apparmor/parser/tst
Steve Beattie 0a97828f30 Subject: parser tests - fix fine grained timestamp detection in
caching tests

Merge from trunk commit 2083

Original message:
  This patch modifies the parser's caching test to more accurately detect
  whether or not the filesystem has a fine enough timestamp resolution.
  Occasionally even on filesystems like ext3, the two files' creation
  dates would differ when created less than a second apart, which would
  typically cause the 'Cache is used when cache is newer' test to fail
  because the cached file would have the same timestamp as the profile.
  
  The fix creates 10 files 0.1 seconds apart and ensures that all ten
  have distinct timestamps.
  
  (The occasional failure was caught in testing runs like
   https://bugs.launchpad.net/qa-regression-testing/+bug/1087061/ )
  
  Signed-off-by: Steve Beattie <sbeattie@ubuntu.com>
  Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>

Nominated-by: Steve Beattie <sbeattie@ubuntu.com>
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
2013-01-03 17:28:44 -08:00
..
errors as ACKed on IRC, drop the unused $Id$ tags everywhere 2010-12-20 12:29:10 -08:00
simple_tests Add a testcase for the issue fixed in commit 2059. 2012-12-10 17:01:24 -08:00
caching.profile actually add caching tests 2009-11-11 11:07:50 -08:00
caching.sh Subject: parser tests - fix fine grained timestamp detection in 2013-01-03 17:28:44 -08:00
gen-xtrans.pl Description: Improve generated test readability and build-time cleanup. 2011-05-02 13:36:55 -07:00
Makefile Fix dfa minimization to deal with exec conflicts 2012-03-09 04:20:19 -08:00
minimize.sh rework the is_null test to not include deny 2012-03-22 07:55:00 -07:00
README Here's an update to rename another chunk of things that still used 2011-01-13 13:58:26 -08:00
simple.pl Subject: parser tests - fix test driver for exec() failure 2013-01-03 17:22:00 -08:00
uservars.conf as ACKed on IRC, drop the unused $Id$ tags everywhere 2010-12-20 12:29:10 -08:00

This is the README for the AppArmor parser regression testsuite.

Running the testsuite
---------------------
Running the tests is pretty easy, a simple 'make tests' should make it
go, assuming the subdomain parser and perl are installed.

There is a user configuration file 'uservars.conf'. If you wish to test
against a different parser, or use a different set of profiles for the
simple.pl test, you can change those settings in 'uservars.conf'.

Adding to the testsuite
-----------------------

The testsuite currently contains one testscript (simple.pl) and makes use
of perl's Test::Simple, Test::Harness, and prove utilities (see 'perldoc
Test::Tutorial', 'perldoc Test::Simple', 'perldoc Test::Harness', and
'man 1 prove' for more information on these).

It should be relatively easy to extend the suite with other testscripts,
as long as they're written using Test::Simple or can emulate the
Test::Harness protocol. To add a script, add it to the TESTS variable
in the Makefile, and it will included in the tests to be run.

However, in many cases, it is not necessary to add an entire new
testscript for a testcase. Instead, the simple testcase (see below)
will run all the profiles it finds on the parser, thus adding testcases
is usually as simple as writing a new profile with a couple of extra
comments.

Simple parsing tests (simple.pl)
--------------------------------
This test script tests the parser front end's ability to identify legal
profiles. It does this by running the parser against several legal and
illegal profiles (in debug mode, so as not to load them into the module
proper)

The simple script has the parser attempt to parse all of the profiles
named *.sd in the simple_tests/ subdirectory; thus, to add a new profile
to test, simply add it to the simple_tests/ directory. The simple
script also adds the testdir (simple_tests/ by default) to the parsers
include path (assuming that particular bug has been fixed :-)). There
is an includes/ subdir to place additional includes if necessary (we
purposefully choose to use different directory names versus the shipped
profiles to minimize testsuite breakage with changes in the external
policy).

The simple script looks for a few special comments in the profile,
#=DESCRIPTION, #=EXRESULT, and #=TODO:

  - #=DESCRIPTION -- all text following the keyword is considered a
    description for the test. Please try to make these meaningful.

  - #=EXRESULT -- This records the expected result of parsing this
    profile. Values can either be PASS or FAIL; if no comment is found
    that matches this pattern, then the profile is assumed to have an
    expected parse result of PASS.

  - #=TODO -- marks the test as being for a future item to implement and
    thus are expected testsuite failures and hsould be ignored.

  - #=DISABLED -- skips the test, and marks it as a failed TODO task.
    Useful if the particular testcase causes the parser to infinite
    loop.

Otherwise, the profile is passed on as-is to the subdomain parser.