This commit also changes the test:integration command to run integration
tests as different processes. This allows to avoid any test leaking into
each-other because of the use of singletons. This however has the side
effect of tests being slower, but that is a forcing function to refactor
the code.
Update-lock tests now use the actual filesystem for testing, instead of
relying on stubs and spies.
This commit also fixes a small bug with update-lock that would cause a
`PromiseRejectionHandledWarning` when the lock callback would throw.
Now the tests are ran against the actual docker engine instead of
against mockerode.
The new tests actually caught a bug in
`volumeManager.removeOrphanedVolumes`, where that function would try to
remove volumes for stopped containers, causing an exception.
This commit also fixes that bug.
This also needs to modify the test environment as database migrations
will look for `config.json` in the location given by the variable
`CONFIG_MOUNT_POINT`.
The volume tests now run against the actual docker engine setup via dind
Change-type: patch
This allows to run integration tests during development and on CI
with the right dependencies. There are several changes that this
involves, but the gist of it is that a test environment is setup using
`docker-compose.test.yml`. This file is loaded by `resin-ci` during the
build, and ensures that integration tests are ran after setting up all
requirements. This commit also defines a test environment command that
can be setup using `npm run test:env` in order to run tests in a local
development machine.
This sets up the new `test/unit` and `test/integration` folders
and starts classification of some of the test files.
Note that unit tests include, `fs-utils` and `system-info` tests.
While these tests interact with the filesystem, the implementation
of these modules is simple enough, and the tests are fast enough to
allow these tests to fall under the `unit` test category (according to
test/README)
Change-type: patch