interestingly the latency monitor test fails because valgrind is slow
enough so that the time inside PEXPIREAT command from the moment of
the first mstime() call to get the basetime until checkAlreadyExpired
calls mstime() again is more than 1ms, and that test was too sensitive.
using this opportunity to speed up the test (unrelated to the failure)
the fix is just the longer time passed to PEXPIRE.
(cherry picked from commit 663e637da87ee9385527fe3a37edb241a1f97cc6)
* Tests: fix and reintroduce redis-cli tests.
These tests have been broken and disabled for 10 years now!
* TLS: add remaining redis-cli support.
This adds support for the redis-cli --pipe, --rdb and --replica options
previously unsupported in --tls mode.
* Fix writeConn().
(cherry picked from commit 99b920534f7710d544c38b870fd10c6053283d99)
tests were sensitive to additional log lines appearing in the log
causing the search to come empty handed.
instead of just looking for the n last log lines, capture the log lines
before performing the action, and then search from that offset.
(cherry picked from commit efc4189b6227a17f26ed9bd6bbac62bf4bf7ab66)
* tests/valgrind: don't use debug restart
DEBUG REATART causes two issues:
1. it uses execve which replaces the original process and valgrind doesn't
have a chance to check for errors, so leaks go unreported.
2. valgrind report invalid calls to close() which we're unable to resolve.
So now the tests use restart_server mechanism in the tests, that terminates
the old server and starts a new one, new PID, but same stdout, stderr.
since the stderr can contain two or more valgrind report, it is not enough
to just check for the absence of leaks, we also need to check for some known
errors, we do both, and fail if we either find an error, or can't find a
report saying there are no leaks.
other changes:
- when killing a server that was already terminated we check for leaks too.
- adding DEBUG LEAK which was used to test it.
- adding --trace-children to valgrind, although no longer needed.
- since the stdout contains two or more runs, we need slightly different way
of checking if the new process is up (explicitly looking for the new PID)
- move the code that handles --wait-server to happen earlier (before
watching the startup message in the log), and serve the restarted server too.
* squashme - CR fixes
(cherry picked from commit 8d4f055e43ab554adfce617c971f10c4b6423484)
interestingly the latency monitor test fails because valgrind is slow
enough so that the time inside PEXPIREAT command from the moment of
the first mstime() call to get the basetime until checkAlreadyExpired
calls mstime() again is more than 1ms, and that test was too sensitive.
using this opportunity to speed up the test (unrelated to the failure)
the fix is just the longer time passed to PEXPIRE.
* Tests: fix and reintroduce redis-cli tests.
These tests have been broken and disabled for 10 years now!
* TLS: add remaining redis-cli support.
This adds support for the redis-cli --pipe, --rdb and --replica options
previously unsupported in --tls mode.
* Fix writeConn().
tests were sensitive to additional log lines appearing in the log
causing the search to come empty handed.
instead of just looking for the n last log lines, capture the log lines
before performing the action, and then search from that offset.
* tests/valgrind: don't use debug restart
DEBUG REATART causes two issues:
1. it uses execve which replaces the original process and valgrind doesn't
have a chance to check for errors, so leaks go unreported.
2. valgrind report invalid calls to close() which we're unable to resolve.
So now the tests use restart_server mechanism in the tests, that terminates
the old server and starts a new one, new PID, but same stdout, stderr.
since the stderr can contain two or more valgrind report, it is not enough
to just check for the absence of leaks, we also need to check for some known
errors, we do both, and fail if we either find an error, or can't find a
report saying there are no leaks.
other changes:
- when killing a server that was already terminated we check for leaks too.
- adding DEBUG LEAK which was used to test it.
- adding --trace-children to valgrind, although no longer needed.
- since the stdout contains two or more runs, we need slightly different way
of checking if the new process is up (explicitly looking for the new PID)
- move the code that handles --wait-server to happen earlier (before
watching the startup message in the log), and serve the restarted server too.
* squashme - CR fixes
these tests create several edge cases that are otherwise uncovered (at
least not consistently) by the test suite, so although they're no longer
testing what they were meant to test, it's still a good idea to keep
them in hope that they'll expose some issue in the future.
these tests create several edge cases that are otherwise uncovered (at
least not consistently) by the test suite, so although they're no longer
testing what they were meant to test, it's still a good idea to keep
them in hope that they'll expose some issue in the future.
with the original version of 6.0.0, this test detects an excessive full
sync.
with the fix in 146201c69, this test detects memory corruption,
especially when using libc allocator with or without valgrind.