forked from TrueCloudLab/s3-tests
Compatibility tests for S3 clones
e1c2800084
Most recent version of setuptools breaks when asked to load requests 0.14.0.
symptom, complains about not being able to import filterfalse thus:
from six.moves import map, filter, filterfalse
this comes from setuptools, and older versions of setuptools don't have
this problem.
Various versions of centos7 and fedora have interesting names for packages,
centos7: python-pip is python2-pip
fedora24: python-virtualenv is python2-virtualenv
This is somewhat masked by using sudo yum: if the actual package
is installed, rpm knows that the capability is there and does nothing.
But, if the package isn't there, or you haven't chosen to set up
sudo to work that way, this does not work.
Signed-off-by: Marcus Watts <mwatts@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit
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s3tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
bootstrap | ||
config.yaml.SAMPLE | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.rst | ||
request_decision_graph.yml | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.py | ||
siege.conf |
======================== S3 compatibility tests ======================== This is a set of completely unofficial Amazon AWS S3 compatibility tests, that will hopefully be useful to people implementing software that exposes an S3-like API. The tests only cover the REST interface. TODO: test direct HTTP downloads, like a web browser would do. The tests use the Boto library, so any e.g. HTTP-level differences that Boto papers over, the tests will not be able to discover. Raw HTTP tests may be added later. The tests use the Nose test framework. To get started, ensure you have the ``virtualenv`` software installed; e.g. on Debian/Ubuntu:: sudo apt-get install python-virtualenv and then run:: ./bootstrap You will need to create a configuration file with the location of the service and two different credentials, something like this:: [DEFAULT] ## this section is just used as default for all the "s3 *" ## sections, you can place these variables also directly there ## replace with e.g. "localhost" to run against local software host = s3.amazonaws.com ## uncomment the port to use something other than 80 # port = 8080 ## say "no" to disable TLS is_secure = yes [fixtures] ## all the buckets created will start with this prefix; ## {random} will be filled with random characters to pad ## the prefix to 30 characters long, and avoid collisions bucket prefix = YOURNAMEHERE-{random}- [s3 main] ## the tests assume two accounts are defined, "main" and "alt". ## user_id is a 64-character hexstring user_id = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef ## display name typically looks more like a unix login, "jdoe" etc display_name = youruseridhere ## replace these with your access keys access_key = ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST secret_key = abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn [s3 alt] ## another user account, used for ACL-related tests user_id = 56789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef01234 display_name = john.doe ## the "alt" user needs to have email set, too email = john.doe@example.com access_key = NOPQRSTUVWXYZABCDEFG secret_key = nopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnabcdefghijklm Once you have that, you can run the tests with:: S3TEST_CONF=your.conf ./virtualenv/bin/nosetests You can specify what test(s) to run:: S3TEST_CONF=your.conf ./virtualenv/bin/nosetests s3tests.functional.test_s3:test_bucket_list_empty Some tests have attributes set based on their current reliability and things like AWS not enforcing their spec stricly. You can filter tests based on their attributes:: S3TEST_CONF=aws.conf ./virtualenv/bin/nosetests -a '!fails_on_aws' TODO ==== - We should assume read-after-write consistency, and make the tests actually request such a location. http://aws.amazon.com/s3/faqs/#What_data_consistency_model_does_Amazon_S3_employ