#!/usr/bin/env bash # @copyright Copyright (c) 2017, Daniel Calviño Sánchez (danxuliu@gmail.com) # # @license GNU AGPL version 3 or any later version # # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as # published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the # License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU Affero General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License # along with this program. If not, see . # Helper script to run the acceptance tests, which test a running Nextcloud # instance from the point of view of a real user. # # The acceptance tests are run in its own Docker container; the grandparent # directory of the acceptance tests directory (that is, the root directory of # the Nextcloud server) is copied to the container and the acceptance tests are # run inside it. Once the tests end the container is stopped. The acceptance # tests also use the Selenium server to control a web browser, so the Selenium # server is also launched before the tests start in its own Docker container (it # will be stopped automatically too once the tests end). # # To perform its job, the script requires the "docker" command to be available. # # The Docker Command Line Interface (the "docker" command) requires special # permissions to talk to the Docker daemon, and those permissions are typically # available only to the root user. Please see the Docker documentation to find # out how to give access to a regular user to the Docker daemon: # https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/linux-postinstall/ # # Note, however, that being able to communicate with the Docker daemon is the # same as being able to get root privileges for the system. Therefore, you must # give access to the Docker daemon (and thus run this script as) ONLY to trusted # and secure users: # https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/security/#docker-daemon-attack-surface # # Finally, take into account that this script will automatically remove the # Docker containers named "selenium-nextcloud-local-test-acceptance" and # "nextcloud-local-test-acceptance", even if the script did not create them # (probably you will not have containers nor images with those names, but just # in case). # Sets the variables that abstract the differences in command names and options # between operating systems. # # Switches between timeout on GNU/Linux and gtimeout on macOS (same for mktemp # and gmktemp). function setOperatingSystemAbstractionVariables() { case "$OSTYPE" in darwin*) if [ "$(which gtimeout)" == "" ]; then echo "Please install coreutils (brew install coreutils)" exit 1 fi MKTEMP=gmktemp TIMEOUT=gtimeout DOCKER_OPTIONS="-e no_proxy=localhost " ;; linux*) MKTEMP=mktemp TIMEOUT=timeout DOCKER_OPTIONS=" " ;; *) echo "Operating system ($OSTYPE) not supported" exit 1 ;; esac } # Launches the Selenium server in a Docker container. # # The acceptance tests use Firefox by default but, unfortunately, Firefox >= 48 # does not provide yet the same level of support as earlier versions for certain # features related to automated testing. Therefore, the Docker image used is not # the latest one, but an older version known to work. # # The acceptance tests expect the Selenium server to be accessible at # "127.0.0.1:4444"; as the Selenium server container and the container in which # the acceptance tests are run share the same network nothing else needs to be # done for the acceptance tests to access the Selenium server and for the # Selenium server to access the Nextcloud server. However, in order to ensure # from this script that the Selenium server was started the 4444 port of its # container is mapped to the 4444 port of the host. # # Besides the Selenium server, the Docker image also provides a VNC server, so # the 5900 port of the container is also mapped to the 5900 port of the host. # # The Docker container started here will be automatically stopped when the # script exits (see cleanUp). If the Selenium server can not be started then the # script will be exited immediately with an error state; the most common cause # for the Selenium server to fail to start is that another server is already # using the mapped ports in the host. # # As the web browser is run inside the Docker container it is not visible by # default. However, it can be viewed using VNC (for example, # "vncviewer 127.0.0.1:5900"); when asked for the password use "secret". function prepareSelenium() { SELENIUM_CONTAINER=selenium-nextcloud-local-test-acceptance echo "Starting Selenium server" docker run --detach --name=$SELENIUM_CONTAINER --publish 4444:4444 --publish 5900:5900 $DOCKER_OPTIONS selenium/standalone-chrome-debug:3.141.59 echo "Waiting for Selenium server to be ready" if ! $TIMEOUT 10s bash -c "while ! curl 127.0.0.1:4444 >/dev/null 2>&1; do sleep 1; done"; then echo "Could not start Selenium server; running" \ "\"docker run --rm --publish 4444:4444 --publish 5900:5900 $DOCKER_OPTIONS selenium/standalone-chrome-debug:3.141.59\"" \ "could give you a hint of the problem" exit 1 fi } # Creates a Docker container to run both the acceptance tests and the Nextcloud # server used by them. # # This function starts a Docker container with a copy the Nextcloud code from # the grandparent directory, although ignoring any configuration or data that it # may provide (for example, if that directory was used directly to deploy a # Nextcloud instance in a web server). As the Nextcloud code is copied to the # container instead of referenced the original code can be modified while the # acceptance tests are running without interfering in them. function prepareDocker() { NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER=nextcloud-local-test-acceptance echo "Starting the Nextcloud container" # As the Nextcloud server container uses the network of the Selenium server # container the Nextcloud server can be accessed at "127.0.0.1" from the # Selenium server. # The container exits immediately if no command is given, so a Bash session # is created to prevent that. docker run --detach --name=$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER --network=container:$SELENIUM_CONTAINER --interactive --tty nextcloudci/acceptance-php7.3:acceptance-php7.3-2 bash # Use the $TMPDIR or, if not set, fall back to /tmp. NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR="$($MKTEMP --tmpdir="${TMPDIR:-/tmp}" --suffix=.tar nextcloud-local-XXXXXXXXXX)" # Setting the user and group of files in the tar would be superfluous, as # "docker cp" does not take them into account (the extracted files are set # to root). echo "Copying local Git working directory of Nextcloud to the container" tar --create --file="$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR" \ --exclude=".git" \ --exclude="./build" \ --exclude="./config/config.php" \ --exclude="./data" \ --exclude="./data-autotest" \ --exclude="./tests" \ --exclude="./apps-extra" \ --exclude="./apps-writable" \ --exclude="node_modules" \ --directory=../../ \ . tar --append --file="$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR" --directory=../../ tests/acceptance/ docker exec $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER mkdir /nextcloud docker cp - $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER:/nextcloud/ < "$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR" # run-local.sh expects a Git repository to be available in the root of the # Nextcloud server, but it was excluded when the Git working directory was # copied to the container to avoid copying the large and unneeded history of # the repository. docker exec $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER bash -c "cd nextcloud && git init" } # Removes/stops temporal elements created/started by this script. function cleanUp() { # Disable (yes, "+" disables) exiting immediately on errors to ensure that # all the cleanup commands are executed (well, no errors should occur during # the cleanup anyway, but just in case). set +o errexit echo "Cleaning up" if [ -f "$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR" ]; then echo "Removing $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR" rm $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_TAR fi # The name filter must be specified as "^/XXX$" to get an exact match; using # just "XXX" would match every name that contained "XXX". if [ -n "$(docker ps --all --quiet --filter name="^/$NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER$")" ]; then echo "Removing Docker container $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER" docker rm --volumes --force $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER fi if [ -n "$(docker ps --all --quiet --filter name="^/$SELENIUM_CONTAINER$")" ]; then echo "Removing Docker container $SELENIUM_CONTAINER" docker rm --volumes --force $SELENIUM_CONTAINER fi } # Exit immediately on errors. set -o errexit # Execute cleanUp when the script exits, either normally or due to an error. trap cleanUp EXIT # Ensure working directory is script directory, as some actions (like copying # the Git working directory to the container) expect that. cd "$(dirname $0)" # "--acceptance-tests-dir XXX" option can be provided to set the directory # (relative to the root directory of the Nextcloud server) used to look for the # Behat configuration and the Nextcloud installation script. # By default it is "tests/acceptance", that is, the acceptance tests for the # Nextcloud server itself. ACCEPTANCE_TESTS_DIR_OPTION="" if [ "$1" = "--acceptance-tests-dir" ]; then ACCEPTANCE_TESTS_DIR_OPTION="--acceptance-tests-dir $2" shift 2 fi # "--timeout-multiplier N" option can be provided before the specific scenario # to run, if any, to set the timeout multiplier to be used in the acceptance # tests. TIMEOUT_MULTIPLIER_OPTION="" if [ "$1" = "--timeout-multiplier" ]; then if [[ ! "$2" =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; then echo "--timeout-multiplier must be followed by a positive integer" exit 1 fi TIMEOUT_MULTIPLIER_OPTION="--timeout-multiplier $2" shift 2 fi # If no parameter is provided to this script all the acceptance tests are run. SCENARIO_TO_RUN=$1 setOperatingSystemAbstractionVariables prepareSelenium prepareDocker echo "Running tests" docker exec $NEXTCLOUD_LOCAL_CONTAINER bash -c "cd nextcloud && tests/acceptance/run-local.sh $ACCEPTANCE_TESTS_DIR_OPTION $TIMEOUT_MULTIPLIER_OPTION allow-git-repository-modifications $SCENARIO_TO_RUN"