## notes on the testing setup In this document: * terminology * notes and background * quick instructions for running the test suite * instructions for adding new tests ### terminology #define PW "patches welcome!" #define TODO PW ### notes and background * all testing is done on one machine, using 2 userids * test driver exits on the *first* failed test; no fancy counting here. (PW). * installs are done using "gl-easy-install". As such, this test suite is mainly meant for testing **the core (access control) functionality**, and will not help you test the install/upgrade parts themselves. Those are a lot more difficult to test in an automated fashion, but luckily they also change infrequently and can easily be tested manually when they do. Errors in those are much more visible too. (PW). * the test driver has evolved as new scripts were added; you will see that older scripts are a little less sophisticated. ### quick instructions for running the test suite * create two brand new user IDs: tester and gitolite-test * these are hard-coded, sorry. (PW) * give them some passwords * allow ssh into gitolite-test in `/etc/ssh/sshd_config`; preferably use a line like `AllowUsers gitolite-test@127.0.0.1` so that no one can ssh in from outside * prepare/push a bare clone of gitolite itself on /tmp so that the "tester" userid can grab it painlessly cd your-gitolite-working-repo git clone --bare $PWD /tmp/gitolite # first time git push -f --all /tmp/gitolite # subsequent times * "su" to "tester" and clone/fetch the gitolite source: cd $HOME; git clone /tmp/gitolite # first time cd gitolite; git fetch origin # subsequent times * checkout and "install" the branch you want to test (install from "tester" userid to "gitolite-test" userid). Example, if you want to test "pu" branch: git checkout -t origin/pu # if needed git checkout -f pu; git reset --hard origin/pu # subsequent times cd t # THIS IS IMPORTANT (patches welcome, or will be fixed eventually!) ./install-gitolite * run all or some of the tests ./test-driver.sh # or ./test-driver.sh t51 * you can also run them through "prove", although to make it work easier with prove, I ended up making the "subtest" numbers be the actual test numbers, making it look like I have over 2000 tests, when in reality I have about 600: prove ./test-driver.sh # or prove ./test-driver.sh :: t51 ### instructions for adding new tests (TODO)