the command below will use an `rt_retry_delay` of 500 and an `rt_max_wait_time` of 180000. If your defaults contain every option you need, you can run riak_test without the `-c` argument. Some configuration parameters: #### rt_default_config Default configuration parameters that will be used for nodes deployed by riak_test. Tests can override these. ```erlang {rtdev, [ { rt_default_config, [ {riak_core, [ {ring_creation_size, 16} ]} ] } ]} ``` #### Coverage You can generate a coverage report for a test run through [Erlang Cover](http://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/tools/cover_chapter.html). Coverage information for all **current** code run on any Riak node started by any of the tests in the run will be output as HTML in the coverage directory. That is, legacy and previous nodes used in the test will not be included, as the tool can only work on one version of the code at a time. Also, cover starts running in the Riak nodes after the node is up, so it will not report coverage of application initialization or other early code paths. Each test module, via a module attribute, can specify what modules it wishes to cover compile: ```erlang -cover_modules([riak_kv_bitcask_backend, riak_core_ring]). ``` Or entire applications by using: ```erlang -cover_apps([riak_kv, riak_core]). ``` To enable this, you need to turn coverage in in your riak_test.config: ```erlang {cover_enabled, true} ``` Tests that do not include coverage annotations will, if cover is enabled, honor {cover_modules, [..]} and {cover_apps, [..]} from the riak_test config file. #### Web hooks When reporting is enabled, each test result is posted to [Giddy Up](http://giddyup.basho.com). You can specify any number of webhooks that will also receive a POST request with JSON formatted test information, plus the URL of the Giddy Up resource page. ```erlang {webhooks, [ [{name, "Bishop"}, {url, "http://basho-engbot.herokuapp.com/riak_test"}] ]} ``` This is an example test result JSON message posted to a webhook: ```json { "test": "verify_build_cluster", "status": "fail", "log": "Some really long lines of log output", "backend": "bitcask", "id": "144", "platform": "osx-64", "version": "riak-1.4.0-9-g740a58d-master", "project": "riak", "reason": "{{assertion_failed, and_probably_a_massive_stacktrace_and stuff}}", "giddyup_url": "http://giddyup.basho.com/test_results/53" } ``` Notice that the giddyup URL is not the page for the test result, but a resource from which you can GET information about the test in JSON. ### Running riak_test for the first time Run a test! `./riak_test -c rtdev -t verify_build_cluster` Did that work? Great, try something harder: `./riak_test -c rtdev_mixed -t upgrade` Intercepts ---------- Intercepts are a powerful but easy to wield feature. They allow you to change the behavior of any function and affect global state in an extremely lightweight manner. You can modify [the KV vnode to simulate dropped puts][dropped_puts]. You can [sleep a call][hashtree_sleep] to discover what happens when certain calls take a long time to finish. You can even [turn a call into a noop][ring_noop] to really cause havoc on a cluster. These are just some examples. You should also be able to change any function you want, including dependency functions and even Erlang functions. You can also create intercepts using anonymous functions, either in compiled code or while debugging in an Erlang shell. Furthermore, any state you can reach from a function call can be affected such as function arguments and also ETS tables. This leads to the principle of intercepts. > If you can do it in Riak source code you can do it with an > intercept. [dropped_puts]: https://github.com/basho/riak_test/blob/d284dcfc22d5d84ad301804691b16dbda6d91aa8/intercepts/riak_kv_vnode_intercepts.erl#L7 [hashtree_sleep]: https://github.com/basho/riak_test/blob/d284dcfc22d5d84ad301804691b16dbda6d91aa8/intercepts/hashtree_intercepts.erl#L5 [ring_noop]: https://github.com/basho/riak_test/blob/d284dcfc22d5d84ad301804691b16dbda6d91aa8/intercepts/riak_core_ring_manager_intercepts.erl#L5 ### Writing Intercepts Writing an intercept is nearly identical to writing any other Erlang source with a few easy-to-remember conventions added. 1. All intercepts must live under the `intercepts` dir. 2. All intercept modules should be named the same as the module they affect with the suffix `_intercepts` added. E.g. `riak_kv_vnode` => `riak_kv_vnode_intercepts`. 3. All intercept modules should include the `intercept.hrl` file. This includes macros to properly log messages. You **cannot** call lager. 4. All intercept modules should declare the macro `M` whose value is the affected module with the suffix `_orig` added. E.g. for `riak_kv_vnode` add the line `-define(M, riak_kv_vnode_orig)`. This, along with the next convention is needed to call into the original function. 5. To call the origin function use the `?M:` followed by the name of the function with the `_orig` suffix appended. E.g. to call `riak_kv_vnode:put` you would type `?M:put_orig`. 6. To log a message use the `I_` macros. E.g. to log an info message use `?I_INFO`. The easiest way to understand the above conventions is to see them all at work in an example. ```erlang -module(riak_kv_vnode_intercepts). -compile(export_all). -include("intercept.hrl"). -define(M, riak_kv_vnode_orig). dropped_put(Preflist, BKey, Obj, ReqId, StartTime, Options, Sender) -> NewPreflist = lists:sublist(Preflist, length(Preflist) - 1), ?I_INFO("Preflist modified from ~p to ~p", [Preflist, NewPreflist]), ?M:put_orig(NewPreflist, BKey, Obj, ReqId, StartTime, Options, Sender). ``` ### How Do I Use Intercepts? Intercepts can be used in two ways: 1) added via the config, 2) added via `rpc:call` in the test. The first way is most convenient, is persistent (survives node restarts), and is in effect for all tests. The second method requires additional code, is specific to a test, is ephemeral (does not survive a node restart), but allows more fine grained control. In both cases intercepts can be disabled by adding the following to your config. By default intercepts will be loaded and compiled, but not added. That is, they will be available but not in effect unless you add them via one of the methods listed previously. {load_intercepts, false} #### Config Here is how you would add the `dropped_put` intercept via the config. {intercepts, [{riak_kv_vnode, [{{put,7}, dropped_put}]}]} Breaking this down, the config key is `intercepts` and its value is a list of intercepts to add. Each intercept definition in the list describes which functions to intercept and what functions to intercept them with. The example above would result in all calls to `riak_kv_vnode:put/7` being intercepted by `riak_kv_vnode_intercepts:dropped_put/7`. {ModuleToIntercept, [{{FunctionToIntercept, Arity}, InterceptFunction}]} Note that anonymous functions may not be supplied as intercepts via config. #### Manual To add the `dropped_put` intercept manually you would do the following. rt_intercept:add(Node, {riak_kv_vnode, [{{put,7}, dropped_put}]}) You could alternatively supply an anonymous function as an intercept here. This requires that your module include the following compilation directive: -compile({parse_transform, rt_intercept_pt}). The general form for an anonymous function intercept is a 2-tuple: {ListOfFreeVariables, AnonymousFunction} The first element of the tuple is a list of free variables the anonymous function uses from its surrounding context, and the second element is the anonymous function itself. For example, the previous example using an anonymous function intercept might look like this: rt_intercept:add(Node, {riak_kv_vnode, [{{put,7}, {[], fun(Preflist,BKey,Obj,ReqId,StartTime,Options,Sender) -> NewPreflist = lists:sublist(Preflist, length(Preflist)-1), error_logger:info_msg("Preflist modified from ~p to ~p", [Preflist, NewPreflist]), riak_kv_vnode_orig:put_orig(NewPreflist,BKey,Obj,ReqId, StartTime,Options,Sender) end}}]}) Note how this version has no access to the `?I_INFO` and `?M` like in the original example. For this reason, for an actual test this code would be better written using a regular intercept rather than the anonymous function approach shown here. Since the anonymous function in this example uses no free variables from its surrounding context, the variable list in this example is empty. For cases like this where the list of free variables is empty, you can alternatively supply just the anonymous function in place of the 2-tuple. If you pass an anonymous function intercept to `rt_intercept:add/2` in an Erlang shell, a list of free variables is not needed regardless of whether the function uses such variables or not. This is because the shell tracks these variables and makes a list of them available as part of the function's context. Therefore you need supply only the function, not the 2-tuple. ### How Does it Work? Knowing the implementation details is not needed to use intercepts but this knowledge could come in handy if problems are encountered. There are two parts to understand: 1) how the intercept code works and 2) how intercepts are applied on-the-fly in Riak Test. It's important to keep one thing in mind. > Intercepts are based entirely on code generation and hot-swapping. > The overhead of an intercept is always 1 or 2 function calls. 1 if > a function is not being intercepted, 2 if it is and you call the > original function. The intercept code turns your original module into three. Based on the mapping passed to `intercept:add` code is generated to re-route requests to your intercept code or forward them to the original code. E.g. if defining intercepts on `riak_kv_vnode` the following modules will exist. * `riak_kv_vnode_orig` - Contains the original code from `riak_kv_vnode` but modified so that all original functions have the suffix `_orig` added to them and the original function definitions become passthrus to `riak_kv_vnode`, the proxy. * `riak_kv_vnode_intercepts` - This contains code of your intercept as you defined it. No modification of the code is performed. * `riak_kv_vnode` - What once contained the original code is now a proxy. All functions passthru to `riak_kv_vnode_orig` unless an intercept is registered in the mapping passed to `intercept:add`, in which case the call will forward to `riak_kv_vnode_intercepts`. The interceptor code also modifies the original module and proxy to export all functions. This fact, along with the fact that all the original functions in `riak_kv_vnode_orig` will callback into the proxy, means that you can intercept private functions as well. In order for Riak Test to use intercepts they need to be compiled, loaded, and registered on the nodes under test. You can't use the bytecode generated by Riak Tests' rebar because the Erlang version used will often be different from that included with your Riak nodes. You could require that the user compile with the oldest Erlang version supported but that is extra burden on the user and still doesn't guarantee things will work if there is a jump of more than 2 majors in Erlang version. No, this should be easy to use and thus the intercept code is compiled **on** the Riak nodes guaranteeing that the bytecode will be compatible. After the code is compiled and loaded the intercepts need to be added. All intercepts defined in the user's `riak_test.config` will be added automatically any time a node is started. Thus, intercepts defined in the config survive restarts and are essentially always in play. A user can also manually add an intercept by making an `rpc` call from the test code to the remote node. This method is ephemeral and the intercept will not survive restarts. #### Shell Completion ##### Bash To have bash shell complete test names, source the `utils/riak_test.bash` file. ##### Zsh put `utils/riak_test.zsh` somewhere on `$fpath`.