# irctest This project aims at testing interoperability of software using the IRC protocol, by running them against test suites and making different software communicate with each other. It is very young and does not contain a lot of test cases yet. ## The big picture This project contains: * IRC protocol test cases * small wrappers around existing software to run tests on them Wrappers run software in temporary directories, so running `irctest` should have no side effect, with [the exception of Sopel](https://github.com/sopel-irc/sopel/issues/946). ## Prerequisites Install irctest and dependencies: ``` git clone https://github.com/ProgVal/irctest.git cd irctest pip3 install --user -r requirements.txt pyxmpp2-scram python3 setup.py install --user ``` Add `~/.local/bin/` (and/or `~/.local/bin/` for Oragono) to your `PATH` if it is not. ``` export PATH=$HOME/.local/bin/:$HOME/go/bin/:$PATH ``` ## Using pytest irctest is invoked using the pytest test runner / CLI. You can usually invoke it with `python3 -m pytest` command; which can often be called by the `pytest` or `pytest-3` commands (if not, alias them if you are planning to use them often). The rest of this README assumes `pytest` works. ## Test selection A major feature of pytest that irctest heavily relies on is test selection. Using the `-k` option, you can select and deselect tests based on their names and/or markers (listed in `pytest.ini`). For example, you can run `LUSERS`-related tests with `-k lusers`. Or only tests based on RFC1459 with `-k rfc1459`. By default, all tests run; even niche ones. So you probably always want to use these options: `-k 'not Oragono and not deprecated and not strict`. This excludes: * `Oragono`-specific tests (included as Oragono uses irctest as its official integration test suite) * tests for deprecated specifications, such as the IRCv3 METADATA specification * tests that check for a strict interpretation of a specification, when the specification is ambiguous. ## Run tests To run (server) tests on Oragono: ``` cd /tmp/ git clone https://github.com/oragono/oragono.git cd oragono/ make build make install cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.oragono -k 'not deprecated' ``` To run (server) tests on Charybdis:: ``` cd /tmp/ git clone https://github.com/atheme/charybdis.git cd charybdis ./configure --prefix=$HOME/.local/ make -j 4 make install cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.charybdis -k 'not Oragono and not deprecated and not strict' ``` To run (server) tests on InspIRCd: ``` cd /tmp/ git clone https://github.com/inspircd/inspircd.git cd inspircd ./configure --prefix=$HOME/.local/ --development make -j 4 make install cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.inspircd -k 'not Oragono and not deprecated and not strict' ``` To run (server) tests on Mammon: ``` pip3 install --user git+https://github.com/mammon-ircd/mammon.git cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.mammon -k 'not Oragono and not deprecated and not strict' ``` To run (client) tests on Limnoria: ``` pip3 install --user limnoria pyxmpp2-scram cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.limnoria ``` To run (client) tests on Sopel: ``` pip3 install --user sopel mkdir ~/.sopel/ cd ~/irctest pytest --controller irctest.controllers.sopel ``` ## What `irctest` is not 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.