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Location: kallithea/init.d/kallithea-daemon-redhat
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tests: remove race condition in test_forgot_password
One in so many times, test_forgot_password failed with:
kallithea/tests/functional/test_login.py:427: in test_forgot_password
assert '\n%s\n' % token in body
E assert ('\n%s\n' % 'd71ad3ed3c6ca637ad00b7098828d33c56579201') in
"Password Reset Request\n\nHello passwd reset,\n\nWe have received a
request to reset the password for your account.\n\nTo
s...7e89326ca372ade1d424dafb106d824cddb\n\nIf it weren't you who
requested the password reset, just disregard this message.\n"
i.e. the expected token is not the one in the email.
The token is calculated based on a timestamp (among others). And the token
is calculated twice: once in the real code and once in the test, each time
on a slightly different timestamp. Even though there is flooring of the
timestamp to a second resolution, there will always be a race condition
where the two timestamps floor to a different second, e.g. 4.99 vs 5.01.
The problem can be reproduced reliably by adding a sleep of e.g. 2 seconds
before generating the password reset mail (after the test has already
calculated the expected token).
Solve this problem by mocking the time.time() used to generate the
timestamp, so that the timestamp used for the real token is the same as the
one used for the expected token in the test.
One in so many times, test_forgot_password failed with:
kallithea/tests/functional/test_login.py:427: in test_forgot_password
assert '\n%s\n' % token in body
E assert ('\n%s\n' % 'd71ad3ed3c6ca637ad00b7098828d33c56579201') in
"Password Reset Request\n\nHello passwd reset,\n\nWe have received a
request to reset the password for your account.\n\nTo
s...7e89326ca372ade1d424dafb106d824cddb\n\nIf it weren't you who
requested the password reset, just disregard this message.\n"
i.e. the expected token is not the one in the email.
The token is calculated based on a timestamp (among others). And the token
is calculated twice: once in the real code and once in the test, each time
on a slightly different timestamp. Even though there is flooring of the
timestamp to a second resolution, there will always be a race condition
where the two timestamps floor to a different second, e.g. 4.99 vs 5.01.
The problem can be reproduced reliably by adding a sleep of e.g. 2 seconds
before generating the password reset mail (after the test has already
calculated the expected token).
Solve this problem by mocking the time.time() used to generate the
timestamp, so that the timestamp used for the real token is the same as the
one used for the expected token in the test.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 | #!/bin/sh
########################################
#### THIS IS A REDHAT INIT.D SCRIPT ####
########################################
##################################################
#
# Kallithea server startup script
# Recommended default-startup: 2 3 4 5
# Recommended default-stop: 0 1 6
#
##################################################
APP_NAME="kallithea"
# the location of your app
# since this is a web app, it should go in /var/www
APP_PATH="/var/www/$APP_NAME"
CONF_NAME="production.ini"
# write to wherever the PID should be stored, just ensure
# that the user you run gearbox as has the appropriate permissions
# same goes for the log file
PID_PATH="/var/run/kallithea/pid"
LOG_PATH="/var/log/kallithea/kallithea.log"
# replace this with the path to the virtual environment you
# made for Kallithea
PYTHON_PATH="/opt/python_virtualenvironments/kallithea-venv"
RUN_AS="kallithea"
DAEMON="$PYTHON_PATH/bin/gearbox"
DAEMON_OPTS="serve --daemon \
--user=$RUN_AS \
--group=$RUN_AS \
--pid-file=$PID_PATH \
--log-file=$LOG_PATH -c $APP_PATH/$CONF_NAME"
DESC="kallithea-server"
LOCK_FILE="/var/lock/subsys/$APP_NAME"
# source CentOS init functions
. /etc/init.d/functions
RETVAL=0
remove_pid () {
rm -f ${PID_PATH}
rmdir `dirname ${PID_PATH}`
}
ensure_pid_dir () {
PID_DIR=`dirname ${PID_PATH}`
if [ ! -d ${PID_DIR} ] ; then
mkdir -p ${PID_DIR}
chown -R ${RUN_AS}:${RUN_AS} ${PID_DIR}
chmod 755 ${PID_DIR}
fi
}
start_kallithea () {
ensure_pid_dir
PYTHON_EGG_CACHE="/tmp" daemon --pidfile $PID_PATH \
--user $RUN_AS "$DAEMON $DAEMON_OPTS"
RETVAL=$?
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch $LOCK_FILE
return $RETVAL
}
stop_kallithea () {
if [ -e $LOCK_FILE ]; then
killproc -p $PID_PATH
RETVAL=$?
rm -f $LOCK_FILE
rm -f $PID_PATH
else
RETVAL=1
fi
return $RETVAL
}
status_kallithea() {
if [ -e $LOCK_FILE ]; then
# exit with non-zero to indicate failure
RETVAL=1
else
RETVAL=0
fi
return $RETVAL
}
restart_kallithea () {
stop_kallithea
start_kallithea
RETVAL=$?
}
case "$1" in
start)
echo -n $"Starting $DESC: "
start_kallithea
echo
;;
stop)
echo -n $"Stopping $DESC: "
stop_kallithea
echo
;;
status)
status_kallithea
RETVAL=$?
if [ ! $RETVAL -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Kallithea server is running..."
else
echo "Kallithea server is stopped."
fi
;;
restart)
echo -n $"Restarting $DESC: "
restart_kallithea
echo
;;
*)
echo $"Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|status}"
RETVAL=1
;;
esac
exit $RETVAL
|