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280 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
280 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
# Testers {#chap-testers}
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This chapter describes several testing builders which are available in the `testers` namespace.
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## `hasPkgConfigModules` {#tester-hasPkgConfigModules}
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<!-- Old anchor name so links still work -->
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[]{#tester-hasPkgConfigModule}
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Checks whether a package exposes a given list of `pkg-config` modules.
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If the `moduleNames` argument is omitted, `hasPkgConfigModules` will use `meta.pkgConfigModules`.
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:::{.example #ex-haspkgconfigmodules-defaultvalues}
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# Check that `pkg-config` modules are exposed using default values
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```nix
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{
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passthru.tests.pkg-config = testers.hasPkgConfigModules {
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package = finalAttrs.finalPackage;
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};
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meta.pkgConfigModules = [ "libfoo" ];
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}
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```
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:::
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:::{.example #ex-haspkgconfigmodules-explicitmodules}
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# Check that `pkg-config` modules are exposed using explicit module names
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```nix
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{
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passthru.tests.pkg-config = testers.hasPkgConfigModules {
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package = finalAttrs.finalPackage;
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moduleNames = [ "libfoo" ];
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};
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}
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```
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:::
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## `testVersion` {#tester-testVersion}
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Checks that the output from running a command contains the specified version string in it as a whole word.
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Although simplistic, this test assures that the main program can run.
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While there's no substitute for a real test case, it does catch dynamic linking errors and such.
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It also provides some protection against accidentally building the wrong version, for example when using an "old" hash in a fixed-output derivation.
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By default, the command to be run will be inferred from the given `package` attribute:
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it will check `meta.mainProgram` first, and fall back to `pname` or `name`.
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The default argument to the command is `--version`, and the version to be checked will be inferred from the given `package` attribute as well.
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:::{.example #ex-testversion-hello}
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# Check a program version using all the default values
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This example will run the command `hello --version`, and then check that the version of the `hello` package is in the output of the command.
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```nix
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{
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passthru.tests.version = testers.testVersion { package = hello; };
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}
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```
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:::
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:::{.example #ex-testversion-different-commandversion}
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# Check the program version using a specified command and expected version string
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This example will run the command `leetcode -V`, and then check that `leetcode 0.4.2` is in the output of the command as a whole word (separated by whitespaces).
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This means that an output like "leetcode 0.4.21" would fail the tests, and an output like "You're running leetcode 0.4.2" would pass the tests.
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A common usage of the `version` attribute is to specify `version = "v${version}"`.
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```nix
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{
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version = "0.4.2";
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passthru.tests.version = testers.testVersion {
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package = leetcode-cli;
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command = "leetcode -V";
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version = "leetcode ${version}";
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};
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}
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```
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:::
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## `testBuildFailure` {#tester-testBuildFailure}
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Make sure that a build does not succeed. This is useful for testing testers.
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This returns a derivation with an override on the builder, with the following effects:
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- Fail the build when the original builder succeeds
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- Move `$out` to `$out/result`, if it exists (assuming `out` is the default output)
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- Save the build log to `$out/testBuildFailure.log` (same)
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While `testBuildFailure` is designed to keep changes to the original builder's environment to a minimum, some small changes are inevitable:
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- The file `$TMPDIR/testBuildFailure.log` is present. It should not be deleted.
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- `stdout` and `stderr` are a pipe instead of a tty. This could be improved.
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- One or two extra processes are present in the sandbox during the original builder's execution.
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- The derivation and output hashes are different, but not unusual.
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- The derivation includes a dependency on `buildPackages.bash` and `expect-failure.sh`, which is built to include a transitive dependency on `buildPackages.coreutils` and possibly more.
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These are not added to `PATH` or any other environment variable, so they should be hard to observe.
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:::{.example #ex-testBuildFailure-showingenvironmentchanges}
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# Check that a build fails, and verify the changes made during build
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```nix
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runCommand "example" {
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failed = testers.testBuildFailure (runCommand "fail" {} ''
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echo ok-ish >$out
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echo failing though
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exit 3
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'');
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} ''
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grep -F 'ok-ish' $failed/result
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grep -F 'failing though' $failed/testBuildFailure.log
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[[ 3 = $(cat $failed/testBuildFailure.exit) ]]
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touch $out
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''
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```
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:::
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## `testEqualContents` {#tester-equalContents}
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Check that two paths have the same contents.
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:::{.example #ex-testEqualContents-toyexample}
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# Check that two paths have the same contents
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```nix
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testers.testEqualContents {
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assertion = "sed -e performs replacement";
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expected = writeText "expected" ''
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foo baz baz
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'';
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actual = runCommand "actual" {
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# not really necessary for a package that's in stdenv
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nativeBuildInputs = [ gnused ];
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base = writeText "base" ''
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foo bar baz
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'';
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} ''
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sed -e 's/bar/baz/g' $base >$out
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'';
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}
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```
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## `testEqualDerivation` {#tester-testEqualDerivation}
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Checks that two packages produce the exact same build instructions.
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This can be used to make sure that a certain difference of configuration, such as the presence of an overlay does not cause a cache miss.
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When the derivations are equal, the return value is an empty file.
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Otherwise, the build log explains the difference via `nix-diff`.
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:::{.example #ex-testEqualDerivation-hello}
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# Check that two packages produce the same derivation
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```nix
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testers.testEqualDerivation
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"The hello package must stay the same when enabling checks."
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hello
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(hello.overrideAttrs(o: { doCheck = true; }))
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```
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:::
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## `invalidateFetcherByDrvHash` {#tester-invalidateFetcherByDrvHash}
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Use the derivation hash to invalidate the output via name, for testing.
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Type: `(a@{ name, ... } -> Derivation) -> a -> Derivation`
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Normally, fixed output derivations can and should be cached by their output hash only, but for testing we want to re-fetch everytime the fetcher changes.
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Changes to the fetcher become apparent in the drvPath, which is a hash of how to fetch, rather than a fixed store path.
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By inserting this hash into the name, we can make sure to re-run the fetcher every time the fetcher changes.
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This relies on the assumption that Nix isn't clever enough to reuse its database of local store contents to optimize fetching.
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You might notice that the "salted" name derives from the normal invocation, not the final derivation.
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`invalidateFetcherByDrvHash` has to invoke the fetcher function twice:
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once to get a derivation hash, and again to produce the final fixed output derivation.
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:::{.example #ex-invalidateFetcherByDrvHash-nix}
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# Prevent nix from reusing the output of a fetcher
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```nix
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{
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tests.fetchgit = testers.invalidateFetcherByDrvHash fetchgit {
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name = "nix-source";
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url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix";
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rev = "9d9dbe6ed05854e03811c361a3380e09183f4f4a";
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hash = "sha256-7DszvbCNTjpzGRmpIVAWXk20P0/XTrWZ79KSOGLrUWY=";
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};
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}
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```
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:::
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## `runNixOSTest` {#tester-runNixOSTest}
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A helper function that behaves exactly like the NixOS `runTest`, except it also assigns this Nixpkgs package set as the `pkgs` of the test and makes the `nixpkgs.*` options read-only.
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If your test is part of the Nixpkgs repository, or if you need a more general entrypoint, see ["Calling a test" in the NixOS manual](https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/index.html#sec-calling-nixos-tests).
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:::{.example #ex-runNixOSTest-hello}
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# Run a NixOS test using `runNixOSTest`
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```nix
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pkgs.testers.runNixOSTest ({ lib, ... }: {
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name = "hello";
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nodes.machine = { pkgs, ... }: {
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environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.hello ];
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};
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testScript = ''
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machine.succeed("hello")
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'';
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})
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```
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:::
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## `nixosTest` {#tester-nixosTest}
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Run a NixOS VM network test using this evaluation of Nixpkgs.
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NOTE: This function is primarily for external use. NixOS itself uses `make-test-python.nix` directly. Packages defined in Nixpkgs [reuse NixOS tests via `nixosTests`, plural](#ssec-nixos-tests-linking).
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It is mostly equivalent to the function `import ./make-test-python.nix` from the [NixOS manual](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-nixos-tests), except that the current application of Nixpkgs (`pkgs`) will be used, instead of letting NixOS invoke Nixpkgs anew.
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If a test machine needs to set NixOS options under `nixpkgs`, it must set only the `nixpkgs.pkgs` option.
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### Parameter {#tester-nixosTest-parameter}
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A [NixOS VM test network](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-nixos-tests), or path to it. Example:
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```nix
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{
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name = "my-test";
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nodes = {
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machine1 = { lib, pkgs, nodes, ... }: {
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environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.hello ];
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services.foo.enable = true;
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};
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# machine2 = ...;
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};
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testScript = ''
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start_all()
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machine1.wait_for_unit("foo.service")
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machine1.succeed("hello | foo-send")
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'';
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}
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```
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### Result {#tester-nixosTest-result}
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A derivation that runs the VM test.
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Notable attributes:
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* `nodes`: the evaluated NixOS configurations. Useful for debugging and exploring the configuration.
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* `driverInteractive`: a script that launches an interactive Python session in the context of the `testScript`.
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