Murano applications are written in MuranoPL. To make the development of applications easier and enable application testing, a special framework was created. So it is possible to add unit tests to an application package and check if the application is in actual state. Also, application deployment can be simulated with unit tests, so you do not need to run the murano engine.
A separate service that is called murano-test-runner is used to run MuranoPL unit tests.
All application test cases should be:
Specified in the MuranoPL class, inherited from io.murano.test.testFixture
This class supports loading object model with the corresponding load(json)
function. Also it contains a minimal set of assertions such as
assertEqual
and etc.
Note, that test class has the following reserved methods are:
- initialize is executed once, like in any other murano application
- setUp is executed before each test case
- tearDown is executed after each test case
Named with test prefix
usage: murano-test-runner [-h] [--config-file CONFIG_FILE]
[--os-auth-url OS_AUTH_URL]
[--os-username OS_USERNAME]
[--os-password OS_PASSWORD]
[--os-project-name OS_PROJECT_NAME]
[-l [</path1, /path2> [</path1, /path2> ...]]] [-v]
[--version]
<PACKAGE_FQN>
[<testMethod1, className.testMethod2> [<testMethod1, className.testMethod2> ...]]
positional arguments:
<PACKAGE_FQN>
Full name of application package that is going to be
tested
<testMethod1, className.testMethod2>
List of method names to be tested
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
Path to the murano config
--os-auth-url OS_AUTH_URL
Defaults to env[OS_AUTH_URL]
--os-username OS_USERNAME
Defaults to env[OS_USERNAME]
--os-password OS_PASSWORD
Defaults to env[OS_PASSWORD]
--os-project-name OS_PROJECT_NAME
Defaults to env[OS_PROJECT_NAME]
-l [</path1 /path2> [</path1 /path2> ...]], --load_packages_from [</path1 /path2> [</path1 /path2> ...]]
Directory to search packages from. Will be used instead of
directories, provided in the same option in murano configuration file.
-v, --verbose increase output verbosity
--version show program's version number and exit
The fully qualified name of a package is required to specify the test location. It can be an application package that contains one or several classes with all the test cases, or a separate package. You can specify a class name to execute all the tests located in it, or specify a particular test case name.
Authorization parameters can be provided in the murano configuration file, or
with higher priority -os-
parameters.
Consider the following example of test execution for the Tomcat application.
Tests are located in the same package with application, but in a separate class
called io.murano.test.TomcatTest
. It contains testDeploy1
and
testDeploy2
test cases.
The application package is located in the /package/location/directory
(murano-apps repository e.g). As the result of the following command, both
test cases from the specified package and class will be executed.
murano-test-runner io.murano.apps.apache.Tomcat io.murano.test.TomcatTest -l /package/location/directory /io.murano/location -v
The following command runs a single testDeploy1 test case from the application package.
murano-test-runner io.murano.apps.apache.Tomcat io.murano.test.TomcatTest.testDeploy1
The main purpose of MuranoPL unit test framework is to enable mocking. Special YAQL functions are registered for that:
inject
to set up mock for class or object, where mock definition is a name of the test class methodinject
to set up mock for a class or object, where mock definition is a YAQL expressionParameters description:
So the user is allowed to specify mock functions in the following ways:
Consider how the following functions may be used in the MuranoPL class with unit tests:
Namespaces:
=: io.murano.test
sys: io.murano.system
Extends: TestFixture
Name: TomcatTest
Methods:
initialize:
Body:
# Object model can be loaded from JSON file, or provided
# directly in MuranoPL code as a YAML insertion.
- $.appJson: new(sys:Resources).json('tomcat-for-mock.json')
- $.heatOutput: new(sys:Resources).json('output.json')
- $.log: logger('test')
- $.agentCallCount: 0
# Mock method to replace the original one
agentMock:
Arguments:
- template:
Contract: $
- resources:
Contract: $
- timeout:
Contract: $
Default: null
Body:
- $.log.info('Mocking murano agent')
- $.assertEqual('Deploy Tomcat', $template.Name)
- $.agentCallCount: $.agentCallCount + 1
# Mock method, that returns predefined heat stack output
getStackOut:
Body:
- $.log.info('Mocking heat stack')
- Return: $.heatOutput
testDeploy1:
Body:
# Loading object model
- $.env: $this.load($.appJson)
# Set up mock for the push method of *io.murano.system.HeatStack* class
- inject(sys:HeatStack, push, $.heatOutput)
# Set up mock with YAQL function
- inject($.env.stack, output, $.heatOutput)
# Set up mock for the concrete object with mock method name
- inject('io.murano.system.Agent', call, $this, agentMock)
# Mocks will be called instead of original function during the deployment
- $.env.deploy()
# Check, that mock worked correctly
- $.assertEqual(1, $.agentCallCount)
testDeploy2:
Body:
- inject(sys:HeatStack, push, $this, getStackOut)
- inject(sys:HeatStack, output, $this, getStackOut)
# Mock is defined with YAQL function and it will print the original variable (agent template)
- inject(sys:Agent, call, withOriginal(t => $template) -> $.log.info('{0}', $t))
- $.env: $this.load($.appJson)
- $.env.deploy()
- $isDeployed: $.env.applications[0].getAttr(deployed, false, 'com.example.apache.Tomcat')
- $.assertEqual(true, $isDeployed)
Provided methods are test cases for the Tomcat application. Object model and
heat stack output are predefined and located in the package Resources
directory. By changing some object model or heat stack parameters, different
cases may be tested without a real deployment. Note, that some asserts are used
in those example. The first one is checked, that agent call function was called
only once as needed. And assert from the second test case checks for a variable
value at the end of the application deployment.
Test cases examples can be found in TomcatTest.yaml
class of the
Apache Tomcat application located at murano-apps repository.
You can run test cases with the commands provided above.
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