This project is the (almost) unvarnished varnishtest program, made available as a stand-alone program because it can be used to test all sorts of HTTP clients, servers and proxies.
If you want to join the fun, email me.
Poul-Henning
Date: Wed, 09 Jan 2019 10:36:14 +0000
From: Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@phk.freebsd.dk>
Subject: Re: vtest status
Personally I am not very keen on turning vtest into a "real" project with releases, package-building and all that, because it would cause me a lot of work which I don't think brings enough advantages.
The problem for me is that vtc_varnish has a very incestuos relationship with varnish internals, internals which we do not want to turn into documented or even open APIs, and that means that vtc_varnish and varnishd must match versions.
A stand-alone vtest-package would either need to be compiled against a specific version of varnish, or have some way to dynamically load vtc_varnish from from the varnish source/package it is being used against.
But that just moves the problem to the other side of the line, where we need to open the internals of vtest up as a documented and versioned API...
Some day (H3?) all that work may make sense, but I don't feel we are there yet, at least not as far as cost/benefit is concerned.
My suggestion for now, is to let vtest live as a "source code library" on github and not build and distribute it as stand-alone packages.
Instead it will be up to the projects which use it to import and build in their own projects.
That way HAproxy and leave vtc_varnish out of their compilation so varnish does not become a build-dependency (or you can conditionally compile vtc_varnish in, if it is already there.)
And we can compile it in Varnish including vtc_varnish, and include vtc_haproxy in similar fashion. (actually, compilation of vtc_haproxy does not need haproxy to be installed, does it ?)
We should still provide a Makefile in the vtest github project which compiles as much as possible (ie: vtc_varnish if it can find varnish installed), that will make work on the shared sources easier for all of us.
If we decide to do things that way, maybe you should call your compiled version something like "hatest", while we stick with "varnishtest", so we can reserve the "vtest" name for the future runtime-extensible all-singing-and-dancing thing ?
The initial source tree is generated by running the convert.sh
script over a Varnish-Cache trunk tree rev 7161dcf9d9f5380ffd.
- Detect content of config.h as required
- Autocrappery
EOF