graphql-engine/server/lib/test-harness
Gil Mizrahi db5370bb62 test-harness: if server fails to start, throwTo main
PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/9206
GitOrigin-RevId: 0663121db8ee546799a4de6deae861740614afc5
2023-05-18 10:02:15 +00:00
..
src/Harness test-harness: if server fails to start, throwTo main 2023-05-18 10:02:15 +00:00
README.md server/tests: Update README.md files 2023-01-03 14:27:22 +00:00
test-harness.cabal feat(tests-harness): Support api-tests using postgres-agent data connector 2023-05-17 14:44:06 +00:00

Hspec API Test Harness

The test harness provides convenience functions and infrastructure for writing tests at the API level of graphql-engine. Specifically, it focuses on setup and teardown for fixtures across our supported backends, and writing tests against the GraphQL API.

Setup

The test harness supports running tests using an external GraphQL-Engine process, as opposed to a server instance running in a thread via library linking. For this purpose, tests that use this need to know the path to the graphql-engine executable via the GRAPHQL_ENGINE environment variable.

To point a test suite using the harness to the graphql-engine executable produced in-tree by cabal, use e.g.:

$ export GRAPHQL_ENGINE=$(cabal list-bin exe:graphql-engine)

(Note that at the time of this writing, almost all of the test suite still tests the Graphql Engine via library linking rather than via external process. However, we expect the external process approach to become gradually more prominent because it is more flexible and true to integration testing.)

The harness depends on the values in src/Harness/Constants.hs being correct. Running docker-compose up in the root of graphql-engine should take care of this for everything except BigQuery. Because BigQuery doesn't have a way of installing locally for testing, we have to connect to an actual BigQuery account. To test against BigQuery, the following environment variables must be set:

  • HASURA_BIGQUERY_SERVICE_KEY: the service account key.
  • HASURA_BIGQUERY_PROJECT_ID: the ID of a project on the service account.

Once the account has been verified, the service account email variable can be omitted from subsequent test runs. For the first run, however:

  1. Ensure you have access to a Google Cloud Console service account. Store the project ID and account email in HASURA_BIGQUERY_PROJECT_ID variable.

    $ export HASURA_BIGQUERY_PROJECT_ID=hasura-project-identifier
    

    https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-managing-service-accounts#creating

  2. Create and download a new service account key. Store the contents of file in a HASURA_BIGQUERY_SERVICE_KEY variable.

    $ export HASURA_BIGQUERY_SERVICE_KEY=$(cat /path/to/service/account)
    

    https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-managing-service-account-keys

  3. Login and activate the service account if it is not already activated.

    https://cloud.google.com/sdk/gcloud/reference/auth/activate-service-account

  4. Verify the service account is accessible via the BigQuery API by setting the HASURA_BIGQUERY_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL with the service account email and running the verification script.

    $ export HASURA_BIGQUERY_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL=hasura@email.com
    $ ./scripts/verify-bigquery-creds.sh
    

    If the query succeeds, the service account is setup correctly to run tests against BigQuery locally!

Note to Hasura team: a service account is already setup for internal use, please check the wiki for further details.

Logging

Currently, in order to enable logging, you have to edit the engineLogLevel term in Harness/Constants.hs manually and specify the level of logging you want to display.

engineLogLevel :: Maybe L.LogLevel
- engineLogLevel = Nothing
+ engineLogLevel = Just L.LevelDebug -- Enable all logs

Library Structure

Harness.Backend

Utilies for interacting with all our specific backends. This includes functions for checking liveness (is the database/backend running?), as well as setting up fixtures (creating tables, inserting data, tracking them in Hasura, setting permissions, and so on).

Harness.Quoter

QuasiQuoters for writing non-Haskell languages such as YAML and GraphQL.

Harness.Test

Specific functions for writing Hspec suites. This directory is probably best understood starting with Harness.Test.Fixture, which describes the method for running tests against one or more backends.

Setup / teardown actions

To ensure things are cleaned up properly in the event of errors in setting up and tearing down tests, test setup is defined in terms of SetupActions.

These look like this:

data SetupAction = forall a.
  SetupAction
    { setupAction :: IO a,
      teardownAction :: Maybe a -> IO ()
    }

A SetupAction encodes how to setup and tear down a single piece of test system state. The value produced by a setupAction is to be input into the corresponding teardownAction, if the setupAction completed without throwing an exception.

Therefore one SetupAction could create the DB tables, and the matching teardown removes them. Pairing setup / teardown in this way makes it easier to remove everything in the right order.

Setup

The setup actions are responsible for creating the environment for the test. They need to, for example:

  1. Clear and reconfigure the metadata
  2. Setup tables and insert values
  3. Track tables, add relationships, permissions

These actions can be created by running POST requests against graphql-engine using Harness.GraphqlEngine.post_, or by running SQL requests against the backend using Backend.<backend>.run_.

Teardown

These actions are responsible for freeing acquired resources, and reverting all local modifications: dropping newly created tables, deleting custom functions, removing the changes made to the metadata, and so on.

These actions can be created by running POST requests against graphql-engine using Harness.GraphqlEngine.post_, or by running SQL requests against the backend using Backend.<backend>.run_.