-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 2.4k
/
272-system-connection.bats
157 lines (128 loc) · 5.37 KB
/
272-system-connection.bats
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
#!/usr/bin/env bats -*- bats -*-
#
# tests for podman system connection
#
load helpers
# This will be set if we start a local service
_SERVICE_PID=
function setup() {
if ! is_remote; then
skip "only applicable when running remote"
fi
basic_setup
}
function teardown() {
if ! is_remote; then
return
fi
# In case test function failed to clean up
if [[ -n $_SERVICE_PID ]]; then
run kill $_SERVICE_PID
fi
# Aaaaargh! When running as root, 'system service' creates a tmpfs
# mount on $root/overlay. This in turn causes cleanup to fail.
mount \
| grep $PODMAN_TMPDIR \
| awk '{print $3}' \
| xargs -l1 --no-run-if-empty umount
# Remove all system connections
run_podman system connection rm --all
basic_teardown
}
# Helper function: invokes $PODMAN (which is podman-remote) _without_ --url opt
#
# Needed because, in CI, PODMAN="/path/to/podman-remote --url /path/to/socket"
# which of course overrides podman's detection and use of a connection.
function _run_podman_remote() {
PODMAN=${PODMAN%%--url*} run_podman "$@"
}
# Very basic test, does not actually connect at any time
@test "podman system connection - basic add / ls / remove" {
run_podman system connection ls
is "$output" "Name URI Identity Default" \
"system connection ls: no connections"
c1="c1_$(random_string 15)"
c2="c2_$(random_string 15)"
run_podman system connection add $c1 tcp://localhost:12345
run_podman system connection add --default $c2 tcp://localhost:54321
run_podman system connection ls
is "$output" \
".*$c1[ ]\+tcp://localhost:12345[ ]\+false
$c2[ ]\+tcp://localhost:54321[ ]\+true" \
"system connection ls"
# Remove default connection; the remaining one should still not be default
run_podman system connection rm $c2
run_podman system connection ls
is "$output" ".*$c1[ ]\+tcp://localhost:12345[ ]\+false" \
"system connection ls (after removing default connection)"
run_podman system connection rm $c1
}
# Test tcp socket; requires starting a local server
@test "podman system connection - tcp" {
# Start server
_SERVICE_PORT=$(random_free_port 63000-64999)
# Add the connection, and run podman info *before* starting the service.
# This should fail.
run_podman system connection add myconnect tcp://localhost:$_SERVICE_PORT
# IMPORTANT NOTE: in CI, podman-remote is tested by setting PODMAN
# to "podman-remote --url sdfsdf". This of course overrides the default
# podman-remote action. Our solution: strip off the "--url xyz" part
# when invoking podman.
_run_podman_remote 125 info
is "$output" \
"Cannot connect to Podman. Please verify.*dial tcp.*connection refused" \
"podman info, without active service"
# Start service. Now podman info should work fine. The %%-remote*
# converts "podman-remote --opts" to just "podman", which is what
# we need for the server.
${PODMAN%%-remote*} --root ${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/root \
--runroot ${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/runroot \
system service -t 99 tcp:localhost:$_SERVICE_PORT &
_SERVICE_PID=$!
wait_for_port localhost $_SERVICE_PORT
# FIXME: #12023, RemoteSocket is always /run/something
# run_podman info --format '{{.Host.RemoteSocket.Path}}'
# is "$output" "tcp:localhost:$_SERVICE_PORT" \
# "podman info works, and talks to the correct server"
_run_podman_remote info --format '{{.Store.GraphRoot}}'
is "$output" "${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/root" \
"podman info, talks to the right service"
# Add another connection; make sure it does not get set as default
_run_podman_remote system connection add fakeconnect tcp://localhost:$(( _SERVICE_PORT + 1))
_run_podman_remote info --format '{{.Store.GraphRoot}}'
# (Don't bother checking output; we just care about exit status)
# Stop server. Use 'run' to avoid failing on nonzero exit status
run kill $_SERVICE_PID
run wait $_SERVICE_PID
_SERVICE_PID=
run_podman system connection rm fakeconnect
run_podman system connection rm myconnect
}
# If we have ssh access to localhost (unlikely in CI), test that.
@test "podman system connection - ssh" {
rand=$(random_string 20)
echo $rand >$PODMAN_TMPDIR/testfile
# Can we actually ssh to localhost?
run ssh -q -o BatchMode=yes \
-o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null \
-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no \
-o CheckHostIP=no \
localhost \
cat $PODMAN_TMPDIR/testfile
test "$status" -eq 0 || skip "cannot ssh to localhost"
is "$output" "$rand" "weird! ssh worked, but could not cat local file"
# OK, ssh works.
# Create a new connection, over ssh, but using existing socket file
# (Remember, we're already podman-remote, there's a service running)
run_podman info --format '{{.Host.RemoteSocket.Path}}'
local socketpath="$output"
run_podman system connection add --socket-path "$socketpath" \
mysshcon ssh://localhost
is "$output" "" "output from system connection add"
# debug logs will confirm that we use ssh connection
_run_podman_remote --log-level=debug info --format '{{.Host.RemoteSocket.Path}}'
is "$output" ".*msg=\"SSH Agent Key .*" "we are truly using ssh"
# Clean up
run_podman system connection rm mysshconn
}
# vim: filetype=sh