Moving from Go module v4 to v5 prepares us for public releases.
Move done using gomove [1] as with the v3 and v4 moves.
[1] https://github.com/KSubedi/gomove
Signed-off-by: Matt Heon <mheon@redhat.com>
Continuing work on RUN-1907: huge set of files, but not
as intimidating as it looks.
Commit 1 of 2: mindless replace of Exit(0) with ExitCleanly()
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
Using GinkgoT().TempDir() will automatically result in the directy to be
cleaned up when the test is done. This should help to prevent leaking
files and we do not need to error check every time.
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
There is no reason to define the same code every time in each file, just
use global nodes. This diff should speak for itself.
CleanupSecrets()/Volume() no longer call Cleanup() directly, as the
global AfterEach node will always call Cleanup() this is no longer
necessary. If one AfterEach() node fails it will still run the others.
Also always unset the CONTAINERS_CONF env vars. This prevents people
from forgetting to unset it. And fix the special CONTAINERS_CONF logic
in the system connection tests, we do not want to preserve
CONTAINERS_CONF anyway so just remove this logic.
Ginkgo orders the BeforeEach and AfterEach nodes. They will be executed
from the outer-most defined to inner-most. This means our global
BeforeEach is always first. Only then the inner one (in the Describe()
function in each file). For AfterEach it is inverted, from the inner to
the outer.
Also see https://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/#organizing-specs-with-container-nodes
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
- fix a typo that was resulting in a test being a NOP, and
add actual testing to it.
- fix two Expects() with incorrectly-ordered actual/expects
- remove leading whitespace from an It() test name
- To(BeTrue()) is evil. Wherever possible, replace it with
useful string or field checks. When not possible, use
the annotation field to indicate what failed. I got
carried away here, #sorrynotsorry
- remove unused system-test code
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
Directly writing to stdout/err is not safe when run in parallel.
Ginkgo v2 fixed this buffering the output and syncing the output so it
is not mangled between tests.
This means we should use the GinkgoWriter everywhere to make sure the
output stays in sync.
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@redhat.com>
A cgroup could have been deleted by the time WalkDir is trying to
access it. Ignore the error and continue.
Closes: https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/17989
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
I found the ginkgolinter[1] by accident, this looks for not optimal
matching and suggest how to do it better.
Overall these fixes seem to be all correct and they will give much
better error messages when something fails.
Check out the repo to see what the linter reports.
[1] https://github.com/nunnatsa/ginkgolinter
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <pholzing@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>
Originally, during pod removal, we locked every container in the
pod at once, did a number of validity checks to ensure everything
was safe, and then removed all the containers in the pod.
A deadlock was recently discovered with this approach. In brief,
we cannot lock the entire pod (or much more than a single
container at a time) without causing a deadlock. As such, we
converted to an approach where we just looped over each container
in the pod, removing them individually. Unfortunately, this
removed a lot of the validity checking of the earlier approach,
allowing for a lot of unintended bad things. Infra containers
could be removed while containers in the pod still depended on
them, for example.
There's no easy way to do validity checks while in a simple loop,
so I implemented a version of our graph-traversal logic that
currently handles pod start. This version acts in the reverse
order of startup: startup starts from containers which depend on
nothing and moves outwards, while removal acts on containers which
have nothing depend on them and moves inwards. By doing graph
traversal, we can guarantee that nothing is removed while
something that depends on it still exists - so the infra
container should be the last thing in a pod that is removed, for
example.
In the (unlikely) case that a graph of the pod's containers
cannot be built (most likely impossible without database editing)
the old method of pod removal has been retained to ensure that
even misbehaving pods can be forcibly evicted from the state.
I'm fairly confident that this resolves the problem, but there
are a lot of assumptions around dependency structure built into
the original pod removal code and I am not 100% sure I have
captured all of them.
Fixes#15526
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
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>
WalkDir should be faster the Walk, since we often do
not need to stat files.
[NO NEW TESTS NEEDED] Existing tests should find errors.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
Made changes so that if the pod contains all exited containers and only infra is running, remove the pod.
resolves#11713
Signed-off-by: cdoern <cdoern@redhat.com>
Add --time flag to podman container rm
Add --time flag to podman pod rm
Add --time flag to podman volume rm
Add --time flag to podman network rm
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
e2e test failures are rife with messages like:
Expected 1 to equal 0
These make me cry. They're anti-helpful, requiring the reader
to dive into the source code to figure out what those numbers
mean.
Solution: Go tests have a '.Should(Exit(NNN))' mechanism. I
don't know if it spits out a better diagnostic (I have no way
to run e2e tests on my laptop), but I have to fantasize that
it will, and given the state of our flakes I assume that at
least one test will fail and give me the opportunity to see
what the error message looks like.
THIS IS NOT REVIEWABLE CODE. There is no way for a human
to review it. Don't bother. Maybe look at a few random
ones for sanity. If you want to really review, here is
a reproducer of what I did:
cd test/e2e
! positive assertions. The second is the same as the first,
! with the addition of (unnecessary) parentheses because
! some invocations were written that way. The third is BeZero().
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.To\(Equal\((\d+)\)\)/Expect($1).Should(Exit($2))/' *_test.go
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.To\(\(Equal\((\d+)\)\)\)/Expect($1).Should(Exit($2))/' *_test.go
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.To\(BeZero\(\)\)/Expect($1).Should(Exit(0))/' *_test.go
! Same as above, but handles three non-numeric exit codes
! in run_exit_test.go
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.To\(Equal\((\S+)\)\)/Expect($1).Should(Exit($2))/' *_test.go
! negative assertions. Difference is the spelling of 'To(Not)',
! 'ToNot', and 'NotTo'. I assume those are all the same.
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.To\(Not\(Equal\((0)\)\)\)/Expect($1).To(ExitWithError())/' *_test.go
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.ToNot\(Equal\((0)\)\)/Expect($1).To(ExitWithError())/' *_test.go
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.NotTo\(Equal\((0)\)\)/Expect($1).To(ExitWithError())/' *_test.go
! negative, old use of BeZero()
perl -pi -e 's/Expect\((\S+)\.ExitCode\(\)\)\.ToNot\(BeZero\(\)\)/Expect($1).Should(ExitWithError())/' *_test.go
Run those on a clean copy of main branch (at the same branch
point as my PR, of course), then diff against a checked-out
copy of my PR. There should be no differences. Then all you
have to review is that my replacements above are sane.
UPDATE: nope, that's not enough, you also need to add gomega/gexec
to the files that don't have it:
perl -pi -e '$_ .= "$1/gexec\"\n" if m!^(.*/onsi/gomega)"!' $(grep -L gomega/gexec $(git log -1 --stat | awk '$1 ~ /test\/e2e\// { print $1}'))
UPDATE 2: hand-edit run_volume_test.go
UPDATE 3: sigh, add WaitWithDefaultTimeout() to a couple of places
UPDATE 4: skip a test due to bug #10935 (race condition)
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>
- When one or more containers in the Pod reports an error on an operation
report StatusConflict and report the error(s)
- jsoniter type encoding used to marshal error as string using error.Error()
- Update test framework to allow setting any flag when creating pods
- Fix test_resize() result check
Fixes#8865
Signed-off-by: Jhon Honce <jhonce@redhat.com>
Detached containers and detach keys are only created with the podman run, i
exec, and start commands. We do not store the detach key sequence or the
detach flags in the database, nor does Docker. The current code was ignoreing
these fields but documenting that they can be used.
Fix podman create man page and --help output to no longer indicate that
--detach and --detach-keys works.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
In podman containers rm and podman images rm, the commands
exit with error code 1 if the object does not exists.
This PR implements similar functionality to volumes, networks, and Pods.
Similarly if volumes or Networks are in use by other containers, and return
exit code 2.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
Remove ones that are not needed.
Document those that should be there.
Document those that should be fixed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
With the advent of Podman 2.0.0 we crossed the magical barrier of go
modules. While we were able to continue importing all packages inside
of the project, the project could not be vendored anymore from the
outside.
Move the go module to new major version and change all imports to
`github.com/containers/libpod/v2`. The renaming of the imports
was done via `gomove` [1].
[1] https://github.com/KSubedi/gomove
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
Support the `--pod-id-file` flag in the rm, start and stop pod commands.
This completes the already support flag in pod-create and is another
prerequisite for generating generic systemd unit files for pods.
Also add completions, docs and tests.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
This path allows pod prune & pod rm to remove stopped containers in the pod before deleting the pod.
PrunePods and RemovePod should be able to remove containers without force removal of stopped pods.
Signed-off-by: Qi Wang <qiwan@redhat.com>
Add an --ignore flag to podman rm and stop. When specified, Podman will
ignore "no such {container,pod}" errors that occur when a specified
container/pod is not present in the store (anymore). The motivation
behind adding this flag is to write more robust systemd services using
Podman. A user might have manually decided to remove a container/pod
which would lead to a failure during the `ExecStop` directive of a
systemd service referencing that container/pod.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
Rather than checking for non-zero, we need to check for >0 to
distinguish between timeouts and error exit codes.
Signed-off-by: Jhon Honce <jhonce@redhat.com>
be sure to load all the existing handlers, so that they can also be
freed in addition to the handlers we treat differently.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
when doing localized tests (not varlink), we can use secondary image
stores as read-only image caches. this cuts down on test time
significantly because each test does not need to restore the images from
a tarball anymore.
Signed-off-by: baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
When running as a user, the order of removal is database ID dependent.
This results in this test randomly failing. This condition was
very difficult to debug and the test was missing two critical checks.
One to confirm an expected error message was produced, and another
to verify the expected running container, remains running.
Fix the container and missing error-message checks, and vastly improve
the debug-ability of this test. Fixing the random-failures requires
intensive fixes in other areas, so that task will be left up to future
work.
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
a series of improvements to our ginkgo test framework so we can
get better ideas of whats going on when run in CI
Signed-off-by: baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
Add the ability to run the integration (ginkgo) suite using
the remote client.
Only the images_test.go file is run right now; all the rest are
isolated with a // +build !remotelinux. As more content is
developed for the remote client, we can unblock the files and
just block single tests as needed.
Signed-off-by: baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
A pause container is added to the pod if the user opts in. The default pause image and command can be overridden. Pause containers are ignored in ps unless the -a option is present. Pod inspect and pod ps show shared namespaces and pause container. A pause container can't be removed with podman rm, and a pod can be removed if it only has a pause container.
Signed-off-by: haircommander <pehunt@redhat.com>
Closes: #1187
Approved by: mheon
This is the second round of performance improvements for out
integration tests.
Signed-off-by: baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
Closes: #1190
Approved by: rhatdan
Because our tests are getting so long, we want to be able to audit which tests are taking
the longest to complete. This may indicate a bad test, bad CI, bad code, etc and therefore
should be auditable.
Also, make speed improvements to tests by making sure we only unpack caches images that
actually get used.
Signed-off-by: baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
Closes: #1178
Approved by: mheon