goirc/client/connection_test.go

473 lines
14 KiB
Go

package client
import (
"code.google.com/p/gomock/gomock"
"github.com/fluffle/goirc/state"
"github.com/fluffle/golog/logging"
"strings"
"testing"
"time"
)
type testState struct {
ctrl *gomock.Controller
st *state.MockTracker
nc *mockNetConn
c *Conn
}
// NOTE: including a second argument at all prevents calling c.postConnect()
func setUp(t *testing.T, start ...bool) (*Conn, *testState) {
ctrl := gomock.NewController(t)
st := state.NewMockTracker(ctrl)
nc := MockNetConn(t)
c := SimpleClient("test", "test", "Testing IRC")
logging.SetLogLevel(logging.LogFatal)
c.st = st
c.sock = nc
c.cfg.Flood = true // Tests can take a while otherwise
c.connected = true
// If a second argument is passed to setUp, we tell postConnect not to
// start the various goroutines that shuttle data around.
c.postConnect(len(start) == 0)
// Sleep 1ms to allow background routines to start.
<-time.After(1e6)
return c, &testState{ctrl, st, nc, c}
}
func (s *testState) tearDown() {
s.st.EXPECT().Wipe()
s.nc.ExpectNothing()
s.c.shutdown()
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
s.ctrl.Finish()
}
// Practically the same as the above test, but shutdown is called implicitly
// by recv() getting an EOF from the mock connection.
func TestEOF(t *testing.T) {
c, s := setUp(t)
// Since we're not using tearDown() here, manually call Finish()
defer s.ctrl.Finish()
// Set up a handler to detect whether disconnected handlers are called
dcon := false
c.HandleFunc(DISCONNECTED, func(conn *Conn, line *Line) {
dcon = true
})
// Simulate EOF from server
s.st.EXPECT().Wipe()
s.nc.Close()
// Since things happen in different internal goroutines, we need to wait
// 1 ms should be enough :-)
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
// Verify that the connection no longer thinks it's connected
if c.connected {
t.Errorf("Conn still thinks it's connected to the server.")
}
// Verify that disconnected handler was called
if !dcon {
t.Errorf("Conn did not call disconnected handlers.")
}
}
func TestClientAndStateTracking(t *testing.T) {
ctrl := gomock.NewController(t)
st := state.NewMockTracker(ctrl)
c := SimpleClient("test", "test", "Testing IRC")
// Assert some basic things about the initial state of the Conn struct
if me := c.cfg.Me; me.Nick != "test" || me.Ident != "test" ||
me.Name != "Testing IRC" || me.Host != "" {
t.Errorf("Conn.cfg.Me not correctly initialised.")
}
// Check that the internal handlers are correctly set up
for k, _ := range intHandlers {
if _, ok := c.handlers.set[strings.ToLower(k)]; !ok {
t.Errorf("Missing internal handler for '%s'.", k)
}
}
// Now enable the state tracking code and check its handlers
c.EnableStateTracking()
for k, _ := range stHandlers {
if _, ok := c.handlers.set[strings.ToLower(k)]; !ok {
t.Errorf("Missing state handler for '%s'.", k)
}
}
if len(c.stRemovers) != len(stHandlers) {
t.Errorf("Incorrect number of Removers (%d != %d) when adding state handlers.",
len(c.stRemovers), len(stHandlers))
}
// We're expecting the untracked me to be replaced by a tracked one
if me := c.cfg.Me; me.Nick != "test" || me.Ident != "test" ||
me.Name != "Testing IRC" || me.Host != "" {
t.Errorf("Enabling state tracking did not replace Me correctly.")
}
if c.st == nil || c.cfg.Me != c.st.Me() {
t.Errorf("State tracker not enabled correctly.")
}
// Now, shim in the mock state tracker and test disabling state tracking
me := c.cfg.Me
c.st = st
st.EXPECT().Wipe()
c.DisableStateTracking()
if c.st != nil || c.cfg.Me != me {
t.Errorf("State tracker not disabled correctly.")
}
// Finally, check state tracking handlers were all removed correctly
for k, _ := range stHandlers {
if _, ok := c.handlers.set[strings.ToLower(k)]; ok && k != "NICK" {
// A bit leaky, because intHandlers adds a NICK handler.
t.Errorf("State handler for '%s' not removed correctly.", k)
}
}
if len(c.stRemovers) != 0 {
t.Errorf("stRemovers not zeroed correctly when removing state handlers.")
}
ctrl.Finish()
}
func TestSend(t *testing.T) {
// Passing a second value to setUp stops goroutines from starting
c, s := setUp(t, false)
defer s.tearDown()
// Assert that before send is running, nothing should be sent to the socket
// but writes to the buffered channel "out" should not block.
c.out <- "SENT BEFORE START"
s.nc.ExpectNothing()
// We want to test that the a goroutine calling send will exit correctly.
exited := false
go func() {
c.send()
exited = true
}()
// send is now running in the background as if started by postConnect.
// This should read the line previously buffered in c.out, and write it
// to the socket connection.
s.nc.Expect("SENT BEFORE START")
// Send another line, just to be sure :-)
c.out <- "SENT AFTER START"
s.nc.Expect("SENT AFTER START")
// Now, use the control channel to exit send and kill the goroutine.
if exited {
t.Errorf("Exited before signal sent.")
}
// This sneakily uses the fact that the other two goroutines that would
// normally be waiting for die to close are not running, so we only send
// to the goroutine started above. Normally shutdown() closes c.die and
// signals to all three goroutines (send, ping, runLoop) to exit.
c.die <- struct{}{}
// Allow propagation time...
<-time.After(1e6)
if !exited {
t.Errorf("Didn't exit after signal.")
}
s.nc.ExpectNothing()
// Sending more on c.out shouldn't reach the network.
c.out <- "SENT AFTER END"
s.nc.ExpectNothing()
}
func TestRecv(t *testing.T) {
// Passing a second value to setUp stops goroutines from starting
c, s := setUp(t, false)
// We can't use tearDown here because we're testing shutdown conditions
// (and so need to EXPECT() a call to st.Wipe() in the right place)
defer s.ctrl.Finish()
// Send a line before recv is started up, to verify nothing appears on c.in
s.nc.Send(":irc.server.org 001 test :First test line.")
// reader is a helper to do a "non-blocking" read of c.in
reader := func() *Line {
select {
case <-time.After(time.Millisecond):
case l := <-c.in:
return l
}
return nil
}
if l := reader(); l != nil {
t.Errorf("Line parsed before recv started.")
}
// We want to test that the a goroutine calling recv will exit correctly.
exited := false
go func() {
c.recv()
exited = true
}()
// Strangely, recv() needs some time to start up, but *only* when this test
// is run standalone with: client/_test/_testmain --test.run TestRecv
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
// Now, this should mean that we'll receive our parsed line on c.in
if l := reader(); l == nil || l.Cmd != "001" {
t.Errorf("Bad first line received on input channel")
}
// Send a second line, just to be sure.
s.nc.Send(":irc.server.org 002 test :Second test line.")
if l := reader(); l == nil || l.Cmd != "002" {
t.Errorf("Bad second line received on input channel.")
}
// Test that recv does something useful with a line it can't parse
// (not that there are many, parseLine is forgiving).
s.nc.Send(":textwithnospaces")
if l := reader(); l != nil {
t.Errorf("Bad line still caused receive on input channel.")
}
// The only way recv() exits is when the socket closes.
if exited {
t.Errorf("Exited before socket close.")
}
s.st.EXPECT().Wipe()
s.nc.Close()
// Give things time to shake themselves out...
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
if !exited {
t.Errorf("Didn't exit on socket close.")
}
// Since s.nc is closed we can't attempt another send on it...
if l := reader(); l != nil {
t.Errorf("Line received on input channel after socket close.")
}
}
func TestPing(t *testing.T) {
// Passing a second value to setUp stops goroutines from starting
c, s := setUp(t, false)
defer s.tearDown()
// Set a low ping frequency for testing.
c.cfg.PingFreq = 50 * time.Millisecond
// reader is a helper to do a "non-blocking" read of c.out
reader := func() string {
select {
case <-time.After(time.Millisecond):
case s := <-c.out:
return s
}
return ""
}
if s := reader(); s != "" {
t.Errorf("Line output before ping started.")
}
// Start ping loop.
exited := false
go func() {
c.ping()
exited = true
}()
// The first ping should be after 50ms,
// so we don't expect anything now on c.in
if s := reader(); s != "" {
t.Errorf("Line output directly after ping started.")
}
<-time.After(50 * time.Millisecond)
if s := reader(); s == "" || !strings.HasPrefix(s, "PING :") {
t.Errorf("Line not output after 50ms.")
}
// Reader waits for 1ms and we call it a few times above.
<-time.After(45 * time.Millisecond)
if s := reader(); s != "" {
t.Errorf("Line output under 50ms after last ping.")
}
// This is a short window (49-51ms) in which the ping should happen
// This may result in flaky tests; sorry (and file a bug) if so.
<-time.After(2 * time.Millisecond)
if s := reader(); s == "" || !strings.HasPrefix(s, "PING :") {
t.Errorf("Line not output after another 2ms.")
}
// Now kill the ping loop.
if exited {
t.Errorf("Exited before signal sent.")
}
// This sneakily uses the fact that the other two goroutines that would
// normally be waiting for die to close are not running, so we only send
// to the goroutine started above. Normally shutdown() closes c.die and
// signals to all three goroutines (send, ping, runLoop) to exit.
c.die <- struct{}{}
// Make sure we're no longer pinging by waiting ~2x PingFreq
<-time.After(105 * time.Millisecond)
if s := reader(); s != "" {
t.Errorf("Line output after ping stopped.")
}
if !exited {
t.Errorf("Didn't exit after signal.")
}
}
func TestRunLoop(t *testing.T) {
// Passing a second value to setUp stops goroutines from starting
c, s := setUp(t, false)
defer s.tearDown()
// Set up a handler to detect whether 001 handler is called
h001 := false
c.HandleFunc("001", func(conn *Conn, line *Line) {
h001 = true
})
// Set up a handler to detect whether 002 handler is called
h002 := false
c.HandleFunc("002", func(conn *Conn, line *Line) {
h002 = true
})
l1 := parseLine(":irc.server.org 001 test :First test line.")
c.in <- l1
if h001 {
t.Errorf("001 handler called before runLoop started.")
}
// We want to test that the a goroutine calling runLoop will exit correctly.
// Now, we can expect the call to Dispatch to take place as runLoop starts.
exited := false
go func() {
c.runLoop()
exited = true
}()
// Here, the opposite seemed to take place, with TestRunLoop failing when
// run as part of the suite but passing when run on it's own.
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
if !h001 {
t.Errorf("001 handler not called after runLoop started.")
}
// Send another line, just to be sure :-)
l2 := parseLine(":irc.server.org 002 test :Second test line.")
c.in <- l2
// It appears some sleeping is needed after all of these to ensure channel
// sends occur before the close signal is sent below...
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
if !h002 {
t.Errorf("002 handler not called while runLoop started.")
}
// Now, use the control channel to exit send and kill the goroutine.
if exited {
t.Errorf("Exited before signal sent.")
}
// This sneakily uses the fact that the other two goroutines that would
// normally be waiting for die to close are not running, so we only send
// to the goroutine started above. Normally shutdown() closes c.die and
// signals to all three goroutines (send, ping, runLoop) to exit.
c.die <- struct{}{}
// Allow propagation time...
<-time.After(time.Millisecond)
if !exited {
t.Errorf("Didn't exit after signal.")
}
// Sending more on c.in shouldn't dispatch any further events
h001 = false
c.in <- l1
if h001 {
t.Errorf("001 handler called after runLoop ended.")
}
}
func TestWrite(t *testing.T) {
// Passing a second value to setUp stops goroutines from starting
c, s := setUp(t, false)
// We can't use tearDown here because we're testing shutdown conditions
// (and so need to EXPECT() a call to st.Wipe() in the right place)
defer s.ctrl.Finish()
// Write should just write a line to the socket.
c.write("yo momma")
s.nc.Expect("yo momma")
// Flood control is disabled -- setUp sets c.cfg.Flood = true -- so we should
// not have set c.badness at this point.
if c.badness != 0 {
t.Errorf("Flood control used when Flood = true.")
}
c.cfg.Flood = false
c.write("she so useless")
s.nc.Expect("she so useless")
// The lastsent time should have been updated very recently...
if time.Now().Sub(c.lastsent) > time.Millisecond {
t.Errorf("Flood control not used when Flood = false.")
}
// Finally, test the error state by closing the socket then writing.
s.st.EXPECT().Wipe()
s.nc.Close()
c.write("she can't pass unit tests")
}
func TestRateLimit(t *testing.T) {
c, s := setUp(t)
defer s.tearDown()
if c.badness != 0 {
t.Errorf("Bad initial values for rate limit variables.")
}
// We'll be needing this later...
abs := func(i time.Duration) time.Duration {
if i < 0 {
return -i
}
return i
}
// Since the changes to the time module, c.lastsent is now a time.Time.
// It's initialised on client creation to time.Now() which for the purposes
// of this test was probably around 1.2 ms ago. This is inconvenient.
// Making it >10s ago effectively clears out the inconsistency, as this
// makes elapsed > linetime and thus zeros c.badness and resets c.lastsent.
c.lastsent = time.Now().Add(-10 * time.Second)
if l := c.rateLimit(60); l != 0 || c.badness != 0 {
t.Errorf("Rate limit got non-zero badness from long-ago lastsent.")
}
// So, time at the nanosecond resolution is a bit of a bitch. Choosing 60
// characters as the line length means we should be increasing badness by
// 2.5 seconds minus the delta between the two ratelimit calls. This should
// be minimal but it's guaranteed that it won't be zero. Use 20us as a fuzz.
if l := c.rateLimit(60); l != 0 ||
abs(c.badness-2500*time.Millisecond) > 20*time.Microsecond {
t.Errorf("Rate limit calculating badness incorrectly.")
}
// At this point, we can tip over the badness scale, with a bit of help.
// 720 chars => +8 seconds of badness => 10.5 seconds => ratelimit
if l := c.rateLimit(720); l != 8*time.Second ||
abs(c.badness-10500*time.Millisecond) > 20*time.Microsecond {
t.Errorf("Rate limit failed to return correct limiting values.")
t.Errorf("l=%d, badness=%d", l, c.badness)
}
}