Files
scylladb/test/boost
Avi Kivity f5eb99f149 test: bump multishard_query_test querier_cache TTL to 60s to avoid flake
Three test cases in multishard_query_test.cc set the querier_cache entry
TTL to 2s and then assert, between pages of a stateful paged query, that
cached queriers are still present (population >= 1) and that
time_based_evictions stays 0.

The 2s TTL is not load-bearing for what these tests exercise — they are
checking the paging-cache handoff, not TTL semantics. But on busy CI
runners (SCYLLADB-1642 was observed on aarch64 release), scheduling
jitter between saving a reader and sampling the population can exceed
2s. When that happens, the TTL fires, both saved queriers are
time-evicted, population drops to 0, and the assertion
`require_greater_equal(saved_readers, 1u)` fails. The trailing
`require_equal(time_based_evictions, 0)` check never runs because the
earlier assertion has already aborted the iteration — which is why the
Jenkins failure surfaces only as a bare "C++ failure at seastar_test.cc:93".

Reproduced deterministically in test_read_with_partition_row_limits by
injecting a `seastar::sleep(2500ms)` between the save and the sample:
the hook then reports
  population=0 inserts=2 drops=0 time_based_evictions=2 resource_based_evictions=0
and the assertion fires — matching the Jenkins symptoms exactly.

Bump the TTL to 60s in all three affected tests:

  - test_read_with_partition_row_limits (confirmed repro for SCYLLADB-1642)
  - test_read_all                       (same pattern, same invariants — suspect)
  - test_read_all_multi_range           (same pattern, same invariants — suspect)

Leave test_abandoned_read (1s TTL, actually tests TTL-driven eviction)
and test_evict_a_shard_reader_on_each_page (tests manual eviction via
evict_one(); its TTL is not load-bearing but the fix is deferred for a
separate review) unchanged.

Fixes: SCYLLADB-1642

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>

Closes scylladb/scylladb#29564
2026-04-22 09:48:59 +03:00
..
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00
2026-04-17 20:58:39 +03:00
2026-04-12 19:46:33 +03:00

Scylla unit tests using C++ and the Boost test framework

The source files in this directory are Scylla unit tests written in C++ using the Boost.Test framework. These unit tests come in three flavors:

  1. Some simple tests that check stand-alone C++ functions or classes use Boost's BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE.

  2. Some tests require Seastar features, and need to be declared with Seastar's extensions to Boost.Test, namely SEASTAR_TEST_CASE.

  3. Even more elaborate tests require not just a functioning Seastar environment but also a complete (or partial) Scylla environment. Those tests use the do_with_cql_env() or do_with_cql_env_thread() function to set up a mostly-functioning environment behaving like a single-node Scylla, in which the test can run.

While we have many tests of the third flavor, writing new tests of this type should be reserved to white box tests - tests where it is necessary to inspect or control Scylla internals that do not have user-facing APIs such as CQL. In contrast, black-box tests - tests that can be written only using user-facing APIs, should be written in one of newer test frameworks that we offer - such as test/cqlpy or test/alternator (in Python, using the CQL or DynamoDB APIs respectively) or test/cql (using textual CQL commands), or - if more than one Scylla node is needed for a test - using the test/topology* framework.

Running tests

Because these are C++ tests, they need to be compiled before running. To compile a single test executable row_cache_test, use a command like

ninja build/dev/test/boost/row_cache_test

You can also use ninja dev-test to build all C++ tests, or use ninja deb-build to build the C++ tests and also the full Scylla executable (however, note that full Scylla executable isn't needed to run Boost tests).

Replace "dev" by "debug" or "release" in the examples above and below to use the "debug" build mode (which, importantly, compiles the test with ASAN and UBSAN enabling on and helps catch difficult-to-catch use-after-free bugs) or the "release" build mode (optimized for run speed).

To run an entire test file row_cache_test, including all its test functions, use a command like:

build/dev/test/boost/row_cache_test -- -c1 -m1G 

to run a single test function test_reproduce_18045() from the longer test file, use a command like:

build/dev/test/boost/row_cache_test -t test_reproduce_18045 -- -c1 -m1G 

In these command lines, the parameters before the -- are passed to Boost.Test, while the parameters after the -- are passed to the test code, and in particular to Seastar. In this example Seastar is asked to run on one CPU (-c1) and use 1G of memory (-m1G) instead of hogging the entire machine. The Boost.Test option -t test_reproduce_18045 asks it to run just this one test function instead of all the test functions in the executable.

Unfortunately, interrupting a running test with control-C while doesn't work. This is a known bug (#5696). Kill a test with SIGKILL (-9) if you need to kill it while it's running.

Boost tests can also be run using test.py - which is a script that provides a uniform way to run all tests in scylladb.git - C++ tests, Python tests, etc.

Execution with pytest

To run all tests with pytest execute

pytest test/boost

To execute all tests in one file, provide the path to the source filename as a parameter

pytest test/boost/aggregate_fcts_test.cc

Since it's a normal path, autocompletion works in the terminal out of the box.

To execute only one test function, provide the path to the source file and function name

pytest --mode dev test/boost/aggregate_fcts_test.cc::test_aggregate_avg

To provide a specific mode, use the next parameter --mode dev, if parameter isn't provided pytest tries to use ninja mode_list to find out the compiled modes.

Parallel execution is controlled by pytest-xdist and the parameter -n auto. This command starts tests with the number of workers equal to CPU cores. The useful command to discover the tests in the file or directory is

pytest --collect-only -q --mode dev test/boost/aggregate_fcts_test.cc

That will return all test functions in the file. To execute only one function from the test, you can invoke the output from the previous command. However, suffix for mode should be skipped. For example, output shows in the terminal something like this test/boost/aggregate_fcts_test.cc::test_aggregate_avg.dev. So to execute this specific test function, please use the next command

pytest --mode dev test/boost/aggregate_fcts_test.cc::test_aggregate_avg

Writing tests

Because of the large build time and build size of each separate test executable, it is recommended to put test functions into relatively large source files. But not too large - to keep compilation time of a single source file (during development) at reasonable levels.

When adding new source files in test/boost, don't forget to list the new source file in configure.py and also in CMakeLists.txt. The former is needed by our CI, but the latter is preferred by some developers.