distribution/digest/verifiers_test.go
2014-12-23 17:13:02 -08:00

72 lines
1.7 KiB
Go

package digest
import (
"bytes"
"crypto/rand"
"io"
"os"
"testing"
"github.com/docker/distribution/common/testutil"
)
func TestDigestVerifier(t *testing.T) {
p := make([]byte, 1<<20)
rand.Read(p)
digest, err := FromBytes(p)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("unexpected error digesting bytes: %#v", err)
}
verifier := NewDigestVerifier(digest)
io.Copy(verifier, bytes.NewReader(p))
if !verifier.Verified() {
t.Fatalf("bytes not verified")
}
tf, tarSum, err := testutil.CreateRandomTarFile()
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating tarfile: %v", err)
}
digest, err = FromReader(tf)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error digesting tarsum: %v", err)
}
if digest.String() != tarSum {
t.Fatalf("unexpected digest: %q != %q", digest.String(), tarSum)
}
expectedSize, _ := tf.Seek(0, os.SEEK_END) // Get tar file size
tf.Seek(0, os.SEEK_SET) // seek back
// This is the most relevant example for the registry application. It's
// effectively a read through pipeline, where the final sink is the digest
// verifier.
verifier = NewDigestVerifier(digest)
lengthVerifier := NewLengthVerifier(expectedSize)
rd := io.TeeReader(tf, lengthVerifier)
io.Copy(verifier, rd)
if !lengthVerifier.Verified() {
t.Fatalf("verifier detected incorrect length")
}
if !verifier.Verified() {
t.Fatalf("bytes not verified")
}
}
// TODO(stevvooe): Add benchmarks to measure bytes/second throughput for
// DigestVerifier. We should be tarsum/gzip limited for common cases but we
// want to verify this.
//
// The relevant benchmarks for comparison can be run with the following
// commands:
//
// go test -bench . crypto/sha1
// go test -bench . github.com/docker/docker/pkg/tarsum
//