The original three-stage design (probe / driver-loopback / forward- bridge) only proved driver-write → server-read. It missed: - OPC UA write → server → driver → PLC (the reverse direction) - server-side data-change notifications actually firing (a stale subscription can still let a read-after-the-fact return the new value and look fine) Extend _common.ps1 with two helpers: - Test-OpcUaWriteBridge: otopcua-cli write the NodeId -> wait 3s -> driver CLI read the PLC side, assert equality. - Test-SubscribeSeesChange: Start-Process otopcua-cli subscribe in the background with --duration N, settle 2s, driver-side write, wait for the subscription window to close, assert captured stdout contains the new value. Wire both into test-modbus / test-abcip / test-ablegacy / test-s7 / test-focas / test-twincat after the existing forward-bridge stage. Update README to describe the five-stage design + note that the published NodeId must be writable for stages 4 + 5. Also prepend UTF-8 BOM to every script in scripts/e2e so Windows PowerShell 5.1 parsers agree on em-dash byte sequences the way PowerShell 7 already does. The scripts still #Requires -Version 7.0 — the BOM is purely defensive for IDE / CI step parsers. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
328 lines
12 KiB
PowerShell
328 lines
12 KiB
PowerShell
# Shared PowerShell helpers for the OtOpcUa end-to-end CLI test scripts.
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#
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# Every per-protocol script dot-sources this file and calls the Test-* functions
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# below. Keeps the per-script code down to ~50 lines of parameterisation +
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# bridging-tag identifiers.
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#
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# Conventions:
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# - All test helpers return a hashtable: @{ Passed=<bool>; Reason=<string> }
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# - Helpers never throw unless the test setup is itself broken (a crashed
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# CLI is a test failure, not an exception).
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# - Output is plain text with [PASS] / [FAIL] / [SKIP] / [INFO] prefixes so
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# grep/log-scraping works.
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Set-StrictMode -Version 3.0
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Colouring + prefixes.
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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function Write-Header {
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param([string]$Title)
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Write-Host ""
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Write-Host "=== $Title ===" -ForegroundColor Cyan
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}
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function Write-Pass {
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param([string]$Message)
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Write-Host "[PASS] $Message" -ForegroundColor Green
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}
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function Write-Fail {
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param([string]$Message)
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Write-Host "[FAIL] $Message" -ForegroundColor Red
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}
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function Write-Skip {
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param([string]$Message)
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Write-Host "[SKIP] $Message" -ForegroundColor Yellow
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}
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function Write-Info {
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param([string]$Message)
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Write-Host "[INFO] $Message" -ForegroundColor Gray
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}
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# CLI invocation helpers.
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Resolve a CLI path from either a published binary OR a `dotnet run` fallback.
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# Preferred order:
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# 1. $env:OTOPCUA_CLI_BIN points at a publish/ folder → use <exe> there
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# 2. Fall back to `dotnet run --project src/<ProjectFolder> --`
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#
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# $ProjectFolder = relative path from repo root
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# $ExeName = expected AssemblyName (no .exe)
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function Get-CliInvocation {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ProjectFolder,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ExeName
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)
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if ($env:OTOPCUA_CLI_BIN) {
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$binPath = Join-Path $env:OTOPCUA_CLI_BIN "$ExeName.exe"
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if (Test-Path $binPath) {
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return @{ File = $binPath; PrefixArgs = @() }
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}
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}
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# Dotnet-run fallback. --no-build would be faster but not every CI step
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# has rebuilt; default to a full run so the script is forgiving.
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return @{
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File = "dotnet"
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PrefixArgs = @("run", "--project", $ProjectFolder, "--")
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}
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}
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# Run a CLI and capture stdout+stderr+exitcode. Never throws.
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function Invoke-Cli {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $Cli, # output of Get-CliInvocation
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$Args, # CLI arguments (after `-- `)
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[int]$TimeoutSec = 30
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)
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$allArgs = @($Cli.PrefixArgs) + $Args
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$output = $null
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$exitCode = -1
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try {
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$output = & $Cli.File @allArgs 2>&1 | Out-String
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$exitCode = $LASTEXITCODE
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}
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catch {
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return @{
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Output = $_.Exception.Message
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ExitCode = -1
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}
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}
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return @{
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Output = $output
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ExitCode = $exitCode
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}
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}
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Test helpers — reusable building blocks every per-protocol script calls.
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Test 1 — the driver CLI's probe command exits 0. Confirms the PLC / simulator
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# is reachable and speaks the protocol. Prerequisite for everything else.
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function Test-Probe {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $Cli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$ProbeArgs
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)
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Write-Header "Probe"
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$r = Invoke-Cli -Cli $Cli -Args $ProbeArgs
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if ($r.ExitCode -eq 0) {
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Write-Pass "driver CLI probe succeeded"
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return @{ Passed = $true }
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}
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Write-Fail "driver CLI probe exit=$($r.ExitCode)"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "probe exit $($r.ExitCode)" }
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}
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# Test 2 — driver-loopback. Write a value via the driver CLI, read it back via
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# the same CLI, assert round-trip equality. Confirms the driver itself is
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# functional without pulling the OtOpcUa server into the loop.
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function Test-DriverLoopback {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $Cli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$WriteArgs,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$ReadArgs,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ExpectedValue
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)
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Write-Header "Driver loopback"
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$w = Invoke-Cli -Cli $Cli -Args $WriteArgs
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if ($w.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Write-Fail "write failed (exit=$($w.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $w.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "write failed" }
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}
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Write-Info "write ok"
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$r = Invoke-Cli -Cli $Cli -Args $ReadArgs
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if ($r.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Write-Fail "read failed (exit=$($r.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "read failed" }
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}
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if ($r.Output -match "Value:\s+$([Regex]::Escape($ExpectedValue))\b") {
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Write-Pass "round-trip equals $ExpectedValue"
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return @{ Passed = $true }
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}
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Write-Fail "round-trip value mismatch — expected $ExpectedValue"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "value mismatch" }
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}
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# Test 3 — server bridge. Write via the driver CLI, read the corresponding
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# OPC UA NodeId via the OPC UA client CLI. Confirms the full path:
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# driver CLI → PLC → OtOpcUa server (polling/subscription) → OPC UA client.
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function Test-ServerBridge {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $DriverCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$DriverWriteArgs,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $OpcUaCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaUrl,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaNodeId,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ExpectedValue,
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[int]$ServerPollDelaySec = 3
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)
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Write-Header "Server bridge"
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$w = Invoke-Cli -Cli $DriverCli -Args $DriverWriteArgs
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if ($w.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Write-Fail "driver-side write failed (exit=$($w.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $w.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "driver write failed" }
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}
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Write-Info "driver write ok, waiting ${ServerPollDelaySec}s for server-side poll"
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Start-Sleep -Seconds $ServerPollDelaySec
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$r = Invoke-Cli -Cli $OpcUaCli -Args @("read", "-u", $OpcUaUrl, "-n", $OpcUaNodeId)
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if ($r.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Write-Fail "OPC UA client read failed (exit=$($r.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "opc-ua read failed" }
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}
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if ($r.Output -match "Value:\s+$([Regex]::Escape($ExpectedValue))\b") {
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Write-Pass "server-side read equals $ExpectedValue"
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return @{ Passed = $true }
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}
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Write-Fail "server-side value mismatch — expected $ExpectedValue"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "bridge value mismatch" }
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}
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# Test 4 — reverse bridge. Write via the OPC UA client CLI, then read the PLC
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# side via the driver CLI. Confirms the write path: OPC UA client → server →
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# driver → PLC. This is the direction Test-ServerBridge does NOT cover — a
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# clean Test-ServerBridge only proves reads flow server-ward.
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function Test-OpcUaWriteBridge {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $OpcUaCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaUrl,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaNodeId,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $DriverCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$DriverReadArgs,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ExpectedValue,
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[int]$DriverPollDelaySec = 3
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)
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Write-Header "OPC UA write bridge"
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$w = Invoke-Cli -Cli $OpcUaCli -Args @(
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"write", "-u", $OpcUaUrl, "-n", $OpcUaNodeId, "-v", $ExpectedValue)
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if ($w.ExitCode -ne 0 -or $w.Output -notmatch "Write successful") {
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Write-Fail "OPC UA client write failed (exit=$($w.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $w.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "opc-ua write failed" }
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}
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Write-Info "opc-ua write ok, waiting ${DriverPollDelaySec}s for driver-side apply"
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Start-Sleep -Seconds $DriverPollDelaySec
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$r = Invoke-Cli -Cli $DriverCli -Args $DriverReadArgs
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if ($r.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Write-Fail "driver-side read failed (exit=$($r.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "driver read failed" }
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}
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if ($r.Output -match "Value:\s+$([Regex]::Escape($ExpectedValue))\b") {
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Write-Pass "PLC-side value equals $ExpectedValue"
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return @{ Passed = $true }
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}
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Write-Fail "PLC-side value mismatch — expected $ExpectedValue"
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Write-Host $r.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "reverse-bridge value mismatch" }
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}
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# Test 5 — subscribe-sees-change. Start `otopcua-cli subscribe --duration N`
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# in the background, give it ~2s to attach, then write a known value via the
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# driver CLI. After the subscription window closes, assert its captured
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# output mentions the new value. Confirms the OPC UA server is actually
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# pushing data-change notifications for driver-originated changes — not just
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# that a fresh read returns the new value.
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function Test-SubscribeSeesChange {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $OpcUaCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaUrl,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$OpcUaNodeId,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] $DriverCli,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string[]]$DriverWriteArgs,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$ExpectedValue,
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[int]$DurationSec = 8,
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[int]$SettleSec = 2
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)
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Write-Header "Subscribe sees change"
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# `Start-Job` would spin up a fresh PowerShell runtime and cost 2s+. Use
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# Start-Process + a temp file instead — it's the same shape Invoke-Cli
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# uses but non-blocking.
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$stdout = New-TemporaryFile
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$stderr = New-TemporaryFile
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$allArgs = @($OpcUaCli.PrefixArgs) + @(
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"subscribe", "-u", $OpcUaUrl, "-n", $OpcUaNodeId,
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"-i", "200", "--duration", "$DurationSec")
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$proc = Start-Process -FilePath $OpcUaCli.File `
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-ArgumentList $allArgs `
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-NoNewWindow -PassThru `
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-RedirectStandardOutput $stdout.FullName `
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-RedirectStandardError $stderr.FullName
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Write-Info "subscription started (pid $($proc.Id)), waiting ${SettleSec}s to settle"
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Start-Sleep -Seconds $SettleSec
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$w = Invoke-Cli -Cli $DriverCli -Args $DriverWriteArgs
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if ($w.ExitCode -ne 0) {
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Stop-Process -Id $proc.Id -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
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Remove-Item $stdout.FullName, $stderr.FullName -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
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Write-Fail "driver write during subscribe failed (exit=$($w.ExitCode))"
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Write-Host $w.Output
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "driver write failed" }
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}
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Write-Info "driver write ok, waiting for subscription window to close"
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# Wait for the subscribe process to exit its --duration timer. Grace
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# margin on top of the duration in case the first data-change races the
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# final flush.
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$proc.WaitForExit(($DurationSec + 5) * 1000) | Out-Null
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if (-not $proc.HasExited) { Stop-Process -Id $proc.Id -Force }
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$out = (Get-Content $stdout.FullName -Raw) + (Get-Content $stderr.FullName -Raw)
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Remove-Item $stdout.FullName, $stderr.FullName -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
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# The subscribe command prints `[timestamp] displayName = value (status)`
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# per data-change event. We only care that one of those events carried
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# the new value.
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if ($out -match "=\s*$([Regex]::Escape($ExpectedValue))\b") {
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Write-Pass "subscribe saw $ExpectedValue"
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return @{ Passed = $true }
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}
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Write-Fail "subscribe did not observe $ExpectedValue in ${DurationSec}s"
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Write-Host $out
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return @{ Passed = $false; Reason = "change not observed on subscription" }
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}
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Summary helper — caller passes an array of test results.
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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function Write-Summary {
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param(
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [string]$Title,
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[Parameter(Mandatory)] [array]$Results
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)
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$passed = ($Results | Where-Object { $_.Passed }).Count
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$failed = ($Results | Where-Object { -not $_.Passed }).Count
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Write-Host ""
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Write-Host "=== $Title summary: $passed/$($Results.Count) passed ===" `
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-ForegroundColor $(if ($failed -eq 0) { "Green" } else { "Red" })
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}
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