`pkgs.testers.runNixOSTest` is the latest and best way to run NixOS Tests outside of nixpkgs as it also improves evaluation performance by injecting the host pkgs into all the guests. It seems no one uses it because it is not mentioned at the right places.
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Writing Tests
A NixOS test is a module that has the following structure:
{
# One or more machines:
nodes =
{ machine =
{ config, pkgs, ... }: { /* ... */ };
machine2 =
{ config, pkgs, ... }: { /* ... */ };
# …
};
testScript =
''
Python code…
'';
}
We refer to the whole test above as a test module, whereas the values
in nodes.<name>
are NixOS modules themselves.
The option testScript
is a piece of Python code that executes the
test (described below). During the test, it will start one or more
virtual machines, the configuration of which is described by
the option nodes
.
An example of a single-node test is
login.nix
.
It only needs a single machine to test whether users can log in
on the virtual console, whether device ownership is correctly maintained
when switching between consoles, and so on. An interesting multi-node test is
nfs/simple.nix
.
It uses two client nodes to test correct locking across server crashes.
Calling a test
Tests are invoked differently depending on whether the test is part of NixOS or lives in a different project.
Testing within NixOS
Tests that are part of NixOS are added to nixos/tests/all-tests.nix
.
{
hostname = runTest ./hostname.nix;
}
Overrides can be added by defining an anonymous module in all-tests.nix
.
{
hostname = runTest {
imports = [ ./hostname.nix ];
defaults.networking.firewall.enable = false;
};
}
You can run a test with attribute name hostname
in nixos/tests/all-tests.nix
by invoking:
cd /my/git/clone/of/nixpkgs
nix-build -A nixosTests.hostname
Testing outside the NixOS project
Outside the nixpkgs
repository, you can use the runNixOSTest
function from
pkgs.testers
:
let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
in
pkgs.testers.runNixOSTest {
imports = [ ./test.nix ];
defaults.services.foo.package = mypkg;
}
runNixOSTest
returns a derivation that runs the test.
Configuring the nodes
There are a few special NixOS options for test VMs:
virtualisation.memorySize
-
The memory of the VM in megabytes.
virtualisation.vlans
-
The virtual networks to which the VM is connected. See
nat.nix
for an example. virtualisation.writableStore
-
By default, the Nix store in the VM is not writable. If you enable this option, a writable union file system is mounted on top of the Nix store to make it appear writable. This is necessary for tests that run Nix operations that modify the store.
For more options, see the module
qemu-vm.nix
.
The test script is a sequence of Python statements that perform various
actions, such as starting VMs, executing commands in the VMs, and so on.
Each virtual machine is represented as an object stored in the variable
name
if this is also the identifier of the machine in the declarative
config. If you specified a node nodes.machine
, the following example starts the
machine, waits until it has finished booting, then executes a command
and checks that the output is more-or-less correct:
machine.start()
machine.wait_for_unit("default.target")
if not "Linux" in machine.succeed("uname"):
raise Exception("Wrong OS")
The first line is technically unnecessary; machines are implicitly started
when you first execute an action on them (such as wait_for_unit
or
succeed
). If you have multiple machines, you can speed up the test by
starting them in parallel:
start_all()
If the hostname of a node contains characters that can't be used in a
Python variable name, those characters will be replaced with
underscores in the variable name, so nodes.machine-a
will be exposed
to Python as machine_a
.
Machine objects
The following methods are available on machine objects:
@PYTHON_MACHINE_METHODS@
To test user units declared by systemd.user.services
the optional
user
argument can be used:
machine.start()
machine.wait_for_x()
machine.wait_for_unit("xautolock.service", "x-session-user")
This applies to systemctl
, get_unit_info
, wait_for_unit
,
start_job
and stop_job
.
For faster dev cycles it's also possible to disable the code-linters (this shouldn't be committed though):
{
skipLint = true;
nodes.machine =
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{ # configuration…
};
testScript =
''
Python code…
'';
}
This will produce a Nix warning at evaluation time. To fully disable the linter, wrap the test script in comment directives to disable the Black linter directly (again, don't commit this within the Nixpkgs repository):
{
testScript =
''
# fmt: off
Python code…
# fmt: on
'';
}
Similarly, the type checking of test scripts can be disabled in the following way:
{
skipTypeCheck = true;
nodes.machine =
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{ # configuration…
};
}
Failing tests early
To fail tests early when certain invariants are no longer met (instead of waiting for the build to time out), the decorator polling_condition
is provided. For example, if we are testing a program foo
that should not quit after being started, we might write the following:
@polling_condition
def foo_running():
machine.succeed("pgrep -x foo")
machine.succeed("foo --start")
machine.wait_until_succeeds("pgrep -x foo")
with foo_running:
... # Put `foo` through its paces
polling_condition
takes the following (optional) arguments:
seconds_interval
-
specifies how often the condition should be polled:
@polling_condition(seconds_interval=10)
def foo_running():
machine.succeed("pgrep -x foo")
description
-
is used in the log when the condition is checked. If this is not provided, the description is pulled from the docstring of the function. These two are therefore equivalent:
@polling_condition
def foo_running():
"check that foo is running"
machine.succeed("pgrep -x foo")
@polling_condition(description="check that foo is running")
def foo_running():
machine.succeed("pgrep -x foo")
Adding Python packages to the test script
When additional Python libraries are required in the test script, they can be
added using the parameter extraPythonPackages
. For example, you could add
numpy
like this:
{
extraPythonPackages = p: [ p.numpy ];
nodes = { };
# Type checking on extra packages doesn't work yet
skipTypeCheck = true;
testScript = ''
import numpy as np
assert str(np.zeros(4)) == "[0. 0. 0. 0.]"
'';
}
In that case, numpy
is chosen from the generic python3Packages
.
Test Options Reference
The following options can be used when writing tests.
id-prefix: test-opt-
list-id: test-options-list
source: @NIXOS_TEST_OPTIONS_JSON@