This is *way* faster because we don't have to wait for the audit
events from previous test runs to drain into the index. And we
don't have to wait for the index's refresh cycle. We have to parse
the log lines which is a bit more brittle but it feels worth it
at this point.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@4b1758fc32
Builds on elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2403 to move all of sql's integration testing into
qa modules with different running server configurations. The
big advantage of this is that it allows us to test the cli and
jdbc with security present.
Creating a project that depends on both cli and jdbc and the
server has some prickly jar hell issues because cli and jdbc
package their dependencies in the jar. This works around it
in a few days:
1. Include only a single copy of the JDBC dependencies with
careful gradle work.
2. Do not include the CLI on the classpath at all and instead
run it externally.
I say "run it externally" rather than "fork it" because Elasticsearch
tests aren't allowed to fork other processes. This is forbidden
by seccomp on linux and seatbelt on osx and cannot be explicitly
requested like additional security manager settings. So instead
of forking the CLI process directly the tests interact with a test
fixture that isn't bound by Elasticsearch's rules and *can* fork
it.
This forking of the CLI has a nice side effect: it forces us to
make sure that things like security and connection strings other
than `localhost:9200` work. The old test could and did work around
missing features like that. The new tests cannot so I added the
ability to set the connection string. Configuring usernames and
passwords was also not supported but I did not add support for
that, only created the failing test and marked it as `@AwaitsFix`.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@560c6815e3
This shuffles all of SQL's QA tests into the `qa/sql` directory, moving
some shared resources into the new `qa:sql` project. It also rigs up
testing of the rest SQL interface in all the sql qa configurations:
without security, with security, and against multiple nodes.
I've had to make some modifications to how we handle the audit log
because it has gotten pretty slow. If these modifications turn out to
not be fast enough then I'll change the test to querying the log files
and drop the audit log index entirely but the index seems to be holding
out for now.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@ff3b5a74c1