4. autopkgtest: Automatic testing for packages¶
The DEP 8 specification defines how automatic testing can very easily be integrated into packages. To integrate a test into a package, all you need to do is:
add a file called
debian/tests/control
which specifies the requirements for the testbed,add the tests in
debian/tests/
.
4.1. Testbed requirements¶
In debian/tests/control
you specify what to expect from the testbed. So
for example you list all the required packages for the tests, if the testbed
gets broken during the build or if root
permissions are required. The
DEP 8 specification lists all available options.
Below we are having a look at the glib2.0
source package. In a very
simple case the file would look like this:
Tests: build
Depends: libglib2.0-dev, build-essential
For the test in debian/tests/build
this would ensure that the packages
libglib2.0-dev
and build-essential
are installed.
Note
You can use @
in the Depends
line to indicate that you want
all the packages installed which are built by the source package in
question.
4.2. The actual tests¶
The accompanying test for the example above might be:
#!/bin/sh
# autopkgtest check: Build and run a program against glib, to verify that the
# headers and pkg-config file are installed correctly
# (C) 2012 Canonical Ltd.
# Author: Martin Pitt <martin.pitt@ubuntu.com>
set -e
WORKDIR=$(mktemp -d)
trap "rm -rf $WORKDIR" 0 INT QUIT ABRT PIPE TERM
cd $WORKDIR
cat <<EOF > glibtest.c
#include <glib.h>
int main()
{
g_assert_cmpint (g_strcmp0 (NULL, "hello"), ==, -1);
g_assert_cmpstr (g_find_program_in_path ("bash"), ==, "/bin/bash");
return 0;
}
EOF
gcc -o glibtest glibtest.c `pkg-config --cflags --libs glib-2.0`
echo "build: OK"
[ -x glibtest ]
./glibtest
echo "run: OK"
Here a very simple piece of C code is written to a temporary directory. Then this is compiled with system libraries (using flags and library paths as provided by pkg-config). Then the compiled binary, which just exercises some parts of core glib functionality, is run.
While this test is very small and simple, it covers quite a lot: that your -dev package has all necessary dependencies, that your package installs working pkg-config files, headers and libraries are put into the right place, or that the compiler and linker work. This helps to uncover critical issues early on.
4.3. Executing the test¶
While the test script can be easily executed on its own, it is strongly
recommended to actually use autopkgtest
from the autopkgtest
package for
verifying that your test works; otherwise, if it fails in the Ubuntu Continuous
Integration (CI) system, it will not land in Ubuntu. This also avoids cluttering
your workstation with test packages or test configuration if the test does
something more intrusive than the simple example above.
The README.running-tests documentation explains all
available testbeds (schroot, LXD, QEMU, etc.) and the most common scenarios how
to run your tests with autopkgtest
, e. g. with locally built binaries, locally
modified tests, etc.
The Ubuntu CI system uses the QEMU runner and runs the tests from the packages
in the archive, with -proposed
enabled. To reproduce the exact same
environment, first install the necessary packages:
sudo apt install autopkgtest qemu-system qemu-utils autodep8
Now build a testbed with:
autopkgtest-buildvm-ubuntu-cloud -v
(Please see its manpage and --help
output for selecting different releases,
architectures, output directory, or using proxies). This will build e. g.
adt-trusty-amd64-cloud.img
.
Then run the tests of a source package like libpng
in that QEMU image:
autopkgtest libpng -- qemu adt-trusty-amd64-cloud.img
The Ubuntu CI system runs packages with only selected packages from
-proposed
available (the package which caused the test to be run); to
enable that, run:
autopkgtest libpng -U --apt-pocket=proposed=src:foo -- qemu adt-release-amd64-cloud.img
or to run with all packages from -proposed
:
autopkgtest libpng -U --apt-pocket=proposed -- qemu adt-release-amd64-cloud.img
The autopkgtest
manpage has a lot more valuable information on other
testing options.
4.4. Further examples¶
This list is not comprehensive, but might help you get a better idea of how automated tests are implemented and used in Ubuntu.
The libxml2 tests are very similar. They also run a test-build of a simple piece of C code and execute it.
The gtk+3.0 tests also do a compile/link/run check in the “build” test. There is an additional “python3-gi” test which verifies that the GTK library can also be used through introspection.
In the ubiquity tests the upstream test-suite is executed.
The gvfs tests have comprehensive testing of their functionality and are very interesting because they emulate usage of CDs, Samba, DAV and other bits.
4.5. Ubuntu infrastructure¶
Packages which have autopkgtest
enabled will have their tests run whenever
they get uploaded or any of their dependencies change. The output of
automatically run autopkgtest tests can be viewed on the web and is
regularly updated.
Debian also uses autopkgtest
to run package tests, although currently only
in schroots, so results may vary a bit. Results and logs can be seen on
http://ci.debian.net. So please submit any test fixes or new tests to Debian as
well.
4.6. Getting the test into Ubuntu¶
The process of submitting an autopkgtest for a package is largely similar to fixing a bug in Ubuntu. Essentially you simply:
run
bzr branch ubuntu:<packagename>
,edit
debian/control
to enable the tests,add the
debian/tests
directory,write the
debian/tests/control
based on the DEP 8 Specification,add your test case(s) to
debian/tests
,commit your changes, push them to Launchpad, propose a merge and get it reviewed just like any other improvement in a source package.
4.7. What you can do¶
The Ubuntu Engineering team put together a list of required test-cases, where packages which need tests are put into different categories. Here you can find examples of these tests and easily assign them to yourself.
If you should run into any problems, you can join the #ubuntu-quality IRC channel to get in touch with developers who can help you.