When I run the below setup with Docker locally on my mac everything works fine.
But same setup does not work on Jenkins running on Ubuntu 16.04
ChromiumHeadless have not captured in 60000 ms, killing.
Following error log is from Jenkins console:
25 05 2018 06:35:09.076:INFO [karma]: Karma v2.0.2 server started at http://0.0.0.0:9222/ 25 05 2018 06:35:09.079:INFO [launcher]: Launching browser Chromium_no_sandbox with unlimited concurrency 25 05 2018 06:35:09.090:INFO [launcher]: Starting browser ChromiumHeadless 25 05 2018 06:36:09.128:WARN [launcher]: ChromiumHeadless have not captured in 60000 ms, killing. 25 05 2018 06:36:09.139:INFO [launcher]: Trying to start ChromiumHeadless again (1/2). 25 05 2018 06:37:09.140:WARN [launcher]: ChromiumHeadless have not captured in 60000 ms, killing. 25 05 2018 06:37:09.147:INFO [launcher]: Trying to start ChromiumHeadless again (2/2).
Package.json ... "testProd": "./node_modules/karma/bin/karma start karma.conf-prod.js --single-run",
Dockerfile
FROM zenika/alpine-node:latest LABEL name="product-web" # Update apk repositories RUN echo "http://dl-2.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/main" > /etc/apk/repositories RUN echo "http://dl-2.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories RUN echo "http://dl-2.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/testing" >> /etc/apk/repositories # Install chromium RUN apk -U --no-cache \ --allow-untrusted add \ zlib-dev \ chromium \ xvfb \ wait4ports \ xorg-server \ dbus \ ttf-freefont \ mesa-dri-swrast \ grep \ udev \ && apk del --purge --force linux-headers binutils-gold gnupg zlib-dev libc-utils \ && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* \ /var/cache/apk/* \ /usr/share/man \ /tmp/* \ /usr/lib/node_modules/npm/man \ /usr/lib/node_modules/npm/doc \ /usr/lib/node_modules/npm/html \ /usr/lib/node_modules/npm/scripts WORKDIR /home/dev/code COPY . . #RUN rm -rf node_modules && npm cache clear --force ENV CHROME_BIN=/usr/bin/chromium-browser ENV CHROME_PATH=/usr/lib/chromium/ RUN npm install RUN npm run testProd && npm run buildProd
karma.conf-prod.js
const path = require('path'); module.exports = function(config) { config.set({ basePath: '', browsers: ['ChromeHeadlessNoSandbox'], customLaunchers: { ChromeHeadlessNoSandbox: { base: 'ChromeHeadless', flags: [ '--no-sandbox', '--user-data-dir=/tmp/chrome-test-profile', '--disable-web-security' ] } }, frameworks: ['mocha', 'chai'], captureConsole: true, files: [ 'node_modules/babel-polyfill/dist/polyfill.js', 'test/root.js' ], preprocessors: { 'src/index.js': ['webpack', 'sourcemap'], 'test/root.js': ['webpack'] }, webpack: { devtool: 'inline-source-map', module: { loaders: [ { test: /\.js$/, loader: 'babel-loader', exclude: path.resolve(__dirname, 'node_modules'), query: { plugins: ['transform-decorators-legacy', 'transform-regenerator'], presets: ['env', 'stage-1', 'react'] } }, { test: /\.json$/, loader: 'json-loader', }, ] }, externals: { 'react/addons': true, 'react/lib/ExecutionEnvironment': true, 'react/lib/ReactContext': true } }, webpackServer: { noInfo: true }, reporters: ['spec'], port: 9222, logLevel: config.LOG_INFO }); };
I even tried with logLevel: config.LOG_DEBUG
but did not show anything missing or unusual.
2 Answers
Answers 1
Based on issue Karma 1.6 breaks Headless support for Chrome created on github, it is related to the slower machine and happens, because it took > 60 seconds before test bundle was parsed and executed by Chrome and therefore test run was started and communicated back to Karma server. Reasons why it may take long vary.
There are 2 ways to handle timeout:
Investigate why your test bundle loads >60 seconds and make sure it loads faster.
- Increase browserNoActivityTimeout to highter value, so test bundle has enough time to load.
- This particular appearance of timeout does not seem to be a Karma issue, but rather problem in the project or misconfiguration.
Based on the Derek's comment
There was a connection that was disconnecting too soon.
He found that in /static/karma.js, when the socket was created, there was a timeout value that is hardcoded to 2 seconds (see below). He just added another 0 to make it 20 seconds and the connection stayed open long enough for the server to respond to the initial request. karma/client/main.js
Lines 14 to 20 in e79463b
var socket = io(location.host, { reconnectionDelay: 500, reconnectionDelayMax: Infinity, timeout: 2000, path: KARMA_PROXY_PATH + KARMA_URL_ROOT.substr(1) + 'socket.io', 'sync disconnect on unload': true })
The next problem he faced was that Karma thought there was no activity even though there was traffic going back and forth on the socket. To fix that he just added browserNoActivityTimeout: 60000 to the Karma configuration.
You need to change the timeout configuration more then that is in the configuration file.
Answers 2
This is not a problem with Jenkins or from Docker according to my current understanding of the situation.
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