This project aims at testing interoperability of software using the IRC protocol, by running them against common test suites.
It is also used while editing the "Modern" specification to check behavior of a large selection of servers at once.
This project contains:
- IRC protocol test cases, primarily checking conformance to the "Modern" specification and IRCv3 extensions, but also RFC 1459 and RFC 2812. Most of them are for servers but also some for clients. Only the client-server protocol is tested; server-server protocols are out of scope.
- Small wrappers around existing software to run tests on them. So far this is restricted to headless software (servers, service packages, and clients bots).
Wrappers run software in temporary directories, so running irctest
should
have no side effect.
Test results for the latest version of each supported software, and respective logs, are published daily.
Install irctest and dependencies:
sudo apt install faketime # Optional, but greatly speeds up irctest/server_tests/list.py
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/progval/irctest.git
cd irctest
pip3 install --user -r requirements.txt
Add ~/.local/bin/
(and/or ~/go/bin/
for Ergo)
to your PATH
if it is not.
export PATH=$HOME/.local/bin/:$HOME/go/bin/:$PATH
irctest is invoked using the pytest test runner / CLI.
You can usually invoke it with python3 -m pytest
command; which can often
be called by the pytest
or pytest-3
commands (if not, alias them if you
are planning to use them often).
After installing pytest-xdist
, you can also pass pytest
the -n 10
option
to run 10
tests in parallel.
The rest of this README assumes pytest
works.
A major feature of pytest that irctest heavily relies on is test selection.
Using the -k
option, you can select and deselect tests based on their names
For example, you can run LUSERS
-related tests with -k lusers
.
Using the -m
option, you can select and deselect and them based on their markers
(listed in pytest.ini
).
For example, you can run only tests based on RFC1459 with -m rfc1459
.
By default, all tests run; even niche ones. So you probably always want to
use these options: -m 'not Ergo and not deprecated and not strict
.
This excludes:
Ergo
-specific tests (included as Ergo uses irctest as its official integration test suite)- tests for deprecated specifications, such as the IRCv3 METADATA specification
- tests that check for a strict interpretation of a specification, when the specification is ambiguous.
This list is non-exhaustive, see workflows.yml
for software not listed here.
If software you want to test is not listed their either, please open an issue
or pull request to add support for it.
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/ergochat/ergo.git
cd ergo/
make install
cd ~/irctest
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.ergo -k 'not deprecated'
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/solanum-ircd/solanum.git
cd solanum
./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=$HOME/.local/
make -j 4
make install
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.solanum -k 'not Ergo and not deprecated and not strict'
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/inspircd/inspircd.git
cd inspircd
# Optional, makes tests run considerably faster. Pick one depending on the InspIRCd version:
# on Insp3 <= 3.16.0 and Insp4 <= 4.0.0a21:
patch src/inspircd.cpp < ~/irctest/patches/inspircd_mainloop.patch
# on Insp3 >= 3.17.0 and Insp4 >= 4.0.0a22:
export CXXFLAGS=-DINSPIRCD_UNLIMITED_MAINLOOP
./configure --prefix=$HOME/.local/ --development
make -j 4
make install
cd ~/irctest
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.inspircd -k 'not Ergo and not deprecated and not strict'
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/unrealircd/unrealircd.git
cd unrealircd
./Config # This will ask a few questions, answer them.
make -j 4
make install
cd ~/irctest
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.unreal -k 'not Ergo and not deprecated and not strict'
Besides Ergo (that has built-in services) and Sable (that ships its own services), most server controllers can optionally run service packages.
You can install it with
sudo apt install atheme-services
and add this to the pytest
call:
--services-controller irctest.controllers.atheme_services
Build with:
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/anope/anope.git
cd anope
./Config # This will ask a few questions, answer them.
make -C build -j 4
make -C build install
and add this to the pytest
call:
--services-controller irctest.controllers.anope_services
pip3 install --user limnoria pyxmpp2-scram
cd ~/irctest
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.limnoria
pip3 install --user sopel
mkdir ~/.sopel/
cd ~/irctest
pytest --controller irctest.controllers.sopel
A formal proof that a given software follows any of the IRC specification, or anything near that.
At best, irctest
can help you find issues in your software, but it may
still have false positives (because it does not implement itself a
full-featured client/server, so it supports only “usual” behavior).
Bug reports for false positives are welcome.