Mercurial > hg > orthanc-tests
view README @ 131:90e5331ddee9
application/dicom+json is now the default in DICOMweb
author | Sebastien Jodogne <s.jodogne@gmail.com> |
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date | Thu, 11 Jan 2018 16:37:21 +0100 |
parents | 8f4b70c89467 |
children | 6943b41eb239 |
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Orthanc - A Lightweight, RESTful DICOM Server ============================================= General Information =================== This repository contains the integration tests that are used to validate Orthanc before each official release, in complement to the unit tests that are part of the Orthanc core repository. These integration tests should be run by the package maintainers of the various platforms supported by Orthanc. General information about Orthanc can be found on its official Website: http://www.orthanc-server.com/ Quick-start: Running tests on the localhost =========================================== This section explains how to run the integration tests in the simplest framework. First, install Orthanc. Then, open 2 command shells and run the instructions that follow: 1. In the first command shell: # python ./GenerateConfigurationForTests.py --force # Orthanc IntegrationTestsConfiguration.json 2. In the second command shell: # python ./Tests/Run.py Running the tests ================= The integration tests are written in Python and are started by the "./Tests/Run.py" script. The tests will validate some "remote" instance of Orthanc (whose AET is "ORTHANC") that is assumed to be running before the tests are started. To test the DICOM protocol, a second, "local" instance of Orthanc is automatically started by the integration tests (its AET is "ORTHANCTEST"). This situation is depicted on the following illustration: +--------------------------+ +-----------------------+ | Local computer | | Remote computer | +--------------------------+ HTTP +-----------------------+ | | 5000 : 8042 | | | Run.py <---> ORTHANCTEST <===============> ORTHANC | | | 5001 : 4242 | | +--------------------------+ DICOM +-----------------------+ Obviously, Orthanc must be installed both on the local and remote computers. NB: Of course, the "local" and "remote" computers are allowed be the same computer. 1. Configure the remote Orthanc ------------------------------- To run the integration tests, you first have to create a configuration file for the remote instance of Orthanc. This is done by running the "./GenerateConfigurationForTests.py" script on the *local* computer. This script will try and autodetect the proper network parameters. For instance (a help is available): # ./GenerateConfigurationForTests.py --force This will create the "./IntegrationTestsConfiguration.json" configuration file that must be copied to the remote computer. Then, start Orthanc on the remote computer using this configuration file. By default, the configuration file will use "ORTHANC" as the AET, 8042 as the HTTP port, and 4242 as the DICOM port. You can of course adapt these parameters by editing the generated configuration file, if you have special constraints or if the autodetection fails. 2. Start the integration tests on the local computer ---------------------------------------------------- Once the remote instance of Orthanc is up and running, you can start the integration tests. You have 2 possibilities: (a) use your local computer as is, or (b) use Docker to have the best reproducibility. (Option 2a) Without Docker: # python ./Tests/Run.py Use the flag "--help" to get the full list of arguments. These arguments will notably allow you to specify the network parameters of your remote instance of Orthanc. (Option 2b) With Docker: # sudo docker pull jodogne/orthanc-tests # ./Start.sh Note that you will have to grant root access for Docker. Licensing ========= The integration tests are licensed under the GPLv3 license. The sample DICOM images contained in the "Database" folder are the property of their respective owners, as listed in the "Database/README.txt" file. We also kindly ask scientific works and clinical studies that make use of Orthanc to cite Orthanc in their associated publications. Similarly, we ask open-source and closed-source products that make use of Orthanc to warn us about this use. You can cite our work using the following BibTeX entry: @inproceedings{Jodogne:ISBI2013, author = {Jodogne, S. and Bernard, C. and Devillers, M. and Lenaerts, E. and Coucke, P.}, title = {Orthanc -- {A} Lightweight, {REST}ful {DICOM} Server for Healthcare and Medical Research}, booktitle={Biomedical Imaging ({ISBI}), {IEEE} 10th International Symposium on}, year={2013}, pages={190-193}, ISSN={1945-7928}, month=apr, url={http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?tp=&arnumber=6556444}, address={San Francisco, {CA}, {USA}} }