When running using the "new" style (with a HGE binary, not a URL), a new PostgreSQL metadata and source database are created for each test. When we get this into CI, this should drastically reduce the flakiness.
I have also enabled parallelization by default when using `run-new.sh`. It's much faster.
I had to basically rewrite _server/tests-py/test_graphql_read_only_source.py_ so that it does two different things depending on how it's run. It's unfortunate, but it should eventually go away.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6879
GitOrigin-RevId: a121b9035f8da3e61a3e36d8b1fbc6ccae918fad
If the tests are run with specific ports assigned to specific services,
set through the environment variables, we continue to use those ports.
We just don't hard-code them now, we pick them up from the environment
variables.
However, if the environment variables are not set, we generate a random
port for each service. This allows us to run multiple tests in parallel
in the future, independently.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6218
GitOrigin-RevId: 3d2a1880bf67544c848951888ce7b4fa1ba379dc
When we run the HGE server inside the test harness, it needs to run with
an admin secret for some tests to make sense. This tags each test that
requires an admin secret with `pytest.mark.admin_secret`, which then
generates a UUID and injects that into both the server and the test case
(if required).
It also simplifies the way the test harness picks up an existing admin
secret, allowing it to use the environment variable instead of requiring
it via a parameter.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6120
GitOrigin-RevId: 55c5b9e8c99bdad9c8304098444ddb9516749a2c
This teaches `hge_server` how to run more tests, thanks to `hge_env`.
It also simplifies the logic a bit more.
I have also modified _run.sh_ and _docker-compose.yml_ so we can run multiple test suites, one after another.
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/6105
GitOrigin-RevId: eff009362eb6bb90c07cedaf96dfe6ec9336ff32
We add a new pytest flag `--accept` that will automatically write back
yaml files with updated responses. This makes it much easier and less
error-prone to update test cases when we expect output to change, or
when authoring new tests.
Second we make sure to test that we actually preserve the order of the
selection set when returning results. This is a "SHOULD" part of the
spec but seems pretty important and something that users will rely on.
To support both of the above we use ruamel.yaml which preserves a
certain amount of formatting and comments (so that --accept can work in
a failry ergonomic way), as well as ordering (so that when we write yaml
the order of keys has meaning that's preserved during parsing).
Use ruamel.yaml everywhere for consistency (since both libraries have
different quirks).
Quirks of ruamel.yaml:
- trailing whitespace in multiline strings in yaml files isn't written
back out as we'd like: https://bitbucket.org/ruamel/yaml/issues/47/multiline-strings-being-changed-if-they
- formatting is only sort of preserved; ruamel e.g. normalizes
indentation. Normally the diff is pretty clean though, and you can
always just check in portions of your test file after --accept
fixup
Changes compared to `/v1alpha1/graphql`
* Changed all graphql responses in **/v1/graphql** endpoint to be 200. All graphql clients expect responses to be HTTP 200. Non-200 responses are considered transport layer errors.
* Errors in http and websocket layer are now consistent and have similar structure.