#!/usr/bin/perl -w package Perlbal::Test; =head1 NAME Perlbal::Test - Test harness for perlbal server =head1 SYNOPSIS # my $msock = Perlbal::Test::start_server(); =head1 DESCRIPTION Perlbal::Test provides access to a perlbal server running on the local host, for testing purposes. The server can be an already-existing server, a child process, or the current process. Various functions are provided to interact with the server. =head1 FUNCTIONS =cut use strict; use POSIX qw( :sys_wait_h ); use IO::Socket::INET; use Socket qw(MSG_NOSIGNAL IPPROTO_TCP TCP_NODELAY SOL_SOCKET); use HTTP::Response; require Exporter; use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT); @ISA = qw(Exporter); @EXPORT = qw(ua start_server foreach_aio manage filecontent tempdir new_port manage_multi mgmt_port wait_on_child dump_res resp_from_sock msock); our $i_am_parent = 0; our $msock; # management sock of child our $to_kill = 0; our $mgmt_port; our $free_port = 60000; =head1 I Return the current management port number. =cut sub mgmt_port { return $mgmt_port; } END { manage("shutdown") if $i_am_parent; } =head1 I Return a readable string formatted from an HTTP::Response object. Only the first 80 characters of returned content are returned. =cut sub dump_res { my $res = shift; my ($pkg, $filename, $line) = caller; my $ret = "$filename:$line ==> "; unless ($res) { $ret .= "[response undefined]\n"; return $ret; } my $ct = $res->content; my $len = length $ct; if ($len > 80) { $ct = substr($ct, 0, 80) . "..."; } my $status = $res->status_line; $status =~ s/[\r\n]//g; return $ret . "status=[$status] content=$len" . "[$ct]\n"; } =head1 I Return a newly created temporary directory. The directory will be removed automatically upon program exit. =cut sub tempdir { require File::Temp; return File::Temp::tempdir( CLEANUP => 1 ); } =head1 I Return the next free port number in the series. Port numbers are assigned starting at 60000. =cut sub new_port { test_port() ? return $free_port++ : return new_port($free_port++); } =head1 I Return 1 if the port is free to use for listening on $free_port else return 0. =cut sub test_port { my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(LocalPort => $free_port) or return 0; $sock->close(); return 1; } =head1 I> Return a string containing the contents of the file $file. If $file cannot be opened, then return undef. =cut sub filecontent { my $file = shift; my $ct; open (F, $file) or return undef; $ct = do { local $/; ; }; close F; return $ct; } =head1 I Set the server into each AIO mode (none, ioaio) and call the specified callback function with the mode name as argument. =cut sub foreach_aio (&) { my $cb = shift; foreach my $mode (qw(none ioaio)) { my $line = manage("SERVER aio_mode = $mode"); next unless $line; $cb->($mode); } } =head1 I Send a command $cmd to the server, and return the response line from the server. Optional arguments are: quiet_failure => 1 Output a warning if the response indicated an error, unless $opts{quiet_failure} is true, or the command was 'shutdown' (which doesn't return a response). =cut sub manage { my $cmd = shift; my %opts = @_; print $msock "$cmd\r\n"; my $res = <$msock>; if (!$res || $res =~ /^ERR/) { # Make the result visible in failure cases, unless # the command was 'shutdown'... cause that never # returns anything. warn "Manage command failed: '$cmd' '$res'\n" unless($opts{quiet_failure} || $cmd eq 'shutdown'); return 0; } return $res; } =head1 I Send a command $cmd to the server, and return a multi-line response. Return the number zero if there was an error or no response. =cut sub manage_multi { my $cmd = shift; print $msock "$cmd\r\n"; my $res; while (<$msock>) { last if /^\./; last if /^ERROR/; $res .= $_; } return 0 if !$res || $res =~ /^ERR/; return $res; } =head1 I Optionally start a perlbal server and return a socket connected to its management port. The argument $conf is a string specifying initial configuration commands. If the environment variable TEST_PERLBAL_FOREGROUND is set to a true value then a server will be started in the foreground, in which case this function does not return. When the server function finishes, exit() will be called to terminate the process. If the environment variable TEST_PERLBAL_USE_EXISTING is set to a true value then a socket will be returned which is connected to an existing server's management port. Otherwise, a child process is forked and a socket is returned which is connected to the child's management port. The management port is assigned automatically, a new port number each time this function is called. The starting port number is 60000. =cut sub start_server { my $conf = shift; $mgmt_port = new_port(); if ($ENV{'TEST_PERLBAL_FOREGROUND'}) { _start_perbal_server($conf, $mgmt_port); } if ($ENV{'TEST_PERLBAL_USE_EXISTING'}) { my $msock = wait_on_child(0, $mgmt_port); return $msock; } my $child = fork; if ($child) { $i_am_parent = 1; $to_kill = $child; my $msock = wait_on_child($child, $mgmt_port); my $rv = waitpid($child, WNOHANG); if ($rv) { die "Child process (webserver) died.\n"; } print $msock "proc\r\n"; my $spid = undef; while (<$msock>) { last if m!^\.\r?\n!; next unless /^pid:\s+(\d+)/; $spid = $1; } die "Our child was $child, but we connected and it says it's $spid." unless $child == $spid; return $msock; } # child process... _start_perbal_server($conf, $mgmt_port); } # Start a perlbal server running and tell it to listen on the specified # management port number. This function does not return. sub _start_perbal_server { my ($conf, $mgmt_port) = @_; require Perlbal; $conf .= qq{ CREATE SERVICE mgmt SET mgmt.listen = 127.0.0.1:$mgmt_port SET mgmt.role = management ENABLE mgmt }; my $out = sub { print STDOUT "$_[0]\n"; }; die "Configuration error" unless Perlbal::run_manage_commands($conf, $out); unless (Perlbal::Socket->WatchedSockets() > 0) { die "Invalid configuration. (shouldn't happen?) Stopping (self=$$).\n"; } Perlbal::run(); exit 0; } =head1 I Return a reference to the socket connected to the server's management port. =cut sub msock { return $msock; } =head1 I Return a new instance of LWP::UserAgent. =cut sub ua { require LWP::UserAgent; return LWP::UserAgent->new; } =head1 I Return a socket which is connected to a child process. $pid specifies the child process id, and $port is the port number on which the child is listening. Several attempts are made; if the child dies or a connection cannot be made within 5 seconds then this function dies with an error message. =cut sub wait_on_child { my $pid = shift; my $port = shift; my $start = time; while (1) { $msock = IO::Socket::INET->new(PeerAddr => "127.0.0.1:$port"); return $msock if $msock; select undef, undef, undef, 0.25; if ($pid && waitpid($pid, WNOHANG) > 0) { die "Child process (webserver) died.\n"; } die "Timeout waiting for port $port to startup" if time > $start + 5; } } =head1 I Read an HTTP response from a socket and return it as an HTTP::Response object In scalar mode, return only the $http_response object. In array mode, return an array of ($http_response, $firstline) where $firstline is the first line read from the socket, for example: "HTTP/1.1 200 OK" =cut sub resp_from_sock { my $sock = shift; my $res = ""; my $firstline = undef; while (<$sock>) { $res .= $_; $firstline ||= $_; last if ! $_ || /^\r?\n/; } unless ($firstline) { print STDERR "Didn't get a firstline in HTTP response.\n"; return undef; } my $resp = HTTP::Response->parse($res); return undef unless $resp; my $cl = $resp->header('Content-Length'); if (defined $cl && $cl > 0) { my $content = ''; my $rv; while (($rv = read($sock, $content, $cl)) && ($cl -= $rv) > 0) { # don't do anything, the loop is it } $resp->content($content); } return wantarray ? ($resp, $firstline) : $resp; } 1;