VMOD_VTC(3) | VMOD_VTC(3) |
vmod_vtc - Utility module for varnishtest
import vtc [as name] [from "path"] VOID barrier_sync(STRING addr, DURATION timeout) BACKEND no_backend() STEVEDORE no_stevedore() IP no_ip() VOID panic(STRING) VOID sleep(DURATION) VOID workspace_alloc(ENUM, INT size) BYTES workspace_reserve(ENUM, INT size) INT workspace_free(ENUM) VOID workspace_snapshot(ENUM) VOID workspace_reset(ENUM) BOOL workspace_overflowed(ENUM) VOID workspace_overflow(ENUM) BLOB workspace_dump(ENUM, ENUM, BYTES off, BYTES len) INT typesize(STRING) BLOB proxy_header(ENUM version, IP client, IP server, STRING authority) VOID vsl(INT vxid, STRING tag, ENUM side, STRING s) VOID vsl_replay(STRING s)
The goal for this VMOD is to provide VCL users and VMOD authors means to test corner cases or reach certain conditions with varnishtest.
When writing test cases, the most common pattern is to start a mock server instance, a Varnish instance, and spin up a mock client. Those entities run asynchronously, and others exist like background processes (process) or log readers (logexpect). While you can synchronize with individual entities and wait for their completion, you must use a barrier if you need to synchronize two or more entities, or wait until a certain point instead of completion.
Not only is it possible to synchronize between test entities, with the barrier_sync function you can even synchronize VCL code:
sub vcl_recv {
# wait for some barrier b1 to complete
vtc.barrier_sync("${b1_sock}"); }
If the function fails to synchronize with the barrier for some reason, or if it reaches the optional timeout, it fails the VCL transaction.
Fails at backend selection.
Fails at storage selection.
Returns a null IP address, not even a bogo_ip.
It can be useful to crash the child process in order to test the robustness of a VMOD.
Block the current worker thread.
It can be useful to put a workspace in a given state when testing corner cases like resource exhaustion for a transaction, especially for VMOD development. All functions available allow to pick which workspace you need to tamper with, available values are client, backend, session and thread.
VOID workspace_alloc(
ENUM {client, backend, session, thread},
INT size )
Allocate and zero out memory from a workspace. A negative size will allocate as much as needed to leave that many bytes free. The actual allocation size may be higher to comply with memory alignment requirements of the CPU architecture. A failed allocation fails the transaction.
BYTES workspace_reserve(
ENUM {client, backend, session, thread},
INT size )
Attempt to reserve size bytes, zero out that memory and release the reservation right away. Return the size of the reservation.
See vtc.workspace_alloc() for semantics of the size argument.
Find how much unallocated space there is left in a workspace.
VOID workspace_snapshot(ENUM {client, backend, session, thread})
Snapshot a workspace. Only one snapshot may be active at a time and each VCL can save only one snapshot, so concurrent tasks requiring snapshots are not supported.
VOID workspace_reset(ENUM {client, backend, session, thread})
Reset to the previous snapshot of a workspace, it must be the same workspace too.
BOOL workspace_overflowed(ENUM {client, backend, session, thread})
Find whether the workspace overflow mark is set or not.
VOID workspace_overflow(ENUM {client, backend, session, thread})
Mark a workspace as overflowed.
BLOB workspace_dump(
ENUM {client, backend, session, thread},
ENUM {s, f, r},
BYTES off=0,
BYTES len=64 )
Return data from a workspace's s, f, or r pointer as a blob. Data is copied onto the primary workspace to avoid it being subsequently overwritten.
The maximum len is 1KB.
Returns the size in bytes of a collection of C-datatypes:
This can be useful for VMOD authors in conjunction with workspace operations.
BLOB proxy_header(
ENUM {v1, v2} version,
IP client,
IP server,
STRING authority=0 )
Format a proxy header of the given version v1 or v2 and addresses (The VCL IP type also contains the port number).
Optionally also send an authority TLV with version v2 (ignored for version v1).
Candidate for moving into vmod_proxy, but there were concerns about the interface design
These functions allow to generate arbitrary log entries to test the Varnish Shared Log (VSL) implementation and readers like varnishlog.
Call VSLs() with the given parameters.
The argument order is chosen to match VSL output.
A VCL error is triggered if tag can not be resolved at runtime or if vxid is out of bounds.
Replay literal log lines.
The parser accepts the output generated by varnishlog -g raw and varnishtest log vsl| lines.
Unparsable lines are silently ignored.
Copyright (c) 2017 Varnish Software AS All rights reserved. Author: Dridi Boukelmoune <dridi.boukelmoune@gmail.com> SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.