`shell_interact()` is currently not nice to use. If you try to cancel the socat process, it will also break the nixos test. Furthermore ptpython creates it's own terminal that subprocesses are running in, which breaks some of the terminal features of socat. Hence this commit extends `shell_interact` to allow also to connect to arbitrary servers i.e. tcp servers started by socat.
2.7 KiB
Running Tests interactively
The test itself can be run interactively. This is particularly useful when developing or debugging a test:
$ nix-build . -A nixosTests.login.driverInteractive
$ ./result/bin/nixos-test-driver
[...]
>>>
You can then take any Python statement, e.g.
>>> start_all()
>>> test_script()
>>> machine.succeed("touch /tmp/foo")
>>> print(machine.succeed("pwd")) # Show stdout of command
The function test_script
executes the entire test script and drops you
back into the test driver command line upon its completion. This allows
you to inspect the state of the VMs after the test (e.g. to debug the
test script).
Shell access in interactive mode
The function <yourmachine>.shell_interact()
grants access to a shell running
inside a virtual machine. To use it, replace <yourmachine>
with the name of a
virtual machine defined in the test, for example: machine.shell_interact()
.
Keep in mind that this shell may not display everything correctly as it is
running within an interactive Python REPL, and logging output from the virtual
machine may overwrite input and output from the guest shell:
>>> machine.shell_interact()
machine: Terminal is ready (there is no initial prompt):
$ hostname
machine
As an alternative, you can proxy the guest shell to a local TCP server by first starting a TCP server in a terminal using the command:
$ socat 'READLINE,PROMPT=$ ' tcp-listen:4444,reuseaddr`
In the terminal where the test driver is running, connect to this server by using:
>>> machine.shell_interact("tcp:127.0.0.1:4444")
Once the connection is established, you can enter commands in the socat terminal where socat is running.
Reuse VM state
You can re-use the VM states coming from a previous run by setting the
--keep-vm-state
flag.
$ ./result/bin/nixos-test-driver --keep-vm-state
The machine state is stored in the $TMPDIR/vm-state-machinename
directory.
Interactive-only test configuration
The .driverInteractive
attribute combines the regular test configuration with
definitions from the interactive
submodule. This gives you
a more usable, graphical, but slightly different configuration.
You can add your own interactive-only test configuration by adding extra
configuration to the interactive
submodule.
To interactively run only the regular configuration, build the <test>.driver
attribute
instead, and call it with the flag result/bin/nixos-test-driver --interactive
.