execution with remotes

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Thomas Levine 2016-04-08 20:41:53 +00:00
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When Urchin runs a directory of files, it goes through the following
steps.
1. Head
2. Test
3. Foot
4. Reporting
Urchin stores files in a temporary directory, creating a new directory
on each invocation. The directory contains these things.
* head (file)
* test (file)
* foot (file)
* stdout (directory)
When run on remotes, the temporary directory corresponding to the local
master process additionally has these files.
* remote-test
Messages from the head, test, and foot steps go in the corresponding
files. In the head and foot phases, messages are just simple prints.
Messages from the test phase always correspond to a particular test
file, and they are written to the test file in a delimiter-separated
format.
Stdout and stderr from test runs are written to files in the stdout
directory, one file per test file per shell that the file is run in.
In most cases Urchin begins printing to the screen only during the
reporting phase. The only case where anything is printed beforehand is
when Urchin is run with -vvvv; that sets "+x", so the commands are
printed as they run, though all other output is still suppressed.
Test results are reported in the reporting phase. Four output formats
are available.
* Urchin's human-readable format (default)
* Test Anything Protocol
* Delimiter-separated values (used internally)
* Remote Urchin worker output
When Urchin runs tests on a remote, it copies tests to the remote and
then calls Urchin with "--format=remote". This specifies the following.
* The temporary directory should be kept, rather than deleted, after
Urchin runs.
* The path of the temporary directory should be printed as output.
* No other output should be printed to stdout.
After the remote Urchin finishes running, the local urchin downloads
the remote Urchin's test log file from the temporary directory.
It modifies the file to include the remote's name and then concatenates
the result to the "remote-test" file in the local temporary directory.
For example, the file from the remote might look like this,
sh:Counting tests/.test/faila:0:not_ok
and the result might look like this.
sh on nsa:Counting tests/.test/faila:0:not_ok