qpid-dispatch
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Mirror of Apache Qpid Dispatch
// Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one // or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file // distributed with this work for additional information // regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file // to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the // "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance // with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, // software distributed under the License is distributed on an // "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY // KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the // specific language governing permissions and limitations // under the License.
= Qpid Dispatch
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Qpid Dispatch is a high-performance, lightweight AMQP 1.0 message router. It provides flexible and scalable interconnect between any AMQP endpoints, whether they be clients, brokers or other AMQP-enabled services.
== Building and testing
NOTE: Dispatch will not build on Windows.
=== Dependencies
To build dispatch on a yum-based Linux system, you will need the following packages installed:
- qpid-proton-c-devel
- python3-qpid-proton
- cmake
- make
- gcc
- python3-devel
- cyrus-sasl-plain
- cyrus-sasl-devel
- asciidoc (for building docs)
- asciidoctor (for building docs)
To build formatted documentation (man pages, HTML, PDF) see the requirements in doc/README.adoc
=== Build
From the qpid-dispatch
directory:
[source,shell script]
$ mkdir my_build # or directory of your choice. $ cd my_build $ cmake .. $ make
=== Running The Tests
From the <build>
directory you can run all the system- and unit-tests with:
[source,shell script]
$ ctest -VV
ctest uses the script <build>/test/run.py
to set up the correct environment for
tests. You can use it to run tests individually from the <build>/tests
directory.
.Example [source,shell script]
$ ./run.py unit_tests_size 3 $ ./run.py -m unittest system_tests_qdstat
Run it without arguments to get a summary of how it can be used: [source,shell script]
$ ./run.py
=== Test-only dependencies
Websocket system tests use the Python websockets asyncio module.
.Install websockets [source,shell script]
pip3 install --user websockets
The system tests are implemented using Python's unittest library. This library is
used to run the tests by default. The tests can be also run using xmlrunner
or pytest
.
Pytest can generate a JUnit-compatible XML report containing an entry for each Python test method.
After running the tests, all XML reports will be found under tests/junitxmls in your build directory:
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DPYTHON_TEST_COMMAND='-m;pytest;-vs;--junit-xml=junitxmls/${py_test_module}.xml;--pyargs;${py_test_module}'
=== Runner for skrouterd
in tests
System tests can be configured to run skrouterd
processes with an arbitrary wrapper.
To do this, set the QDROUTERD_RUNNER
CMake option to a string that will be prepended before all skrouterd
invocations during testing.
The following example illustrates how to run the router under gdb
, to obtain a backtrace if the router crashes.
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DQDROUTERD_RUNNER="gdb -quiet -iex 'set pagination off' -iex 'set debuginfod enabled on' -ex run -ex 'thread apply all bt' -ex 'quit $_exitcode' --batch --args"
=== Test Suite Code Coverage (GNU tools only)
Use coverage analysis to ensure that all code paths are exercised by the test suite. To run the tests and perform code coverage analysis:
-
install the lcov package [source,shell script] $ yum install lcov
-
configure and build for the Coverage build type (from the
directory): [source,shell script] $ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Coverage .. && make -
run the test suite and generate the coverage html output [source,shell script] $ ctest && make coverage
-
then point your browser at
<build>/coverage_results/html/index.html
=== Clean build, install and test [source]
$ source config.sh; test.sh
WARNING: Any preexisting directories 'build' and 'install' will be deleted.
This script then does the following:
- Do a fresh cmake and make in directory 'build'
- Run unit tests (not system tests) in 'build'
- Do 'make install' into the directory 'install'
- Run system tests on the installation in 'install'.
=== Run Time Validation
The CTest test suite can be configured to enable extra run time validation checks against the dispatch router.
Since run time validation slows down qdrouter considerably it is disabled by default. It can be enabled by setting the RUNTIME_CHECK build flag via the cmake command.
NOTE: Depending on your environment the ctest suite may time out
if validation is enabled due to the additional run time overhead it
adds. You can extend the default test time via the ctest --timeout
option.
.Example [source,shell script]
ctest --timeout 1500 -VV
The Qpid Dispatch Router test suite supports the following run time validation tools:
==== Valgrind Memcheck Runs qdrouterd under Valgrind's memcheck leak checker during the CTest suite. This will cause tests to fail if a memory error is encountered. Use the grinder tool (in the bin directory) to create a summary of the errors found during the test run.
The valgrind toolset must be installed in order to use memcheck.
To enable memcheck set the RUNTIME_CHECK build flag to "memcheck":
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DRUNTIME_CHECK=memcheck
If valgrind detects errors the qdrouterd process will exit with an exit code of 42. This will be displayed in the CTest output. For example:
[source]
RuntimeError: Errors during teardown: Process XXXX error: exit code 42, expected 0
==== GCC/Clang Thread Sanitizer (TSAN) This option turns on extra run time threading verification.
NOTE: Applicable only to GCC versions >= 7.4 and Clang versions >= 6.0.
To enable the thread sanitizer set the RUNTIME_CHECK build flag to "tsan":
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DRUNTIME_CHECK=tsan
The TSAN library (libtsan) must be installed in order to use this option.
If threading violations are detected during the CTest suite the qdrouterd process will exit with an exit code of 66. This will be displayed in the CTest output. For example:
[source]
RuntimeError: Errors during teardown: Process XXXX error: exit code 66, expected 0
False positives can be suppressed via the tsan.supp
file in the tests
directory.
==== GCC/Clang Address Sanitizer (ASAN)
This option turns on extra run time memory verification, including leak checks.
NOTE: Applicable only to GCC versions >= 5.4 and Clang versions >= 6.0.
To enable the address sanitizer set the RUNTIME_CHECK build flag to "asan":
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DCMAKE_C_FLAGS=-DQD_MEMORY_DEBUG -DRUNTIME_CHECK=asan
On Aarch64, a hardware-assisted address sanitizer is enabled with "hwasan":
[source,shell script]
cmake .. -DCMAKE_C_FLAGS=-DQD_MEMORY_DEBUG -DRUNTIME_CHECK=hwasan
The ASAN (libasan) and UBSAN (libubsan) libraries must be installed in order to use this option.
NOTE: Memory pool will produce false leak reports unless QD_MEMORY_DEBUG
is also defined.
False positive leak errors can be suppressed via the lsan.supp file in the tests directory.
=== CMake Build Options
Use cmake-gui
to explore the CMake build options available.
Existing build directory can be opened with cmake-gui -S .. -B .
|=== |CMake option| Description
|-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=
|Dispatch defaults to building with the RelWithDebInfo
CMake preset.
Other options include Debug
(disables optimizations) and Coverage
.
|-DQD_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=
|Seting this to ON
enables asserts irrespective of CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
.
|-DCONSOLE_INSTALL=
|Web console will not be built if this is set to OFF
.
|-DRUNTIME_CHECK=
|Enables C/C++ runtime checkers.See "Run Time Validation" chapter above.
|-DCMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION=ON
|With CMake 3.9+, compiles the project with LTO (Link Time Optimization) enabled.
Older CMake will only honor this option with the Intel compiler on Linux.
|===