List of resources on testing distributed systems curated by Andrey Satarin (@asatarin). If you are interested in my other stuff, check out talks page. For any questions or suggestions you can reach out to me on Twitter (@asatarin), Mastodon (https://discuss.systems/@asatarin) or LinkedIn.
Table of Contents
- A Markdown unordered list which will be replaced with the ToC {:toc}
- What Bugs Live in the Cloud? A Study of 3000+ Issues in Cloud Systems — study of actual bugs in different popular distributed systems (Hadoop MapReduce, HDFS, HBase, Cassandra, ZooKeeper and Flume)
- TaxDC: A Taxonomy of Non-Deterministic Concurrency Bugs in Datacenter Distributed Systems — comprehensive taxonomy of bugs in distributed systems (Cassandra, Hadoop MapReduce, HBase, ZooKeeper)
- An Empirical Study on Crash Recovery Bugs in Large-Scale Distributed Systems — based on bug database from "What Bugs Live in the Cloud?" paper researchers focus specifically on crash recovery bugs in Hadoop MapReduce, HBase, Cassandra, ZooKeeper. There is review of this paper by Murat Demirbas in his blog.
- An empirical study on the correctness of formally verified distributed systems — study of bugs in formally verified distributed systems. Analysis includes Microsoft's IronFleet distributed key-value store built from formal model.
- What bugs cause cloud production incidents? — research focused on bugs (and their resolution strategies) that actually cause production incidents in large-scale distributed services at Microsoft Azure.
- Simple Testing Can Prevent Most Critical Failures: An Analysis of Production Failures in Distributed Data-Intensive Systems — Great overview of how even simple testing can help a lot, you just need the right focus
- Early detection of configuration errors to reduce failure damage — why and how to test configuration files of your system
- Why Is Random Testing Effective for Partition Tolerance Bugs? — just what it says in a title, authors try to explain why random testing (Jepsen) is effective and introduce notions of test coverage relating to network partition, see also "The Morning Paper" review or a video from POPL 2018.
- FlyMC: Highly Scalable Testing of Complex Interleavings in Distributed Systems — novel approach of systematically exploring interleavings in distributed systems augmented with static analysis and prioritization. This approach is faster than previous techniques and found old and new bugs in several systems (Cassandra, Ethereum Blockchain, Hadoop, Kudu, Raft LogCabin, Spark, ZooKeeper).
- Torturing Databases for Fun and Profit — checking ACID guarantees of open source and commercial databases under power loss, additional material
- Understanding and Detecting Software Upgrade Failures in Distributed Systems — paper presents first study of upgrade failures in distributed systems (Cassandra, HBase, Kafka, Mesos, YARN, ZooKeeper, etc). Authors look at severity, symptoms, causes and triggers of these failures and summarize results in a number of findings. They propose two new tools to improve testing targeting upgrade failures specifically and apply those tools to a few systems with good results (new bugs and potential bugs found). I gave an overview talk of the paper in September 2022.
- Redundancy does not imply fault tolerance: analysis of distributed storage reactions to single errors and corruptions — study of several distributed systems (Redis, ZooKeeper, MongoDB, Cassandra, Kafka, RethinkDB) on how fault-tolerant they are to data corruption and read/write errors
- The Case for Limping-Hardware Tolerant Clouds — research on effect of limping hardware on performance of a distributed systems (aka limplock), see also great blog post by Dan Luu on a similar topic Distributed systems: when limping hardware is worse than dead hardware
- Toward a Generic Fault Tolerance Technique for Partial Network Partitioning — overview of network partition failures in various distributed systems (MongoDB, HBase, HDFS, Kafka, RabbitMQ, Elasticsearch, Mesos, etc), common traits among them and strategies to mitigate those failures.
- Understanding, Detecting and Localizing Partial Failures in Large System Software — what happens if your system loses some functionality due to failure as opposed to full fail-stop? Authors study how these partial failures manifest in distributed systems (ZooKeeper, Cassandra, HDFS, Mesos) and what triggers them. They propose runtime approach to detect those failure with mimic-style intrinsic watchdogs and show how these watchdogs could be generated automatically. They managed to reproduce 20 out of 22 real world partial failures and detect them using intrinsic watchdogs with great code localization and reaction time within a few seconds. See also overview talk of the paper.
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Colin Scott shares his viewpoint from academia on testing distributed systems, specifically regression testing for correctness and performance bugs.
- Technologies for Testing Distributed Systems, Part I
- See also post Distributed Systems Testing: The Lost World by Crista Lopes
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Great overview of techniques for testing distributed systems from practitioner, the video did age well and still an excellent overview of the landscape. Additional materials could be found in this GitHub repo
These materials are not directly related to testing distributed systems, but they greatly contribute to general understanding of such systems.
- Velocity NY 2013: Richard Cook, "Resilience In Complex Adaptive Systems"
- Velocity 2012: Richard Cook, "How Complex Systems Fail"
- How Complex Systems Fail
State-of-the-art approach to testing stateful distributed systems.
- Jepsen Analyses — most recent Jepsen analyses of different distributed systems
- Jepsen Talks — talks by Kyle Kingsbury at various conferences
- Aphyr's Jepsen posts — older Jepsen analyses on Kyle Kingsbury's (Aphyr) personal site
- Jepsen Talks on GitHub — Jepsen talks slides before 2015 on GitHub
- Kyle Kingsbury on InfoQ
- Call me maybe: Jepsen and flaky networks — talk on Jepsen, not by Kyle
- Jepsen is used by Microsoft CosmosDB — founder of Azure CosmosDB confirms, that they are using Jepsen
- Consistency Models — overview of various consistency models for distributed systems with transactional and non-transactional semantics. This page gives bird's-eye view on guarantees distributed systems might provide with references to do a deep dive.
Elle transactional consistency checker for black-box databases:
- Elle: Inferring Isolation Anomalies from Experimental Observations — paper on Elle design by Kyle Kingsbury and Peter Alvaro. You might also check out overview of the paper from Murat Demirbas or The Morning Paper blog
- Elle source code
- Black-box Isolation Checking with Elle — talk Kyle gave at CMU DB database seminar describing Elle and results obtained with it
- Elle: Finding Isolation Violations in Real-World Databases — keynote by Kyle Kingsbury on Elle at PODC 2021
- Elle: Opaque-box Serializability Verification — talk by Kyle Kingsbury and Peter Alvaro on Elle at VLDB 2021
Some notable Jepsen analyses:
- CockroachDB beta-20160829
- VoltDB 6.3
- Jepsen: RethinkDB 2.2.3 reconfiguration
- Jepsen: RethinkDB 2.1.5
- Radix DLT 1.0-beta.35.1
- Dgraph 1.1.1
Jepsen is used by CockroachDB, VoltDB, Cassandra, ScyllaDB and others.
- The verification of a distributed system By Caitie McCaffrey also podcast and talk on InfoQ.com and accompanying materials on GitHub and a slidedeck
- Comparisons of Alloy and Spin
- Verdi — A framework for formally verifying distributed systems implementations in Coq
- Network Semantics for Verifying Distributed Systems
- Proving that Android’s, Java’s and Python’s sorting algorithm is broken (and showing how to fix it) — using formal verification to find a bug in TimSort sorting algorithm
- Proving JDK’s Dual Pivot Quicksort Correct — analyzing quicksort implementation in Java
- Designing Distributed Systems in TLA+ by Hillel Wayne, and talk Everything about distributed systems is terrible
- Designing distributed systems with TLA+ by Hillel Wayne at Hydra Conference 2020
- Distributed systems showdown — TLA + vs real code by Jack Vanlightly at Hydra Conference 2021. Jack compares two approaches to testing distributed systems — formal verification of the design with TLA+ and testing with Maelstrom/Jepsen, comparing pros and cons.
- "Workshop: TLA+ in action" by Markus Kuppe in four parts 1, 2, 3, 4 at Hydra Conference 2021
- TLA+ Conference is a forum to present case studies tools and techniques using TLA+
Companies using TLA+ to verify correctness of algorithms:
- Amazon Web Services
- PingCap for TiDB
- Elastic
- MongoDB
- CockroachLabs
- Microsoft for services in Azure cloud
- Confluent for Apache Kafka
Pioneered by FoundationDB, deterministic simulation approach to testing distributed systems gained more popularity in recent years.
- Designing Dope Distributed Systems for Outer Space with High-Fidelity Simulation — talk about using deterministic simulation to test distributed space telescope. With recommendations on how to move file IO, network, scheduling out of your program o make it more amenable to simulation.
More companies and systems adopt it as a primary testing strategy:
- FoundationDB
- TigerBeetle
- Convex
- RisingWave
- Amazon Web Services uses SimWorld to test Elastic Block Storage control plane
- Red Planet Labs
- Sled
See also talk "Simulation Testing" by Michael Nygard
Netflix adopted lineage-driven fault injection techniques for testing microservices.
- Principles of Chaos Engineering
- Free Chaos Engineering book by Netflix engineers
- A curated list of awesome Chaos Engineering resources
Netflix pioneered chaos engineering discipline.
There are two flavors of fuzzing. First, randomized concurrency testing, where the ordering of messages is fuzzed:
And input fuzzing, where message contents or user inputs are fuzzed:
- DNS parser, meet Go fuzzer
- Fuzz Testing with afl-fuzz (American Fuzzy Loop)
- Randomized testing for Go and talk on this tool GopherCon 2015: Dmitry Vyukov — Go Dynamic Tools
- Simple guided fuzzing for libraries using LLVM`s new libFuzzer
- LibFuzzer – a library for coverage-guided fuzz testing
- How Heartbleed could've been found — example of how fuzzing could be used for finding famous HeartBleed vulnerability
Amazing and comprehensive overview of different strategies to test systems built with microservices by Cindy Sridharan.
Series of blog posts specifically on testing in production — best practices, pitfalls, etc:
- Your Load Generator Is Probably Lying To You
- Everything You Know About Latency Is Wrong — great overview of Gil Tene`s "How NOT to Measure Latency" talk
- "How NOT to Measure Latency" by Gil Tene
- "Benchmarking: You're Doing It Wrong" by Aysylu Greenberg
- Performance Analysis Methodology — approaches developed by Brendan Gregg for analysing performance in systematic fashion
See also benchmarking tools.
- Minimizing Faulty Executions of Distributed Systems — reducing the size of buggy executions to make them easier to understand. 60 minute talk here
- Troubleshooting Blackbox SDN Control Software with Minimal Causal Sequences — similar to above, but requires less instrumentation.
- Concurrency Debugging with Differential Schedule Projections — find and minimize concurrency bugs using program analysis. Shared memory systems are equivalent to message passing systems, so you can apply the same techniques to distributed systems.
- Metamorphic Testing — overview of what metamorphic testing is and where it can help. For more details see paper "Metamorphic Testing: A Review of Challenges and Opportunities".
- Testing Distributed Systems for Linearizability — describes linearizability testing tool Porcupine, written in Go.
- Efficient Exploratory Testing of Concurrent Systems — They don't mention it but looks like they describe testing of Google Omega
- Exploratory Testing Architecture (ETA)
- Paxos Made Live — An Engineering Perspective has a section on testing
- 10 Years of Crashing Google describes some war stories from Disaster Recovery Testing (DiRT) team at Google
- Testing for Reliability chapter from Google Site Reliability Engineering book
- Randomized Testing of Cloud Spanner — overview of randomized testing at Cloud Spanner, including how to scale it to large datasets and high concurrency
- The Evolution of Testing Methodology at AWS: From Status Quo to Formal Methods with TLA+
- Use of Formal Methods at Amazon Web Services
- CACM Article "How Amazon Web Services Uses Formal Methods"
- Debugging Designs by Chris Newcombie there is also a source bundle
- Millions of tiny databases — has section on testing which describes several approaches: SimWorld simulation resembling approach used at Foundation DB, use of Jepsen and formal methods and game days.
- Using lightweight formal methods to validate a key-value storage node in Amazon S3 — paper on verifying correctness of a new key-value storage node implementation in S3. They are using property-based testing and stateless model checking extensively to balance trade-offs and follow pragmatic approach. I gave a talk "Formal Methods at Amazon S3" on this paper for a reading group.
See also formal methods and deterministic simulation sections.
Automated failure injection (see also Lineage-driven Fault Injection):
- Monkeys in Lab Coats: Applying Failure Testing Research @Netflix
- “Monkeys in Labs Coats”: Applied Failure Testing Research at Netflix
- Automated Failure Testing
- Automating Failure Testing Research at Internet Scale by P. Alvaro et. el.
Random/manual failure injection testing:
- Netflix Simian Army
- Failure Injection Testing
- From Chaos to Control — Testing the resiliency of Netflix’s Content Discovery Platform
- Breaking Bad at Netflix: Building Failure as a Service
- GTAC 2014: I Don't Test Often ... But When I Do, I Test in Production — Netflix different testing strategies
See also Chaos Engineering.
- Asynchronous programming, analysis and testing with state machines — Open source language for building distributed systems. Language is designed with tooling in mind, particularly, automatic exploration of message orderings in order to find bugs.
- Uncovering Bugs in Distributed Storage Systems during Testing (not in Production!)
- Windows Azure Storage: A Highly Available Cloud Storage Service with Strong Consistency describes "Pressure Point Testing" approach used for Azure Cloud Storage
- Inside Azure Search: Chaos Engineering
- TLA+ at Microsoft: 16 Years in Production by David Langworthy — how rejuvenation of TLA+ happened at Microsoft in 2016 and onwards
See also formal methods section.
- BellJar: A new framework for testing system recoverability at scale — BellJar is a testing framework focused on answering question "What service dependencies are required for the service to recover after large scale disaster?". BellJar puts service in a vacuum environment with only handful of direct dependencies allow-listed to verify that recovery procedures succeed under those constraints. It checks those recovery procedures in CI/CD pipeline preventing unconstrained growth of dependency graph and circular dependencies. Based on BellJar tests one can construct the entire dependency graph of the services allowing to boostrap them in the correct order from bottom to top.
- "Testing Distributed Systems w/ Deterministic Simulation" by Will Wilson — talk on FoundationDB simulation testing. Their architecture was built from the ground up to support fully deterministic simulation testing
- Simulation and Testing — public overview of FoundationDB simulation testing framework
- FoundationDB or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Trust the Database by Markus Pilman from Snowflake — updated talk on testing FoundationDB with deterministic simulation. Markus goes into details of what it takes to build deterministic simulation into a database. He mentions that it took two years to build a simulation framework before FoundationDB team started working on a database.
- "Buggify — Testing Distributed Systems with Deterministic Simulation" — Alex Miller, one of developers at FoundationDB, describes BUGGIFY macros, which helps bias simulation tests towards doing dangerous and bug finding things. This is a good example of cooperation between testing efforts and production code.
- "FoundationDB: A Distributed Unbundled Transactional Key Value Store" — SIGMOD 2021 paper on FoundationDB has a very detailed section on simulation testing at FoundationDB with discussions on determinism, test oracles, fault injection and limitations.
- "Unlucky Simulation" — talk on using various scheduling strategies (LibFuzzer, random, etc) with simulation testing in FoundationDB
See also deterministic simulation section.
- Testing Apache Cassandra with Jepsen
- Testing Cassandra Guarantees under Diverse Failure Modes with Jepsen
- Testing Cassandra Guarantees under Diverse Failure Modes with Jepsen
- Jepsen Cassandra Testing on Git
- Netflix A STATE OF XEN — CHAOS MONKEY & CASSANDRA from Cassandra Summit 2015
- Testing Apache Cassandra with Jepsen: How to Understand and Produce Safe Distributed Systems by Joel Knighton presented at Devoxx UK 2016
- Testing Apache Cassandra 4.0 — quick overview of approaches used to test next major version of Cassandra
- Fallout — tool to run distributed tests as a service. It is meant to easily orchestrate cluster creation and testing tools like Jepsen, performance testing tools and others, though extension and combining them in various ways with environmental conditions. It could run tests either locally or on large scale clusters.
- Cassandra Harry — Fuzz testing tool for Apache Cassandra. Aims to provide reproducible workloads to test correctness of Apache Cassandra.
- Fuzz Testing and Verification of Apache Cassandra with "Harry" — talk on Harry fuzz testing tool by Alex Petrov at ApacheCon 2021
- Harry, an Open Source Fuzz Testing and Verification Tool for Apache Cassandra by Alex Petrov — blog post about Harry fuzz testing tool for Apache Cassandra and how it helps to find bugs
They published series of blog posts on testing ScyllaDB:
- Scylla testing part 1: Cassandra compatibility testing
- Scylla testing part 2: Extending Jepsen for testing Scylla
- CharybdeFS: a new fault-injecting filesystem for software testing
- Testing part 4: Distributed tests
- Testing part 5: Longevity testing
- Fault-injecting filesystem cookbook Video from Scylla Summit 2017 on testing
- How We Constantly Try to Bring Scylla to its Knees and slides — overview of different testing types at ScyllaDB
- Project Gemini: An Open Source Automated Random Testing Suite for Scylla and Cassandra Clusters — random test generator comparing results from cluster with injected faults against single node running without faults. Works on tops of CQL API and suitable for testing any database implementing it. See also talk on Project Gemini and open source code
- ScyllaDB NoSQL Database Testing — highlights of testing approaches at Scylla
- Mysteries of Dropbox Property-Based Testing of a Distributed Synchronization Service — example of how to use QuickCheck to test synchronization in Dropbox and similar tools (Google Drive). John Hughes gave a talk on this. See also QuickCheck.
- Data Checking at Dropbox — If you have lots of data, you have to verify that it did not suffer from bit rot and protect it against rare bugs (e.g. race conditions) to guarantee long term durability. This talks explains intricacies of building data consistency checker(s) at Dropbox scale.
- Dropbox's Exabyte Storage System (aka Magic Pocket) talk by James Cowling — describes number of strategies to achieve extremely high durability.
This includes:
- guard against faulty disks,
- guard against software defects,
- guard against black swan events,
- operational safeguards to reduce blast radius,
- safeguards against deletes with multi stage soft-delete,
- comprehensive testing strategy in-depth with increased scale,
- redundancy across various axis in software and hardware stacks,
- continuous data integrity validation on many levels,
- etc
- Testing sync at Dropbox — comprehensive overview of two test frameworks at Dropbox for new sync engine implementation. CanopyCheck — single threaded and fully deterministic randomized testing framework with minimization for synchronization planner component of the engine. The other framework Trinity focuses on concurrency and larger surface area of components. Great discussion on tradeoffs between determinism, strength of test oracles vs width of coverage and size of the system under test.
- Growing a protocol — applying lineage driven fault injection to test Elasticsearch replication protocol
- Using TLA+ for fun and profit in the development of Elasticsearch by Yannick Welsch — Elasticsearch uses TLA+ to verify correctness of their replication protocol
See also formal methods section.
- MongoDB’s JavaScript Fuzzer: Creating Chaos (1/2)
- MongoDB’s JavaScript Fuzzer: Harnessing the Havoc (2/2)
- MongoDB's JavaScript Fuzzer article in ACM Queue
- Fixing a MongoDB Replication Protocol Bug with TLA+ by William Schultz — how MongoDB uses formal verification with TLA+ to check correctness of their replication protocol. Describes how replication bugs could have been found with help of formal model.
- eXtreme Modelling in Practice — two attempts at MongoDB to check that code conforms to its formal model.
- Formal Verification of a Distributed Dynamic Reconfiguration Protocol — talk on formally verifying MongoDB Raft-based replication reconfiguration protocol with TLAPS. Paper preprint.
- Change Point Detection in Software Performance Testing — paper on how MongoDB team automatically detects performance degradations in the presence of noise in continuous integration runs. The paper was presented at ICPE 2020
See also formal methods section.
- Kafka Fault Injection framework
- TLA+ specification of the Kafka replication protocol and talk about using TLA+ for hardening Kafka replication protocol
See also formal methods section.
- DIY Jepsen Testing CockroachDB — great read about using Jepsen at Cockroach Labs
- CockroachDB Beta Passes Jepsen Testing — CockroachDB tested by Kyle Kingsbury (Jepsen.io)
- Introducing Pebble: A RocksDB Inspired Key-Value Store Written in Go — introduces new storage engine and includes thorough discussion on what it takes to properly test storage engine
- ParallelCommits.tla — Formal specification in TLA+ of the parallel commit transaction protocol. See also formal methods.
Formerly known as MemSQL.
- Running SingleStore’s 107 Node Test Infrastructure on CoreOS. See also accompanying talk.
- Practical Techniques to Achieve Quality in Large Software Projects
- How to Make a Believable Benchmark
- Building an Infinitely Scalable Testing System — description of internal test system PsyDuck
- Simoorg Failure inducer framework — Failure inducer implemented in Python
- A Deep Dive into Simoorg
- Dynamometer: Scale Testing HDFS on Minimal Hardware with Maximum Fidelity — testing scalability of large Hadoop clusters (namely NameNode) with just fraction of nodes
Series of post on testing at VoltDB:
- How We Test at VoltDB
- Testing at VoltDB: SQLCoverage — describes how they test SQL query functionality using 5 millions queries generated from templates and comparing results against HSQLDB
- Testing VoltDB Against PostgreSQL
- VoltDB 6.4 Passes Official Jepsen Testing — VoltDB hired Kyle Kingsbury (Jepsen) to tests their database, they share results in this post
Additional resources:
- "All In With Determinism for Performance and Testing in Distributed Systems" by John Hugg and a slide deck Hugg-DeterministicDistributedSystems.pdf
- SelfCheck workload
- TPC-C implementation
- Use Chaos to test the distributed system linearizability — describes Jepsen-like framework implemented in Go and used at PingCap to test TiDB
- A test framework for linearizability check with Go — Chaos is a Jepsen-like framework written in Go, uses Porcupine linearizability checker
- Chaos Tools and Techniques for Testing the TiDB Distributed NewSQL Database and the same post on company blog
- Official Jepsen report on TiDB 2.1.7 and companion blog post in company blog
- Safety First! Common Safety Pitfalls in Distributed Databases Found by Jepsen Tests — overview of Jepsen approach and tests with quick refresher on results for different databases to date
- https://github.com/pingcap/tla-plus — formal specification in TLA+ of Raft consensus protocol and implementation of distributed transactions in TiDB
- Testing Cloud-Native Databases with Chaos Mesh — talk on Chaos Mesh and how it is used for testing TiDB at PingCap. Blog post with introduction to Chaos Mesh and how it integrates with Kubernetes. See also Chaos Mesh source code and chaos engineering section.
See also formal methods section.
- Quality Assurance at Cloudera: Fault Injection and Elastic Partitioning — Cloudera describes their approach to fault injection testing
- Quality Assurance at Cloudera: Highly-Controlled Disk Injection
- Measuring Correctness of State in a Distributed System — describes general idea and implementation how to test safety of distributed stream processing system
- Performance testing a low-latency stream processing system — high level overview of what to look at when testing performance of stream processing system
- How We Test the Stateful Autoscaling of Our Stream Processing System — advanced safety tests for autoscaling stateful stream processing
- All posts on testing from Walaroo engineering blog
There is also talk from Sean T. Allen on testing stream processing system at Wallaroo Labs (ex. Sendence)
- Materials on Sean's blog "CodeMeshIO: How Did I Get Here?"
- Video from QCon NY 2016 on InfoQ
- Video from CodeMeshIO on YouTube
- Presentation on Speakerdeck
- Jepsen Testing on YugabyteDB — YugabyteDB describes how they use Jepsen
- YugabyteDB 1.1.9 analysis by Kyle Kingsbury — Kyle explores safety of YugabyteDB. Accompanying post in company blog "YugabyteDB 1.2 Passes Jepsen Testing" and "Wrapping Up: Jepsen Test Results for YugabyteDB 1.2 Webinar" post with webinar recording by Kyle and Karthik Ranganathan (Yugabyte CTO).
- YugabyteDB 1.3.1 — Jepsen analysis of YugabyteDB support for serializable SQL transactions. Companion blog post on the company website.
- Verifying Transactional Consistency with Jepsen — results of internal Jepsen testing at FaunaDB
- Jepsen: FaunaDB 2.5.4 — official Jepsen test for FaunaDB, write-up in Fauna blog
- Resiliency Testing with Toxiproxy
- Toxiproxy — A TCP proxy to simulate network and system conditions for chaos and resiliency testing
- Testing the CP Subsystem with Jepsen — overview of how Jepsen is used to test Hazelcast in-memory data grid CP subsystem
- Testing Eventual Consistency in Riak — how to model eventually consistent database in QuickCheck and find bugs in it`s implementation, video available on YouTube
- Modeling Eventual Consistency Databases with QuickCheck — another talk on testing Riak eventual consistency guarantees with QuickCheck
- Testing distributed systems in Go — overview of failure injection testing for etcd. Or alternative url for the same post.
- On the Hunt for Etcd Data Inconsistencies — talk on how Etcd reimplemented Jepsen in Go using their existing test framework as a cluster runner and Porcupine as a linearizability checker
- Where we’re going, we don’t need threads: Simulating Distributed Systems — following FoundationDB steps, Red Planet Labs uses deterministic simulation for testing. Their formula for success is "deterministic simulation = no parallelism + quantized execution + deterministic behavior".
See also deterministic simulation section.
- Simulation Tests in TigerBeetle — TigerBeetle is a distributed financial accounting database built in Zig programming language and uses simulation tests inspired by Dropbox and FoundationDB.
See also deterministic simulation section.
- Convex: Life Without a Backend Team by James Cowling — talks about architecture and features of Convex. At the end of the talk James covers testing at Convex. They use approach inspired by QuickCheck and FoundationDB to test end-to-end guarantees with randomized initial state, workload, injected failures and thread interleaving. These tests validate correctness in production similar to Dropbox Magic Pocket system on which James worked previously.
- Better Testing With Less Code Using Randomization — blog post describing approach Convex uses to develop randomized tests
See also QuickCheck, FoundationDB, Dropbox, Jepsen, deterministic simulation.
In a series of two blog posts, RisingWave team talks about their experience using deterministic simulation for testing distributed SQL-based stream processing platform:
- Deterministic Simulation: A New Era of Distributed System Testing
- Applying Deterministic Simulation: The RisingWave Story They talk about few kinds of tests they built with the simulator (unit, end-to-end, recovery, scaling), pros, cons and challenges of this approach.
As a result of this work, they open sourced MadSim — Magical Deterministic Simulator for the Rust language ecosystem.
See also deterministic simulation section.
These examples are not about distributed systems, but they demonstrate testing concurrency and level of sophistication required in distributed systems.
SQLite is not a distributed system by any stretch of the imagination, but provides good example of comprehensive testing of a database implementation.
- Finding bugs in SQLite, the easy way — how fuzzing used in testing SQLite database
- How SQLite Is Tested
- Sled simulation guide (jepsen-proof engineering) — guide on simulation testing (see FoundationDB) in Sled database
- Reliable Systems Series: Model-Based Testing
See also deterministic simulation section.
- Fuzzing ClickHouse — high level overview of query fuzzing at Clickhouse
- ClickHouse Testing — documentation on various tests for ClickHouse database and how to contribute more tests
- Comcast — Simulating shitty network connections, so you can build better systems
- Muxy Simulating real-world distributed system failures
- Namazu — Programmable fuzzy scheduler for testing distributed systems
- Toxiproxy — A TCP proxy to simulate network and system conditions for chaos and resiliency testing
- Traffic Control
- Python API for Linux Traffic Control
- Slow tool
- Blockade is a utility for testing network failures and partitions in distributed applications
- DEMi: Distributed Execution Minimizer for Akka
- Chaos Mesh — chaos engineering platform for Kubernetes. See also PingCap, company behind Chaos Mesh.
- PolyConf 14: Testing the Hard Stuff and Staying Sane / John Hughes
- The Joy of Testing
- John Hughes on InfoQ
- Hansei: Property-based Development of Concurrent Systems
- QuickChecking Poolboy for Fun and Profit — from Basho
- Combining Fault-Injection with Property-Based Testing
- Testing Telecoms Software with Quviq QuickCheck
- Fuzz testing distributed systems with QuickCheck — using QuickCheck to test Raft protocol implementation in Haskell