From: Gregory Maxwell <gmaxwell@gmail.com>
To: Adam Ritter <aritter@gmail.com>
Cc: Bitcoin Development <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Integration testing for BitCoin
Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2013 10:42:22 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAAS2fgT71s0EgF055wyqcCdXmMtY-=q0pQDh9P8pRgKJcELOQg@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAKuKjyUFBuPMPRV6R-u0iTa=8DWMN9vqdOxnr8o8kxg9rJtVBA@mail.gmail.com>
On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 10:24 AM, Adam Ritter <aritter@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> I just bought some BitCoins after being lazy to do it for the last few
> years, but also looked at the client code and the messages that are
> going on this mailing list.
> I saw that there are quite some unit tests, but I didn't find
> integration test for BitCoin, and I believe that it's quite important
> for the future of BitCoin (making the current code more stable,
> testing attack scenarios, refactoring and extending code).
[...]
> Tests that simulate multiple bitcoin users and can verify that the
> whole network of bitcoin clients work together
> to achieve the goals of Bitcoin. Also maybe [System
> testing](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_testing)
> would be a better name for the tests, but I'm not sure.
I prefer to call them system tests.
We use a system called blocktester that Matt Corallo wrote,
https://code.google.com/r/bluemattme-bitcoinj/source/browse/core/src/test/java/com/google/bitcoin/core/FullBlockTestGenerator.java?name=fullverif&r=874c5904b12d1fcec5b556429cf208f63cd4e1bc
It's based on BitcoinJ and works by simulating a peer against a
slightly instrumented copy of Bitcoin(d/-qt) (modified to avoid
computationally expensive mining). The tests simulates many
complicated network scenarios and tests the boundaries of many
(hopefully all) the particular rules of the blockchain validation
protocol. We can use these tests to compare different versions of the
reference software to each other and to bitcoinj (or other full node
implementations) as well as comparing them to our abstract
understanding of what we believe the rules of the protocol to be.
These tests are run as part of the automated tests on every proposed
patch to the reference software. Via a robot called pulltester which
comments on github requests and produces logs like this:
http://jenkins.bluematt.me/pull-tester/92a129980fb9b506da6c7f876aa8adb405c88e17/.
Pulltester also performs automatic code coverage measurements.
Additionally, we run a public secondary test bitcoin network called
'testnet', which can be accessed by anyone by starting the reference
software with testnet=1. Testnet operates the same as the production
network except it allows mining low difficulty blocks to prevent it
going for long times without blocks, and some of the protective
relaying rules against "non standard" transaction types are disabled.
Most of this testing work has been centered around validating the
blockchain behavior because thats what has serious systemic risk.
Measuring the json rpc behavior is strictly less interesting, though
interesting too.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2013-04-05 17:42 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-04-05 17:24 [Bitcoin-development] Integration testing for BitCoin Adam Ritter
2013-04-05 17:33 ` Matt Corallo
2013-04-05 17:42 ` Gregory Maxwell [this message]
2013-04-05 19:29 ` Adam Ritter
2013-04-06 12:21 ` Mike Hearn
2013-04-07 13:50 ` Adam Ritter
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