Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lubomir Rintel
4f557db063 clients/tests: utilize nm_utils_get_timestamp_msec() 2018-06-15 16:23:30 +02:00
Thomas Haller
ed638b7126 clients/tests: document importance of locale for clients tests 2018-06-14 13:57:14 +02:00
Thomas Haller
c2932dd7db clients/tests: better document how to re-generate files for clients tests 2018-06-13 08:50:46 +02:00
Thomas Haller
d739247e9f clients/tests: minor cleanup iterating over various nmcli output modes 2018-06-11 19:30:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller
ee4655d168 clients/tests: extend tests to gracefully handle unstable output
Commands that fail with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings produce unstable
output like

  (process:10743): GLib-CRITICAL **: 16:29:13.635: g_ptr_array_add: assertion 'rarray' failed

To workaround that, add a new option for marking the output as unstable.

An alternative might be to extend the replace_stdout, replace_stderr
arguments to support more powerful matching, like by specifying regular
expression for replacing. However, it's just too complicated. Add a simpler
workaround by passing _UNSTABLE_OUTPUT.
2018-06-11 19:30:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3044caa07a clients/tests: run tests with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings
We don't want any g_critial() or g_warning() in our nmcli
output. By default, let the tests crash. But tests could opt-out of
this.
2018-06-11 17:14:47 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
386129d92b cli: add connection FILENAME field
This allows the user to look up the file where the connection is stored.
Useful especially for ifcfg users.

Not shown by default.
2018-06-11 15:09:30 +02:00
Thomas Haller
1403ebf435 clients/tests: show device fields with invisible connection
How does `nmcli -f ALL dev show $DEV` look, if it references
a connection that is invisible to the user?

Note in the output:

  CONNECTIONS.AVAILABLE-CONNECTIONS[1]:   (null) | (null)
2018-06-11 11:20:31 +02:00
Thomas Haller
dd2da759de clients/tests: seed generated numbers for test-networkmanager-service.py
At several places, "test-networkmanager-service.py" uses generated numbers
with a defined seed. For example, generated connection's UUID is
generated in a predictable, but randomized way (if you forgive the
inprecise use of the word "random" in context of using a deterministic
seed).

Aside the connection's UUID, this becomes more interesting in the next commit
where the stub server generates a list of IP and DHCP settings in a predictable
randomized way.

For "clients/tests" we spawn the test service multiple times, but also
create similar environments by calling init_001(). This is done for
convenience, where out of lazyness all the tests share one setup. But it's
still a good idea that these tests generate slightly different setups,
wherever applicable. this increases the possible setups which get tested.
For example, the number of static IPv4 addresses (the following commit) is
interested to explicitly test for zero or a non-zero number of
addresses. If all tests happen to use the same seed, the tests are expected
to also generate the same number of addresses, and we miss an opportunity to
hit interesting test cases.

There is still no guarantee that all interesting cases are hit, the chances are just
better. The approach of generating the setup randomly, does not preclude that
the stub-server allows to explicitly configure the setup. However, due to the
sheer number of combinations that might be interesting to test, it's much simpler
to rely on some randomization and have the justifid hope we catch interesting cases.
Also in terms of runtime of the test, the cli unit tests should complete within
few seconds. Testing every combination would result in huge tests and long runtimes.

Also, the patch refactors generating random numbers in
"test-networkmanager-service.py". For example, it introduces
Util.RandomSeed(), which can be used to generate a sequence of different
random numbers. It works by having an internal state and a counter which is
combined to chain the seed and generate different numbers on each call.
2018-06-11 11:20:31 +02:00
Thomas Haller
ac8f786987 clients/tests: add optional "required" argument to findConnectionUuid()
It's still unused, but commit it individually, as it also causes
trivial changes to the .expected files.
2018-06-11 10:30:27 +02:00
Thomas Haller
eceaba025f clients/tests: add Util.debug_dbus_interface() helper function 2018-06-06 09:55:43 +02:00
Thomas Haller
a1b25a47b0 cli: rework printing of nmcli connection for multiple active connections
The output of `nmcli connection show` contains also information about
whether the profile is currently active, for example the device and
the current (activation) state.

Even when a profile can be activated only once (without supporting
mutiple activations at the same time), there are moments when a
connection is activating and still deactivating on another device.
NetworkManager ensures in the case with single activations that
a profile cannot be in state "activated" multiple times. But that
doesn't mean, that one profile cannot have multiple active connection
which reference it. That was already handled wrongly before, because
`nmcli connection show` would only search the first matching
active-connection. That is, it would arbitrarily pick an active
connection in case there were multiple and only show activation
state about one.
Furthermore, we will soon also add the possibility, that a profile can be
active multiple times (at the same time). Especially then, we need to
extend the output format to show all the devices on which the profile is
currently active.

Rework printing the connection list to use nmc_print(), and fix various
issues.

- as discussed, a profile may have multiple active connections at each time.
  There are only two possibilities: if a profile is active multiple
  times, show a line for each activation, or otherwise, show the
  information about multiple activations combined in one line, e.g. by
  printing "DEVICE eth0,eth1". This patch, does the former.
  We will now print a line for each active connection, to show
  all the devices and activation states in multiple lines.
  Yes, this may result in the same profile being printed multiple times.
  That is a change in behavior, and inconvenient if you do something
  like

     for UUID in $(nmcli connection show | awk '{print$2}'); do ...

  However, above is anyway wrong because it assumes that there are no
  spaces in the connection name. The proper way to do this is like

     for UUID in $(nmcli -g UUID connection show); do ...

  In the latter case, whenever a user selects a subset of fields
  (--fields, --get) which don't print information about active connections,
  these multiple lines are combined. So, above still works as expected,
  never returning duplicate UUIDs.

- if a user has no permissions to see a connection, we previously
  would print "<invisible> $NAME". No longer do this but just print
  the ID was it is reported by the active-connection. If the goal
  of this was to prevent users from accidentally access the non-existing
  connection by $NAME, then this was a bad solution, because a script
  would instead try to access "<invisible> $NAME". This is now solved
  better by hiding the active connection if the user selects "-g NAME".

- the --order option now sorts according to how the fields are shown.
  For example, with --terse mode, it will evaluate type "802-11-wireless"
  but with pretty mode it will consider "wifi". This may change the
  ordering in which connections are shown. Also, for sorting the name,
  we use g_utf8_collate() because it's unicode.
2018-06-01 16:03:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3690f8bcd5 clients/tests: add test for showing connection's active state 2018-06-01 16:03:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3645be6484 clients/tests: add test for showing invisible connection in nmcli
It also shows how we handle invisible connections wrongly, when we have
multiple active-connections that reference them.
2018-06-01 16:03:23 +02:00