This is a test runner for running integration/regression tests for .NET and .NET Core on Linux.
It uses the same format for identifying, selecting and running tests as dotnet-bunny.
It produces results in various forms, including a junit-compatible xml file.
This is fully usable on GNU libc-based and musl libc-based Linux distributions.
This is used by Red Hat to run .NET tests on Fedora and RHEL on multiple
architectures including 64-bit ARM (aarch64
), Intel x86_64 (x86_64
) and IBM
Z (s390x
).
It's also being used by other distributions, such as Alpine.
Use the following command to build the turkey
program and place it in the
bin/
directory.
make
If you have a directory containing tests, you can run them via
running dotnet turkey/Turkey.dll
. For example:
$ dotnet turkey/Turkey.dll Samples
BashTestSpecificToDotNet2x [PASS]
BashTestSpecificToDotNet50 [SKIP]
DisabledBashTest [SKIP]
...
See dotnet turkey/Turkey.dll --help
for more information on how to
select and run tests and how to show the test output.
To get output compatible with (the old) dotnet-bunny
, use dotnet turkey/Turkey.dll --compatible
A real example of a test-suite to use with this framework is: https://github.com/redhat-developer/dotnet-regular-tests/
Two different types of tests are supported: xunit-style tests that are
executed with dotnet test
and bash scripts that are executed directly.
Each test must be stored in a unique directory. The test must contain
a test.json
file. An example of this file:
{
"name": "CVE-2018-0875",
"enabled": true,
"requiresSdk": true,
"version": "2.0",
"versionSpecific": false,
"type": "xunit",
"cleanup": true,
"timeoutMultiplier": 1.0,
"ignoredRIDs": [
"fedora",
"fedora.29",
"fedora.34-s390x",
"rhel.7",
"rhel.7-arm64"
],
"skipWhen": [
"blue",
"os=fedora,arch=x64"
]
}
The type
specifies how the test is executed.
test.json
needs to be a json
file containing a json object with
the following keys:
-
name
The name of the test. It must be the same as the name of the directory containing the test.
-
enabled
Indicates whether a test is enabled. Useful for disabling specific tests that are causing issues.
-
requiresSdk
Indicates whether a test requires SDK to be installed. If false the test will run even when there is no SDK present.
-
version
The version of .NET Core runtime that this test is valid for. It can be a complete major/minor version like
2.1
or a wildcard like1.x
. UnlessversionSpecific
is also set, this test will be executed on all versions equal to or greater than the specified version. For example, settingversion
to2.0
will result in tests being executed under .NET Core versions 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, and 5.0 but not under 1.1. -
versionSpecific
If set, this test will only be executed if the .NET Core version matches the version specified in
version
.For example, if
version
is2.0
andversionSpecific
istrue
, the test will only be executed for .NET Core 2.0, not for 2.1, 1.1 or 3.0.It is often useful to have a wildcard version with this. For example,
version
of1.x
andversionSpecific
oftrue
, means that the tests will only be executed on .NET Core 1.0 and 1.1, and on no other versions. -
type
Tests can be one of two
type
s:xunit
orbash
.xunit
tests are executed by runningdotnet test
.bash
tests are executed by executing atest.sh
file directly. -
cleanup
Specifies whether directories like
obj
andbin
should be deleted before running the test. -
ignoredRIDs
This is a list of runtime-ids or platform names (optionally followed by the version) where this test is invalid. The test will be skipped on those platforms.
Examples:
["linux-arm64"]
: skip this test onarm64
(akaaarch64
)["fedora"]
: skip this test on all Fedora platforms["rhel.7"]
or["rhel7"]
: skip this test on RHEL 7, but not on RHEL 8, or another RHEL version["rhel.8-arm64"]
: skip this test on RHEL 8 on arm64
See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/rid-catalog for more details. Not all the RIDs are fully supported yet.
-
skipWhen
This is a list of conditions. If one (or more) conditions in the list match the test environment, then the test is skipped.
A condition is a combination of traits separated by commas.
The test runner injects a few traits based on the system.
Additional traits can be added using the --trait
flag.
Example:
A test with the following skipWhen
will be skipped if the
trait blue
is set, or both os=fedora
and arch=x64
are set.
"skipWhen": [
"blue",
"os=fedora,arch=x64"
]
timeoutMultiplier
This is a number, that scales the default timeout for a specific test.
The default timeout can be set through the command-line --timeout
argument.
Example:
A test with the following timeoutMultiplier
will be allowed to take twice
as long.
"timeoutMultiplier": 2.0
Some notes for writing tests:
-
The first argument passed to a
test.sh
is the version number of .NET Core that's being tested. -
All tests are run with the current working directory set to a directory where all the test files are present. This may not be the original directory of the tests, but a copy instead.
-
Tests should try and complete as quickly as possible. Long running tests may hit a timeout and be marked as failed.
-
Tests are executed in multiple environments. Sometimes they are run by the root user (eg, GitHub Actions) and sometimes as non-root (eg, by devs working on tests). A test should make every effort to work in both environments. It must not rely on being run as root.
If a feature must be verified as non-root and the test is being run by the root user, consider creating a
testrunner
user andsu
-ing to that for the specific test.
-
All warnings are displayed as:
WARNING: foo bar baz
-
Tag the release
$ git tag -a v# --sign
Replease
#
with the real release version. Generally, use the previous release version + 1. For example, if the last tag wasv99
, usev100
.This produces a signed and annotated tag. Feel free to add details about the release to the annotation.
Signing requires a gpg key. If you don't have one, you can omit
--sign
. -
Push the tags to GitHub
$ git push --tags remote-name OR, better: $ git push remote-name tag-name
-
GitHub Actions will create a draft release corresponding to the tag.
It will also attach the
turkey.tar.gz
release tarball to the release.Many tools use
wget https://github.com/redhat-developer/dotnet-bunny/releases/latest/download/turkey.tar.gz
to get the latest release. This keeps them working. -
Publish the release in GitHub
-
Select the tag created in step 1
-
Write release notes
-
Publish the release
-
- Do not modify original source files for xunit tests
Copyright (C) 2019 Red Hat, Inc
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA