Multi Node Testing - Version 2.4.20

Multi Node Testing

Multi Node Testing Concepts

When we talk about multi node testing in Akka we mean the process of running coordinated tests on multiple actor systems in different JVMs. The multi node testing kit consist of three main parts.

The Test Conductor

The basis for the multi node testing is the TestConductor. It is an Akka Extension that plugs in to the network stack and it is used to coordinate the nodes participating in the test and provides several features including:

  • Node Address Lookup: Finding out the full path to another test node (No need to share configuration between test nodes)
  • Node Barrier Coordination: Waiting for other nodes at named barriers.
  • Network Failure Injection: Throttling traffic, dropping packets, unplugging and plugging nodes back in.

This is a schematic overview of the test conductor.

../_images/akka-remote-testconductor.png

The test conductor server is responsible for coordinating barriers and sending commands to the test conductor clients that act upon them, e.g. throttling network traffic to/from another client. More information on the possible operations is available in the akka.remote.testconductor.Conductor API documentation.

The Multi Node Spec

The Multi Node Spec consists of two parts. The MultiNodeConfig that is responsible for common configuration and enumerating and naming the nodes under test. The MultiNodeSpec that contains a number of convenience functions for making the test nodes interact with each other. More information on the possible operations is available in the akka.remote.testkit.MultiNodeSpec API documentation.

The setup of the MultiNodeSpec is configured through java system properties that you set on all JVMs that's going to run a node under test. These can easily be set on the JVM command line with -Dproperty=value.

These are the available properties:
  • multinode.max-nodes

    The maximum number of nodes that a test can have.

  • multinode.host

    The host name or IP for this node. Must be resolvable using InetAddress.getByName.

  • multinode.port

    The port number for this node. Defaults to 0 which will use a random port.

  • multinode.server-host

    The host name or IP for the server node. Must be resolvable using InetAddress.getByName.

  • multinode.server-port

    The port number for the server node. Defaults to 4711.

  • multinode.index

    The index of this node in the sequence of roles defined for the test. The index 0 is special and that machine will be the server. All failure injection and throttling must be done from this node.

The SbtMultiJvm Plugin

The SbtMultiJvm Plugin has been updated to be able to run multi node tests, by automatically generating the relevant multinode.* properties. This means that you can easily run multi node tests on a single machine without any special configuration by just running them as normal multi-jvm tests. These tests can then be run distributed over multiple machines without any changes simply by using the multi-node additions to the plugin.

Multi Node Specific Additions

The plugin also has a number of new multi-node-* sbt tasks and settings to support running tests on multiple machines. The necessary test classes and dependencies are packaged for distribution to other machines with SbtAssembly into a jar file with a name on the format <projectName>_<scalaVersion>-<projectVersion>-multi-jvm-assembly.jar

Note

To be able to distribute and kick off the tests on multiple machines, it is assumed that both host and target systems are POSIX like systems with ssh and rsync available.

These are the available sbt multi-node settings:
  • multiNodeHosts

    A sequence of hosts to use for running the test, on the form user@host:java where host is the only required part. Will override settings from file.

  • multiNodeHostsFileName

    A file to use for reading in the hosts to use for running the test. One per line on the same format as above. Defaults to multi-node-test.hosts in the base project directory.

  • multiNodeTargetDirName

    A name for the directory on the target machine, where to copy the jar file. Defaults to multi-node-test in the base directory of the ssh user used to rsync the jar file.

  • multiNodeJavaName

    The name of the default Java executable on the target machines. Defaults to java.

Here are some examples of how you define hosts:
  • localhost

    The current user on localhost using the default java.

  • user1@host1

    User user1 on host host1 with the default java.

  • user2@host2:/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk-amd64/bin/java

    User user2 on host host2 using java 7.

  • host3:/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk-amd64/bin/java

    The current user on host host3 using java 6.

Running the Multi Node Tests

To run all the multi node test in multi-node mode (i.e. distributing the jar files and kicking off the tests remotely) from inside sbt, use the multi-node-test task:

multi-node-test

To run all of them in multi-jvm mode (i.e. all JVMs on the local machine) do:

multi-jvm:test

To run individual tests use the multi-node-test-only task:

multi-node-test-only your.MultiNodeTest

To run individual tests in the multi-jvm mode do:

multi-jvm:test-only your.MultiNodeTest

More than one test name can be listed to run multiple specific tests. Tab completion in sbt makes it easy to complete the test names.

Preparing Your Project for Multi Node Testing

The multi node testing kit is a separate jar file. Make sure that you have the following dependency in your project:

"com.typesafe.akka" %% "akka-multi-node-testkit" % "2.4.20"

If you are using the latest nightly build you should pick a timestamped Akka version from https://repo.akka.io/snapshots/com/typesafe/akka/akka-multi-node-testkit_2.11/. We recommend against using SNAPSHOT in order to obtain stable builds.

A Multi Node Testing Example

First we need some scaffolding to hook up the MultiNodeSpec with your favorite test framework. Lets define a trait STMultiNodeSpec that uses ScalaTest to start and stop MultiNodeSpec.

package sample.multinode

import org.scalatest.{ BeforeAndAfterAll, WordSpecLike }
import org.scalatest.Matchers
import akka.remote.testkit.MultiNodeSpecCallbacks

/**
 * Hooks up MultiNodeSpec with ScalaTest
 */
trait STMultiNodeSpec extends MultiNodeSpecCallbacks
  with WordSpecLike with Matchers with BeforeAndAfterAll {

  override def beforeAll() = multiNodeSpecBeforeAll()

  override def afterAll() = multiNodeSpecAfterAll()
}

Then we need to define a configuration. Lets use two nodes "node1 and "node2" and call it MultiNodeSampleConfig.

package sample.multinode
import akka.remote.testkit.MultiNodeConfig

object MultiNodeSampleConfig extends MultiNodeConfig {
  val node1 = role("node1")
  val node2 = role("node2")
}

And then finally to the node test code. That starts the two nodes, and demonstrates a barrier, and a remote actor message send/receive.

package sample.multinode
import akka.remote.testkit.MultiNodeSpec
import akka.testkit.ImplicitSender
import akka.actor.{ Props, Actor }

class MultiNodeSampleSpecMultiJvmNode1 extends MultiNodeSample
class MultiNodeSampleSpecMultiJvmNode2 extends MultiNodeSample

object MultiNodeSample {
  class Ponger extends Actor {
    def receive = {
      case "ping" => sender() ! "pong"
    }
  }
}

class MultiNodeSample extends MultiNodeSpec(MultiNodeSampleConfig)
  with STMultiNodeSpec with ImplicitSender {

  import MultiNodeSampleConfig._
  import MultiNodeSample._

  def initialParticipants = roles.size

  "A MultiNodeSample" must {

    "wait for all nodes to enter a barrier" in {
      enterBarrier("startup")
    }

    "send to and receive from a remote node" in {
      runOn(node1) {
        enterBarrier("deployed")
        val ponger = system.actorSelection(node(node2) / "user" / "ponger")
        ponger ! "ping"
        import scala.concurrent.duration._
        expectMsg(10.seconds, "pong")
      }

      runOn(node2) {
        system.actorOf(Props[Ponger], "ponger")
        enterBarrier("deployed")
      }

      enterBarrier("finished")
    }
  }
}

The easiest way to run this example yourself is to download Lightbend Activator and open the tutorial named Akka Multi-Node Testing Sample with Scala.

Things to Keep in Mind

There are a couple of things to keep in mind when writing multi node tests or else your tests might behave in surprising ways.

  • Don't issue a shutdown of the first node. The first node is the controller and if it shuts down your test will break.
  • To be able to use blackhole, passThrough, and throttle you must activate the failure injector and throttler transport adapters by specifying testTransport(on = true) in your MultiNodeConfig.
  • Throttling, shutdown and other failure injections can only be done from the first node, which again is the controller.
  • Don't ask for the address of a node using node(address) after the node has been shut down. Grab the address before shutting down the node.
  • Don't use MultiNodeSpec methods like address lookup, barrier entry et.c. from other threads than the main test thread. This also means that you shouldn't use them from inside an actor, a future, or a scheduled task.

Configuration

There are several configuration properties for the Multi-Node Testing module, please refer to the reference configuration.

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