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authorEd Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>2021-07-22 13:54:32 -0600
committerEd Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>2021-07-22 18:27:13 -0600
commit8f9d33b7f738d0f7b51b44aa76cd6639415ec9c8 (patch)
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Networking test: fix silent breakage
Wow did I screw up. #10982 introduced (at my suggestion) a new wait_for_port() helper, with the goal of eliminating a race condition. It didn't work. First: wait_for_port() tests by connecting to the port, which is a Bad Idea when you have a one-shot server that exits upon the first connection closing. We should've caught that, but: Second: I wrote wait_for_port() for a non-BATS test framework, and used the conventional file descriptor 3. BATS uses fd3 for internal control. Overriding that made the test silently just disappear, no "not ok" message, no warnings, nothing except vanishing into the ether. Third: this was caught by my log-colorizer script, which loudly yelled "WARNING: expected 234" (tests) at the bottom of the log. Unfortunately, since this wasn't my PR, I didn't actually look at the test logs. Solution: we can't use wait_for_port() in the network port test. Use wait_for_output() instead, triggering on the 'listening' message emitted by netcat in the container. Also: fix wait_for_port() to use fd5 instead of 3. Although no code currently uses wait_for_port() as of this PR, it's a useful helper that we may want to keep. Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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