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Add ScaledTimeout to scale EventuallyWithT timeouts by 2x on CI, consistent with the existing PeerSyncTimeout (60s/120s) and dockertestMaxWait (300s/600s) conventions. Add assertCurlSuccessWithCollect and assertCurlFailWithCollect helpers following the existing *WithCollect naming convention. assertCurlFailWithCollect uses CurlFailFast internally for aggressive timeouts, avoiding wasted retries when expecting blocked connections. Apply these to the three flakiest ACL tests: - TestACLTagPropagation: swap NetMap and curl verification order so the fast NetMap check (confirms MapResponse arrived) runs before the slower curl check. Use curl helpers and scaled timeouts. - TestACLTagPropagationPortSpecific: use curl helpers and scaled timeouts. - TestACLHostsInNetMapTable: scale the 10s EventuallyWithT timeout. Updates #3125
Integration testing
Headscale relies on integration testing to ensure we remain compatible with Tailscale.
This is typically performed by starting a Headscale server and running a test "scenario" with an array of Tailscale clients and versions.
Headscale's test framework and the current set of scenarios are defined in this directory.
Tests are located in files ending with _test.go and the framework are located in the rest.
Running integration tests locally
The easiest way to run tests locally is to use act, a local GitHub Actions runner:
act pull_request -W .github/workflows/test-integration.yaml
Alternatively, the docker run command in each GitHub workflow file can be used.
Running integration tests on GitHub Actions
Each test currently runs as a separate workflows in GitHub actions, to add new test, run
go generate inside ../cmd/gh-action-integration-generator/ and commit the result.