Since the arrival of XCMP-Lite, communication between different consensus systems became a reality in the Polkadot ecosystem. Parachains Integration Tests is a tool that was created with the ambition of easing testing interactions between Substrate based blockchains.
This tool allows you to develop tests rapidly describing them in a YAML file. Behind the scenes, the YAML files are converted to Mocha tests with Chai assertions.
It can work alongside with Zombienet or you can run your tests against the testnet of your choice.
Under the ./examples
folder, this repository contains integration tests for the System Parachains. You can take them as examples of how to write tests with this tool.
node v18
or higher.
-
v2.0.0
contains BREAKING CHANGES. Tests based on^1.0.0
will stop working properly fromv2.0.0
onwards. Check the GitHub release for more info and how to migrate the tests. -
v2.3.0
contains BREAKING CHANGES. Polkadot Launch is not supported anymore.
It can be installed to be run in two different ways:
- Installing the npm package globally
yarn global add ts-node yarn global add @parity/parachains-integration-tests
- From the repository
yarn
The tool implements a simple CLI.
parachains-integration-tests -m <mode> -c <path> -t <path> -to <millisecons> -el <milliseconds> -qd <milliseconds>
-e
,--env
:prod
: for compiled TypeScript to Javascript (default)dev
: for development environment in TypeScript
-m
,--mode
:checker
: checks the format integtity of the yaml test filestest
: for running your tests (the checker will be autmatically run prior to the tests)zombienet
: only deploy a Zombienet networkzombienet-test
: deploy a Zombienet testnet and run your tests against it
-c
,--config
: path to the Zombienet or Polkadot Launch config file.-t
,--test
: path to the tests folder or to a single test yaml file. All files under the path with ayml
extension will be run. To choose the order, is necessary to add an index in front of the file name. E.g:0_my_test.yml
,1_my_other_test.yml
-to
,--timeout
: overrides the default Mocha tests timeout set to300000
-el
,--event-listener-timeout
: overrides the default event listener timeout set to40000
-ad
,--action-delay
: delay before state queries, rpc calls and extrinsics. Overrides the default delay set to40000
. Some delay is necessary to make sure the state is already updated. In the case of extrinsics, it is also necessary until ID hashes are available in XCM v3. Without an identifier, it is not possible to distinguish what XCM message event was triggered as a result of a specific extrinsic from another chain/context. For this reason, it is necessary to add a big delay between XCM messages, to avoid interferences from other unrelated events.-cl
,--chain-logs
: path to the log file to redirect stdout and stderr from the testnets deployment tool, either Zombienet or Polkadot Launch.-tl
,--test-logs
: path to the log file to redirect stdout and stderr from this testing tool.
Examples:
-
NPM package
-
Check the integrity of the tests format
parachains-integration-tests -m checker -t <tests_path>
-
Run tests using other testnet
parachains-integration-tests -m test -t <tests_path>
-
Only deploy a testnet with Zombienet
parachains-integration-tests -m zombienet -c <zombienet_config_path>
-
Run tests using Zombienet as testnet
parachains-integration-tests -m zombienet-test -t <tests_path> -c <zombienet_config_path>
-
-
From the repository
-
Check the integrity of the tests format
yarn checker -t <tests_path>
-
Run tests using other testnet
yarn test -t <tests_path>
-
Only deploy a testnet with Zombienet
yarn zombienet -c <zombienet_config_path>
-
Run tests using as testnet
yarn zombienet-test -t <tests_path> -c <zombienet_config_path>
-
It is formed by two main sections: settings
and tests
.
settings:
# Declaration of the chains the tests should connect to
chains: # { [key: string]: Chain }
# Arbitrary declaration of constants to be used across the tests
variables: # { [key: string]: any }
# Calls that want to be encoded to be used in the tests
decodedCalls: # { [key: string]: Call }
tests: # Describe[]
export interface TestsConfig {
settings: Settings;
tests: Describe[];
}
-
chains
: connection values for all the different chains we want to connect to. DefiningwsPort
should be enough unless you want to override the defaultws
URL (ws://localhost). -
variables
: section that allows you to define your own variables following the schema that better suits your test's logic. -
decodedCalls
: declaration of the different calls you want to calculate their encoded call hex value or use them inside abatch
call. Each result is stored in a variable that will become available in the rest of the file ONLY after its declaration. The way to access those variables is appending a$
symbol to the defineddecodedCalls
key. For instance, in the following example, the encoded call result formy_call_id
will be accessible from$my_call_id
. If you want to use the call inside abatch
call, the attributeencode: false
should be added. That attribute indicates if the call should be encoded or if it should be treated asSubmittable
Polkadot JS object.
Example:
settings: # Settings
chains:
my_chain_id: &relay_chain # a Relay Chain, for instance
wsPort: 9966
ws: ws://my-custom-url
my_other_chain_id: ¶chain # a Parachain, for instance
wsPort: 9988
# It is also possible to add the variables that you consider
# are useful and related to the chain
for_example_paraId: ¶Id 2000
variables:
my_variable: &my_variable 0x0011
my_arbitrary_schema: &my_schema
object:
a: 1
b: 2
decodedCalls:
my_call_id:
chain: *relay_chain
pallet: system
call: remark
args: [ *my_variable ]
my_call_id:
chain: *relay_chain
encode: false # Indicates the call will not be encoded and used instead as Submittable
pallet: system
call: remark
args: [ *my_variable ]
interface Settings {
chains: { [key: string]: Chain };
variables: { [key: string]: any };
decodedCalls: { [key: string]: Call };
}
interface Chain {
wsPort: number;
ws?: string; // if 'undefined', it fallback to the default value -> ws://localhost
paraId: number; // parachain id
}
interface Call {
chain: Chain;
sudo?: boolean; // if 'true', the call will be wrapped with 'sudo.sudo()'
pallet: string;
call: string;
args: any[];
}
Tests are formed by an array of Describe interfaces. Tests can be nested through the describes
attribute.
Example:
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: 'before' description to console log
actions: [...]
beforeEach: ... # BeforeEach[]
after: ... # After[]
afterEach: ... # AfterEach[]
its: # It[]
- name: It should do something
actions: [...]
describes: # Describe[]
- name: My nested Describe
- name: My other Describe
its: [...] # It[]
Interfaces:
interface Describe {
name: string;
before?: Before[];
beforeEach?: BeforeEach[];
after?: After[];
afterEach?: AfterEach[];
its: It[];
describes?: Describe[]; // It is possible to nest Describes
}
Both have a similar interface. They are formed by a name
for descriptions and by the actions
attribute.
The available hooks are: before
, beforeEach
, after
and afterEach
Example:
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: 'before' description to console log
actions: [...] # Action[]
- name: another description for a 'before'
actions: [...] # Action[]
its: # It[]
- name: It should do something
actions: [...] # Action[]
- name: It should not do something
actions: [...] # Action[]
...
Interfaces:
type Hook = Before | BeforeEach | After | AfterEach
// Same for BeforeEach, After, AfterEach
interface Before {
name?: string; // optional description
actions: Action[];
}
interface It {
name: string;
actions: Action[];
}
There are five available actions types that can be performed inside a Hook or an It: extrinsics
, queries
, rpcs
, asserts
and customs
. The order they are executed depends on the order they are defined in the Action array. Since actions
is an array, multiple actions of the same type can be declared.
Example:
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: 'before' description to console log
actions: # Action[]
- extrinsics: [...] # Extrinsic[]
- queries: [...] # Query[]
- ...
its: # It[]
- name: It should do something
actions: # Action[]
- extrinsics: [...] # Extrinsic[]
- rpcs: [...] # RPC[]
- asserts: [...] # Assert[]
- customs: [...] # Custom[]
- queries: [...] # Query []
- asserts: [...] # Assert[]
...
Interfaces:
export type ExtrinsicAction = {
extrinsics: Extrinsic[];
}
export type QueryAction = {
queries: { [key: string]: Query };
}
export type RpcAction = {
rpcs: { [key: string]: Rpc };
}
export type AsserAction = {
asserts: { [key: string]: AssertOrCustom };
}
export type CustomAction = {
customs: Custom[];
}
export type Action = ExtrinsicAction | QueryAction | AsserAction | RpcAction | CustomAction;
Extends the Call interface adding two new attributes: signer
(indispensable) and events
(optional). A Extrinsic by itself will not perform any chai assertion. Assertions are build based on the events
that the extrinsic is expected to trigger. Each event defined under the events
attribute will build and perform its corresponding chai assertion.
Example:
settings:
chains:
relay_chain: &relay_chain
wsPort: 9900
parachain: ¶chain
wsPort: 9910
paraId: &id 2000
variables:
common:
require_weight_at_most: &weight_at_most 1000000000
relay_chain:
signer: &signer
uri: //Alice
parachain_destination: &dest { v1: { 0, interior: { x1: { parachain: *id }}}}
my_variable: &my_variable 0x0011
decodedCalls:
force_create_asset:
chain: *parachain
pallet: assets
call: forceCreate
args: [
1, # assetId
{ # owner
Id: HNZata7iMYWmk5RvZRTiAsSDhV8366zq2YGb3tLH5Upf74F
},
true, # isSufficient
1000 # minBalance
]
to_be_batched:
chain: *relay_chain
encode: false # Indicates the call will not be encoded and used instead as Submittable instead
pallet: system
call: remark
args: [ *my_variable ]
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
its: # It[]
- name: It should do something
actions: # Action[]
- extrinsics: # Extrinsic[]
- chain: *relay_chain # Chain
signer: *signer
sudo: true
pallet: xcmPallet
call: send
args: [
*ap_dest, # destination
{
v2: [ # message
{
Transact: {
originType: Superuser,
requireWeightAtMost: *weight_at_most,
call: $force_create_asset # encoded call hex
}
}
]
}
]
events: [...]
- chain: *relay_chain # Chain
signer: *signer
pallet: utility
call: batchAll
args: [
[$to_be_batched]
]
...
Interfaces:
interface Call {
encode?: boolean; // Indicates if the Call should be encoded
chain: Chain;
sudo?: boolean; // if 'true', the call will be wrapped with 'sudo.sudo()'
pallet: string;
call: string;
args: any[];
}
interface Extrinsic extends Call {
signer: string;
delay?: number; // Overrides the default action delay
events: Event[];
}
If the chain
attribute is not defined, it means the event is expected to happen in the same chain context where the extrinsic was dispatched and as a result of it. Otherwise, the chain
attribute referring to another context must be defined.
Default event listener timeout can be overridden by the timeout
attribute.
There are two different and compatible ways (you can apply both at the same time) of checking if an event returns the expected values: comparing the "whole" result
, or comparing by atrributes
.
-
result
: When the event is defined in the runtime as a Tuple, the event result is returned as an ordered array of its elements. In case it is defined as a Struct, the event result is returned as an object.E.g:
- Tuple
Sent(MultiLocation, MultiLocation, Xcm<()>) // Event from 'pallet_xcm'
result: [..., ..., ...] # order and indexes matters
- Struct
Transfer { from: T::AccountId, to: T::AccountId, amount: T::Balance } // Event from 'pallet_balances'
result: { from: ..., to: ..., amount: ... }
strict
is set tofalse
by default. It allows to check ifresult
is just contained in the event result instead of expecting a perfect match. For a Tuple it means that the provided array is a subset (array items exist & order and index matter) of the event result array. For a Struct it means that the provided object is also a subset (keys/values exist) of the event result object. - Tuple
-
attributes
: Event's attributes must be identified either bytype
,key
or both. When the event is defined in the runtime as a Tuple, the only way to identify the attributes is by theirtype
. Be aware that in that case the order you declare theattributes
in the test matters. That is because there could be multiple attributes with the sametype
in the Tuple. However, if the event is defined as a Struct, its attributes can be also identified by theirkey
.By setting
isRange: true
you are letting know to the tool that the expected value should be within the range defined in thevalue
attribute. The expectedvalue
's format is:<lower_limit>..<upper_limit>
.In addition, a
threshold
attribute can be used to define an upper and lower limit thevalue
attribute should be within. It is expecting a percentage value. E.g:threshold: [10, 20]
means that thevalue
can be 10% lower and 20% higher. It can be used either for anattribute
value
or aevent
result
. For assessing aresult
treshold should be an object where its keys are the fields to be assessed fromresult
. Example below checkingWeight
valuesref_time
andproof_size
.For obvious reason,
isRange
andthreshold
can not be used at the same time. These features are especially useful when checking variables that often change such as Weights.There is a special treatment for the attribute type
XcmV2TraitsOutcome
. Only in that case,xcmOutput
andvalue
can be set to replace an eventresult
with the format{ outcome: { <xcmOutput>: <value> }}
. ValidxcmOutput
areComplete
,Incomplete
andError
.
Example:
settings:
chains:
relay_chain: &relay_chain
wsPort: 9900
parachain: ¶chain
wsPort: 9910
variables:
...
encodedCalls:
my_encoded_call:
...
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
its: # It[]
- name: It should do something
actions: # Action[]
- extrinsics: # Extrinsic[]
- chain: *relay_chain
signer: *signer
sudo: true
pallet: xcmPallet
call: send
args: [
*dest, # destination
{
v2: [ #message
{
Transact: {
originType: Superuser,
requireWeightAtMost: *weight_at_most,
call: $my_encoded_call
}
}
]
}
]
events: # Event[]
- name: sudo.Sudid
attributes:
- type: Result<Null, SpRuntimeDispatchError>
key: sudoResult
value: Ok
- name: xcmPallet.Sent
- name: dmpQueue.ExecutedDownward
chain: *collectives_parachain
threshold: { refTime: [10, 10], proofSize: [10, 10] }
result: {
outcome: { Complete: { refTime: '3,000,000,000', proofSize: '1,000,000' }}
}
- name: polkadotXcm.Sent
chain: *parachain
- name: ump.ExecutedUpward
timeout: 40000
attributes: # Attribute[]
- type: XcmV2TraitsOutcome
xcmOutcome: Complete
isRange: true
value: 4,000,000..5,000,000 # value should be within 4,000,000..5,000,000
...
Interfaces:
interface Event {
chain: Chain;
name: string;
remote: boolean; // indicates the event is considered as a remote (different chain context)
timeout?: number; // overrides de default event listener timeout
result?: object; // Either {..} or [..]
strict: boolean;
attributes?: Attribute[];
threshold?: any;
}
interface Attribute {
type?: string;
key?: string;
isRange?: boolean; // indicates the value is a range
threshold: [number, number]; // defines the percentages a value can vary
value?: any;
xcmOutcome?: XcmOutcome; // only for 'XcmV2TraitsOutcome' type
}
export enum XcmOutcome {
Complete = 'Complete',
Incomplete = 'Incomplete',
Error = 'Error'
}
Query the chain state. The result of the query will be stored in a new variable based on the key name of the Query. The variable naming follows the same format of decodedCalls
. Therefore, for the following example, the result of the query is stored in: $balance_sender_before
. The variable becomes available in the rest of the file ONLY after its declaration.
Example:
settings:
chains:
relay_chain: &relay_chain
wsPort: 9900
variables:
...
encodedCalls:
...
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: Get the balance of an account
actions: # Action[]
- queries: # { key: Query }
balance_sender_before:
chain: *relay_chain
pallet: system
call: account
args: [
HNZata7iMYWmk5RvZRTiAsSDhV8366zq2YGb3tLH5Upf74F
]
its: [...]
Interfaces:
interface Query {
chain: Chain;
delay?: number;
pallet: string;
call: string;
args: any[];
}
RPC call to the chain's node. Same approach as Query. For the following example, the result of the RPC call will be stored in $block
.
Example:
settings:
chains:
relay_chain: &relay_chain
wsPort: 9900
variables:
...
encodedCalls:
...
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: Get the last block
actions: # Action[]
- rpcs: # { key: Rpc }
block:
chain: *relay_chain
method: chain
call: getBlock
args: []
events: []
its: [...]
Interfaces:
interface Rpc {
chain: Chain;
delay?: number;
method: string;
call: string;
args: any[];
events?: Event[];
}
Unlike Query and Rpc where their keys can be arbitrarily chosen to generate a new variable, AssertOrCustom keys can only be chosen from a list of built-in asserts.
equal
: it has a single attributeargs
which is expecting an array of two values to bedeepEqual()
compared.isNone
: the argument is null../src/asserts/isNone.ts
isSome
: the argument is not null../src/asserts/isSome.ts
balanceDecreased
: compares balances queried withsystem.account
. Ifamount
andfees
are not included as arguments, it will just check thatafter
is lower thanbefore
./src/asserts/balanceDecreased.ts
balanceIncreased
: compares balances queried withsystem.account
. Ifamount
andfees
(only for XCM messages) are not included as arguments, it will just check thatafter
is bigger thanbefore
./src/asserts/balanceIncreased.ts
assetsDecreased
: compares balances queried withassets.account
. Ifamount
andfees
are not included as arguments, it will just check thatafter
is lower thanbefore
./src/asserts/assetsDecreased.ts
assetsIncreased
: compares balances queried withassets.account
. Ifamount
andfees
(only for XCM messages) are not included as arguments, it will just check thatafter
is bigger thanbefore
./src/asserts/assetsIncreased.ts
custom
: assertion cases can be endless, therefore they are difficult to standardize.custom
solves that issue providing thepath
argument. Its value should point to a file where the desired asserts are performed based on the providedargs
. It can not be any kind of file though, and it should export a specific function signature. To learn more about this files see Custom. Notice that you will have to include atsconfig.json
file withtypeRoots
andtypes
attributes pointing to your types in case of adding paths to a typescript file.
These methods are extensible opening a PR to include them:
- Add a new assertion key to
REGISTERED_ASSERTIONS
in./src/constants.ts
- Add a new assertion file under
./src/asserts
. The filename needs to match with the previously registered assertion key.
Example:
settings:
chains:
relay_chain: &relay_chain
wsPort: 9900
variables:
relay_chain:
sender: &sender HNZata7iMYWmk5RvZRTiAsSDhV8366zq2YGb3tLH5Upf74F
...
encodedCalls:
...
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # Before[]
- name: Get the balance of an account before an event
actions:
- queries:
balance_sender_before:
chain: *relay_chain
pallet: system
call: account
args: [
*sender
]
after: # After[]
- name: Get the balance of an account after an event
actions:
- queries:
balance_sender_after:
chain: *relay_chain
pallet: system
call: account
args: [
*sender
]
its: # It[]
- name: Something happens here than modifies the balance
actions: [...]
- name: Should reduce the balance of the sender
actions: # Action[]
- asserts: # { [key: string]: AssertOrCustom }
customs:
path: ./asserts/checkSenderBalances.ts
args:
{
balances: {
before: $balance_rc_sender_before,
after: $balance_rc_sender_after,
},
amount: *amount,
}
equal:
args: [true, true]
Interfaces:
interface Assert {
args: any[];
}
interface Custom {
path: string;
args: any;
}
type AssertOrCustom = Assert | Custom;
This Action type enables the possibility of referring to your own files to perform those actions that a constrained YAML schema can not provide. The file must export a very specific function signature that the tool is expecting to import: async (context, ...args)
context
: corresponds to the test'sthis
object. All user created variables (inencodedCalls
,queries
andrpcs
) are stored and accessible from thethis.variables
key. In a similar way,context
can be used to stored new variables that will become available in the rest of the tests.args
: the arguments used as input for your custom file function.
The following example shows how to use a custom
action to perform an assertion, but there are no limitations about what to achieve.
Example:
settings:
...
tests: # Describe[]
- name: My Describe
before: # I declare $coin_symbol
its: # It[]
...
- name: My custom action should do something
actions: # Action[]
customs: # Custom[]
- path: ./queryExternalOracle.ts
args: [
{
url: https://www.my-oracle.com/price/
}
]
events: []
asserts:
equal: [$dot_price, 30]
// queryExternalOracle.ts
const myCustomFunction = async (context, ...args) => {
const { url } = args[0]
let coinSymbol = context.variables.$coin_symbol
let price = myApi.get(url + coinSymbol)
// Save the result in context (this) variables
// to make it available for the rests of the tests
context.variables['$dot_price'] = price
}
export default myCustomFunction
Interfaces:
interface Custom {
path: string;
args: any[];
events?: Event[];
}
Open an issue if you have problems.
PRs and contributions are welcome :)