Awesome
Fauxhai-ng
Note: fauxhai-ng is an updated version of the original fauxhai gem. The CLI and library namespaces have not changed, but you will want to update to use the new gem.
Fauxhai is a gem for mocking out ohai data in your chef testing. Fauxhai is community supported, so we need your help to populate our dataset. Here's an example for testing my "awesome_cookbook" on Ubuntu 20.04:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(platform: 'ubuntu', version: '20.04')
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
Alternatively, you can pull "real" Ohai data from an existing server:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.fetch(host: 'server01.example.com')
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
Important Note
Fauxhai ships with a command line tool - fauxhai
. This is not the same as Fauxhai.mock. Running fauxhai
on a machine effectively runs ohai
, but then sanitizes the data, removing/replacing things like:
- users
- ssh keys
- usernames in paths
- sensitive system information
fauxhai
should only be used by developers wishing to submit a new json file.
Platform and Versions
For a complete list of platforms and versions available for mocking via Fauxhai see PLATFORMS.MD in this repository.
Usage
Fauxhai provides a bunch of default attributes so that you don't need to mock out your entire infrastructure to write a simple test. That being said, not all configurations will suit your needs. Because of that, Fauxhai provides two ways to configure your mocks:
Overriding
Fauxhai.mock
will also accept a block with override attributes that are merged with all the default attributes. For example, the default Ubuntu 12.04 mock uses Ruby 1.9.3
. Maybe your system is using ree
, and you want to verify that the cookbooks work with that data as well:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(platform: 'ubuntu', version: '12.04') do |node|
node['languages']['ruby']['version'] = 'ree'
end
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
The node
block variable allows you to set any Ohai attribute on the mock that you want. This provides an easy way to manage your environments. If you find that you are overriding attributes like OS or platform, you should see the section on Contributing.
Fetching
Alternatively, if you do not want to mock the data, Fauxhai provides a fetch
mechanism for collecting "real" Ohai data from a remote server or local file. Maybe you want to test against the fully-replicated environment for a front-facing server in your pool. Just pass in the url
option instead of a platform
:
The fetch
method supports all the same options as the Net-SSH command, such as :user
, :password
, :key_file
, etc.
The fetch
method will cache the JSON file in a temporary path on your local machine. Similar to gems like VCR, this allows Fauxhai to use the cached copy, making your test suite run faster. You can optionally force a cache miss by passing the :force_cache_miss => true
option to the fetch
initializer. Because this is real data, there may be a security concern. Secure your laptop accordingly.
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.fetch(host: 'server01.example.com')
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
This will ssh into the machine (you must have authorization to run sudo ohai
on that machine), download a copy of the Ohai output, and optionally cache that data inside the test directory (speeding up future tests).
Overriding + Fetching
As you might expect, you can combine overriding and fetching like so:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.fetch(host: 'server01.example.com') do |node|
node['languages']['ruby']['version'] = 'ree'
end
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
Fixturing
If you want to use Fauxhai as "fixture" data, you can store real JSON in your project and use the :path
option:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(path: 'fixtures/my_node.json')
end
end
Overriding + Fixturing
You can also change specific attributes in your fixture:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(path: 'fixtures/my_node.json') do |node|
node['languages']['ruby']['version'] = 'ree'
end
end
end
Disabling Fetching from Github
On environments that does not have access to the internet, you can disable fetching Fauxhai data from GitHub as follow:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(platform: 'ubuntu', version: '12.04', github_fetching: false)
end
end
Testing Multiple Versions
It's a common use case to test multiple version of the same operating system. Here's a simple example to get your started. This is more rspec-related that Fauxhai related, but here ya go:
require 'chefspec'
describe 'awesome_cookbook::default' do
['18.04', '20.04'].each do |version|
context "on Ubuntu #{version}" do
before do
Fauxhai.mock(platform: 'ubuntu', version: version)
end
it 'should install awesome' do
@runner = ChefSpec::ChefRunner.new.converge('tmpreaper::default')
expect(@runner).to install_package 'awesome'
end
end
end
end
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md.