open-nomad/client/allocrunner/taskrunner/tasklet_test.go

269 lines
7.5 KiB
Go

package taskrunner
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"os"
"os/exec"
"sync/atomic"
"testing"
"time"
hclog "github.com/hashicorp/go-hclog"
"github.com/hashicorp/nomad/client/allocrunner/taskrunner/interfaces"
"github.com/hashicorp/nomad/helper/testlog"
"github.com/hashicorp/nomad/helper/testtask"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
)
func TestMain(m *testing.M) {
if !testtask.Run() {
os.Exit(m.Run())
}
}
func TestTasklet_Exec_HappyPath(t *testing.T) {
results := []execResult{
{[]byte("output"), 0, nil},
{[]byte("output"), 1, nil},
{[]byte("output"), 0, context.DeadlineExceeded},
{[]byte("<ignored output>"), 2, fmt.Errorf("some error")},
{[]byte("error9000"), 9000, nil},
}
exec := newScriptedExec(results)
tm := newTaskletMock(exec, testlog.HCLogger(t), time.Nanosecond, 3*time.Second)
handle := tm.run()
defer handle.cancel() // just-in-case cleanup
deadline := time.After(3 * time.Second)
for i := 0; i <= 4; i++ {
select {
case result := <-tm.calls:
// for the happy path without cancelations or shutdowns, we expect
// to get the results passed to the callback in order and without
// modification
assert.Equal(t, result, results[i])
case <-deadline:
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for all script checks to finish")
}
}
}
// TestTasklet_Exec_Cancel asserts cancelling a tasklet short-circuits
// any running executions the tasklet
func TestTasklet_Exec_Cancel(t *testing.T) {
exec, cancel := newBlockingScriptExec()
defer cancel()
tm := newTaskletMock(exec, testlog.HCLogger(t), time.Hour, time.Hour)
handle := tm.run()
<-exec.running // wait until Exec is called
handle.cancel() // cancel now that we're blocked in exec
select {
case <-handle.wait():
case <-time.After(3 * time.Second):
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for tasklet check to exit")
}
// The underlying ScriptExecutor (newBlockScriptExec) *cannot* be
// canceled. Only a wrapper around it obeys the context cancelation.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&exec.exited) == 1 {
t.Errorf("expected script executor to still be running after timeout")
}
// No tasklets finished, so no callbacks should have gotten a
// chance to fire
select {
case call := <-tm.calls:
t.Errorf("expected 0 calls of tasklet, got %v", call)
default:
break
}
}
// TestTasklet_Exec_Timeout asserts a tasklet script will be killed
// when the timeout is reached.
func TestTasklet_Exec_Timeout(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
exec, cancel := newBlockingScriptExec()
defer cancel()
tm := newTaskletMock(exec, testlog.HCLogger(t), time.Hour, time.Second)
handle := tm.run()
defer handle.cancel() // just-in-case cleanup
<-exec.running // wait until Exec is called
// We should get a timeout
select {
case update := <-tm.calls:
if update.err != context.DeadlineExceeded {
t.Errorf("expected context.DeadlineExceeed but received %+v", update)
}
case <-time.After(3 * time.Second):
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for script check to exit")
}
// The underlying ScriptExecutor (newBlockScriptExec) *cannot* be
// canceled. Only a wrapper around it obeys the context cancelation.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&exec.exited) == 1 {
t.Errorf("expected executor to still be running after timeout")
}
// Cancel and watch for exit
handle.cancel()
select {
case <-handle.wait(): // ok!
case update := <-tm.calls:
t.Errorf("unexpected extra callback on exit with status=%v", update)
case <-time.After(3 * time.Second):
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for tasklet to exit")
}
}
// TestTasklet_Exec_Shutdown asserts a script will be executed once more
// when told to shutdown.
func TestTasklet_Exec_Shutdown(t *testing.T) {
exec := newSimpleExec(0, nil)
shutdown := make(chan struct{})
tm := newTaskletMock(exec, testlog.HCLogger(t), time.Hour, 3*time.Second)
tm.shutdownCh = shutdown
handle := tm.run()
defer handle.cancel() // just-in-case cleanup
close(shutdown) // tell script to exit
select {
case update := <-tm.calls:
if update.err != nil {
t.Errorf("expected clean shutdown but received %q", update.err)
}
case <-time.After(3 * time.Second):
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for script check to exit")
}
select {
case <-handle.wait(): // ok
case <-time.After(3 * time.Second):
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for script check to exit")
}
}
// test helpers
type taskletMock struct {
tasklet
calls chan execResult
}
func newTaskletMock(exec interfaces.ScriptExecutor, logger hclog.Logger, interval, timeout time.Duration) *taskletMock {
tm := &taskletMock{calls: make(chan execResult)}
tm.exec = exec
tm.logger = logger
tm.Interval = interval
tm.Timeout = timeout
tm.callback = func(ctx context.Context, params execResult) {
tm.calls <- params
}
return tm
}
// blockingScriptExec implements ScriptExec by running a subcommand that never
// exits.
type blockingScriptExec struct {
// pctx is canceled *only* for test cleanup. Just like real
// ScriptExecutors its Exec method cannot be canceled directly -- only
// with a timeout.
pctx context.Context
// running is ticked before blocking to allow synchronizing operations
running chan struct{}
// set to 1 with atomics if Exec is called and has exited
exited int32
}
// newBlockingScriptExec returns a ScriptExecutor that blocks Exec() until the
// caller recvs on the b.running chan. It also returns a CancelFunc for test
// cleanup only. The runtime cannot cancel ScriptExecutors before their timeout
// expires.
func newBlockingScriptExec() (*blockingScriptExec, context.CancelFunc) {
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
exec := &blockingScriptExec{
pctx: ctx,
running: make(chan struct{}),
}
return exec, cancel
}
func (b *blockingScriptExec) Exec(dur time.Duration, _ string, _ []string) ([]byte, int, error) {
b.running <- struct{}{}
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(b.pctx, dur)
defer cancel()
cmd := exec.CommandContext(ctx, testtask.Path(), "sleep", "9000h")
testtask.SetCmdEnv(cmd)
err := cmd.Run()
code := 0
if exitErr, ok := err.(*exec.ExitError); ok {
if !exitErr.Success() {
code = 1
}
}
atomic.StoreInt32(&b.exited, 1)
return []byte{}, code, err
}
// sleeperExec sleeps for 100ms but returns successfully to allow testing timeout conditions
type sleeperExec struct{}
func (sleeperExec) Exec(time.Duration, string, []string) ([]byte, int, error) {
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond)
return []byte{}, 0, nil
}
// simpleExec is a fake ScriptExecutor that returns whatever is specified.
type simpleExec struct {
code int
err error
}
func (s simpleExec) Exec(time.Duration, string, []string) ([]byte, int, error) {
return []byte(fmt.Sprintf("code=%d err=%v", s.code, s.err)), s.code, s.err
}
// newSimpleExec creates a new ScriptExecutor that returns the given code and err.
func newSimpleExec(code int, err error) simpleExec {
return simpleExec{code: code, err: err}
}
// scriptedExec is a fake ScriptExecutor with a predetermined sequence
// of results.
type scriptedExec struct {
fn func() ([]byte, int, error)
}
// For each call to Exec, scriptedExec returns the next result in its
// sequence of results
func (s scriptedExec) Exec(time.Duration, string, []string) ([]byte, int, error) {
return s.fn()
}
func newScriptedExec(results []execResult) scriptedExec {
index := 0
s := scriptedExec{}
// we have to close over the index because the interface we're
// mocking expects a value and not a pointer, which prevents
// us from updating the index
fn := func() ([]byte, int, error) {
result := results[index]
// prevents us from iterating off the end of the results
if index+1 < len(results) {
index = index + 1
}
return result.output, result.code, result.err
}
s.fn = fn
return s
}