blob: ff98be31a51b360ef917aba97dbda0e53719b58a [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/sh
test_description='simple command server'
. ./test-lib.sh
test-tool simple-ipc SUPPORTS_SIMPLE_IPC || {
skip_all='simple IPC not supported on this platform'
test_done
}
stop_simple_IPC_server () {
test-tool simple-ipc stop-daemon
}
test_expect_success 'start simple command server' '
test_atexit stop_simple_IPC_server &&
test-tool simple-ipc start-daemon --threads=8 &&
test-tool simple-ipc is-active
'
test_expect_success 'simple command server' '
test-tool simple-ipc send --token=ping >actual &&
echo pong >expect &&
test_cmp expect actual
'
test_expect_success 'servers cannot share the same path' '
test_must_fail test-tool simple-ipc run-daemon &&
test-tool simple-ipc is-active
'
test_expect_success 'big response' '
test-tool simple-ipc send --token=big >actual &&
test_line_count -ge 10000 actual &&
grep -q "big: [0]*9999\$" actual
'
test_expect_success 'chunk response' '
test-tool simple-ipc send --token=chunk >actual &&
test_line_count -ge 10000 actual &&
grep -q "big: [0]*9999\$" actual
'
test_expect_success 'slow response' '
test-tool simple-ipc send --token=slow >actual &&
test_line_count -ge 100 actual &&
grep -q "big: [0]*99\$" actual
'
# Send an IPC with n=100,000 bytes of ballast. This should be large enough
# to force both the kernel and the pkt-line layer to chunk the message to the
# daemon and for the daemon to receive it in chunks.
#
test_expect_success 'sendbytes' '
test-tool simple-ipc sendbytes --bytecount=100000 --byte=A >actual &&
grep "sent:A00100000 rcvd:A00100000" actual
'
# Start a series of <threads> client threads that each make <batchsize>
# IPC requests to the server. Each (<threads> * <batchsize>) request
# will open a new connection to the server and randomly bind to a server
# thread. Each client thread exits after completing its batch. So the
# total number of live client threads will be smaller than the total.
# Each request will send a message containing at least <bytecount> bytes
# of ballast. (Responses are small.)
#
# The purpose here is to test threading in the server and responding to
# many concurrent client requests (regardless of whether they come from
# 1 client process or many). And to test that the server side of the
# named pipe/socket is stable. (On Windows this means that the server
# pipe is properly recycled.)
#
# On Windows it also lets us adjust the connection timeout in the
# `ipc_client_send_command()`.
#
# Note it is easy to drive the system into failure by requesting an
# insane number of threads on client or server and/or increasing the
# per-thread batchsize or the per-request bytecount (ballast).
# On Windows these failures look like "pipe is busy" errors.
# So I've chosen fairly conservative values for now.
#
# We expect output of the form "sent:<letter><length> ..."
# With terms (7, 19, 13) we expect:
# <letter> in [A-G]
# <length> in [19+0 .. 19+(13-1)]
# and (7 * 13) successful responses.
#
test_expect_success 'stress test threads' '
test-tool simple-ipc multiple \
--threads=7 \
--bytecount=19 \
--batchsize=13 \
>actual &&
test_line_count = 92 actual &&
grep "good 91" actual &&
grep "sent:A" <actual >actual_a &&
cat >expect_a <<-EOF &&
sent:A00000019 rcvd:A00000019
sent:A00000020 rcvd:A00000020
sent:A00000021 rcvd:A00000021
sent:A00000022 rcvd:A00000022
sent:A00000023 rcvd:A00000023
sent:A00000024 rcvd:A00000024
sent:A00000025 rcvd:A00000025
sent:A00000026 rcvd:A00000026
sent:A00000027 rcvd:A00000027
sent:A00000028 rcvd:A00000028
sent:A00000029 rcvd:A00000029
sent:A00000030 rcvd:A00000030
sent:A00000031 rcvd:A00000031
EOF
test_cmp expect_a actual_a
'
test_expect_success 'stop-daemon works' '
test-tool simple-ipc stop-daemon &&
test_must_fail test-tool simple-ipc is-active &&
test_must_fail test-tool simple-ipc send --token=ping
'
test_done