| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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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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It was observed during periodic testing, this test can fail due to the
container process being not fully running and listening on the expected
port:
```
[+1069s] not ok 220 podman networking: port with --userns=keep-id
[+1069s] # (in test file test/system/500-networking.bats, line 144)
[+1069s] # `echo "$teststring" | nc 127.0.0.1 $myport' failed
[+1069s] # # /var/tmp/go/src/github.com/containers/podman/bin/podman rm
--all --force
[+1069s] # # /var/tmp/go/src/github.com/containers/podman/bin/podman ps
--all --external --format {{.ID}} {{.Names}}
[+1069s] # # /var/tmp/go/src/github.com/containers/podman/bin/podman
images --all --format {{.Repository}}:{{.Tag}} {{.ID}}
[+1069s] # quay.io/libpod/testimage:20210610 9f9ec7f2fdef
[+1069s] # # /var/tmp/go/src/github.com/containers/podman/bin/podman run
-d --userns=keep-id -p 127.0.0.1:54322:54322
quay.io/libpod/testimage:20210610 nc -l -n -v -p 54322
[+1069s] #
252c562c9a3c96892d867d1d72fb52b2efdfe62855ebedbccd2d281c472c2988
[+1069s] # Ncat: No route to host.
```
Fix this by using a new `wait_for_port()` function (thanks @edsantiago)
before attempting to communicate with the service.
Signed-off-by: Chris Evich <cevich@redhat.com>
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TL;DR podman needs "arm64" as arch, not "arm64v8".
Unexpurgated version: docker.io publishes ${ARCH}/alpine for
several values of ARCH. Unfortunately, the arm64 one is
called "arm64v8", which is sensible, but podman needs the
--arch value of the manifest to be exactly "arm64". So we
need to special-case this value in our loop. Do so, and
build/publish a new 20210610 testimage. Use that in tests
moving forward.
And, since we need to jump through the same hoops to build
the nonlocal image, include it in the build loop instead
of as a tacked-on comment. Try to be helpful by determining
the next-available numeric tag.
And: don't push anything by default. Instead, just tell
the user what buildah-push commands to run.
And: refactor $PODMAN_NONLOCAL_IMAGE_TAG, to make it easier
for the RHEL-arch-testing folx to override using envariables
instead of inplace-sed. (Not that they should ever need to
override again, because this is the final multiarch commit
that should be forevermore perfect and need no further commits
ever again).
And, finally, bump up to latest alpine/busybox images.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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System tests: honor $OCI_RUNTIME (for CI)
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Some CI systems set $OCI_RUNTIME as a way to override the
default crun. Integration (e2e) tests honor this, but system
tests were not aware of the convention; this means we haven't
been testing system tests with runc, which means RHEL gating
tests are now failing.
The proper solution would be to edit containers.conf on CI
systems. Sorry, that would involve too much CI-VM work.
Instead, this PR detects $OCI_RUNTIME and creates a dummy
containers.conf file using that runtime.
Add: various skips for tests that don't work with runc.
Refactor: add a helper function so we don't need to do
the complicated 'podman info blah blah .OCIRuntime.blah'
thing in many places.
BUG: we leave a tmp file behind on exit.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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The RHEL multi-arch team informed me that we were missing
aarch64; add it, using the new name (arm64v8).
(This is from last week, so the image date tag does not
match today's date. I was waiting for confirmation that
things were working).
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Fix a corner case in basic_setup(), where we rmi stray images.
If a test tags $IMAGE and fails to rmi by tag name, cleanup
could rmi both tag name and IID, wiping out the desired image:
podman tag $IMAGE foo
...
cleanup: rmi foo $FOO_IID [this removes $IMAGE!]
Solution: rmi by name, but only rmi by IID if != $IMAGE.
TOTH to ypu for bringing this to my attention.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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The 'is' check was intended to be called with three arguments,
the last one being a nice helpful test name. There's a fallback
for two-argument calls, but it was a horrible FIXME.
New fallback: the most recently run podman command. We keep
track of it in each run_podman() invocation.
This is not ideal, because it's theoretically possible to
invoke 'is' on something other than the output of run_podman,
but this at least fixes the by-far-most-common case.
[NO TESTS NEEDED]
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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podman upgrade tests
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Initial validation of using podman-in-podman to create an
old-podman root, then use new-podman to play with the
containers created therein.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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buildah now supports running under emulation[1] as well as
creating manifests. Use those features to create a multiarch
testimage that can be used to test podman on other arches.
[1] on Fedora 33, this requires the qemu-user-static package
We also build a new :00000001 image, replacing :00000000,
because (sigh) some tests try to run 'true' in the container.
Include instructions on building said image.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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The new Ubuntu 20.04 VMs seem very slow and fail reproducibly in a build
test (i.e, "wordir, cmd, env, label"). Bumping up the time out to 120
seconds will help get the CI green.
See github.com/containers/podman/pull/8747.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
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- run test: minor cleanup to .containerenv test. Basically,
make it do only two podman-runs (they're expensive) and
tighten up the results checks
- ps test: add ps -a --storage. Requires small tweak to
run_podman helper, so we can have "timeout" be an expected
result
- sdnotify test: workaround for #8718 (seeing MAINPID=xxx as
last output line instead of READY=1). As found by the
newly-added debugging echos, what we are seeing is:
MAINPID=103530
READY=1
MAINPID=103530
It's not supposed to be that way; it's supposed to be just
the first two. But when faced with reality, we must bend
to accommodate it, so let's accept READY=1 anywhere in
the output stream, not just as the last line.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Followup to #8284, due to my not having noticed #8096.
RHEL gating tests are failing again due to rhbz#1895105, the
one where we can't run journalctl rootless on RHEL. #8284 fixed
this for some RHEL builds of older podman, but I missed #8096
which added yet another logs test.
This brings us to three journalctl exceptions, which means
it gets complicated because I have to refactor it all.
**THIS IS NOT SUSTAINABLE**. We need some way to have a similar
setup in CI, with a permission-less rootless login, so we don't
add yet another logs test some day and discover, months later,
that it doesn't work on RHEL and then have to go into crisis
mode.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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There exists a unit test to ensure that shell completion functions are
defined. However there was no check about the quality of the provided
shell completions. Lets change that.
The idea is to create a general test that makes sure we are suggesting
containers,pods,images... for the correct commands. This works by
reading the command use line and checking for each arg if we provide
the correct suggestions for this arg.
It includes the following tests:
- flag suggestions if [options] is set
- container, pod, image, network, volume, registry completion
- path completion for the appropriate arg KEYWORDS (`PATH`,`CONTEXT`,etc.)
- no completion if there are no args
- completion for more than one arg if it ends with `...]`
The test does not cover completion values for flags and not every arg KEYWORD
is supported. This is still a huge improvement and covers most use cases.
This test spotted several inconsistencies between the completion and the
command use line. All of them have been adjusted to make the test pass.
The biggest advantage is that the completions always match the latest
command changes. So if someone changes the arguments for a command this
ensures that the completions must be adjusted.
Signed-off-by: Paul Holzinger <paul.holzinger@web.de>
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Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon <matthew.heon@pm.me>
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The BATS 'run' directive is really quite obnoxious; for the
most part we really don't want to use it. Remove some uses
that snuck in last week, and remove one test (exists) that
can more naturally be piggybacked into an rm test.
While we're at it: in setup(), look for and delete stray
external (buildah) containers. This will be important if
any of the external-container tests fails; this way we
don't leave behind a state that causes subsequent tests
to fail.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- run --userns=keep-id: confirm that $HOME gets set (#8013)
- inspect: confirm that JSON output is a sane number of
lines (10 or more), not an unreadable one-liner (#8011
and #8021). Do so with image, pod, network, volume
because the code paths might be different.
- cgroups: confirm that 'run' preserves cgroup manager (#7970)
- sdnotify: reenable tests, and hope CI doesn't hang. This
test was disabled on August 18 because CI jobs were hanging
and timing out. My suspicion was that it was #7316, which
in turn seems to have hinged on conmon #182. The latter
was merged on Sep 16, so let's cross our fingers and see
what happens.
Also: remove inaccurate warning from a networking test.
And, wow, fix is_cgroupsv2(), it has never actually worked.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- images test: add test for 'table' and '\t' formatting
- image mount test: check output from 'umount', test
repeat umount (NOP), and test invalid-umount
- kill test: remove kludgy workaround for crun signal bug
ref: #5004 -- code is no longer needed (fingers crossed),
and the workaround involved pulling an expensive image.
- selinux test: add new tests for shared context in:
* pods , w/ and w/o infra container (ref: #7902)
* containers with namespace sharing: --ipc, --pid, --net
- selinux test: new test for --pid=host (disabled pending
propagation of container-selinux-2.146, ref: #7939)
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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New tests for podman run --tz=EXPLICIT and =local. Requires
updating our testimage by adding a fixed reference timestamp
to a known file path.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- pause test: enable when rootless + cgroups v2
(was previously disabled for all rootless)
- run --pull: now works with podman-remote
(in #7647, thank you @jwhonce)
- various other run/volumes tests: try reenabling
It looks like #7195 was fixed (by #7451? I'm not
sure if I'm reading the conversation correctly).
Anyway, remove all the skip()s on 7195. Only time
will tell if it's really fixed)
Also:
- new test for podman image tree --whatrequires
(because TIL). Doesn't work with podman-remote.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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system tests: new tests
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- podman network create: new test
- podman pull by-sha + podman images -a (#7651)
- podman image mount: new test
- podman pod: --infra-image and --infra-command (#7167)
For convenience and robustness, build a new testimage
containing a custom file /home/podman/testimage-id
with contents YYYYMMDD (same as image tag). The
image-mount test checks that this file exists and
has the desired content. New testimage also includes
a dummy 'pause' executable, for testing pod infra.
Updates from testimage:20200902 to :20200917
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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The parse_table() helper has until now dumbly split lines
on every single '|' character. This prevents us from running
simple tests such as 'cgroupManager: (systemd|cgroupfs)'.
We now use an ugly but robust sed expression to split
on '|' but *only* when surrounded by spaces and/or beginning
or end of line. This is safe because, for readability, all
tables already keep the '|' symbols well separated from
table content.
Add tests. And, the whole reason behind this, add
an actual real test for cgroupManager and cgroupVersion.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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CI and system tests currently pull some images from docker.io.
Eliminate that, by:
- building a custom image containing much of what we need
for testing; and
- copying other needed images to quay.io
(Reason: effective 2020-11-01 docker.io will limit the
number of image pulls).
The principal change is to create a new quay.io/libpod/testimage,
using the new test/system/build-testimage script, instead of
relying on quay.io/libpod/alpine_labels. We also switch to
using a hardcoded :YYYYMMDD tag, instead of :latest, in an
attempt to futureproof our CI. This image includes 'httpd'
from busybox-extras, which we use in our networking test
(previously we had to pull and run busybox from docker.io).
The testimage can and should be extended as needed for future
tests, e.g. adding test file content or other useful tools.
For the '--pull' tests which require actually pulling from
the registry, I've created an image with the same name but
tagged :00000000 so it will never be pulled by default.
Since this image is only used minimally, it's just busybox.
Unfortunately there remain two cases we cannot solve in
this tiny alpine-based image:
1) docker registry
2) systemd
For those, I've (manually) run:
podman pull [ docker.io/library/registry:2.7 | registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:31 ]
podman tag !$ quay.io/...
podman push !$
...and amended the calling tests accordingly.
I've tried to make the the smallest reasonable diff, not the
smallest possible one. I hope it's a reasonable tradeoff.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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This allows to use any kind of `rm` in `$PATH` for the system tests.
Signed-off-by: Sascha Grunert <sgrunert@suse.com>
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podman-remote is in better shape now. Let's see what needs
to be done to reenable remote system tests.
- logs test: skip multilog, it doesn't work remote
- diff test: use -l only when local, not with remote
- many other tests: skip_if_remote, with 'FIXME: pending #xxxx'
where xxxx is a filed issue.
Unrelated: added new helper to skip_if_remote and _if_rootless,
where we check if the source message includes "remote"/"rootless"
and insert it if missing. This is a minor usability enhancement
to make it easier to understand at-a-glance why a skip triggers.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Some CI tests are flaking in the SELinux test, possibly because
there's a new variation of the "multiple devices" warning I hadn't
seen before:
WARNING: Creating device "/dev/null" with same type, major and minor as existing "/dev/foodevdir/null".
Solution: in remove_same_dev_warning(), remove "multiple" from
the match string.
Also: fix a Go test that wasn't cleaning up after itself. And
add an actual test to it, not just check-exit-status.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- Issue #6735 : problem with multiple namespaces; confirms
combinations of --userns=keep-id, --privileged, --user=XX
- Issue #6829 : --userns=keep-id will add a /etc/passwd entry
- Issue #6593 : podman exec, with --userns=keep-id, errors
(test is currently skipped because issue remains live)
...and, addendum: add new helper function, remove_same_dev_warning.
Some CI systems issue a warning on podman run --privileged:
WARNING: The same type, major and minor should not be used for multiple devices.
We already had special-case code to ignore than in the SELinux
test, but now we're seeing it in the new run tests I added, so
I've refactored the "ignore this warning" code and written
tests for the removal code.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Reversion of one part of #6679: my handling of 'realpath'
would not work when $PODMAN is 'podman-remote --url etc'.
Trying to handle that case got unmaintainable; so instead
let's just force 'make {local,remote}system' to invoke
with a full PODMAN path. This breaks down if someone
runs the tests with a manual 'bats' invocation, but I
think I'm the only one who ever does that.
Since podman path will now be very long in the logs,
add code to logformatter to abbreviate it like we do
for the ginkgo logs.
And, one thing that has bugged me for a long time:
in the error logs, show a different prompt ('#' vs '$')
to distinguish root vs rootless. This should make it
much easier to see at-a-glance whether a log file
is root or not. Add tests for it.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- rm: confirm 'rm' and 'rm -f' on running container
- build: shotgun test of workdir, cmd, env, labels
The new build test cd's to a temporary directory, which broke
test invocations using a relative path (./bin/podman). Added
code to detect relative paths and convert them to absolute.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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The systemd unit test never ran in CI and was broken for various
reasons. Fix the test to execute Podman in systemd units and to also
run generated units files.
Note: more tests will be added in the future. The simple check for now
will prevent regressions.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
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the current implementation of info, while typed, is very loosely done so. we need stronger types for our apiv2 implmentation and bindings.
Signed-off-by: Brent Baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
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- run: --name (includes 'podman container exists' tests)
- run: --pull (always, never, missing)
- build: new test for ADD URL (#4420)
- exec: new test for issue #4785 (pipe getting lost)
- diff: new test
- selinux (mostly copied from docker-autotest)
Plus a bug fix: the wait_for_output() helper would continue
checking, eventually timing out, even if the container had
already exited (probably because of an error). Fix: as
part of the loop, run 'podman inspect' and bail out if
container is not running. Include exit code and logs.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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As initially written the test does not work other than in
a CI environment because it relies on an empty tag history.
Rewrite so we can guarantee that, by creating a new image.
Also add slightly more helpful tests: the initial tests
would just show "expected 0, got 1" which is unhelpful.
Tweak so we test on actual history contents, which will
show more informative messages on failure.
And, finally, clean up after ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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podman exec leaks an exec_pid_<hash> file for every exec in tmpfs,
it's known rhbz#1731117, this case makes sure leakage issue has
been fixed.
rhbz: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1731117
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <chuanchang.jia@gmail.com>
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podman-remote rm now works; that's the only thing we were
waiting for to enable podman-remote (varlink) system tests.
Add a (too-complicated, sorry) Makefile target that will
define a random socket path, start the podman varlink server,
and run the test suite using podman-remote.
Also: add two convenience functions, is_rootless and is_remote,
and use those in skip_if_rootless/if_remote and elsewhere
Also: workarounds for broken tests:
- basic version test: podman-remote emits an empty 'Client'
line. Just ignore it.
- looks like 'podman-remote pod' doesn't work; skip test.
Also: minor documentation update
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Fedora CI tests are failing on rawhide under kernel
5.3.0-0.rc1.git3.1.fc31 (rhbz#1736758). But there's
another insidious failure, a 4-hour hang in the
rootless tests on the same CI system. The culprit
line is in the podman build test, but it's actually
BATS itself that hangs, not the build command -- which
suggests that it's the usual FD 3 problem (see BATS README).
It would seem that podman is forking a process that
inherits fd 3 but that process is not getting cleaned
up when podman crashes upon encountering the kernel bug.
Today it's podman build, tomorrow it might be something
else. Let's just run all podman invocations in run_podman
with a non-bats FD 3.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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By default, podman points PIDFile in generated unit file to non-existent
location. As a result, the unit file, generated by podman, is broken:
an attempt to start this unit without prior modification results in a crash,
because systemd can not find the pidfile of service's main process.
Fix the value of "PIDFile" and add a system test for this case.
Signed-off-by: Danila Kiver <danila.kiver@mail.ru>
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podman-remote now supports rm! That's what we needed to start
running BATS tests.
Although most tests don't actually work, some do, and maybe
the rest will start working over time. For now, disable them.
The only significant difference found is that podman-remote
strips fractional seconds from timestamps in JSON output.
Probably not something worth caring about.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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- document a recommended convention for fail-fast tests
- document the requirement for jq. (And, add a fail-fast
test for its presence; remove the duplicated checks
in subtests)
- add further sanity checks to 'help' test. Add missing
documentation. Remove a no-longer-needed workaround for
usage-message bug fixed in #2486
- add a documented TEMPLATE
- and, since we're at 1.1, enable 'Remote API' check in
version test
- better diagnostics in setup/teardown; add vim filetype hint;
better formatting of actual-vs-expect errors
- new pod-top, logs, build tests
- improve error messages
- add $IMAGE alias for ridiculous $PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_FQN
- final cleanup, in prep for merge
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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Initial attempt at writing a framework for podman system tests.
The idea is to define a useful set of primitives that will
make it easy to write actual tests and to interpret results
of failing ones.
This is a proof-of-concept right now; only a small number of
tests, by no means comprehensive. I am requesting review in
order to find showstopper problems: reasons why this approach
cannot work. Should there be none, we can work toward running
these as gating tests for Fedora and RHEL8.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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