Wednesday 5 September 2012

Infinispan Arquillian Container 1.0.0.CR1 released

Infinispan Arquillian Container is an extension to Arquillian that provides several ways to interact with Infinispan, either with a standalone Infinispan server or just with Infinispan libraries. This extension can also communicate with JBoss Data Grid server via JMX.

It was released as Maven artifacts in JBoss Maven Repository. It is located at http://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/groups/public-jboss/ . More information on how to set up and use the repo can be found at https://community.jboss.org/wiki/MavenGettingStarted-Users

What does this Arquillian extension offer to you? Let me describe all aspects of this extension one by one.

Developing tests with standalone Infinispan server


When testing, you might want to automatically start the Infinispan server before the test and stop it afterwards. This can be achieved by configuring infinispan-arquillian-container via Arquillian's configuration file. The following is a subset of attributes that can be specified and thus passed to the Infinispan server during startup: masterThreads, workerThreads, cacheConfig, jmxPort, ... The complete list can be found in bit.ly/R7j4d1 (all private fields).


NOTE: Examples are not a part of the release, only libraries are. In order to check out examples provided with the project, one has to clone project's repository: https://github.com/mgencur/infinispan-arquillian-container Examples are located in the respective sub-directory.

The configuration file then looks similar to the following:

Whether these two Infinispan servers are clustered or not depends on the configuration passed to them via cacheConfig (file path) attribute or their default configuration (when no config. file is passed). The configuration in arquillian.xml file just says: "Start these two instances with whatever configuration is passed to them".

Complete example: bit.ly/RkrpEE

When we tell Arquillian to work with Infinispan server, we can inject RemoteInfinispanServer object into our test. Such an object provides various information about the running Infinispan server. For example, we can retrieve a hostname and HotRod port and use these pieces of information to create a RemoteCacheManager instance. Besides that users are allowed to retrieve information available via JMX from the server like cluster size, number of entries in the cache, number of cache hits and many more.

Complete example: http://bit.ly/OaCw8q

Vital dependencies required for the test to run are:

org.infinispan.arquillian.container:infinispan-arquillian-container-managed:jar:1.0.0.CR1:test
org.infinispan.arquillian.container:infinispan-arquillian-impl:jar:1.0.0.CR1:test

Not only with standalone Infinispan server can Infinispan Arquillian extension work.

Developing tests with JBoss Data Grid (JDG) server


This time, the properties in Arquillian's configuration file are different and correspond to properties of JBoss Application Server 7. The most important property is again the path to the server (jbossHome).

Are you interested in what the test looks like? It looks completely the same as tests for standalone Infinispan server, you just have a few more attributes available. JDG server usually starts all three endpoints (HotRod, Memcached, REST) at the same time while for the Infinispan server you have to specify which end point should be started. Furthermore, Infinispan server does not have the REST endpoint available out-of-the-box.

As a result, you can call the following methods with JDG in one single test.

server1.getMemcachedEndpoint().getPort();
server1.getRESTEndpoint().getContextPath();
server1.getHotRodEndpoint().getPort();

The difference is, of course in dependencies. Instead of a handler for standalone Infinispan server, one has to use a handler for JBoss AS 7. The dependencies then look like this:

org.jboss.as:jboss-as-arquillian-container-managed:jar:7.1.2.Final:test
org.infinispan.arquillian.container:infinispan-arquillian-impl:jar:1.0.0.CR1:test


Testing Infinispan libraries


Sometimes we don't want to use a standalone server. Sometimes we want to test just Infinispan in its basic form - Java libraries. Infinispan has been under development for years and during that time, lots of tests were developed. With tests come utility methods. Infinispan Arquillian Container enables you to leverage these utility methods and call them via an instance of DatagridManager. This instance can be easily injected into a test, no matter which test framework (TestNG, JUnit) you use.

DatagridManager class can be found at http://bit.ly/Q0a7ki

Can you see the advantage? No? Let me point out some useful methods available in the manager.

List<Cache<K, V>> createClusteredCaches(int numMembersInCluster, String cacheName, ConfigurationBuilder builder)

- creates a cluster of caches with certain name and pre-defined configuration

void waitForClusterToForm()

- helps to wait until the cluster is up and running

Cache<A, B> cache(int index)

- retrieves a cache from certain node according to the index

Cache<A, B> cache(int managerIndex, String cacheName)

- retrieves a cache with that name

void killMember(int cacheIndex)

- kills a cache with cacheIndex index

AdvancedCache advancedCache(int i)

- retrieves an advanced cache from node i

Trancation tx(int i)

- retrieves a transaction from node i

TransactionManager tm(int i)

- retrieves a transaction manager from node i

...and much more.


The following test can be found among other examples in the GIT repository.

Required dependencies:

org.infinispan:infinispan-core:jar:5.1.5.FINAL:test  -  users should replace this version with the one they want to test
org.infinispan.arquillian.container:infinispan-arquillian-impl:jar:1.0.0.CR1:test

Infinispan Arquillian Container was tested with Infinispan 5.1.5.FINAL and JDG 6.0.0.GA. Nevertheless, it should work smoothly also with other not-very-distinct versions. I'll be updating the project to work with newer versions of both Infinispan and JBoss Data Grid.
 

1 comment:

  1. The Infinispan Arquillian Container artifacts have propagated to the central maven repository so there is no need to setup the JBoss maven repo.

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