VictoriaMetrics/app/vmalert/group_test.go

476 lines
12 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
Vmalert compliance 2 (#2340) * vmalert: split alert's `Start` field into `ActiveAt` and `Start` The `ActiveAt` field identifies when alert becomes active for rules with `for > 0`. Previously, this value was stored in field `Start`. The field `Start` now identifies the moment alert became `FIRING`. The split is needed in order to distinguish these two moments in the API responses for alerts. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: support specific moment of time for rules evaluation The Querier interface was extended to accept a new argument used as a timestamp at which evaluation should be made. It is needed to align rules execution time within the group. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: mark disappeared series as stale Series generated by alerting rules, which were sent to remote write now will be marked as stale if they will disappear on the next evaluation. This would make ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_TIME series more precise. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * wip Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: evaluate rules at fixed timestamp Before, time at which rules were evaluated was calculated right before rule execution. The change makes sure that timestamp is calculated only once per evalution round and all rules are using the same timestamp. It also updates the logic of resending of already resolved alert notification. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: allow overridin `alertname` label value if it is present in response Previously, `alertname` was always equal to the Alerting Rule name. Now, its value can be overriden if series in response containt the different value for this label. The change is needed for improving compatibility with Prometheus. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: align rules evaluation in time Now, evaluation timestamp for rules evaluates as if there was no delay in rules evaluation. It means, that rules will be evaluated at fixed timestamps+group_interval. This way provides more consistent evaluation results and improves compatibility with Prometheus, Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: add metric for missed iterations New metric `vmalert_iteration_missed_total` will show whether rules evaluation round was missed. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: reduce delay before the initial rule evaluation in group Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: rollback alertname override According to the spec: ``` The alert name from the alerting rule (HighRequestLatency from the example above) MUST be added to the labels of the alert with the label name as alertname. It MUST override any existing alertname label. ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-3 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: throw err immediately on dedup detection ``` The execution of an alerting rule MUST error out immediately and MUST NOT send any alerts or add samples to samples receiver if there is more than one alert with the same labels ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-4 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: cleanup Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: use strings builder to reduce allocs Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
2022-03-29 13:09:07 +00:00
"reflect"
"sort"
"testing"
"time"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/app/vmalert/config"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/app/vmalert/notifier"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/app/vmalert/remotewrite"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/lib/decimal"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/lib/prompbmarshal"
"github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/lib/promutils"
)
func init() {
// Disable rand sleep on group start during tests in order to speed up test execution.
// Rand sleep is needed only in prod code.
skipRandSleepOnGroupStart = true
}
func TestUpdateWith(t *testing.T) {
testCases := []struct {
name string
currentRules []config.Rule
newRules []config.Rule
}{
{
"new rule",
nil,
[]config.Rule{{Alert: "bar"}},
},
{
"update alerting rule",
[]config.Rule{{
Alert: "foo",
Expr: "up > 0",
For: promutils.NewDuration(time.Second),
Labels: map[string]string{
"bar": "baz",
},
Annotations: map[string]string{
"summary": "{{ $value|humanize }}",
"description": "{{$labels}}",
},
}},
[]config.Rule{{
Alert: "foo",
Expr: "up > 10",
For: promutils.NewDuration(time.Second),
Labels: map[string]string{
"baz": "bar",
},
Annotations: map[string]string{
"summary": "none",
},
}},
},
{
"update recording rule",
[]config.Rule{{
Record: "foo",
Expr: "max(up)",
Labels: map[string]string{
"bar": "baz",
},
}},
[]config.Rule{{
Record: "foo",
Expr: "min(up)",
Labels: map[string]string{
"baz": "bar",
},
}},
},
{
"empty rule",
[]config.Rule{{Alert: "foo"}, {Record: "bar"}},
nil,
},
{
"multiple rules",
[]config.Rule{
{Alert: "bar"},
{Alert: "baz"},
{Alert: "foo"},
},
[]config.Rule{
{Alert: "baz"},
{Record: "foo"},
},
},
{
"replace rule",
[]config.Rule{{Alert: "foo1"}},
[]config.Rule{{Alert: "foo2"}},
},
{
"replace multiple rules",
[]config.Rule{
{Alert: "foo1"},
{Record: "foo2"},
{Alert: "foo3"},
},
[]config.Rule{
{Alert: "foo3"},
{Alert: "foo4"},
{Record: "foo5"},
},
},
}
for _, tc := range testCases {
t.Run(tc.name, func(t *testing.T) {
g := &Group{Name: "test"}
qb := &fakeQuerier{}
for _, r := range tc.currentRules {
r.ID = config.HashRule(r)
g.Rules = append(g.Rules, g.newRule(qb, r))
}
ng := &Group{Name: "test"}
for _, r := range tc.newRules {
r.ID = config.HashRule(r)
ng.Rules = append(ng.Rules, ng.newRule(qb, r))
}
err := g.updateWith(ng)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
if len(g.Rules) != len(tc.newRules) {
t.Fatalf("expected to have %d rules; got: %d",
len(g.Rules), len(tc.newRules))
}
sort.Slice(g.Rules, func(i, j int) bool {
return g.Rules[i].ID() < g.Rules[j].ID()
})
sort.Slice(ng.Rules, func(i, j int) bool {
return ng.Rules[i].ID() < ng.Rules[j].ID()
})
for i, r := range g.Rules {
got, want := r, ng.Rules[i]
if got.ID() != want.ID() {
t.Fatalf("expected to have rule %q; got %q", want, got)
}
if err := compareRules(t, got, want); err != nil {
t.Fatalf("comparsion error: %s", err)
}
}
})
}
}
func TestGroupStart(t *testing.T) {
// TODO: make parsing from string instead of file
groups, err := config.Parse([]string{"config/testdata/rules/rules1-good.rules"}, true, true)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("failed to parse rules: %s", err)
}
fs := &fakeQuerier{}
fn := &fakeNotifier{}
const evalInterval = time.Millisecond
g := newGroup(groups[0], fs, evalInterval, map[string]string{"cluster": "east-1"})
g.Concurrency = 2
const inst1, inst2, job = "foo", "bar", "baz"
m1 := metricWithLabels(t, "instance", inst1, "job", job)
m2 := metricWithLabels(t, "instance", inst2, "job", job)
r := g.Rules[0].(*AlertingRule)
alert1, err := r.newAlert(m1, nil, time.Now(), nil)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("faield to create alert: %s", err)
}
alert1.State = notifier.StateFiring
// add external label
alert1.Labels["cluster"] = "east-1"
// add rule labels - see config/testdata/rules1-good.rules
alert1.Labels["label"] = "bar"
alert1.Labels["host"] = inst1
// add service labels
alert1.Labels[alertNameLabel] = alert1.Name
alert1.Labels[alertGroupNameLabel] = g.Name
alert1.ID = hash(alert1.Labels)
alert2, err := r.newAlert(m2, nil, time.Now(), nil)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("faield to create alert: %s", err)
}
alert2.State = notifier.StateFiring
// add external label
alert2.Labels["cluster"] = "east-1"
// add rule labels - see config/testdata/rules1-good.rules
alert2.Labels["label"] = "bar"
alert2.Labels["host"] = inst2
// add service labels
alert2.Labels[alertNameLabel] = alert2.Name
alert2.Labels[alertGroupNameLabel] = g.Name
alert2.ID = hash(alert2.Labels)
finished := make(chan struct{})
fs.add(m1)
fs.add(m2)
go func() {
g.start(context.Background(), func() []notifier.Notifier { return []notifier.Notifier{fn} }, nil)
close(finished)
}()
// wait for multiple evals
time.Sleep(20 * evalInterval)
gotAlerts := fn.getAlerts()
expectedAlerts := []notifier.Alert{*alert1, *alert2}
compareAlerts(t, expectedAlerts, gotAlerts)
gotAlertsNum := fn.getCounter()
if gotAlertsNum < len(expectedAlerts)*2 {
t.Fatalf("expected to receive at least %d alerts; got %d instead",
len(expectedAlerts)*2, gotAlertsNum)
}
// reset previous data
fs.reset()
// and set only one datapoint for response
fs.add(m1)
// wait for multiple evals
time.Sleep(20 * evalInterval)
gotAlerts = fn.getAlerts()
Vmalert compliance 2 (#2340) * vmalert: split alert's `Start` field into `ActiveAt` and `Start` The `ActiveAt` field identifies when alert becomes active for rules with `for > 0`. Previously, this value was stored in field `Start`. The field `Start` now identifies the moment alert became `FIRING`. The split is needed in order to distinguish these two moments in the API responses for alerts. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: support specific moment of time for rules evaluation The Querier interface was extended to accept a new argument used as a timestamp at which evaluation should be made. It is needed to align rules execution time within the group. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: mark disappeared series as stale Series generated by alerting rules, which were sent to remote write now will be marked as stale if they will disappear on the next evaluation. This would make ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_TIME series more precise. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * wip Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: evaluate rules at fixed timestamp Before, time at which rules were evaluated was calculated right before rule execution. The change makes sure that timestamp is calculated only once per evalution round and all rules are using the same timestamp. It also updates the logic of resending of already resolved alert notification. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: allow overridin `alertname` label value if it is present in response Previously, `alertname` was always equal to the Alerting Rule name. Now, its value can be overriden if series in response containt the different value for this label. The change is needed for improving compatibility with Prometheus. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: align rules evaluation in time Now, evaluation timestamp for rules evaluates as if there was no delay in rules evaluation. It means, that rules will be evaluated at fixed timestamps+group_interval. This way provides more consistent evaluation results and improves compatibility with Prometheus, Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: add metric for missed iterations New metric `vmalert_iteration_missed_total` will show whether rules evaluation round was missed. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: reduce delay before the initial rule evaluation in group Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: rollback alertname override According to the spec: ``` The alert name from the alerting rule (HighRequestLatency from the example above) MUST be added to the labels of the alert with the label name as alertname. It MUST override any existing alertname label. ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-3 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: throw err immediately on dedup detection ``` The execution of an alerting rule MUST error out immediately and MUST NOT send any alerts or add samples to samples receiver if there is more than one alert with the same labels ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-4 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: cleanup Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: use strings builder to reduce allocs Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
2022-03-29 13:09:07 +00:00
alert2.State = notifier.StateInactive
expectedAlerts = []notifier.Alert{*alert1, *alert2}
compareAlerts(t, expectedAlerts, gotAlerts)
g.close()
<-finished
}
func TestResolveDuration(t *testing.T) {
testCases := []struct {
groupInterval time.Duration
maxDuration time.Duration
resendDelay time.Duration
expected time.Duration
}{
{time.Minute, 0, 0, 4 * time.Minute},
{time.Minute, 0, 2 * time.Minute, 8 * time.Minute},
{time.Minute, 4 * time.Minute, 4 * time.Minute, 4 * time.Minute},
{2 * time.Minute, time.Minute, 2 * time.Minute, time.Minute},
{time.Minute, 2 * time.Minute, 1 * time.Minute, 2 * time.Minute},
{2 * time.Minute, 0, 1 * time.Minute, 8 * time.Minute},
{0, 0, 0, 0},
}
for _, tc := range testCases {
t.Run(fmt.Sprintf("%v-%v-%v", tc.groupInterval, tc.expected, tc.maxDuration), func(t *testing.T) {
Vmalert compliance 2 (#2340) * vmalert: split alert's `Start` field into `ActiveAt` and `Start` The `ActiveAt` field identifies when alert becomes active for rules with `for > 0`. Previously, this value was stored in field `Start`. The field `Start` now identifies the moment alert became `FIRING`. The split is needed in order to distinguish these two moments in the API responses for alerts. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: support specific moment of time for rules evaluation The Querier interface was extended to accept a new argument used as a timestamp at which evaluation should be made. It is needed to align rules execution time within the group. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: mark disappeared series as stale Series generated by alerting rules, which were sent to remote write now will be marked as stale if they will disappear on the next evaluation. This would make ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_TIME series more precise. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * wip Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: evaluate rules at fixed timestamp Before, time at which rules were evaluated was calculated right before rule execution. The change makes sure that timestamp is calculated only once per evalution round and all rules are using the same timestamp. It also updates the logic of resending of already resolved alert notification. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: allow overridin `alertname` label value if it is present in response Previously, `alertname` was always equal to the Alerting Rule name. Now, its value can be overriden if series in response containt the different value for this label. The change is needed for improving compatibility with Prometheus. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: align rules evaluation in time Now, evaluation timestamp for rules evaluates as if there was no delay in rules evaluation. It means, that rules will be evaluated at fixed timestamps+group_interval. This way provides more consistent evaluation results and improves compatibility with Prometheus, Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: add metric for missed iterations New metric `vmalert_iteration_missed_total` will show whether rules evaluation round was missed. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: reduce delay before the initial rule evaluation in group Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: rollback alertname override According to the spec: ``` The alert name from the alerting rule (HighRequestLatency from the example above) MUST be added to the labels of the alert with the label name as alertname. It MUST override any existing alertname label. ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-3 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: throw err immediately on dedup detection ``` The execution of an alerting rule MUST error out immediately and MUST NOT send any alerts or add samples to samples receiver if there is more than one alert with the same labels ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-4 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: cleanup Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: use strings builder to reduce allocs Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
2022-03-29 13:09:07 +00:00
got := getResolveDuration(tc.groupInterval, tc.resendDelay, tc.maxDuration)
if got != tc.expected {
t.Errorf("expected to have %v; got %v", tc.expected, got)
}
})
}
}
Vmalert compliance 2 (#2340) * vmalert: split alert's `Start` field into `ActiveAt` and `Start` The `ActiveAt` field identifies when alert becomes active for rules with `for > 0`. Previously, this value was stored in field `Start`. The field `Start` now identifies the moment alert became `FIRING`. The split is needed in order to distinguish these two moments in the API responses for alerts. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: support specific moment of time for rules evaluation The Querier interface was extended to accept a new argument used as a timestamp at which evaluation should be made. It is needed to align rules execution time within the group. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: mark disappeared series as stale Series generated by alerting rules, which were sent to remote write now will be marked as stale if they will disappear on the next evaluation. This would make ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_TIME series more precise. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * wip Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: evaluate rules at fixed timestamp Before, time at which rules were evaluated was calculated right before rule execution. The change makes sure that timestamp is calculated only once per evalution round and all rules are using the same timestamp. It also updates the logic of resending of already resolved alert notification. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: allow overridin `alertname` label value if it is present in response Previously, `alertname` was always equal to the Alerting Rule name. Now, its value can be overriden if series in response containt the different value for this label. The change is needed for improving compatibility with Prometheus. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: align rules evaluation in time Now, evaluation timestamp for rules evaluates as if there was no delay in rules evaluation. It means, that rules will be evaluated at fixed timestamps+group_interval. This way provides more consistent evaluation results and improves compatibility with Prometheus, Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: add metric for missed iterations New metric `vmalert_iteration_missed_total` will show whether rules evaluation round was missed. Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: reduce delay before the initial rule evaluation in group Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: rollback alertname override According to the spec: ``` The alert name from the alerting rule (HighRequestLatency from the example above) MUST be added to the labels of the alert with the label name as alertname. It MUST override any existing alertname label. ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-3 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: throw err immediately on dedup detection ``` The execution of an alerting rule MUST error out immediately and MUST NOT send any alerts or add samples to samples receiver if there is more than one alert with the same labels ``` https://github.com/prometheus/compliance/blob/main/alert_generator/specification.md#step-4 Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: cleanup Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com> * vmalert: use strings builder to reduce allocs Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
2022-03-29 13:09:07 +00:00
func TestGetStaleSeries(t *testing.T) {
ts := time.Now()
e := &executor{
previouslySentSeriesToRW: make(map[uint64]map[string][]prompbmarshal.Label),
}
f := func(rule Rule, labels, expLabels [][]prompbmarshal.Label) {
t.Helper()
var tss []prompbmarshal.TimeSeries
for _, l := range labels {
tss = append(tss, newTimeSeriesPB([]float64{1}, []int64{ts.Unix()}, l))
}
staleS := e.getStaleSeries(rule, tss, ts)
if staleS == nil && expLabels == nil {
return
}
if len(staleS) != len(expLabels) {
t.Fatalf("expected to get %d stale series, got %d",
len(expLabels), len(staleS))
}
for i, exp := range expLabels {
got := staleS[i]
if !reflect.DeepEqual(exp, got.Labels) {
t.Fatalf("expected to get labels: \n%v;\ngot instead: \n%v",
exp, got.Labels)
}
if len(got.Samples) != 1 {
t.Fatalf("expected to have 1 sample; got %d", len(got.Samples))
}
if !decimal.IsStaleNaN(got.Samples[0].Value) {
t.Fatalf("expected sample value to be %v; got %v", decimal.StaleNaN, got.Samples[0].Value)
}
}
}
// warn: keep in mind, that executor holds the state, so sequence of f calls matters
// single series
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
nil,
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")})
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
nil,
nil)
// multiple series
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo"),
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar"),
},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar")},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")})
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar")},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
nil,
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar")})
// multiple rules and series
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo"),
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar"),
},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 2},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo"),
toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar"),
},
nil)
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar")},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")})
f(&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1},
[][]prompbmarshal.Label{toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "bar")},
nil)
}
func TestPurgeStaleSeries(t *testing.T) {
ts := time.Now()
labels := toPromLabels(t, "__name__", "job:foo", "job", "foo")
tss := []prompbmarshal.TimeSeries{newTimeSeriesPB([]float64{1}, []int64{ts.Unix()}, labels)}
f := func(curRules, newRules, expStaleRules []Rule) {
t.Helper()
e := &executor{
previouslySentSeriesToRW: make(map[uint64]map[string][]prompbmarshal.Label),
}
// seed executor with series for
// current rules
for _, rule := range curRules {
e.getStaleSeries(rule, tss, ts)
}
e.purgeStaleSeries(newRules)
if len(e.previouslySentSeriesToRW) != len(expStaleRules) {
t.Fatalf("expected to get %d stale series, got %d",
len(expStaleRules), len(e.previouslySentSeriesToRW))
}
for _, exp := range expStaleRules {
if _, ok := e.previouslySentSeriesToRW[exp.ID()]; !ok {
t.Fatalf("expected to have rule %d; got nil instead", exp.ID())
}
}
}
f(nil, nil, nil)
f(
nil,
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}},
nil,
)
f(
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}},
nil,
nil,
)
f(
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}},
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
nil,
)
f(
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}, &AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
)
f(
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}, &AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}, &AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
[]Rule{&AlertingRule{RuleID: 1}, &AlertingRule{RuleID: 2}},
)
}
func TestFaultyNotifier(t *testing.T) {
fq := &fakeQuerier{}
fq.add(metricWithValueAndLabels(t, 1, "__name__", "foo", "job", "bar"))
r := newTestAlertingRule("instant", 0)
r.q = fq
fn := &fakeNotifier{}
e := &executor{
notifiers: func() []notifier.Notifier {
return []notifier.Notifier{
&faultyNotifier{},
fn,
}
},
}
delay := 5 * time.Second
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), delay)
defer cancel()
go func() {
_ = e.exec(ctx, r, time.Now(), 0, 10)
}()
tn := time.Now()
deadline := tn.Add(delay / 2)
for {
if fn.getCounter() > 0 {
return
}
if tn.After(deadline) {
break
}
tn = time.Now()
time.Sleep(time.Millisecond * 100)
}
t.Fatalf("alive notifier didn't receive notification by %v", deadline)
}
func TestFaultyRW(t *testing.T) {
fq := &fakeQuerier{}
fq.add(metricWithValueAndLabels(t, 1, "__name__", "foo", "job", "bar"))
r := &RecordingRule{
Name: "test",
q: fq,
}
e := &executor{
rw: &remotewrite.Client{},
previouslySentSeriesToRW: make(map[uint64]map[string][]prompbmarshal.Label),
}
err := e.exec(context.Background(), r, time.Now(), 0, 10)
if err == nil {
t.Fatalf("expected to get an error from faulty RW client, got nil instead")
}
}