package stream import ( "context" fmt "fmt" "testing" time "time" "github.com/stretchr/testify/require" ) func TestEventSnapshot(t *testing.T) { // Setup a dummy state that we can manipulate easily. The properties we care // about are that we publish some sequence of events as a snapshot and then // follow them up with "live updates". We control the interleaving. Our state // consists of health events (only type fully defined so far) for service // instances with consecutive ID numbers starting from 0 (e.g. test-000, // test-001). The snapshot is delivered at index 1000. updatesBeforeSnap // controls how many updates are delivered _before_ the snapshot is complete // (with an index < 1000). updatesBeforeSnap controls the number of updates // delivered after (index > 1000). // // In all cases the invariant should be that we end up with all of the // instances in the snapshot, plus any delivered _after_ the snapshot index, // but none delivered _before_ the snapshot index otherwise we may have an // inconsistent snapshot. cases := []struct { name string snapshotSize int updatesBeforeSnap int updatesAfterSnap int }{ { name: "snapshot with subsequent mutations", snapshotSize: 10, updatesBeforeSnap: 0, updatesAfterSnap: 10, }, { name: "snapshot with concurrent mutations", snapshotSize: 10, updatesBeforeSnap: 5, updatesAfterSnap: 5, }, { name: "empty snapshot with subsequent mutations", snapshotSize: 0, updatesBeforeSnap: 0, updatesAfterSnap: 10, }, { name: "empty snapshot with concurrent mutations", snapshotSize: 0, updatesBeforeSnap: 5, updatesAfterSnap: 5, }, } snapIndex := uint64(1000) for _, tc := range cases { tc := tc t.Run(tc.name, func(t *testing.T) { require.True(t, tc.updatesBeforeSnap < 999, "bad test param updatesBeforeSnap must be less than the snapshot"+ " index (%d) minus one (%d), got: %d", snapIndex, snapIndex-1, tc.updatesBeforeSnap) // Create a snapshot func that will deliver registration events. snFn := testHealthConsecutiveSnapshotFn(tc.snapshotSize, snapIndex) // Create a topic buffer for updates tb := newEventBuffer() // Capture the topic buffer head now so updatesBeforeSnap are "concurrent" // and are seen by the eventSnapshot once it completes the snap. tbHead := tb.Head() // Deliver any pre-snapshot events simulating updates that occur after the // topic buffer is captured during a Subscribe call, but before the // snapshot is made of the FSM. for i := tc.updatesBeforeSnap; i > 0; i-- { index := snapIndex - uint64(i) // Use an instance index that's unique and should never appear in the // output so we can be sure these were not included as they came before // the snapshot. tb.Append([]Event{newDefaultHealthEvent(index, 10000+i)}) } es := newEventSnapshot() es.appendAndSplice(SubscribeRequest{}, snFn, tbHead) // Deliver any post-snapshot events simulating updates that occur // logically after snapshot. It doesn't matter that these might actually // be appended before the snapshot fn executes in another goroutine since // it's operating an a possible stale "snapshot". This is the same as // reality with the state store where updates that occur after the // snapshot is taken but while the SnapFnis still running must be captured // correctly. for i := 0; i < tc.updatesAfterSnap; i++ { index := snapIndex + 1 + uint64(i) // Use an instance index that's unique. tb.Append([]Event{newDefaultHealthEvent(index, 20000+i)}) } // Now read the snapshot buffer until we've received everything we expect. // Don't wait too long in case we get stuck. ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 5*time.Second) defer cancel() snapIDs := make([]string, 0, tc.snapshotSize) updateIDs := make([]string, 0, tc.updatesAfterSnap) snapDone := false curItem := es.First var err error RECV: for { curItem, err = curItem.Next(ctx, nil) // This error is typically timeout so dump the state to aid debugging. require.NoError(t, err, "current state: snapDone=%v snapIDs=%s updateIDs=%s", snapDone, snapIDs, updateIDs) if len(curItem.Events) == 0 { // An item without an error or events is a bufferItem.NextLink event. // A subscription handles this by proceeding to the next item, // so we do the same here. continue } e := curItem.Events[0] switch { case snapDone: payload, ok := e.Payload.(simplePayload) require.True(t, ok, "want health event got: %#v", e.Payload) updateIDs = append(updateIDs, payload.value) if len(updateIDs) == tc.updatesAfterSnap { // We're done! break RECV } case e.IsEndOfSnapshot(): snapDone = true default: payload, ok := e.Payload.(simplePayload) require.True(t, ok, "want health event got: %#v", e.Payload) snapIDs = append(snapIDs, payload.value) } } // Validate the event IDs we got delivered. require.Equal(t, genSequentialIDs(0, tc.snapshotSize), snapIDs) require.Equal(t, genSequentialIDs(20000, 20000+tc.updatesAfterSnap), updateIDs) }) } } func genSequentialIDs(start, end int) []string { ids := make([]string, 0, end-start) for i := start; i < end; i++ { ids = append(ids, fmt.Sprintf("test-event-%03d", i)) } return ids } func testHealthConsecutiveSnapshotFn(size int, index uint64) SnapshotFunc { return func(req SubscribeRequest, buf SnapshotAppender) (uint64, error) { for i := 0; i < size; i++ { // Event content is arbitrary we are just using Health because it's the // first type defined. We just want a set of things with consecutive // names. buf.Append([]Event{newDefaultHealthEvent(index, i)}) } return index, nil } } func newDefaultHealthEvent(index uint64, n int) Event { return Event{ Index: index, Topic: testTopic, Payload: simplePayload{value: fmt.Sprintf("test-event-%03d", n)}, } }