We renamed README.textile to README.asciidoc but a bunch of tests and
the package build itself still pointed at the old name. This switches
them the new name.
Backport of #49612.
The current Docker entrypoint script picks up environment variables and
translates them into -E command line arguments. However, since any tool
executes via `docker exec` doesn't run the entrypoint, it results in
a poorer user experience.
Therefore, refactor the env var handling so that the -E options are
generated in `elasticsearch-env`. These have to be appended to any
existing command arguments, since some CLI tools have subcommands and
-E arguments must come after the subcommand.
Also extract the support for `_FILE` env vars into a separate script, so
that it can be called from more than once place (the behaviour is
idempotent).
Finally, add noop -E handling to CronEvalTool for parity, and support
`-E` in MultiCommand before subcommands.
Running tools requires a shell. This should be the shell setup by the
base packaging tests, but currently tests must pass in their own shell.
This commit begins to make running tools easier by eliminating the shell
argument, instead keeping the shell as part of the Installation (which
can eventually be passed through from the test itself on installation).
The variable names for each tool are also simplified.
This refactor bridges some gaps between a long-running feature branch (#49268) and the master branch.
First of all, this PR gives our PackagingTestCase class some methods to start and stop Elasticsearch that will switch on packaging type and delegate to the appropriate utility class for deb/RPM packages, archive installations, and Docker. These methods should be very useful as we continue group tests by function rather than by package or platform type.
Second, the password-protected keystore tests have a particular need to read the output of Elasticsearch startup commands. In order to make this easer to do, some commands now return Shell.Result objects so that tests can check over output to the shell. To that end, there's also an assertElasticsearchFailure method that will handle checking for startup failures for the various distribution types.
There is an update to the Powershell startup script for archives that asynchronously redirects the output of the Powershell process to files that we can read for errors.
Finally, we use the ES_STARTUP_SLEEP_TIME environment variable to make sure that our startup commands wait long enough before exiting for errors to make it to the standard output and error streams.
Backport of #49079. Reimplement a number of the tests from
elastic/elasticsearch-docker.
There is also one Docker image fix here, which is that two of the provided
config files had different file permissions to the rest. I've fixed this
with another RUN chmod while building the image, and adjusted the
corresponding packaging test.
This commit moves the packaging tests for elasticsearch-setup-passwords
to java from bats. The change also enables future tests to enable
security in Elasticsearch and automatically have waitForElasticsearch
work correctly, at least to the same extent it worked in bats, by
waiting on the ES port instead of health check.
relates #46005
Fix reference about the uid:gid that Elasticsearch runs as inside
the Docker container and add a packaging test to ensure that bind
mounting a data dir with a random uid and gid:0 works as
expected.
Backport of #49529Closes#47929
Backport of #47208.
Closes#46900. When running ES with `--quiet`, if ES then exits abnormally, a
user has to go hunting in the logs for the error. Instead, never close
System.err, and print more information to it if ES encounters a fatal error
e.g. config validation, or some fatal runtime exception. This is useful when
running under e.g. systemd, since the error will go into the journal.
Note that stderr is still closed in daemon (`-d`) mode.
Backport of #47573.
Closes#43603. Allow environment variables to be passed to ES in a Docker
container via a file, by setting an environment variable with the `_FILE`
suffix that points to the file with the intended value of the env var.
Backport of #48849. Update `.editorconfig` to make the Java settings the
default for all files, and then apply a 2-space indent to all `*.gradle`
files. Then reformat all the files.
The previous approach did not work because the system property is passed
to Gradle but not to the tests JVM.
We shouldn't really pass this to the tests as we wouldn't want to have
differences.
This timeout being different might not be bad, but having a way to
differentiate could lead to others and it's best avoided.
Backport of #46599 and #47640. Add packaging tests for Docker.
* Introduce packaging tests for Docker (#46599)
Closes#37617. Add packaging tests for our Docker images, similar to what
we have for RPMs or Debian packages. This works by running a container and
probing it e.g. via `docker exec`. Test can also be run in Vagrant, by
exporting the Docker images to disk and loading them again in VMs. Docker
is installed via `Vagrantfile` in a selection of boxes.
* Only define Docker pkg tests if Docker is available (#47640)
Closes#47639, and unmutes tests that were muted in b958467.
The Docker packaging tests were being defined irrespective of whether
Docker was actually available in the current environment. Instead,
implement exclude lists so that in environments where Docker is not
available, no Docker packaging tests are defined. For CI hosts, the build
checks `.ci/dockerOnLinuxExclusions`. The Vagrant VMs can defined the
extension property `shouldTestDocker` property to opt-in to packaging
tests.
As part of this, define a seperate utility class for checking Docker,
and call that instead of defining checks in-line in BuildPlugin.groovy
This is in preparation to move to nested virtualization which is much slower
than the bare metal setup we use right now, but parallelizes better
resulting in a net win.t
We no longer run the sample tests in CI, so it's safe to create a task
for every project.
This will make it easier to set them up in a matrix like fashion.
On windows, it happens that the process we called terminates but some
other process it creates still has the same output strems and thus the
files open, so we can't clean it up.
This PR makes the cleanup a best effort.
This PR makes the necesary adaptations to the tests and adds a power shell script to
invoke the OS tests on GCP instances connected as CI workers.
Also noticed that logs were not being produced by the tests and that theses were not using log4j so fixed that too.
One of the difficulties in working on theses tests was that the tests just stalled with no indication where the problem is.
To ease with the debugging, after process explorer suggested that the tests are running some commands, we now have multiple timeouts: one for the tests ( which will generate a thread dump ) and one for individual commands ( that bails with the command being ran and output and error so far ) to make it easier to see what went wrong.
The tests were blocking because apparently the pipes to the sub-process were not closing, thus the threads were blocking on them and we were blocking indefinitely on the join. I'm not sure why this doesn't happen in vagrant, but we now properly deal with it.
Since the bundled jdk was added to Elasticsearch, there are now 2 ways
java can be missing. Either JAVA_HOME is set but does not exist, or the
bundled jdk does not exist. This commit improves the error messages in
those two cases, and also ensures our tests cover both cases.
The archives stopElasticsearch utility method sends SIGTERM to the
elasticsearch process, but does not wait for it to exit. That can cause
subsequent tests to sometimes file. This commit adds wait logic to both
linux and windows for the stopElasticsearch method.
closes#44501
The test for java home with special characters on linux would create a
temporary java home under /home/elasticsearch. But our packaging
assertions expect that to not exist. Unfortunately this would fail much
later when the checks were actually done in bats tests. This commit
fixes the linux test to match the behavior of windows, which links the
entire java directory, and now does it into a /tmp dir.
closes#45903
This commit moves many features of individual distro tests into the base
class so that other test cases can utilize them. It also standardizes
the pattern for tests adding assumptions for the particular
distributions to test.
Most of our CLI tools use the Terminal class, which previously did not provide methods for writing to standard output. When all output goes to standard out, there are two basic problems. First, errors and warnings are "swallowed" in pipelines, making it hard for a user to know when something's gone wrong. Second, errors and warnings are intermingled with legitimate output, making it difficult to pass the results of interactive scripts to other tools.
This commit adds a second set of print commands to Terminal for printing to standard error, with errorPrint corresponding to print and errorPrintln corresponding to println. This leaves it to developers to decide which output should go where. It also adjusts existing commands to send errors and warnings to stderr.
Usage is printed to standard output when it's correctly requested (e.g., bin/elasticsearch-keystore --help) but goes to standard error when a command is invoked incorrectly (e.g. bin/elasticsearch-keystore list-with-a-typo | sort).
The java based distribution tests currently have a single Tests class
which encapsulates all of the tests for a particular distribution. The
test task in gradle then depends on all distributions being built, and
each individual tests class looks for the particular distribution it is
trying to test. This means that reproducing a single test failure
triggers all the distributions to be built, even though only one is
needed for the test.
This commit reworks the java distribution tests to pass in a particular
distribution to be tested, and changes the base test classes to be
actual test classes which have assumptions around which distributions
they operate on. For example, the archives tests will be skipped when
run with an rpm distribution, and vice versa for the package tests. This
makes reproduction much more granular. It also also better splitting up
tests around a particular use case. For example, all tests for systemd
behavior can be in one test class, and run independently of all tests
against rpm/deb distributions.
This commit addresses an issue when trying to using Elasticsearch on
systems with Sys V init and the bundled JDK was not being used. Instead,
we were still inadvertently trying to fallback on the path. This commit
removes that fallback as that is against our intentions for 7.x where we
only support the bundled JDK or an explicit JDK via JAVA_HOME.
The system level tests for our distributions have historically be run in
vagrant, and thus the name of the gradle project has been "vagrant".
However, as we move to running these tests in other environments (eg
GCP) the name vagrant no longer makes sense. This commit renames the
project to "os" (short for operating system), since these tests ensure
all of our distributions run correctly on our supported operating
systems.