The "removed" condition mapped to an undefined state which ultimately
rendered the wait endpoint to return an incorrect exit code. Instead,
map "removed" to "exited" to make sure Podman returns the expected
exit code.
Fixes: #18889
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <vrothberg@redhat.com>
This finishes the removal of curls and exits.
Please please please, everyone, if you see a 'curl' or 'exit'
in any new PR, reject the PR and tell me immediately so I can
help the developer do it the proper way.
Also, removed some very-very-wrong USER/UID code. Both are
reserved variables in bash. You cannot override them.
Also, added a cleanup to a system-connection test. I wasted
a lot of time because my podman-remote stopped working, all
because I had run this test as part of something unrelated.
Also, found and fixed dangerously-broken timeout code.
Implemented a new mechanism for requiring a timeout.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
The `Error` part of response must be nil (or omitted) if no error occurred.
Before this commit a zero value for the struct was returned.
Signed-off-by: Matej Vasek <mvasek@redhat.com>
Using event API to detect changes to container instead of polling.
Polling was unreliable, sometime change of a state might have been
missed.
Signed-off-by: Matej Vasek <mvasek@redhat.com>
When I originally wrote this code I had no idea what POST
would look like so I did a sloppy job, deferring making it
usable. Now that we have some real-world examples in place,
I have a better understanding of what params look like and
how to make tests more readable/maintainable. (Deferring isn't
always bad: one of my early ideas was to separate params using
commas; that would've been a disaster because some JSON values,
such as arrays, include commas).
This commit implements a better way of dealing with POST:
* The main concept is still 'key=value'
* When value is a JSON object (dictionary, array), it
can be quoted.
* Multiple params are simply separated by spaces.
The 3-digit HTTP code is a prominent, readable separator
between POST params and expected results. The parsing
code is a little uglier, but test developers need
never see that. The important thing is that writing
tests is now easier.
* POST params can be empty (this removes the need for a
useless '')
I snuck in one unrelated change: one of the newly-added
tests, .NetworkSettings, was failing when run rootless
(which is how I test on my setup). I made it conditional.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>