How our testing works

We use the test tooling of postgres to run our tests. This tooling is very simple but effective. The basics it runs a series of .sql scripts, gets their output and stores that in results/$sqlfilename.out. It then compares the actual output to the expected output with a simple diff command:

bash diff results/$sqlfilename.out expected/$sqlfilename.out

Schedules

Which sql scripts to run is defined in a schedule file, e.g. multi_schedule, multi_mx_schedule.

Makefile

In our Makefile we have rules to run the different types of test schedules. You can run them from the root of the repository like so: ```bash

e.g. the multi_schedule

make install -j9 && make -C src/test/regress/ check-multi ```

Take a look at the makefile for a list of all the testing targets.

Running a specific test

Often you want to run a specific test and don't want to run everything. You can use one of the following commands to do so: ```bash

If your tests needs almost no setup you can use check-minimal

make install -j9 && make -C src/test/regress/ check-minimal EXTRA_TESTS='multi_utility_warnings'

Often tests need some testing data, if you get missing table errors using

check-minimal you should try check-base

make install -j9 && make -C src/test/regress/ check-base EXTRA_TESTS='with_prepare'

Sometimes this is still not enough and some other test needs to be run before

the test you want to run. You can do so by adding it to EXTRA_TESTS too.

make install -j9 && make -C src/test/regress/ check-base EXTRA_TESTS='add_coordinator coordinator_shouldhaveshards' ```

Normalization

The output of tests is sadly not completely predictable. Still we want to compare the output of different runs and error when the important things are different. We do this by not using the regular system diff to compare files. Instead we use src/test/regress/bin/diff which does the following things:

  1. Change the $sqlfilename.out file by running it through sed using the src/test/regress/bin/normalize.sed file. This does stuff like replacing numbers that keep changing across runs with an XXX string, e.g. portnumbers or transaction numbers.
  2. Backup the original output to $sqlfilename.out.unmodified in case it's needed for debugging
  3. Compare the changed results and expected files with the system diff command.

Updating the expected test output

Sometimes you add a test to an existing file, or test output changes in a way that's not bad (possibly even good if support for queries is added). In those cases you want to update the expected test output. The way to do this is very simple, you run the test and copy the new .out file in the results directory to the expected directory, e.g.:

bash make install -j9 && make -C src/test/regress/ check-minimal EXTRA_TESTS='multi_utility_warnings' cp src/test/regress/{results,expected}/multi_utility_warnings.out

Adding a new test file

Adding a new test file is quite simple:

  1. Write the SQL file in the sql directory
  2. Add it to a schedule file, to make sure it's run in CI
  3. Run the test
  4. Check that the output is as expected
  5. Copy the .out file from results to expected

Isolation testing

See src/test/regress/spec/README.md

Upgrade testing

See src/test/regress/upgrade/README.md

Failure testing

See src/test/regress/mitmscripts/README.md

Perl test setup script

To automatically setup a citus cluster in tests we use our src/test/regress/pg_regress_multi.pl script. This sets up a citus cluster and then starts the standard postgres test tooling. You almost never have to change this file.