Files
bot-bottle/tests
didericis c9825cf701
test / unit (pull_request) Successful in 18s
test / integration (pull_request) Successful in 1m7s
refactor(egress): write routes.yaml as actual YAML, not JSON-in-yml
`egress_render_routes` now emits hand-rolled YAML in the same style
as `pipelock_render_yaml`. The egress addon parses it via
`yaml_subset.parse_yaml_subset` — the same parser the manifest
loader + pipelock_apply use.

Why bother: routes.yaml is bind-mounted into the egress sidecar
AND surfaced to operators through `routes edit` (PRD 0019). JSON-
in-yml renders ugly in $EDITOR and signals "this is data" rather
than "this is config you can read at a glance". Real YAML reads
cleanly.

Mechanics:

  - `yaml_subset.py` drops its `claude_bottle.log` dependency.
    Errors now raise `YamlSubsetError` (a `ValueError`); the
    manifest loader + pipelock_apply catch it at the boundary
    and forward to `die` / `PipelockApplyError` so callers see
    the same behavior they did before.
  - `Dockerfile.egress` adds one COPY line for `yaml_subset.py`
    so it sits flat in `/app/` next to the addon. The addon
    uses an absolute-import-with-fallback shim so the same file
    works inside the container AND from the host's unit tests.
  - `egress_apply._merge_single_route` round-trips current
    routes.yaml through `parse_yaml_subset` + a new
    `_render_routes_payload` helper instead of `json.loads` +
    `json.dumps`.

End-to-end: rebuilt the egress image, ran `./cli.py start` to a
full bring-up, confirmed the addon's boot log shows `egress:
loaded 9 route(s)` — i.e., the YAML parses inside the container.
453 unit + 3 integration tests pass.
2026-05-26 02:17:42 -04:00
..

Tests

Plain-Python test suite using stdlib unittest. No external dependencies. Unit tests run anywhere Python 3 is present; integration tests need Docker and skip cleanly otherwise.

Layout

tests/
  fixtures.py                       # JSON manifest builders (shared)
  _docker.py                        # docker-availability skip helper (shared)
  unit/
    test_pipelock_classify.py
    test_pipelock_allowlist.py
    test_pipelock_yaml.py
    test_manifest_runtime.py
  integration/
    test_pipelock_sidecar_smoke.py
    test_dry_run_plan.py
    test_orphan_cleanup.py
  canaries/
    test_pipelock_image.py          # opt-in; see below

Classification falls out of the directory — no hand-maintained list to keep in sync.

Running

python -m unittest discover -t . -s tests/unit -v         # unit only
python -m unittest discover -t . -s tests/integration -v  # integration only
python -m unittest discover -t . -s tests -v              # both (recursive)
python -m unittest tests.unit.test_pipelock_yaml          # one file

Discovery is invoked with -t . (top-level dir = repo root) so the claude_bottle package on sys.path resolves correctly.

What the integration tests cover

  • test_pipelock_sidecar_smoke.py — drives DockerPipelockProxy.prepare
    • .start (the production code path) against a real Docker daemon and probes the sidecar's /health from an in-network curl container.
  • test_dry_run_plan.pycli.py start --dry-run --format=json emits a structured plan that contains the resolved egress allowlist and the bottle's runtime, and creates zero Docker resources.
  • test_orphan_cleanup.pynetwork_remove and PipelockProxy.stop are idempotent against missing resources, so the EXIT trap can call them unconditionally.

Canaries

tests/canaries/ holds upstream-regression checks (e.g. the pinned pipelock digest's binary still runs). These are gated on CLAUDE_BOTTLE_RUN_CANARIES=1 and not part of the per-push suite. They're invoked by the scheduled canaries workflow.

CLAUDE_BOTTLE_RUN_CANARIES=1 python -m unittest discover -t . -s tests/canaries -v

What's NOT covered

  • claude_bottle/ssh.py end-to-end (would need a fake SSH host inside the container).
  • A live SSH-through-pipelock tunnel against a real Tailscale-style IP.
  • DLP false-positive measurements.
  • TLS handling / cert pinning behavior.

Adding a test

  1. Pick the directory: tests/unit/ for a pure unit test, tests/integration/ for one that needs Docker.
  2. Filename: test_<topic>.py.
  3. Boilerplate:
    import unittest
    
    from claude_bottle.<module> import <symbol>
    
    class TestThing(unittest.TestCase):
        def test_x(self):
            ...
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        unittest.main()
    
  4. For Docker-dependent tests, decorate the class with @skip_unless_docker() from tests._docker.