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author | Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com> | 2021-12-14 08:41:26 -0700 |
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committer | Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com> | 2021-12-14 12:10:19 -0700 |
commit | 0a2eb7b1857907f065a48a07a9a3096fa3cc5f77 (patch) | |
tree | e84b116a2af32c9d7dbd94a525e0751cad11e493 | |
parent | a0894b5ecd6c64d30b82a7b79bc1e2e87c7f0a4e (diff) | |
download | podman-0a2eb7b1857907f065a48a07a9a3096fa3cc5f77.tar.gz podman-0a2eb7b1857907f065a48a07a9a3096fa3cc5f77.tar.bz2 podman-0a2eb7b1857907f065a48a07a9a3096fa3cc5f77.zip |
apiv2 tests: refactor complicated curls
Some months ago, apiv2 tests got added that needed new
functionality: passing a tarball to the remote server.
There was no mechanism to do so in the 't' helper, so
these tests used complicated (and actually not-really-
working) curl commands.
This PR introduces and documents a new usage of 't', in
which passing an argument ending in '.tar' adds the
right magic syntax (--data-binary @PATH) to the existing
curl. This lets us use all standard 't' checks, making
for simpler tests and in the process fixing some bugs.
Also: drive-by fix of a typo bug in the networks test.
Also: set CONTAINERS_REGISTRIES_CONF when starting server
and when running direct podman, to avoid docker.io throttling.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r-- | test/apiv2/10-images.at | 90 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | test/apiv2/35-networks.at | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | test/apiv2/README.md | 6 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | test/apiv2/test-apiv2 | 31 |
4 files changed, 48 insertions, 81 deletions
diff --git a/test/apiv2/10-images.at b/test/apiv2/10-images.at index 115332d0c..f849fc33c 100644 --- a/test/apiv2/10-images.at +++ b/test/apiv2/10-images.at @@ -171,84 +171,32 @@ function cleanBuildTest() { } CONTAINERFILE_TAR="${TMPD}/containerfile.tar" cat > $TMPD/containerfile << EOF -FROM quay.io/libpod/alpine_labels:latest +FROM $IMAGE EOF tar --format=posix -C $TMPD -cvf ${CONTAINERFILE_TAR} containerfile &> /dev/null -curl -XPOST --data-binary @<(cat $CONTAINERFILE_TAR) \ - -H "content-type: application/x-tar" \ - --dump-header "${TMPD}/headers.txt" \ - -o "${TMPD}/response.txt" \ - "http://$HOST:$PORT/v1.40/libpod/build?dockerfile=containerfile" &> /dev/null - -BUILD_TEST_ERROR="" - -if ! grep -q '200 OK' "${TMPD}/headers.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build from tar failed response was not 200 OK (application/x-tar)" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi - -if ! grep -q 'quay.io/libpod/alpine_labels' "${TMPD}/response.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build from tar failed image name not in response" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi - -curl -XPOST --data-binary @<(cat $CONTAINERFILE_TAR) \ - -H "content-type: application/tar" \ - --dump-header "${TMPD}/headers.txt" \ - -o "${TMPD}/response.txt" \ - "http://$HOST:$PORT/v1.40/build?dockerfile=containerfile&q=true" &> /dev/null -if ! grep -q '200 OK' "${TMPD}/headers.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build from tar failed response was not 200 OK (application/tar)" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi -if grep -E "\"[0-9a-f]{64}\\\n\"" $(jq .stream "${TMPD}/response.txt"); then - echo -e "${red} quiet-mode should only send image ID" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi - -# Yes, this is very un-RESTful re: Content-Type header ignored when compatibility endpoint used -# See https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/11012 -curl -XPOST --data-binary @<(cat $CONTAINERFILE_TAR) \ - -H "content-type: application/json" \ - --dump-header "${TMPD}/headers.txt" \ - -o /dev/null \ - "http://$HOST:$PORT/v1.40/build?dockerfile=containerfile" &> /dev/null -if ! grep -q '200 OK' "${TMPD}/headers.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build from tar failed response was not 200 OK (application/tar)" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi - -curl -XPOST --data-binary @<(cat $CONTAINERFILE_TAR) \ - -H "content-type: application/json" \ - --dump-header "${TMPD}/headers.txt" \ - -o /dev/null \ - "http://$HOST:$PORT/v1.40/libpod/build?dockerfile=containerfile" &> /dev/null -if ! grep -q '400 Bad Request' "${TMPD}/headers.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build should have failed with 400 (wrong Content-Type)" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi - -curl -XPOST --data-binary @<(cat $CONTAINERFILE_TAR) \ - -H "content-type: application/tar" \ - --dump-header "${TMPD}/headers.txt" \ - -o "${TMPD}/response.txt" \ - "http://$HOST:$PORT/v1.40/build?dockerfile=containerfile" &> /dev/null -if ! grep -q '200 OK' "${TMPD}/headers.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build from tar failed response was not 200 OK (application/tar)" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi -if ! grep -qP '^{"aux":{"ID":"sha256:[0-9a-f]{64}"}}$' "${TMPD}/response.txt"; then - echo -e "${red}NOK: Image build response does not contain ID" - BUILD_TEST_ERROR="1" -fi +t POST "libpod/build?dockerfile=containerfile" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR 200 \ + .stream~"STEP 1/1: FROM $IMAGE" + +# With -q, all we should get is image ID. Test both libpod & compat endpoints. +t POST "libpod/build?dockerfile=containerfile&q=true" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR 200 \ + .stream~'^[0-9a-f]\{64\}$' +t POST "build?dockerfile=containerfile&q=true" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR 200 \ + .stream~'^[0-9a-f]\{64\}$' + +# Override content-type and confirm that libpod rejects, but compat accepts +t POST "libpod/build?dockerfile=containerfile" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR application/json 400 \ + .cause='Content-Type: application/json is not supported. Should be "application/x-tar"' +t POST "build?dockerfile=containerfile" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR application/json 200 \ + .stream~"STEP 1/1: FROM $IMAGE" + +# PR #12091: output from compat API must now include {"aux":{"ID":"sha..."}} +t POST "build?dockerfile=containerfile" $CONTAINERFILE_TAR 200 \ + '.aux|select(has("ID")).ID~^sha256:[0-9a-f]\{64\}$' t POST libpod/images/prune 200 t POST libpod/images/prune 200 length=0 [] cleanBuildTest -if [[ "${BUILD_TEST_ERROR}" ]]; then - exit 1 -fi # vim: filetype=sh diff --git a/test/apiv2/35-networks.at b/test/apiv2/35-networks.at index 713f677fa..0e2389bd5 100644 --- a/test/apiv2/35-networks.at +++ b/test/apiv2/35-networks.at @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ t GET networks/non-existing-network 404 \ .cause='network not found' t POST libpod/networks/create name='"network1"' 200 \ - .name=network1 + .name=network1 \ .created~[0-9]\\{4\\}-[0-9]\\{2\\}-[0-9]\\{2\\}.* \ # --data '{"name":"network2","subnets":[{"subnet":"10.10.254.0/24"}],"Labels":{"abc":"val"}}' diff --git a/test/apiv2/README.md b/test/apiv2/README.md index 19727cec7..63d1f5b13 100644 --- a/test/apiv2/README.md +++ b/test/apiv2/README.md @@ -60,6 +60,12 @@ of POST parameters in the form 'key=value', separated by spaces: t POST myentrypoint name=$name badparam='["foo","bar"]' 500 ! etc... `t` will convert the param list to JSON form for passing to the server. A numeric status code terminates processing of POST parameters. +** As a special case, when one POST argument is a string ending in `.tar`, +`t` will invoke `curl` with `--data-binary @PATH` and +set `Content-type: application/x-tar`. This is useful for `build` endpoints. +(To override `Content-type`, simply pass along an extra string argument +matching `application/*`): + t POST myentrypoint /mytmpdir/myfile.tar application/foo 400 * The final arguments are one or more expected string results. If an argument starts with a dot, `t` will invoke `jq` on the output to diff --git a/test/apiv2/test-apiv2 b/test/apiv2/test-apiv2 index c644b9578..47934cca9 100755 --- a/test/apiv2/test-apiv2 +++ b/test/apiv2/test-apiv2 @@ -182,6 +182,7 @@ function t() { local method=$1; shift local path=$1; shift local curl_args + local content_type="application/json" local testname="$method $path" # POST requests may be followed by one or more key=value pairs. @@ -190,13 +191,21 @@ function t() { local -a post_args for arg; do case "$arg" in - *=*) post_args+=("$arg"); shift ;; + *=*) post_args+=("$arg"); + shift;; + *.tar) curl_args="--data-binary @$arg" ; + content_type="application/x-tar"; + shift;; + application/*) content_type="$arg"; + shift;; [1-9][0-9][0-9]) break;; *) die "Internal error: invalid POST arg '$arg'" ;; esac done - curl_args="-d $(jsonify ${post_args[@]})" - testname="$testname [$curl_args]" + if [[ -z "$curl_args" ]]; then + curl_args="-d $(jsonify ${post_args[@]})" + testname="$testname [$curl_args]" + fi fi # entrypoint path can include a descriptive comment; strip it off @@ -229,7 +238,7 @@ function t() { rm -f $WORKDIR/curl.* # -s = silent, but --write-out 'format' gives us important response data response=$(curl -s -X $method ${curl_args} \ - -H 'Content-type: application/json' \ + -H "Content-type: $content_type" \ --dump-header $WORKDIR/curl.headers.out \ --write-out '%{http_code}^%{content_type}^%{time_total}' \ -o $WORKDIR/curl.result.out "$url") @@ -328,10 +337,13 @@ function start_service() { fi echo $WORKDIR - $PODMAN_BIN --root $WORKDIR/server_root --syslog=true \ - system service \ - --time 15 \ - tcp:127.0.0.1:$PORT \ + # Some tests use shortnames; force registry override to work around + # docker.io throttling. + env CONTAINERS_REGISTRIES_CONF=$TESTS_DIR/../registries.conf $PODMAN_BIN \ + --root $WORKDIR/server_root --syslog=true \ + system service \ + --time 15 \ + tcp:127.0.0.1:$PORT \ &> $WORKDIR/server.log & service_pid=$! @@ -460,7 +472,8 @@ function wait_for_port() { ############ function podman() { echo "\$ $PODMAN_BIN $*" >>$WORKDIR/output.log - $PODMAN_BIN --root $WORKDIR/server_root "$@" >>$WORKDIR/output.log 2>&1 + env CONTAINERS_REGISTRIES_CONF=$TESTS_DIR/../registries.conf \ + $PODMAN_BIN --root $WORKDIR/server_root "$@" >>$WORKDIR/output.log 2>&1 } #################### |