A Parallel test runner for DevOps.
Download the latest binary for linux or osx from here: https://github.com/cetra3/lorikeet/releases
Lorikeet is a command line tool and a rust library to run tests for smoke testing and integration testing. Lorikeet currently supports bash commands and simple http requests along with system information (ram, cpu).
Test plans are defined within a yaml file and can be templated using tera. Each step within a test plan can have multiple dependencies (run some steps before others) and can have expectations about the output of each command.
Steps are run in parallel by default, using the number of threads that are available to your system. If a step has dependencies either by require
or required_by
attributes, then it will wait until those steps are finished.
As an example, here's a test plan to check to see whether reddit is up, and then tries to login if it is:
check_reddit:
http: https://www.reddit.com
regex: the front page of the internet
login_to_reddit:
http:
url: https://www.reddit.com/api/login/{{user}}
save_cookies: true
form:
user: {{user}}
passwd: {{pass}}
api_type: json
jmespath: length(json.errors)
matches: 0
require:
- check_reddit
( As a side note, we have added jmespath: length(json.errors)
& matches: 0
because an invalid login to reddit still returns a status of 200 OK
)
And the output of lorikeet:
$ lorikeet -c config.yml test.yml
- name: check_reddit
pass: true
output: the front page of the internet
duration: 1416.591ms
- name: login_to_reddit
pass: true
output: 0
duration: 1089.0276ms
The name comes from the Rainbow Lorikeet, an Australian Bird which is very colourful. Like a canary in a coal mine, lorikeet is meant to provide a way of notifying when things go wrong. Rather than running one test framework (one colour), it is meant to be more full spectrum, hence the choice of a bird with rainbow plumage.
They are also very noisy birds.
- Add in a new option to run a step on failure:
on_fail_example:
value: true
matches: false
on_fail:
bash: notify-send "Lorikeet Failed!"
- We now have releases being generated via github actions
- Breaking Change: Add in a default timeout (
timeout_ms
) for http requests to30000
milliseconds (30 seconds), This default can be changed as per http options below.
- Adds slack webhook support. if there are any steps that have errors, this will be sent to a webhook:
lorikeet -s https://hooks.slack.com/services/<your_webhook_here> test
- Breaking Change: The
run_steps
method returns a stream of steps as they complete, rather than waiting for them all to finish - More Clippy Lints
- Fixed a compilation error on osx
- Fixed all clippy issues
- JMESPath strings are no longer quoted
- Added ability to include step output in subsequent requests. You can do this by including
${step_output.<step_name>}
where<step_name>
is the name of the step to include as output. Currently you will still need to "require" this step
example_output:
require: another_step
http:
url: http://example.com
body: |
${step_output.another_step}
- Update to Tokio 1.0
- Updates to all library dependencies
- Initial Async Version
- Updates to library dependencies
- Upgrade to 2018 crate format
- Fixed terminal painting on Ubuntu 19.10
- A few minor updates to the library version
-
Upgrade to Reqwest
0.9.x
branch, thanks norcali! -
Added multipart support, body, and headers support to the HTTP request type:
To add custom headers, supply a map of header_name: header_value
:
Example Header:
http:
url: https://example.com
headers:
my-custom-header: my-custom-value
Multipart works in the same way as the existing form
option, but allows you to also specify files to upload:
Example Multipart:
http:
url: https://example.com
multipart:
multipart_field: multipart_value
file_upload:
file: /path/to/file
You can also just set a generic body via a string:
Example Body:
http:
url: https://example.com
body: |
This is a generic POST body
-
The cli app will not panic if there is an issue reading, parsing or running steps, instead it will output a
lorikeet
step to display what the error is, and still submit it via webhooks, etc.. -
Added in initial delay for a step. If you want to wait an arbitrary period of time before running a step, then you can set an initial delay with the
delay_ms
parameter. This delay is only executed when the step would normally start, so if you have dependent steps, they will run first, then the delay, then the step. -
Added in Retry Policy: If a test fails, you can retry n times by setting the
retry_count
property. You can also delay retries by setting theretry_delay_ms
parameter. -
Both
delay_ms
andretry_delay_ms
are in milliseconds and must be a positive integer value. -
Added initial
junit
output so you can use lorikeet with jenkins or another CI server that supports junit xml reports. Use-j report.xml
to output junit reports.
- The main change here was to change the YAML parsing to remove panics, returning a
Result<Vec<Step>>
which is a breaking change - A new function
get_steps_raw
which takes a&str
yaml & anything that implementsSerialize
as a config context. This mainly allows the library to be used without touching the file system for configs or steps.get_steps
still can be provided with paths
Lorikeet is on crates.io, so you can either run:
cargo install lorikeet
Or clone and build this repo:
cargo build --release
Alternatively, you can download prebuilt from the releases page
Command line usage is given by lorikeet -h
:
USAGE:
lorikeet [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] [test_plan]
FLAGS:
-h, --help Prints help information
-q, --quiet Don't output results to console
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-c, --config <config> Configuration File
-j, --junit <junit> Output a JUnit XML Report to this file
-w, --webhook <webhook>... Webhook submission URL (multiple values allowed)
ARGS:
<test_plan> Test Plan [default: test.yml]
The test plan is the main driver for lorikeet and is already quite flexible. See below for examples and test syntax. By default lorikeet will expect a file test.yml
in the current directory.
Lorikeet uses tera as a template engine so you can include variables within your yaml test plan. Using -c
you can provide the context of the test plan as a seperate yaml file. This file can be in any shape, as long as it's valid yaml.
As an example, say you want to check that a number of servers are up and connected. You can have a config like so:
instances:
- server1
- server2
- server3
And then write your test plan:
{% for instance in instances %}
ping_server_{{instance}}:
bash: ping -c 1 {{instance}} 2>&1 >/dev/null
{% endfor %}
And run it:
$ lorikeet -c config.yml test.yml
- name: ping_server_server1
pass: true
duration: 7.859398ms
- name: ping_server_server2
pass: true
duration: 7.95139ms
- name: ping_server_server3
pass: true
duration: 7.740785ms
You can submit your results to a server using a webhook when the test run is finished. This will POST a json object with the submitter::WebHook
shape:
{
"hostname": "example.hostname",
"has_errors": true,
"tests": [{
"name": "Example Webhook",
"pass": false,
"output": "Example Output",
"error": "Example Error",
"duration": 7.70
}]
}
The test plan is a yaml file that is divided up into steps:
<step_name>:
<step_type>: <options>
(<description>: <value>)
(<expect_type>: <value>)
(<filter_type>: <list or value>)
(<dependence_type>: <list or value>)
Each step has a unique name and a step type. Optionally, there can be an expect type, and a list of dependencies or dependents.
You can also include a description of what the test does alongside a name, so you can provide a more detailed explanation of what the test is doing
There are currently 5 step types that can be configured: bash, http, system, step and value
The bash step type simply runs the bash
command to execute shell scripts:
say_hello:
bash: echo "hello"
Optionally you can specify not to return the output if you're only interested in the return code of the application:
dont_say_hello:
bash:
cmd: echo "hello"
get_output: false
The HTTP step type can execute HTTP commands to web servers using reqwest. Currently this is a very simple step type but does support status codes and storing cookies per domain.
You can specify just the URL:
check_reddit:
http: https://www.reddit.com
matches: the front page of the internet
Or provide the following options:
url
: The URL of the request to submitmethod
: The HTTP method to use, such as POST, GET, DELETE. Defaults toGET
headers
: Key/Value pairs for any custom headers on your requestget_output
: Return the output of the request. Defaults totrue
save_cookies
: Save any set cookies on this domain. Defaults tofalse
status
: Check the return status is equal to this value. Defaults to200
user
: Username for Basic Authpass
: Password for Basic Authtimeout_ms
: Timeout in milliseconds for the request, defaults to30000
(30 seconds). If set tonull
or~
it will never timeout.form
: Key/Value pairs for a form POST submission. If method is set toGET
, then this will set the method toPOST
multipart
: Multipart request. Key/Value pairs Like theform
option but allows file upload as well.body
: Like theform
/multipart
options but a raw string instead of form data for JSON uploadsverify_ssl
: Verify SSL on the remote host. Defaults totrue
. Warning: Disabling SSL verification will cause Lorikeet to trust any host it communicates with, which can expose you to numerous vulnerabilities. You should only use this as a last resort.
As a more elaborate example:
login_to_reddit:
http:
url: https://www.reddit.com/api/login/{{user}}
save_cookies: true
form:
user: {{user}}
passwd: {{pass}}
api_type: json
For Multipart, you can specify files like so:
Example Multipart:
http:
url: https://www.example.com
multipart:
multipart_field: multipart_value
file_upload:
file: /path/to/file
For a JSON upload you can use the body
field:
Example Raw JSON:
http:
url: https://www.example.com
body: |
{ "json_key": "json_value" }
The system step type will return information about the system such as available memory or system load using the sys-info crate.
As an example, to check memory:
check_memory:
description: Checks to see if the available memory is greater than 1gb
system: mem_available
greater_than: 1048000
The system type has a fixed list of values that returns various system info:
load_avg_1m
: The load average over 1 minuteload_avg_5m
: The load average over 5 minutesload_avg_15m
: The load average over 15 minutesmem_available
: The amount of available memorymem_free
: The amount of free memorymem_total
: The amount of total memorydisk_free
: The amount of free disk spacedisk_total
: The total amount of disk space
Using the greater_than
or less_than
expect types means you can set thresholds for environment resources:
system_load:
description: Checks the System Load over the last 15 minutes is below 80%
system: load_avg15m
less_than: 1.6
If you want to make more assertions on the one step, you can use the 'step' step type. This type simply returns the output of the other step:
say_hello:
value: hello
test_step:
step: say_hello
matches: hello
This will also implicitly require that the step it gets it output from is run first as a dependency so you don't have to worry about the order.
The value step type will simply return a value, rather than executing anything.
say_hello:
value: hello
You can filter your output either via regex, jmespath, or remove the output completely. Filters can be provided once off, or as a list, so you can chain filters together:
example_step:
value: some example
filters:
- regex: some (.*)
You can also shorthand provide a filter on the step like so:
example_step:
value: some example
regex: some
Note: If the filter can't match against a value, it counts as a test error
Simply filters out the output of the step based upon the matched value.
say_hello:
value: hello world!
regex: (.*) world!
You can either add it as a regex
attribute against the step, or in the filter list:
say_hello:
value: hello world!
filters:
- regex: (.*) world!
By default it will match and return the entire regex statement (`hello world!), but if you only want to match a certain group, you can do that too:
say_hello:
value: hello world!
regex:
matches: (?P<greeting>.*) world!
group: greeting
This will output simply hello
You can use jmespath to filter out JSON documents, returning some or more values:
show_status:
value: "{\"status\": \"ok\"}"
jmespath: status
As with regex, this can be part of a filter chain:
show_status:
value: "{\"status\": \"ok\"}"
filters:
- jmespath: status
If you don't want your output printed in results, you can add no output:
dont_show_hello:
value: hello
do_output: false
You can also add this to a filter chain:
dont_show_hello:
value: hello
filters:
- nooutput
Sometimes you might return too much from a request, so you can use this to ensure what's printed out is not included:
check_reddit:
http: https://www.reddit.com
filters:
- regex: the front page of the internet
There are 3 expect types currently: Match output, Greater than and Less than. The expect types will take the raw output of the step type and validate against that. In this way you can use it to match against the returned HTML from a web server, or the output of a bash file.
The match expect type will use regex to match the output of a command.
say_hello_or_goodbye:
value: hello
matches: hello|goodbye
If there is an error converting the regex into a valid regex query, then this will be treated as a failure.
If your output is numerical, then you can use greater than or less than to compare it:
there_are_four_lights:
value: 4
less_than: 5
You can run another step when a step fails. This on_fail
can be any of the step types: bash, http, system, step and value
on_fail_example:
value: true
matches: false
on_fail:
bash: notify-send "Lorikeet Failed!"
The output or error of this on fail step will be included in the standard output.
If you are using retry counts, then the on_fail
step will execute each time the step fail.
By default tests are run in parallel and submitted to a thread pool for execution. If a step has a dependency it won't be run until the dependent step has been finished. If there are no dependencies to a step then it will run as soon as a thread is free. If you don't specify any dependencies there is no guaranteed ordering to execution.
Dependencies are important when you need to do things like set cookies before checking API, but will cause your tests to take longer to run while they wait for others to finish.
To defined dependencies you can use the require
and required_by
arguments to control this dependency tree. The required steps are given by their name, and can either be a single value or a list of names:
step1:
value: hello
step2:
value: goodbye
require: step1
step3:
value: yes
require:
- step1
- step2
Lorikeet will fail to run and panic if:
- There is a circular dependency
- The step name in a dependency can't be found
required_by
is just the reciprocal of require
and can be used where the test plan makes it more readable.
So this step plan:
step1:
value: hello
step2:
value: goodbye
require: step1
Is equivalent to this one:
step1:
value: hello
required_by: step2
step2:
value: goodbye
you_say_yes:
value: yes
i_say_no:
value: no
require: you_say_yes
you_say_stop:
value: stop
require:
- i_say_no
- you_say_yes
required_by:
- and_i_say_go_go_go
and_i_say_go_go_go:
value: go go go
Sometimes you want to delay a step a certain amount of time after another step has been run. Sometimes if a step fails you may also want to retry it a few times before giving up.
You can add a delay by setting the delay_ms
value:
step1:
value: hello
delay_ms: 1000
Output:
$ lorikeet test.yml
- name: step1
pass: true
output: hello
duration: 1004.1231ms
You can retry steps a few times with the retry_count
and add a delay to the retry by using the retry_delay_ms
.
this_will_fail_but_take_3_seconds:
value: hello
matches: goodbye
retry_count: 3
retry_delay_ms: 1000
Output:
$ lorikeet test.yml
- name: this_will_fail_but_take_3_seconds
pass: false
output: hello
error: Not matched against `goodbye`
duration: 3015.933ms
You can generate a junit xml report with the -j
command:
lorikeet -j report.xml test.yml
The output is primarily geared towards using with with Jenkins BlueOcean, and the report format may change a little bit.
Save these examples as test.yml
to run them
Test Plan:
say_hello:
bash: echo hello
Output:
$ lorikeet test.yml
- name: say_hello
pass: true
output: |
hello
duration: 2.727446ms
Test Plan:
say_hello:
bash: echo hello
matches: hello
Output:
$ lorikeet test.yml
- name: say_hello
pass: true
duration: 2.68431ms
Test Plan:
check_reddit:
http: https://www.reddit.com
matches: the front page of the internet
Output:
$ lorikeet test.yml
- name: say_hello
pass: true
duration: 2.68431ms
For configuration parameters of tests such as usernames and passwords, it makes sense to separate this out into a different file:
Config file:
user: myuser
pass: mypass
Test Plan:
login_to_reddit:
http:
url: https://www.reddit.com/api/login/{{user}}
form:
user: {{user}}
passwd: {{pass}}
api_type: json
Output (Don't forget to specify the config file with -c
) :
$ lorikeet -c config.yml test.yml
- name: login_to_reddit
pass: true
output: {"json": {"errors": [], "data": {"need_https": true, "modhash": "....", "cookie": "..."}}}
duration: 1420.8466ms