Developer Test Environment ************************** This assumes you have your basic server running and you've made some changes and you want to test them to work out what's going right... or wrong. Installing Cassandane ===================== Cassandane is a Perl-based integration test suite for Cyrus. Cassandane documentation includes information on setting up tests and writing new tests. Why "Cassandane"? Wikipedia indicates that Cassandane was the name of the consort of King Cyrus the Great of Persia, founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire. So that's kinda cool. Install and configure Cassandane -------------------------------- 1. You already have it -- it's in the "cassandane" subdirectory of the cyrus-imapd sources. 2. Install dependencies sudo apt-get install libanyevent-perl libtest-unit-perl libconfig-inifiles-perl \ libdatetime-perl libbsd-resource-perl libxml-generator-perl \ libencode-imaputf7-perl libio-stringy-perl libnews-nntpclient-perl \ libfile-chdir-perl libfile-libmagic-perl libnet-server-perl libunix-syslog-perl \ libdata-uuid-perl libjson-xs-perl libdata-ical-perl libjson-perl \ libdatetime-format-ical-perl libtext-levenshteinxs-perl \ libmime-types-perl libdatetime-format-iso8601-perl libcal-dav-perl \ libclone-perl libstring-crc32-perl libnet-ldap-server-perl The quickest option for the rest is installing via CPAN, but you could build packages using dh-make-perl if that is preferred. sudo cpan -i Tie::DataUUID sudo cpan -i XML::Spice sudo cpan -i XML::Fast sudo cpan -i Data::ICal::TimeZone sudo cpan -i Text::VCardFast sudo cpan -i Mail::IMAPTalk sudo cpan -i List::Pairwise sudo cpan -i Convert::Base64 sudo cpan -i Net::DAVTalk sudo cpan -i Net::CardDAVTalk sudo cpan -i Net::CalDAVTalk sudo cpan -i Mail::JMAPTalk sudo cpan -i Math::Int64 3. Build Cassandane's binary components cd /path/to/cyrus-imapd/cassandane make 4. Copy "cassandane.ini.example" to "cassandane.ini" in your home directory 5. Edit "cassandane.ini" to set up your cassandane environment. * Assuming you configure cyrus with "--prefix=/usr/cyrus" (as above), then the defaults are mostly fine * Set "destdir" to "/var/tmp/cyrus" * Add "[valgrind]" if you're using it. * Add an "[imaptest]" section. For the moment, it may be necessary to suppress the binary tests as they are buggy upstream still. [imaptest] basedir=/path/to/imaptest/imaptest suppress=append-binary urlauth-binary fetch-binary-mime fetch-binary-mime-qp 6. Create a "cyrus" user and matching group and also add "cyrus" to group "mail" sudo adduser --system --group cyrus sudo adduser cyrus mail 7. Give your user account access to sudo as "cyrus" * "sudo visudo" * add lines like: Defaults:username rlimit_core=default username ALL = (cyrus) NOPASSWD: ALL where "username" is your own username 8. Make the "destdir" directory, as the "cyrus" user * "sudo -u cyrus mkdir /var/tmp/cass" Install IMAPTest ---------------- IMAPTest is a testing suite which uses libraries from the Dovecot installation. 1. Fetch and compile Dovecot. * Get the latest nightly snapshot from http://dovecot.org/nightly/dovecot-latest.tar.gz * "./configure && make" (No need for make install) 2. Fetch and compile IMAPTest * Download http://dovecot.org/nightly/imaptest/imaptest- latest.tar.gz * "./configure --with-dovecot=../dovecot-2.2 && make" (No need for make install) * The "--with-dovecot=" parameter is used to specify path to Dovecot v2.2 sources' root directory. This is not quite the same IMAPTest that CI uses. The CI system uses a docker image, which among other things has Dovecot and IMAPTest already built in so that they don't need to be rebuilt every time CI runs. The docker image is built from Dockerfile in the cyrus-docker repo. If you want to locally reproduce the same testing that CI runs, you can search it for "dovecot.git" and "imaptest.git" to see how these two components are fetched and built, and do the same yourself. Briefly, Dovecot is built from a known commit id on the upstream repository, whereas IMAPTest is built from the "cyrus" branch of our own fork. Rebuild Cyrus for Testing ========================= Prepare to rebuild by making the source tree shiny and clean as if you've done a brand new checkout. Leave no old artifacts lying around! cd /path/to/cyrus-imapd make clean git clean -f -x -d autoreconf -v -i Warning: Apply caution! The "git clean" removes anything that's a build product, but also anything it doesn't know about: which may include your new source files you haven't added yet. Set the compile flags for testing and debugging. It may be of use to also add "--std=gnu99" here. That does TONS of warnings, and "-g" enables debug mode. CFLAGS="-g -fPIC -W -Wall -Wextra -Werror" Configure the environment. ./configure --prefix=/usr/cyrus --with-cyrus-prefix=/usr/cyrus \ --enable-autocreate --enable-http --enable-unit-tests \ --enable-replication --enable-nntp --enable-murder \ --enable-idled --enable-xapian --enable-calalarmd \ --enable-backup make lex-fix # you need this if compile fails with errors from sieve/sieve.c And finally, make it. If you're testing across versions, the binsymlinks is necessary as older Cyrus doesn't have the binaries in the new locations. This uses the default install path of "/usr/cyrus/". It can be useful to also have "/usr/cyrus25", "/usr/cyrus24", etc, if you're testing with older versions as well. make -j16 && make -j16 check sudo make install sudo make install-binsymlinks sudo cp tools/mkimap /usr/cyrus/bin/mkimap Running the tests ================= Cassandane internals need to run as the "cyrus" user, but if you gave yourself passwordless sudo access as instructed above, then Cassandane will take care of switching to the "cyrus" user for you. In which case, just run it as yourself. If you didn't give yourself this access, you will first need to become the "cyrus" user by some other means, and then run it from there. cd /path/to/cyrus-imapd/cassandane ./testrunner.pl Do not run it as root. Debugging and stacktraces ========================= Check out the guide to running Cyrus components under gdb. In the event of a crash, here's how to generate a stacktrace. Core dumps will be owned by the "cyrus" user, but your source tree will probably be owned by yourself. Copy the core dump somewhere convenient, change the ownership to yourself, and then you can open the core file in gdb for examination. Tips and Tricks =============== Read the script to see other options. If you're having problems, add more "-v" options to the testrunner to get more info out. **Looking for memory leaks?** Run with --valgrind to use valgrind (if it's installed). It is slower, which is why it doesn't need to be always used. Running with -v -v is very noisy, but gives a lot more data. For example: all IMAP telemetry. Also helpful to run "sudo tail -f /var/log/syslog", and examine /var/tmp/cass as "cyrus" to examine log files and disk structures for failed tests.