Files
nomad/e2e
Derek Strickland 7e8306e476 api: remove mapstructure tags fromPort struct (#12916)
This PR solves a defect in the deserialization of api.Port structs when returning structs from theEventStream.

Previously, the api.Port struct's fields were decorated with both mapstructure and hcl tags to support the network.port stanza's use of the keyword static when posting a static port value. This works fine when posting a job and when retrieving any struct that has an embedded api.Port instance as long as the value is deserialized using JSON decoding. The EventStream, however, uses mapstructure to decode event payloads in the api package. mapstructure expects an underlying field named static which does not exist. The result was that the Port.Value field would always be set to 0.

Upon further inspection, a few things became apparent.

The struct already has hcl tags that support the indirection during job submission.
Serialization/deserialization with both the json and hcl packages produce the desired result.
The use of of the mapstructure tags provided no value as the Port struct contains only fields with primitive types.
This PR:

Removes the mapstructure tags from the api.Port structs
Updates the job parsing logic to use hcl instead of mapstructure when decoding Port instances.
Closes #11044

Co-authored-by: DerekStrickland <dstrickland@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Piotr Kazmierczak <470696+pkazmierczak@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-11-08 11:26:28 +01:00
..
2022-03-17 08:37:34 -05:00
2021-10-01 10:14:28 -04:00

End to End Tests

This package contains integration tests. Unlike tests alongside Nomad code, these tests expect there to already be a functional Nomad cluster accessible (either on localhost or via the NOMAD_ADDR env var).

See framework/doc.go for how to write tests.

The NOMAD_E2E=1 environment variable must be set for these tests to run.

Provisioning Test Infrastructure on AWS

The terraform/ folder has provisioning code to spin up a Nomad cluster on AWS. You'll need both Terraform and AWS credentials to setup AWS instances on which e2e tests will run. See the README for details. The number of servers and clients is configurable, as is the specific build of Nomad to deploy and the configuration file for each client and server.

Provisioning Local Clusters

To run tests against a local cluster, you'll need to make sure the following environment variables are set:

  • NOMAD_ADDR should point to one of the Nomad servers
  • CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR should point to one of the Consul servers
  • NOMAD_E2E=1

TODO: the scripts in ./bin currently work only with Terraform, it would be nice for us to have a way to deploy Nomad to Vagrant or local clusters.

Running

After completing the provisioning step above, you can set the client environment for NOMAD_ADDR and run the tests as shown below:

# from the ./e2e/terraform directory, set your client environment
# if you haven't already
$(terraform output environment)

cd ..
go test -v ./...

If you want to run a specific suite, you can specify the -suite flag as shown below. Only the suite with a matching Framework.TestSuite.Component will be run, and all others will be skipped.

go test -v -suite=Consul .

If you want to run a specific test, you'll need to regex-escape some of the test's name so that the test runner doesn't skip over framework struct method names in the full name of the tests:

go test -v . -run 'TestE2E/Consul/\*consul\.ScriptChecksE2ETest/TestGroup'
                              ^       ^             ^               ^
                              |       |             |               |
                          Component   |             |           Test func
                                      |             |
                                  Go Package      Struct

We're also in the process of migrating to "stdlib-style" tests that use the standard go testing package without a notion of "suite". You can run these with -run regexes the same way you would any other go test:

go test -v . -run TestExample/TestExample_Simple

I Want To...

...SSH Into One Of The Test Machines

You can use the Terraform output to find the IP address. The keys will in the ./terraform/keys/ directory.

ssh -i keys/nomad-e2e-*.pem ubuntu@${EC2_IP_ADDR}

Run terraform output for IP addresses and details.

...Deploy a Cluster of Mixed Nomad Versions

The variables.tf file describes the nomad_version, and nomad_local_binary variables that can be used for most circumstances. But if you want to deploy mixed Nomad versions, you can provide a list of versions in your terraform.tfvars file.

For example, if you want to provision 3 servers all using Nomad 0.12.1, and 2 Linux clients using 0.12.1 and 0.12.2, you can use the following variables:

# will be used for servers
nomad_version = "0.12.1"

# will override the nomad_version for Linux clients
nomad_version_client_linux = [
    "0.12.1",
    "0.12.2"
]

...Deploy Custom Configuration Files

Set the profile field to "custom" and put the configuration files in ./terraform/config/custom/ as described in the README.

...Deploy More Than 4 Linux Clients

Use the "custom" profile as described above.

...Change the Nomad Version After Provisioning

You can update the nomad_version variable, or simply rebuild the binary you have at the nomad_local_binary path so that Terraform picks up the changes. Then run terraform plan/terraform apply again. This will update Nomad in place, making the minimum amount of changes necessary.