DeepTest enables tests to run in parallel using multiple processes. Processes may spawned locally to take advantage of multiple processors on a single machine or distributed across many machines to take advantage of distributed processing.
This README has been updated to reflect changes made on the master branch that have not yet been released. If you are looking for the README for DeepTest 1.2 it is availeble on the 1.2.x branch on github.
In your Rakefile:
require "rubygems" require "deep_test/rake_tasks" # sample DeepTest task DeepTest::TestTask.new "task_name" do |t| t.number_of_agents = 2 # optional, defaults to number of cores t.pattern = "test/**/*_test.rb" t.libs << "test" # may be necessary for Rails >= 2.1.x end # sample SpecTask using DeepTest Spec::Rake::SpecTask.new(:deep_spec) do |t| t.spec_files = FileList['spec/**/*_spec.rb'] t.deep_test :number_of_agents => 2 # optional, defaults to number of cores end
In my_listener.rb
class MyListener def before_sync end def before_starting_agents end def starting(agent) end def starting_work(agent, work_unit) end def finished_work(agent, work_unit, result) end end
In your Rakefile
DeepTest::TestTask.new "task_name" do |t| ... t.listener = "MyListener" end
An instance of MyListener will be created for each agent that is started, and will receive events from that agent. However, you must ensure that the MyListener class is loaded at the time that the test files are loaded, so it is available to be instantiated. You can specify multiple listener classes by separating them with a comma. For more information about when events are triggered, see the documentation at DeepTest::NullListener.
By default, DeepTest will reinitialize ActiveRecord connections if ActiveRecord is loaded when the agents are started. This means all agents are running against the same database. You may want each agent to use a database decidicated to it. To facilitate this, DeepTest provides a agent listener to help you. If you’re using Rails with Mysql, simply configure DeepTest as follows in your Rakefile:
DeepTest::TestTask.new "task_name" do |t| ... t.listener = "DeepTest::Database::MysqlSetupListener" end
Before spawning agents, DeepTest will dump the schema of the database for the current Rails environment (usually test). As each agent starts up, the listener will create a database dedicated to that agent and load the schema into it. The database will be dropped when the agent process exits.
If you’re using Mysql but not using Rails, you’ll have to create a subclass of MysqlSetupListener and override master_database_config
and dump_file_name
, as the default implementations of these methods are Rails specific.
If you’re using a database other than Mysql, read the documentation for DeepTest::Database::SetupListener and create a new subclass for your database type. If you do this, please consider contributing your subclass back to the project so that it can be included in later releases of DeepTest.
In addition to running your tests in parallel, DeepTest can also distribute them across multiple machines. It does this by first mirroring the local working copy that launched the tests on each machine that will be running tests. Then agents are launched on each of the machines and consume tests in the same fashion as when DeepTest is running locally.
Before you can distribute tests, you must ensure that all the machines involved (including the machine with the local working copy) have rsync installed for mirroring working copies. You must also have either SSH or an RSync daemon exposing your local working copy running on the local development machine. For more information about rsync, visit the rsync webpage. Currently only passwordless access is supported, so you must either setup your RSync daemon to be accessible without a password or enable passwordless SSH access from the test machines to the local development machine. DeepTest must also be installed as a gem on each test machine and available either as a gem or in your project on the local machine.
There is no need to start a special daemon process on the machines that will be used to run DeepTest. Simply specify the names of the hosts that you would like DeepTest to distribute to along with a set of sync_options telling it how to to rsync the project code.
If you’re using rsync over ssh, create a DeepTest test task similar to that below in your Rakefile.
DeepTest::TestTask.new "deep_test_distributed" do |t| t.pattern = "test/**/*_test.rb" # whatever is appropriate for your project t.distributed_hosts = %w[host1 host2] t.sync_options = { :source => <absolute path of project root on machine>, :username => "username", :remote_base_dir => <absolute path to keep working copies in on remote machine> # defaults to /tmp } end
The :source entry in sync_options can be easily calculated based on the value of _FILE_ when defining the task. :username will be used by rsync to ssh back to the local machine and mirror the working copy.
If you have an rsync daemon running in your local machine, configure the rake task as follows.
DeepTest::TestTask.new "deep_test_distributed" do |t| t.pattern = "test/**/*_test.rb" # whatever is appropriate for your project t.distributed_hosts = %w[host1 host2] t.sync_options = { :source => <name of rsync module from daemon configuration>, :daemon => true, :username => "username" } end
Username is optional in both cases. You’ll need to either setup passwordless ssh access or run an rsync daemon that doesn’t require passwords.
There may be other options you’d like to pass to rsync in your particular scenario. This can be done by adding an :rsync_options entry to sync_options. For example, if you’re working on a Rails project you’ll probably want to at least have something like this:
DeepTest::TestTask.new "deep_test_distributed" do |t| ... excludes = %w[.svn tmp/** log/**] t.sync_options = { ... :rsync_options => excludes.map {|s| "'--exclude=#{s}'"}.join(' ') } end
That way you can avoid spending any time mirroring tmp and log files that don’t have any effect on the tests. If you are running distributed tests against a database, consult the section above about creating a new database for each agent to see how to configure DeepTest for your project.
Any number of projects can be run using the same test servers, as long as they’re all using the same version of Ruby and DeepTest.