Analyzing test run results

Testground outputs structure

Testground test plans emit outputs that you can collect and analyse after the test run concludes.

The outputs structure is as follows:

/
|___ <group id> (coming from the composition)
|      |____ <instance id or index>
|                     |__ run.out
|                     |__ run.err
|                     |__ ...
|                     |__ dht_events.json
|                     |__ heap.out
|                     |__ cpuprofile01.out
|                     |__ cpuprofile02.out
|                     |__ cpuprofile03.out
|      |____ <instance id or index>
|      |____ <instance id or index>
|___ <group id> (coming from the composition)
|      |____ <instance id or index>
|      |____ <instance id or index>

How to collect Testground outputs

The logic for outputs collection is runner-dependent, e.g.

  • the cluster:k8s runner will download from AWS EFS.

  • the local:docker runner will fetch the outputs from the $TESTGROUND_HOME directory.

$ testground collect --runner=local:docker <run-id>

$ tar -xzvf <run-id>.tgz

Testground also supports automatic outputs collection after a testplan run completes, with the --collect flag, which instructs the Testground client to download the outputs in the current working directory after the run concludes.

$ testground run single \
                 --plan=network \
                 --testcase=ping-pong \
                 --builder=docker:go \
                 --runner=local:docker \
                 --instances=2 \
                 --wait \
                 --collect

...

>>> Result:

INFO    finished run with ID: 975b9bc15b3b

>>> Result:

INFO    created file: 975b9bc15b3b.tgz

Processing the Testground outputs

At the moment Testground doesn't provide any tools for post-processing of outputs. You are free to submit ideas and pull requests and contribute to this feature.

One way to review all messages sent to stdout by test plan instances, is with the following command:

$ cd <run-id>

$ find . | grep run.out | xargs awk '{print FILENAME, " >>> ", $0 }'

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