You are in the right place if you are interested in testing the Hyperledger Fabric and related repositories.
Here are some recommended setup steps. The following repositories will need to be cloned separately with their corresponding images built.
- fabric:
- fabric-orderer
- fabric-peer
- fabric-kafka
- fabric-zookeeper
- fabric-tools
- fabric-couchdb
- fabric-testenv
- fabric-ccenv
- fabric-ca
- fabric-test
Once the fabric
, fabric-ca
and fabric-test
repositories are in place, in $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/,
initialize and populate the submodules. Execute the following:
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test
git submodule update --init --recursive
The fabric-test repository contains submodules of other Hyperledger Fabric projects that are used in testing. Tests may be run with the submodule commit levels saved with the commit-level of fabric-test. Or, the git submodules may be updated to run tests with the bleeding edge of development master branches. If you would like to update the git submodules, use the following command:
git submodule foreach git pull origin master
Note: When making changes for committing to a submodule (for example, fabric code), then make the change in the actual repository and not here in the submodules. This makes managing changes much easier when working with submodules.
Ensure you are in your $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test directory. These steps will help prepare the environment.
To install dependencies - NodeJS,NPM (one time only):
make pre-setup
To build all images and binaries in fabric, fabric-ca, as required by tests (execute each time you update the repositories commit levels, after each make git-update
)
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test/fabric
make docker # Builds all fabric images.
make native # Builds all binaries.
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test/fabric-ca
make docker # Builds all fabric-ca images.
To install all the gotools, required for testing, execute the following command
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test
make gotools # Downloads the gotools like ginkgo, golint, goimports, gocov and govendor
To update the go version in the repo, follow the below steps
Step 1: Change GO_VER in fabric-test/ci.properties and also update the same in azure-pipeline yml files in fabric-test/ci directory.
Step 2: Find all files in repo called go.mod. 'cd' into each of those directories. Remove go.mod and go.sum files and execute the following steps
1. go mod init
2. go get -u github.com/hyperledger/fabric-test@master
3. go mod tidy
Step 3: Commit all the go.mod and go.sum files that get changed in those directories
Then, choose a tool and a test to run by following the instructions. For example, to run a Behave test, execute the following:
cd ../feature
../scripts/install_behave.sh
behave -t smoke -k
You can run the automated test suites with a makefile target given below. This handles all the steps for you as the procedure installs all the prerequisites that include cloning fabric, fabric-ca repositories, building images and binaries and executing the daily tests or smoke tests in the fabric-test repository. Simply run one of the following commands,
make ci-daily # Cleans environment, updates submodules, clones & builds
# fabric & fabric-ca images, executes Daily tests from
# regression/daily folder.
make ci-smoke # Cleans environment, updates submodules, clones & builds
# fabric & fabric-ca images, executes Smoke tests from
# regression/smoke folder.
Please see the README located in the tools/NL
directory for more detailed information for using the command line to run the Networker Launcher to dynamically create a Fabric network on a single host machine.
Please see the README located in the tools/PTE
directory for more detailed information for using the Performance Traffic Engine to drive transactions through a Fabric network.
Please see the README located in the tools/LTE
directory for more detailed information for using the Ledger Traffic Engine to execute APIs to test the functionality and throughput of Ledger code that exists inside the peer.
Cello is a Hyperledger Project (https://www.hyperledger.org/projects/cello) with its own repository.
It contains the Cello Ansible Agent
, an easy-to-use tool for
deploying and managing a fabric network on one or more hosts in the cloud.
Refer to these instructions
https://github.com/hyperledger/cello/blob/master/src/agent/ansible/README.md
to clone it and set up an ansible controller to deploy a network.
Many tests are now integrated into CI. Every patch set triggers a fabric-test-verify
job and executes smoke
tests. Once the build is successfully executed, the CI job sends All checks have passed
vote back to the corresponding github pull request; otherwise it sends an error message. Please see the fabric-test CI job page:
Note: Migrating from Jenkins to Azure CI.
.. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/