Run minitest suites after your Chef recipes to check the status of your system.
gem install minitest-chef-handler
Option 1: Add the report handler to your client.rb or solo.rb file:
require 'minitest-chef-handler'
report_handlers << MiniTest::Chef::Handler.new
Options 2: Using minitest-handler
# Vagrantfile
chef.run_list = [
"your-recipes",
"minitest-handler"
]
Write your tests as normal MiniTest cases extending from MiniTest::Chef::TestCase:
class TestNginx < MiniTest::Chef::TestCase
def test_config_file_exist
assert File.exist?('/etc/nginx.conf')
end
end
Inside your tests cases, you still have access to Chef's run_status
, node
and run_context
:
class TestNginx < MiniTest::Chef::TestCase
def test_succeed
assert run_status.success?
end
end
Wrap your descriptions with a class extending from MiniTest::Chef::Spec:
class NginxSpec < MiniTest::Chef::Spec
describe 'configuration' do
it 'creates nginx.conf'
end
end
Use the prefix recipe::
in your descriptions:
describe "recipe::nginx::configuration" do
it 'creates nginx.conf'
end
Or use describe_recipe
to define your specs:
describe_recipe "nginx::configuration" do
it 'creates nginx.conf'
end
Inside your specs, you still have access to Chef's run_status
, node
and run_context
:
describe_recipe 'nginx:configuration' do
it 'installs version 1.0.15' do
node[:nginx][:version].should == '1.0.15'
end
end
By including MiniTest::Chef::Resources
and MiniTest::Chef::Assertions
you
can also make assertions like these:
file("/etc/fstab").must_have(:mode, "644")
package("less").must_be_installed
service("chef-client").must_be_running
assert_directory "/etc", "root", "root", "755"
assert_file "/etc/fstab", "root", "root", "644"
assert_sh "ls /etc"
assert_logrotate "/etc/logrotate.d/mysql"
and many more
The resources supported are: cron
, directory
, file
, group
, ifconfig
,
link
, mount
, package
, service
and user
.
For example usage see the tests under the examples/spec_examples
directory.
These are the options the handler accepts:
- :path => where your test files are, './test/test_*.rb' by default
- :filter => filter test names on pattern
- :seed => set random seed
- :verbose => show progress processing files.
- :ci_reports => path to write out the result of each test in a JUnit-compatible XML file, parseable by many CI platforms.
Example:
handler = MiniTest::Chef::Handler.new({
:path => './cookbooks/test/*_test.rb',
:filter => 'foo',
:seed => srand,
:verbose => true})
report_handlers << handler
MiniTest-chef-hander collects test paths based in the recipes ran. It loads the tests based on the name of the cookbook and the name of the recipe. The tests must be under the cookbooks directory.
Examples:
If the seen recipes includes the recipe "foo" we try to load tests from:
cookbooks/foo/tests/default_test.rb
cookbooks/foo/tests/default/*_test.rb
cookbooks/foo/specs/default_spec.rb
cookbooks/foo/specs/default/*_spec.rb
If the seen recipes includes the recipe "foo::install" we try to load tests from:
cookbooks/foo/tests/install_test.rb
cookbooks/foo/tests/install/*_test.rb
cookbooks/foo/specs/install_spec.rb
cookbooks/foo/specs/install/*_spec.rb
If the tests detect any failure, the handler raises an error to abort the Chef execution. This error can be captured by any other exception handler and be treated like any other error in the Chef execution.
The instructions above have described how to use it in a Chef solo installation. If you want to distribute the handler to your Chef server check either the chef_handler cookbooks in the examples or minitest-handler-cookbook.
bundle
bundle exec rake # unit tests
bundle exec vagrant up # integration tests (install virtualbox first and vagrant destroy -f afterwards to clean up)
Copyright (c) 2012 David Calavera. See LICENSE for details.