Bacula Regression Suite and CTest
==================================================================
+#
+# Copyright (C) 2000-2015 Kern Sibbald
+# License: BSD 2-Clause; see file LICENSE-FOSS
+#
Thanks to Frank Sweetser, the Bacula regression scripts have now been modified
to use the ctest component of cmake. The major gain from this, since Bacula
results of each test submitted to a centralized dashboard system. All of the
test results are aggregated and summarized, where all of the developers can
quickly see how the regression tests are running.
+====
How to Use CTest
==================================================================
./experimental-all # experimental disk and tape testing
./experimental-disk # experimental disk testing
-If you are a developer and you have modified your local SVN repository, you
+We recommend that you start with the ./experimental-disk runs so that
+you can check that everything is working fine. Once that is done,
+try a nightly-xxx run. The difference is the experimental runs are just
+that -- they are things where you are experimenting and it is expected that
+something might be broken (bad ctest configuration, experimental source
+code, ...), and nightly runs are not expected to fail.
+
+If you are a developer and you have modified your local Git repository, you
should be running the experimental tests -- they are designed for developers.
If you do modify your local repository and commit it, then run a nightly
-test, the local repository may be reverted to a prior version so that the
-nightly tests all have a consistent cutoff time.
+test.
If you are just doing testing on a nightly basis (no development in your
source repository), then please use the nightly tests.
Note that you must have run ./scripts/do_sed at least once already in order to
use Experimental mode.
+====
-Updating and Building Within CTest
+Updating and Building Within CTest:
==================================================================
-
Before each Nightly run, ctest will automatically update the BACULA_SOURCE
directory, and submit these updates along with the test results. Any
Experimental runs will not.
Before either type of run actually begins running tests, ctest will run the
-script scripts/update-ctest. This script first compares the svn version of
+script scripts/update-ctest. This script first compares the version of
BUILD_SOURCE with that of the build/ directory. If the two versions differ, or
if the build/ directory does not exist, it will automatically run 'make setup'
for you.
+====
-Viewing the Dashboard
+Viewing the Dashboard:
==================================================================
-
You can view the dashboard at:
-http://regress.bacula.org:8081
+http://regress.bacula.org/index.php?project=bacula
Results will not be visible as soon as they are submitted to the server.
Processing is currently done every 10 minutes, so you may have to wait up to 15
minutes or so before your results show up.
+====
-=========================================================
+Getting CTest running on Solaris (thanks to Robert Hartzell):
+============================================================
+The regression is working in zone on opensolaris build 126
+
+ create a zone and install these pkg's:
+ SUNWcmake, SUNWmysql5, SUNWlibm, gcc-dev
+ SUNWgtar, SUNWgit, SUNWperl584usr,
+ and most of SUNWgnu*
+ In the config file I edited the "WHICHDB=" line to read:
+ WHICHDB="--with-mysql=/usr/mysql/5.0"
+
+ And then in the shell:
+ $ export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/mysql/5.0/lib/mysql -R/usr/mysql/5.0/lib/mysql"
+ $ PATH=/usr/gnu/bin:$PATH
+
+ When i first ran "make setup" it failed... couldn't create the database
+ so I had to run /usr/mysql/5.0/bin/mysql -u root mysql and do this:
+ grant all privileges on regress.* to ''@localhost;
+ grant all privileges on regress.* to ''@"%";
+====
+
+CTest script details:
+=========================================================
Email from Frank describing the flow when running a ctest and some of the
problems that come up.
-0. Start off with a local svn repository at version A, and the master
+0. Start off with a local Git repository at version A, and the master
repository at version B.
1. nightly-disk is started.
6. nightly-disk then runs 'ctest -D Nightly'. This implicitly tells ctest to
perform Update, Configure, Build, Test, and Submit stages, in that order.
-7. The Update stage runs 'svn update' on the local repository. The local
+7. The Update stage runs 'git pull' on the local repository. The local
repository is now updated to version B from the master, but since the
DartConfiguration.tcl file was already created and has not been updated, the
Update.xml file has the version A BuildName still.
9. Next is the Build stage, which is handled by calling scripts/update-ctest.
-10. update-ctest checks the svn versions of regress/build vs BACULA_SOURCE.
+10. update-ctest checks the Git versions of regress/build vs BACULA_SOURCE.
Since the two are different (regress/build is still version A, while
BACULA_SOURCE has been updated to B) it calls 'make setup'.
http://regress.bacula.org:8081/Bacula/Dashboard/Dashboard?trackid=29
The Update and Build information show up with a BuildName of
-bacula-2.3.10-26Feb08-Linux-sqlite3, then after svn update hit the Test
+bacula-2.3.10-26Feb08-Linux-sqlite3, then aftegit pull hit the Test
information shows up with bacula-2.3.11-03Mar08-Linux-sqlite3. (Ignore for
the moment the fact my timestamps are at 6:59PM, rather than at 9PM where
they're supposed to be; this seems to be a Fedora specific client side issue I
just seems to rely on the timestamp of the test.
======
+Important Note:
+======================================================================
NOTE !!!!!!!!! ctest can actually back out changes that have been made to
-your local source repository. As a consequence, it is probably better not to
+your local source repository (this was true for SVN, but I (Kern) am
+not sure it is true now that we have switched to git).
+
+As a consequence, it is probably better not to
use a directory in which you are developing code for Nightly tests. Seee the
below explanation given by Frank Sweetser.