lix/tests/functional/common/vars-and-functions.sh.in
Artemis Tosini 742b6e4786
gc: Find roots using libproc on Darwin
Previously, the garbage collector found runtime roots on Darwin by
shelling out to `lsof -n -w -F n` then parsing the result.
However, this requires an lsof binary and can be extremely slow.

The official Apple lsof returns in a reasonable amount of time,
about 250ms in my tests, but the lsof packaged in nixpkgs is quite slow,
taking about 40 seconds to run the command.

Using libproc directly is about the same speed as Apple lsof,
and allows us to reënable several tests that were disabled on Darwin.

Change-Id: Ifa0adda7984e13c15535693baba835aae79a3577
2024-04-25 23:24:21 -04:00

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set -eu -o pipefail
if [[ -z "${COMMON_VARS_AND_FUNCTIONS_SH_SOURCED-}" ]]; then
COMMON_VARS_AND_FUNCTIONS_SH_SOURCED=1
export PS4='+(${BASH_SOURCE[0]-$0}:$LINENO) '
export TEST_ROOT=$(realpath ${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/nix-test)/${TEST_NAME:-default/tests\/functional//}
export NIX_STORE_DIR
if ! NIX_STORE_DIR=$(readlink -f $TEST_ROOT/store 2> /dev/null); then
# Maybe the build directory is symlinked.
export NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE=1
NIX_STORE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/store
fi
export NIX_LOCALSTATE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var
export NIX_LOG_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var/log/nix
export NIX_STATE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var/nix
export NIX_CONF_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/etc
export NIX_DAEMON_SOCKET_PATH=$TEST_ROOT/dSocket
unset NIX_USER_CONF_FILES
export _NIX_TEST_SHARED=$TEST_ROOT/shared
if [[ -n $NIX_STORE ]]; then
export _NIX_TEST_NO_SANDBOX=1
fi
export _NIX_IN_TEST=$TEST_ROOT/shared
export NIX_REMOTE=${NIX_REMOTE_-}
unset NIX_PATH
export TEST_HOME=$TEST_ROOT/test-home
export HOME=$TEST_HOME
unset XDG_STATE_HOME
unset XDG_DATA_HOME
unset XDG_CONFIG_HOME
unset XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
unset XDG_CACHE_HOME
mkdir -p $TEST_HOME
export PATH=@bindir@:$PATH
if [[ -n "${NIX_CLIENT_PACKAGE:-}" ]]; then
export PATH="$NIX_CLIENT_PACKAGE/bin":$PATH
fi
DAEMON_PATH="$PATH"
if [[ -n "${NIX_DAEMON_PACKAGE:-}" ]]; then
DAEMON_PATH="${NIX_DAEMON_PACKAGE}/bin:$DAEMON_PATH"
fi
coreutils=@coreutils@
lsof=@lsof@
export dot=@dot@
export SHELL="@bash@"
export PAGER=cat
export busybox="@sandbox_shell@"
export version=@PACKAGE_VERSION@
export system=@system@
export BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=@BUILD_SHARED_LIBS@
export IMPURE_VAR1=foo
export IMPURE_VAR2=bar
cacheDir=$TEST_ROOT/binary-cache
readLink() {
ls -l "$1" | sed 's/.*->\ //'
}
clearProfiles() {
profiles="$HOME"/.local/state/nix/profiles
rm -rf "$profiles"
}
clearStore() {
echo "clearing store..."
chmod -R +w "$NIX_STORE_DIR"
rm -rf "$NIX_STORE_DIR"
mkdir "$NIX_STORE_DIR"
rm -rf "$NIX_STATE_DIR"
mkdir "$NIX_STATE_DIR"
clearProfiles
}
clearCache() {
rm -rf "$cacheDir"
}
clearCacheCache() {
rm -f $TEST_HOME/.cache/nix/binary-cache*
}
startDaemon() {
# Dont start the daemon twice, as this would just make it loop indefinitely
if [[ "${_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID-}" != '' ]]; then
return
fi
# Start the daemon, wait for the socket to appear.
rm -f $NIX_DAEMON_SOCKET_PATH
PATH=$DAEMON_PATH nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command' daemon &
_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID=$!
export _NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID
for ((i = 0; i < 300; i++)); do
if [[ -S $NIX_DAEMON_SOCKET_PATH ]]; then
DAEMON_STARTED=1
break;
fi
sleep 0.1
done
if [[ -z ${DAEMON_STARTED+x} ]]; then
fail "Didnt manage to start the daemon"
fi
trap "killDaemon" EXIT
# Save for if daemon is killed
NIX_REMOTE_OLD=$NIX_REMOTE
export NIX_REMOTE=daemon
}
killDaemon() {
# Dont fail trying to stop a non-existant daemon twice
if [[ "${_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID-}" == '' ]]; then
return
fi
kill $_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID
for i in {0..100}; do
kill -0 $_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID 2> /dev/null || break
sleep 0.1
done
kill -9 $_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID 2> /dev/null || true
wait $_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID || true
rm -f $NIX_DAEMON_SOCKET_PATH
# Indicate daemon is stopped
unset _NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID
# Restore old nix remote
NIX_REMOTE=$NIX_REMOTE_OLD
trap "" EXIT
}
restartDaemon() {
[[ -z "${_NIX_TEST_DAEMON_PID:-}" ]] && return 0
killDaemon
startDaemon
}
if [[ $(uname) == Linux ]] && [[ -L /proc/self/ns/user ]] && unshare --user true; then
_canUseSandbox=1
fi
isDaemonNewer () {
[[ -n "${NIX_DAEMON_PACKAGE:-}" ]] || return 0
local requiredVersion="$1"
local daemonVersion=$($NIX_DAEMON_PACKAGE/bin/nix daemon --version | cut -d' ' -f3)
[[ $(nix eval --expr "builtins.compareVersions ''$daemonVersion'' ''$requiredVersion''") -ge 0 ]]
}
skipTest () {
echo "$1, skipping this test..." >&2
exit 99
}
requireDaemonNewerThan () {
isDaemonNewer "$1" || skipTest "Daemon is too old"
}
canUseSandbox() {
[[ ${_canUseSandbox-} ]]
}
requireSandboxSupport () {
canUseSandbox || skipTest "Sandboxing not supported"
}
requireGit() {
[[ $(type -p git) ]] || skipTest "Git not installed"
}
fail() {
echo "$1" >&2
exit 1
}
# Run a command failing if it didn't exit with the expected exit code.
#
# Has two advantages over the built-in `!`:
#
# 1. `!` conflates all non-0 codes. `expect` allows testing for an exact
# code.
#
# 2. `!` unexpectedly negates `set -e`, and cannot be used on individual
# pipeline stages with `set -o pipefail`. It only works on the entire
# pipeline, which is useless if we want, say, `nix ...` invocation to
# *fail*, but a grep on the error message it outputs to *succeed*.
expect() {
local expected res
expected="$1"
shift
"$@" && res=0 || res="$?"
if [[ $res -ne $expected ]]; then
echo "Expected exit code '$expected' but got '$res' from command ${*@Q}" >&2
return 1
fi
return 0
}
# Better than just doing `expect ... >&2` because the "Expected..."
# message below will *not* be redirected.
expectStderr() {
local expected res
expected="$1"
shift
"$@" 2>&1 && res=0 || res="$?"
if [[ $res -ne $expected ]]; then
echo "Expected exit code '$expected' but got '$res' from command ${*@Q}" >&2
return 1
fi
return 0
}
needLocalStore() {
if [[ "$NIX_REMOTE" == "daemon" ]]; then
skipTest "Cant run through the daemon ($1)"
fi
}
# Just to make it easy to find which tests should be fixed
buggyNeedLocalStore() {
needLocalStore "$1"
}
enableFeatures() {
local features="$1"
sed -i 's/experimental-features .*/& '"$features"'/' "$NIX_CONF_DIR"/nix.conf
}
set -x
onError() {
set +x
echo "$0: test failed at:" >&2
for ((i = 1; i < ${#BASH_SOURCE[@]}; i++)); do
if [[ -z ${BASH_SOURCE[i]} ]]; then break; fi
echo " ${FUNCNAME[i]} in ${BASH_SOURCE[i]}:${BASH_LINENO[i-1]}" >&2
done
}
# `grep -v` doesn't work well for exit codes. We want `!(exist line l. l
# matches)`. It gives us `exist line l. !(l matches)`.
#
# `!` normally doesn't work well with `set -e`, but when we wrap in a
# function it *does*.
grepInverse() {
! grep "$@"
}
# A shorthand, `> /dev/null` is a bit noisy.
#
# `grep -q` would seem to do this, no function necessary, but it is a
# bad fit with pipes and `set -o pipefail`: `-q` will exit after the
# first match, and then subsequent writes will result in broken pipes.
#
# Note that reproducing the above is a bit tricky as it depends on
# non-deterministic properties such as the timing between the match and
# the closing of the pipe, the buffering of the pipe, and the speed of
# the producer into the pipe. But rest assured we've seen it happen in
# CI reliably.
grepQuiet() {
grep "$@" > /dev/null
}
# The previous two, combined
grepQuietInverse() {
! grep "$@" > /dev/null
}
trap onError ERR
fi # COMMON_VARS_AND_FUNCTIONS_SH_SOURCED