I got tired of being told "TL;DR". Now the online versions of most documents fit on a page or two, or at least most of them do. The rest has been split out (and you can see the links to the split out sections right where the text is in the raw Markdown). This is much more pleasant to read, and I've improved the linking so it's much less effort for me to keep the links correct.
3.2 KiB
F=_t notes on the testing setup
WARNING: PLEASE use a dedicated user for doing this. Various files and directories get overwritten and it's much simpler this way.
terminology
#define PW "patches welcome!"
#define TODO PW
notes and background
All testing is done on one brand new userid. We use ssh host alias tricks
to simulate multiple gitolite users within this, so ssh gitolite info
gets
you different results than ssh u1 info
.
The test suite is mainly meant for testing the core (access control) functionality. It doesn't test anything else, like say the install or upgrade operations. Other big features NOT covered by the test suite are mirroring, smart http, and password-based access.
Note that the test driver has evolved as new scripts were added; you will see that older scripts are a little less sophisticated.
playing with gitolite
(Please heed the warning at the top of this document and use a dedicated user for this).
Playing with gitolite is easy.
-
Create a userid (doesn't matter what it's called; we'll pretend it's "gl-test" in this document).
-
Make sure sshd allows incoming ssh to this userid at least from localhost. (Out of scope for this document: sshd config, 'AllowUsers', etc...)
-
Now log in as this user (doesn't matter how), and run the following commands:
cd $HOME # if not already in $HOME git clone git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite gitolite/t/install
This installs the "testbed" in the userid you chose. No other user is affected in any way.
This is what you get when you do this:
-
A gitolite user called "tester", tied to an ssh host alias called "gitolite". This user has RW+ rights to the admin repo; running
ssh gitolite info
should get you the expected results. -
Six gitolite users called "u1" through "u6", all done through ssh host aliases. Running
ssh u1 info
etc. should show you only the "testing" repo accessible to them. -
A clone of the admin repo in
~/gitolite-admin
, created bygit clone gitolite:gitolite-admin
. If youcd ~/gitolite-admin
, you will see the keys for the users mentioned above (tester, u1, ..., u6). -
The rest of a gitolite installation, such as the rc file in
~/.gitolite.rc
etc.
Don't forget that the client and the server are all on the same user on the same machine.
And don't forget, too, that we are simulating 7 gitolite users using ssh keys!
(How? Maybe ~/.ssh/config
will give you a hint). You can now use those 7
users in any way you please in the config file and test out different user's
access simply using a different URL. For example, git clone u1:testing
and
git clone u2:testing
may give you different results depending on what rights
you gave users "u1" and "u2" in your config.
testing gitolite
First, do what the "playing with gitolite" section says. That is a pre-requisite.
Once that is done, run this command (still in $HOME
of the gl-test userid):
prove gitolite/t/test-driver.sh
(note: 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)
instructions for adding new tests
(TODO)