Testing: Configuration Tests
Testinfra tests verify the end state of the staging VMs. Any changes to the Ansible configuration should have a corresponding spectest.
Installation
pip install --no-deps --require-hashes -r securedrop/requirements/python3/develop-requirements.txt
Running the Config Tests
Testinfra tests are executed against a virtualized staging environment. To provision the environment and run the tests, run the following commands:
make build-debs
make staging
make testinfra
Test failure against any host will generate a report with informative output about the specific test that triggered the error. Molecule will also exit with a non-zero status code.
Updating the Config Tests
Changes to the Ansible config should result in failing config tests, but only if an existing task was modified. If you add a new task, make sure to add a corresponding spectest to validate that state after a new provisioning run. Tests import variables from separate YAML files than the Ansible playbooks:
molecule/testinfra/staging/vars/
├── app-prod.yml
├── app-staging.yml
├── mon-prod.yml
├── mon-staging.yml
└── staging.yml
Any variable changes in the Ansible config should have a corresponding
entry in these vars files. These vars are dynamically loaded for each
host via the molecule/testinfra/staging/conftest.py
file. Make sure to add
your tests to the relevant location for the host you plan to test:
molecule/testinfra/staging/app/
├── apache
│ ├── test_apache_journalist_interface.py
│ ├── test_apache_service.py
│ ├── test_apache_source_interface.py
│ └── test_apache_system_config.py
├── test_apparmor.py
├── test_appenv.py
├── test_network.py
└── test_ossec.py
In the example above, to add a new test for the app-staging
host,
add a new file to the testinfra/staging/app
directory.
Tip
Read Updating OSSEC Rules to learn how to write tests for the OSSEC rules.
Config Test Layout
With some exceptions, the config tests are broken up according to platform definitions in the Molecule configuration:
molecule/testinfra/staging
├── app
├── app-code
├── common
├── mon
├── ossec
└── vars
Ideally the config tests would be broken up according to roles, mirroring the Ansible configuration. Prior to the reorganization of the Ansible layout, the tests are rather tightly coupled to hosts. The layout of config tests is therefore subject to change.
Config Testing Strategy
The config tests currently emphasize testing implementation rather than functionality. This was a temporary measure to increase the testing baseline for validating the Ansible provisioning flow, which aided in migrating to a current version of Ansible (v2+). Now that the Ansible version is current, the config tests can be improved to validate behavior, such as confirming ports are blocked via external network calls, rather than simply checking that the iptables rules are formatted as expected.