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Test Puppet code with Puppet code

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You are welcome to contribute to this module by suggesting new features, currency updates, or fixes. Every contribution is valuable to help ensure that the module remains compatible with the latest Puppet versions and continues to meet community needs. Complete the following steps:

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Version information

  • 1.2.0 (latest)
  • 1.1.1
  • 1.1.0
  • 1.0.2
  • 1.0.1
  • 1.0.0
released Sep 30th 2015
This version is compatible with:
  • , , , ,

Start using this module

  • r10k or Code Manager
  • Bolt
  • Manual installation
  • Direct download

Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'jordan-spec', '1.2.0'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add jordan-spec
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install jordan-spec --version 1.2.0

Direct download is not typically how you would use a Puppet module to manage your infrastructure, but you may want to download the module in order to inspect the code.

Download

Documentation

jordan/spec — version 1.2.0 Sep 30th 2015

puppet-spec

Build Status

Test Puppet code with Puppet code.

Why not rspec-puppet?

Puppet-spec is intended to provide a low barrier to entry for those new to testing, and is idiomatic for anyone familiar with the Puppet DSL. Rspec-puppet, while more powerful, is far more complex and requires past exposure to Ruby and rspec. Don't think of puppet-spec as an attempt to undermine the wide adoption of rspec-puppet in the community, but rather the fulfilment of an unmet, yet significant need.

Getting Started

Installation

Puppet Module

You can install the Puppet spec module by cloning this repository into your modulepath, or by running puppet module install jordan/spec. Once the module is in your modulepath, the Puppet application puppet spec will be available.

Rubygem

If your Puppet module has a Gemfile, you can add the gem puppet-spec as a dependency and include the bundled rake task to simplify the process of invoking your test suite. Just add require puppet-spec/tasks to your Rakefile, and run rake puppetspec to invoke the test suite.

Requirements

Puppet spec is tested on all permutations of the below versions.

Puppet:

  • 4.2.1
  • 4.2.0
  • 4.1.0
  • 4.0.0

Ruby:

  • 2.2.0
  • 2.1.0
  • 2.0.0
  • 1.9.3

A simple test case

file { '/tmp/test':
  ensure  => present,
  content => 'The file content',
}

assertion { 'that the file has the correct contents':
  subject     => File['/tmp/test'],
  attribute   => 'content',
  expectation => 'The file content',
}

assertion { 'that the file is present':
  subject     => File['/tmp/test'],
  attribute   => 'ensure',
  expectation => 'present',
}

The Assertion Resource Type

Title

The assertion's title should reflect what it is attempting to prove. This value will not used during evaluation, and will only be displayed if the assertion fails.

Subject

This attribute's value should be a reference to the resource under question. i.e. File['the title'] Like the ordering metaparams, etc.

Attribute

Attribute determines which attribute of the subject we are asserting on.

Expectation

Expectation should be set to the expected value of the subject's attribute as determined by the subject and attribute params. It's required if attribute is provided.

Ensure

Defaults to 'present', and accepts values 'present' and 'absent'. If the ensure attribute is set to absent, the assertion will validate that the subject is absent from the catalog. Expectation and attribute cannot be set in conjunction with ensure => 'absent'.

Puppet spec test cases are just manifests that happen to contain assertion resources. A typical testcase is essentially an example (declaration test) with assertions. These assertions prove that the resources that have been included in the catalog are in fact what we intended. The tests tend to look something like the below.

include apache

assertion { 'that the apache::ssl class is in the catalog':
  subject     => Class['apache::ssl'],
}

assertion { 'that the apache package version is correct':
  subject     => Package['apache::package'],
  attribute   => 'ensure',
  expectation => '1.2.3',
}
...

Any spec manifests stored in the module-under-test's spec directory with a *_spec.pp suffix will be evaluated when puppet spec is executed. Failed assertions are printed to the console rspec style.

Stubbing

In order to effectively unit test a class, we may need to stub certain dependencies and/or potential side affects. Puppet spec provides three functions that can be used to stub at the Puppet compiler's top scope. Naturally, test cases are parsed top down, so the stub functions must be called before any affected resources are evaluated.

For examples, check out the acceptance test suite.

stub_facts({})

Stub_facts takes a hash of fact/value pairs, and... stubs them. Technically it just defines top scope variables, but stub_top_scope_variables() doesn't quite roll off the tongue.

stub_class('')

Stub_class stubs a given class. The stubbed class will accept values for any param. Classes can be namespaced as expected with the scope indicator.

stub_type('')

Stub_type stubs a defined type. Any parameters will be accepted and can be asserted upon. Like the stub_class function, the type name can be namespaced as you would expect.

Fixtures

Asserting on attributes with a very long expectation can be unpleasant, so Puppet spec provides a fixture function which reads from a given file underneath spec/fixtures.

Example

assertion { 'that the file has the correct very long contents':
  subject     => File['/tmp/largefile'],
  attribute   => 'content',
  expectation => fixture('file_contents'), #This would load the file `<module>/spec/fixtures/file_contents`
}

Negative Assertions

Considering that Puppet modules often make use of logical expressions to entirely exclude certain resources from the catalog, Puppet spec's assertion resource type has an ensure attribute, which when given the value absent, sets an expectation on the absence of a resource from the catalog.

assertion { 'that the undesired file is not in the catalog':
  ensure  => absent,
  subject => File['/tmp/should/not/be/around'],
}

Want to pitch in?

I wrote this tool because I felt that the community could use an approachable testing mechanism in Puppet's native tongue. If you feel the same, feel free to take on an open GH issue, or find a bug. If your changes have good tests (irony?), I'll merge and not yell at you even a little bit. If you're not up for the hacking, feel free to open an issue and I'll have a look.