Open sourcing Terratest: a swiss army knife for testing infrastructure code

Tools to test Terraform, Packer, Docker, AWS, and much more

Infrastructure as code (IaC) tools such as Terraform, Packer, and Docker offer a number of advantages: you can automate your entire provisioning and deployment process, you can store the state of your infrastructure in code (instead of a sysadmin’s head), you can use version control to track the history of how your infrastructure has changed, and so on. But there’s a catch: maintaining a large codebase of infrastructure code is hard. Most IaC tools are immature, modern architectures are complicated, and seemingly minor changes to infrastructure code sometimes cause severe bugs, such as wiping out a server, a database, or even an entire data center.

Here’s the hard truth: most teams are terrified of making changes to their infrastructure code.

The goal of Terratest is to change that. Terratest is a Go library that makes it easier to write automated tests for your infrastructure code. I won’t claim that writing these tests is actually easy—it’s takes a considerable amount of work to get them just right—but it’s worth the effort, because these tests can run after every commit and verify that the code works as expected, thereby giving you the confidence to make the code changes you need.

We developed Terratest at Gruntwork to help maintain the Infrastructure as Code Library, which contains over 250,000 lines of code written in Terraform, Go, Python, and Bash. This code is used in production by hundreds of companies, and Terratest is a big part of what makes it possible for our small team to maintain and support this codebase and our customers.

Today, we’re happy to announce that we are open sourcing Terratest under the Apache 2.0 license! You can find Terratest on GitHub.

Let’s take it for a spin.

Terratest intro

The basic usage pattern for writing automated tests with Terratest is to:

Write tests using Go’s built-in package testing: you create a file ending in _test.go and run tests with the go test command. E.g., go test my_test.go . Use Terratest to execute your real IaC tools (e.g., Terraform, Packer, etc.) to deploy real infrastructure (e.g., servers) in a real environment (e.g., AWS). Use the tools built into Terratest to validate that the infrastructure works correctly in that environment by making HTTP requests, API calls, SSH connections, etc. Undeploy everything at the end of the test.

To make this sort of testing easier, Terratest provides a variety of helper functions and patterns for common infrastructure testing tasks, such as testing Terraform code, testing Packer templates, testing Docker images, executing commands on servers over SSH, making HTTP requests, working with AWS APIs, and so on.

Example #1: Terraform

Let’s say you have the following (simplified) Terraform code to deploy a web server in AWS (if you’re new to Terraform, check out our Comprehensive Guide to Terraform):

provider "aws" {

region = "us-east-1"

} resource "aws_instance" "web_server" {

ami = "ami-43a15f3e" # Ubuntu 16.04

instance_type = "t2.micro"

vpc_security_group_ids = ["${aws_security_group.web_server.id}"] # Run a "Hello, World" web server on port 8080

user_data = <<-EOF

#!/bin/bash

echo "Hello, World" > index.html

nohup busybox httpd -f -p 8080 &

EOF

} # Allow the web app to receive requests on port 8080

resource "aws_security_group" "web_server" {

ingress {

from_port = 8080

to_port = 8080

protocol = "tcp"

cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]

}

}

value = "

} output "url" {value = " http://${aws_instance.web_server.public_ip}:8080

The code above deploys an EC2 Instance that is running an Ubuntu Amazon Machine Image (AMI). To keep this example simple, we specify a User Data script that, while the server is booting, fires up a dirt-simple web server that returns “Hello, World” on port 8080.

How can you test this code to be confident it works correctly? Well, let’s think about how you would test it manually:

Run terraform init and terraform apply to deploy into your AWS account. When apply finishes, the url output variable will show the URL of the web server. Open url in your web browser and make sure it says “Hello, World”. It can take 1–2 minutes for the server to boot up, so you may have to retry a few times. When you’re done testing, run terraform destroy to clean everything up.

Using Terratest, you can write an automated test that performs the exact same steps! Here’s what the code looks like:

func TestWebServer(t *testing.T) {

terraformOptions := &terraform.Options {

// The path to where your Terraform code is located

TerraformDir: "../web-server",

} // At the end of the test, run `terraform destroy`

defer terraform.Destroy(t, terraformOptions) // Run `terraform init` and `terraform apply`

terraform.InitAndApply(t, terraformOptions) // Run `terraform output` to get the value of an output variable

url := terraform.Output(t, terraformOptions, "url") // Verify that we get back a 200 OK with the expected text. It

// takes ~1 min for the Instance to boot, so retry a few times.

status := 200

text := "Hello, World"

retries := 15

sleep := 5 * time.Second http_helper.HttpGetWithRetry(t, url, status, text, retries, sleep)

}

The code above does all the steps we mentioned above, including running terraform init , terraform apply , making HTTP requests to the web server (retrying up to 15 times with 5 seconds between retries), and running terraform destroy (using defer to run it at the end of the test, whether the test succeeds or fails). If you put this code in a file called web_server_test.go , you can run it by executing go test , and you’ll see output that looks like this (truncated for readability):

$ go test -v === RUN TestWebServer

Running command terraform with args [init]

Initializing provider plugins... [...] Terraform has been successfully initialized! [...] Running command terraform with args [apply -auto-approve]

aws_instance.web_server: Creating...

ami: "" => "ami-43a15f3e"

associate_public_ip_address: "" => "<computed>"

availability_zone: "" => "<computed>"

ephemeral_block_device.#: "" => "<computed>"

instance_type: "" => "t2.micro"

key_name: "" => "<computed>" [...] Apply complete! Resources: 2 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. Outputs: url = http://52.67.41.31:8080 [...]

dial tcp 52.67.41.31:8080: getsockopt: connection refused.

Sleeping for 5s and will try again.

Making an HTTP GET call to URL

dial tcp 52.67.41.31:8080: getsockopt: connection refused.

Sleeping for 5s and will try again.

Making an HTTP GET call to URL

Success! Making an HTTP GET call to URL http://52.67.41.31:8080 dial tcp 52.67.41.31:8080: getsockopt: connection refused.Sleeping for 5s and will try again.Making an HTTP GET call to URL http://52.67.41.31:8080 dial tcp 52.67.41.31:8080: getsockopt: connection refused.Sleeping for 5s and will try again.Making an HTTP GET call to URL http://52.67.41.31:8080 Success! [...] Running command terraform with args [destroy -force -input=false] [...] Destroy complete! Resources: 2 destroyed.

--- PASS: TestWebServer (149.36s)

Success! Now, every time you make a change to this Terraform code, the test code can run and make sure your web server works as expected.

Example #2: Packer

The Terraform code in example #1 shoved all the web server code into User Data, which is fine for demonstration and learning purposes, but not what you’d actually do in the real world. For example, let’s say you wanted to run a Node.js app, such as the one below in server.js , which listens on port 8080 and responds to requests with “Hello, World”:

const http = require('http'); const hostname = '0.0.0.0';

const port = 8080; const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {

res.statusCode = 200;

res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/plain');

res.end('Hello World!

');

});

console.log(`Server running at

}); server.listen(port, hostname, () => {console.log(`Server running at http://${hostname}:${port}/` );});

How can you run this Node.js app on an EC2 Instance? One option is to use Packer to create a custom AMI that has this app installed. Here’s a Packer template that installs Node.js and server.js on top of Ubuntu:



"builders": [{

"ami_name": "node-example-{{isotime | clean_ami_name}}",

"instance_type": "t2.micro",

"region": "us-east-1",

"type": "amazon-ebs",

"source_ami": "ami-43a15f3e",

"ssh_username": "ubuntu"

}],

"provisioners": [{

"type": "shell",

"inline": [

"curl

"sudo apt-get install -y nodejs"

]

},{

"type": "file",

"source": "{{template_dir}}/server.js",

"destination": "/home/ubuntu/server.js"

}]

} "builders": [{"ami_name": "node-example-{{isotime | clean_ami_name}}","instance_type": "t2.micro","region": "us-east-1","type": "amazon-ebs","source_ami": "ami-43a15f3e","ssh_username": "ubuntu"}],"provisioners": [{"type": "shell","inline": ["curl https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_8.x | sudo -E bash -","sudo apt-get install -y nodejs"},{"type": "file","source": "{{template_dir}}/server.js","destination": "/home/ubuntu/server.js"}]

If you put the code above into web-server.json , you can create an AMI by running packer build web-server.json :

$ packer build web-server.json ==> amazon-ebs: Prevalidating AMI Name...

==> amazon-ebs: Creating temporary security group for instance...

==> amazon-ebs: Authorizing access to port 22 ...

==> amazon-ebs: Launching a source AWS instance... [...] Build 'amazon-ebs' finished. ==> Builds finished. The artifacts of successful builds are:

--> amazon-ebs: AMIs were created: us-east-1: ami-3505b64a

At the end of your build, you get a new AMI ID. Let’s update the Terraform code from example #1 to expose an ami_id variable that lets you specify the AMI to deploy and update the User Data script to run the Node.js app:

provider "aws" {

region = "us-east-1"

} resource "aws_instance" "web_server" {

ami = "${var.ami_id}"

instance_type = "t2.micro"

vpc_security_group_ids = ["${aws_security_group.web_server.id}"] # Run the Node app

user_data = <<-EOF

#!/bin/bash

nohup node /home/ubuntu/server.js &

EOF

} # Allow the web app to receive requests on port 8080

resource "aws_security_group" "web_server" {

ingress {

from_port = 8080

to_port = 8080

protocol = "tcp"

cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]

}

} variable "ami_id" {

description = "The ID of the AMI to deploy"

}

value = "

} output "url" {value = " http://${aws_instance.web_server.public_ip}:8080

(Note: the User Data script above is still very simplified. In a real-world use case, you’d probably want to run your Node app with a process supervisor such as systemd and configure it to use all cores on the server using the cluster module).

So how can you test this Packer template and the Terraform code? Well, if you were doing it manually, you’d:

Run packer build to build a new AMI. Plug the AMI ID into the ami_id variable of the Terraform code. Test the Terraform code as before: run terraform init , terraform apply , open the web server URL in the browser, etc.

Once again, you can automate this process with Terratest! To build the AMI using Packer and pass the ID of that AMI to Terraform as the ami_id variable, just add the following to the top of the test code from example #1:

packerOptions := &packer.Options {

// The path to where the Packer template is located

Template: "../web-server/web-server.json",

} // Build the AMI

amiId := packer.BuildAmi(t, packerOptions) terraformOptions := &terraform.Options {

// The path to where your Terraform code is located

TerraformDir: "../web-server", // Variables to pass to our Terraform code using -var options

Vars: map[string]interface{} {

"ami_id": amiId,

},

}

And that’s it! The rest of the test code is exactly the same. When you run go test , Terratest will build your AMI, run terraform init , terraform apply , make HTTP requests to the web server, etc.

Give it a shot!

The above is just a small taste of what you can do with Terratest. To learn more:

Check out the examples folder and the corresponding automated tests for those examples in the test folder for fully working (and tested!) sample code. Browse through the list of Terratest packages to get a sense of all the tools available in Terratest. Read our Testing Best Practices Guide. Check out real-world examples of Terratest usage in our open source infrastructure modules: Consul, Vault, Nomad.

Happy testing!

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