Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Eizinger
86ada01828 fix(gui-client): initialise sentry-tracing for IPC service (#7363)
It was already a bit sus that we didn't receive as many errors in Sentry
from the IPC service as from the GUI client. Turns out that we forgot to
initialise our `sentry_layer` there. Additionally, we also didn't
initialise the `LogTracer`, meaning we didn't capture logs from the
`log` crate which is used by some of the dependencies, for example
`wintun`.
2024-11-18 22:40:01 +00:00
Thomas Eizinger
3b56664e02 test(rust): ensure deterministic proptests (#6319)
For quite a while now, we have been making extensive use of
property-based testing to ensure `connlib` works as intended. The idea
of proptests is that - given a certain seed - we deterministically
sample test inputs and assert properties on a given function.

If the test fails, `proptest` prints the seed which can then be added to
a regressions file to iterate on the test case and fix it. It is quite
obvious that non-determinism in how the test input gets generated is no
bueno and reduces the value we get out of these tests a fair bit.

The `HashMap` and `HashSet` data structures are known to be
non-deterministic in their iteration order. This causes non-determinism
during the input generation because we make use of a lot of maps and
sets to gradually build up the test input. We fix all uses of `HashMap`
and `HashSet` by replacing them with `BTreeMap` and `BTreeSet`.

To ensure this doesn't regress, we refactor `tunnel_test` to not make
use of proptest's macros and instead, we initialise and run the test
ourselves. This allows us to dump the sampled state and transitions into
a file per test run. In CI, we then run a 2nd iteration of all
regression tests and compare the sampled state and transitions with the
previous run. They must match byte-for-byte.

Finally, to discourage use of non-deterministic iteration, we ban the
use of the iteration functions on `HashMap` and `HashSet` across the
codebase. This doesn't catch iteration in a `for`-loop but it is better
than not linting against it at all.

---------

Signed-off-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
Co-authored-by: Reactor Scram <ReactorScram@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-08-16 23:15:58 +00:00
Thomas Eizinger
fb7f7c0b9a chore: apply lints consistently across workspace (#4357)
Motivated by: #4340.

I also activated
[`clippy::unnnecessary_wraps`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#/unnecessary_wraps)
which does create some false-positives for the platform-specific code
but is IMO overall a net-positive. With the amount of Rust code and
crates increasing, it is good to have tools point out simplifications
like these as they are otherwise hard to spot, especially across crate
boundaries.
2024-03-28 06:09:22 +00:00