--connection was failing due to the servicedestinations array being empty on runtime.
Fix by making sure the cached config is used
resolves#16282
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
We've had some oopsies in system tests:
podman foo bar
run podman foo bar
...all of which should be run_podman with underscore. Those
have been passing because /usr/bin/podman is the fallback
from $PATH. In those (few) cases, we haven't actually been
testing the podman we should be testing.
Solution: nuke /usr/bin/podman and podman-remote before
invoking system and unit tests. As an extra level of
paranoia, check for other podmans in $PATH - if any
exist, bail out with a fatal error.
Also: in a few cases where runner.sh invokes podman for
containerized something-something, run bin/podman instead
of podman from $PATH.
Also: fix existing dependencies on /usr/bin/podman
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
Package `io/ioutil` was deprecated in golang 1.16, preventing podman from
building under Fedora 37. Fortunately, functionality identical
replacements are provided by the packages `io` and `os`. Replace all
usage of all `io/ioutil` symbols with appropriate substitutions
according to the golang docs.
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
podman image scp and podman system connection tests were querying an existing website during testing.
Change to a URL that will never exist given an improper domain extension
also just generally clean up a few things in both scp and connection testing
resolves#14699
Signed-off-by: Charlie Doern <cdoern@redhat.com>
* Replace "setup", "lookup", "cleanup", "backup" with
"set up", "look up", "clean up", "back up"
when used as verbs. Replace also variations of those.
* Improve language in a few places.
Signed-off-by: Erik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com>
Rather than assuming a filesystem path, the API service URI is recorded
in the libpod runtime configuration and then reported as requested.
Note: All schemes other than "unix" are hard-coded to report URI exists.
Fixes#12023
Signed-off-by: Jhon Honce <jhonce@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
The errcheck linter makes sure that errors are always check and not
ignored by accident. It spotted a lot of unchecked errors, mostly in the
tests but also some real problem in the code.
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
Fix a handful of instances not covered by earlier automated
replacements. Found via:
ack 'Expect\(len' test/e2e
There are still a bunch of BeNumerically(">", ...) that cannot (yet)
be handled by HaveLen(). Leave those as they are.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
Print out the headers even if the system connection list
is empty to match the behavior of other list commands.
Signed-off-by: Urvashi Mohnani <umohnani@redhat.com>
Stop using "*" to indicate default. Add default field to make
it more obvios and the json field more machine usable.
Fixes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/12019
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
(Sorry, couldn't resist).
CI flakes have been coming down - thank you to everyone who has
been making them a priority.
This leaves a noisy subset that I've just been ignoring for months:
Running: podman ... -p 8080:something
...cannot listen on the TCP port: listen tcp4 :8080: bind: address already in use
Sometimes these are one-time errors resolved on 2nd try; sometimes
they fail three times, forcing CI user to hit Rerun. In all cases
they make noise in my flake logs, which costs me time.
My assumption is that this has to do with ginkgo running random
tests in parallel. Since many e2e tests simplemindedly use 8080,
collisions are inevitable.
Solution: simplemindedly replace 8080 with other (also arbitrarily
picked) numbers. This is imperfect -- it requires human developers
to pick a number NNNN and 'grep NNNN test/e2e/*' before adding
new tests, which I am 100% confident ain't gonna happen -- but
it's better than what we have now.
Side note: I considered writing and using a RandomAvailablePort()
helper, but that would still be racy. Plus, it would be a pain
to interpolate strings into so many places. Finally, with this
hand-tooled approach, if/when we _do_ get conflicts on port NNNN,
it should be very easy to grep for NNNN, find the offending tests
that reuse that port, and fix one of them.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
We missed bumping the go module, so let's do it now :)
* Automated go code with github.com/sirkon/go-imports-rename
* Manually via `vgrep podman/v2` the rest
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>