Date: Sun, 27 Jul 2014 21:38:05 +0100 From: "George Neville-Neil" <gnn@neville-neil.com> To: "Garrett Cooper" <yaneurabeya@gmail.com> Cc: "testing@freebsd.org" <testing@freebsd.org>, "net@freebsd.org" <net@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: A new way to test systems in multiple machine scenarios... Message-ID: <9207F596-D12C-4624-932C-631E47D40D66@neville-neil.com> In-Reply-To: <19D0342C-3635-4DC1-ACB8-5697F1D579F0@gmail.com> References: <B8265086-6875-46A3-BE90-E286CD5066E2@neville-neil.com> <19D0342C-3635-4DC1-ACB8-5697F1D579F0@gmail.com>
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On 6 Jul 2014, at 4:52, Garrett Cooper wrote: >> On Jul 5, 2014, at 20:04, "George Neville-Neil" >> <gnn@neville-neil.com> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> I've coded up a system to allow you to control multiple other systems >> for use in testing. >> >> https://github.com/gvnn3/conductor >> >> It's BSD licensed, of course, and is only alpha quality but I'm using >> it in the test lab >> to control hosts in forwarding tests. >> >> I'll be updating the system frequently over the coming months as I >> build out more test scenarios, >> add documentation and the like. >> >> There are two main scripts, player, and conductor. You run N >> players, one per machine, and >> a single conductor. The conductor controls the players by sending >> down phases which are >> encoded in INI style configs. There are a few, simple, samples in >> the config/ directory >> of the project. >> >> Best, >> George >> >> NOTE: Conductor MUST run as root to be useful. Do NOT run on the >> open Internet. It is meant >> for private test labs. > > I took a quick glance at the code -- have you considered using > multiprocessing managers instead? > > https://docs.python.org/2/library/multiprocessing.html#managers I had not. Thanks. I'll give it a look over. Best, George
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