gi-gio-2.0.25: Gio bindings
CopyrightWill Thompson Iñaki García Etxebarria and Jonas Platte
LicenseLGPL-2.1
MaintainerIñaki García Etxebarria
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

Description

A helper class for testing code which uses D-Bus without touching the user's session bus.

Note that TestDBus modifies the user’s environment, calling setenv(). This is not thread-safe, so all TestDBus calls should be completed before threads are spawned, or should have appropriate locking to ensure no access conflicts to environment variables shared between TestDBus and other threads.

Creating unit tests using GTestDBus

Testing of D-Bus services can be tricky because normally we only ever run D-Bus services over an existing instance of the D-Bus daemon thus we usually don't activate D-Bus services that are not yet installed into the target system. The TestDBus object makes this easier for us by taking care of the lower level tasks such as running a private D-Bus daemon and looking up uninstalled services in customizable locations, typically in your source code tree.

The first thing you will need is a separate service description file for the D-Bus daemon. Typically a services subdirectory of your tests directory is a good place to put this file.

The service file should list your service along with an absolute path to the uninstalled service executable in your source tree. Using autotools we would achieve this by adding a file such as my-server.service.in in the services directory and have it processed by configure. > > [D-BUS Service] > Name=org.gtk.GDBus.Examples.ObjectManager > Exec=abs_top_builddirgiotests/gdbus-example-objectmanager-server

You will also need to indicate this service directory in your test fixtures, so you will need to pass the path while compiling your test cases. Typically this is done with autotools with an added preprocessor flag specified to compile your tests such as: > > -DTEST_SERVICES=""$(abs_top_builddir)testsservices""

Once you have a service definition file which is local to your source tree, you can proceed to set up a GTest fixture using the TestDBus scaffolding.

An example of a test fixture for D-Bus services can be found here: gdbus-test-fixture.c

Note that these examples only deal with isolating the D-Bus aspect of your service. To successfully run isolated unit tests on your service you may need some additional modifications to your test case fixture. For example; if your service uses GSettings and installs a schema then it is important that your test service not load the schema in the ordinary installed location (chances are that your service and schema files are not yet installed, or worse; there is an older version of the schema file sitting in the install location).

Most of the time we can work around these obstacles using the environment. Since the environment is inherited by the D-Bus daemon created by TestDBus and then in turn inherited by any services the D-Bus daemon activates, using the setup routine for your fixture is a practical place to help sandbox your runtime environment. For the rather typical GSettings case we can work around this by setting GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR to the in tree directory holding your schemas in the above fixture_setup() routine.

The GSettings schemas need to be locally pre-compiled for this to work. This can be achieved by compiling the schemas locally as a step before running test cases, an autotools setup might do the following in the directory holding schemas: > > all-am: > $(GLIB_COMPILE_SCHEMAS) . > > CLEANFILES += gschemas.compiled

Since: 2.34

Synopsis

Exported types

newtype TestDBus Source #

Memory-managed wrapper type.

Constructors

TestDBus (ManagedPtr TestDBus) 

Instances

Instances details
Eq TestDBus Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

GObject TestDBus Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

Methods

gobjectType :: IO GType #

IsGValue TestDBus Source #

Convert TestDBus to and from GValue with toGValue and fromGValue.

Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

HasParentTypes TestDBus Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

type ParentTypes TestDBus Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

class (GObject o, IsDescendantOf TestDBus o) => IsTestDBus o Source #

Type class for types which can be safely cast to TestDBus, for instance with toTestDBus.

Instances

Instances details
(GObject o, IsDescendantOf TestDBus o) => IsTestDBus o Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.TestDBus

toTestDBus :: (MonadIO m, IsTestDBus o) => o -> m TestDBus Source #

Cast to TestDBus, for types for which this is known to be safe. For general casts, use castTo.

noTestDBus :: Maybe TestDBus Source #

A convenience alias for Nothing :: Maybe TestDBus.

Methods

Overloaded methods

addServiceDir

testDBusAddServiceDir Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> Text

path: path to a directory containing .service files

-> m () 

Add a path where dbus-daemon will look up .service files. This can't be called after testDBusUp.

down

testDBusDown Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> m () 

Stop the session bus started by testDBusUp.

This will wait for the singleton returned by busGet or busGetSync is destroyed. This is done to ensure that the next unit test won't get a leaked singleton from this test.

getBusAddress

testDBusGetBusAddress Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> m (Maybe Text)

Returns: the address of the bus, or Nothing.

Get the address on which dbus-daemon is running. If testDBusUp has not been called yet, Nothing is returned. This can be used with dBusConnectionNewForAddress.

getFlags

testDBusGetFlags Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> m [TestDBusFlags]

Returns: the value of TestDBus:flags property

Get the flags of the TestDBus object.

new

testDBusNew Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m) 
=> [TestDBusFlags]

flags: a TestDBusFlags

-> m TestDBus

Returns: a new TestDBus.

Create a new TestDBus object.

stop

testDBusStop Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> m () 

Stop the session bus started by testDBusUp.

Unlike testDBusDown, this won't verify the DBusConnection singleton returned by busGet or busGetSync is destroyed. Unit tests wanting to verify behaviour after the session bus has been stopped can use this function but should still call testDBusDown when done.

unset

testDBusUnset :: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m) => m () Source #

Unset DISPLAY and DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS env variables to ensure the test won't use user's session bus.

This is useful for unit tests that want to verify behaviour when no session bus is running. It is not necessary to call this if unit test already calls testDBusUp before acquiring the session bus.

up

testDBusUp Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsTestDBus a) 
=> a

self: a TestDBus

-> m () 

Start a dbus-daemon instance and set DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. After this call, it is safe for unit tests to start sending messages on the session bus.

If this function is called from setup callback of g_test_add(), testDBusDown must be called in its teardown callback.

If this function is called from unit test's main(), then testDBusDown must be called after testRun.

Properties

flags

TestDBusFlags specifying the behaviour of the D-Bus session.

Since: 2.34

constructTestDBusFlags :: IsTestDBus o => [TestDBusFlags] -> IO (GValueConstruct o) Source #

Construct a GValueConstruct with valid value for the “flags” property. This is rarely needed directly, but it is used by new.

getTestDBusFlags :: (MonadIO m, IsTestDBus o) => o -> m [TestDBusFlags] Source #

Get the value of the “flags” property. When overloading is enabled, this is equivalent to

get testDBus #flags