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
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
|
#!/usr/bin/env bats
load helpers
# Very simple test
@test "podman stop - basic test" {
run_podman run -d $IMAGE sleep 60
cid="$output"
# Run 'stop'. Time how long it takes.
t0=$SECONDS
run_podman stop $cid
t1=$SECONDS
# Confirm that container is stopped. Podman-remote unfortunately
# cannot tell the difference between "stopped" and "exited", and
# spits them out interchangeably, so we need to recognize either.
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.Status}} {{.State.ExitCode}}' $cid
is "$output" "\\(stopped\|exited\\) \+137" \
"Status and exit code of stopped container"
# The initial SIGTERM is ignored, so this operation should take
# exactly 10 seconds. Give it some leeway.
delta_t=$(( $t1 - $t0 ))
[ $delta_t -gt 8 ] ||\
die "podman stop: ran too quickly! ($delta_t seconds; expected >= 10)"
[ $delta_t -le 14 ] ||\
die "podman stop: took too long ($delta_t seconds; expected ~10)"
run_podman rm $cid
}
# #9051 : podman stop --all was not working with podman-remote
@test "podman stop --all" {
# Start three containers, create (without running) a fourth
run_podman run -d --name c1 $IMAGE sleep 20
run_podman run -d --name c2 $IMAGE sleep 40
run_podman run -d --name c3 $IMAGE sleep 60
run_podman create --name c4 $IMAGE sleep 80
# podman ps (without -a) should show the three running containers
run_podman ps --sort names --format '{{.Names}}--{{.Status}}'
is "${#lines[*]}" "3" "podman ps shows exactly three containers"
is "${lines[0]}" "c1--Up.*" "podman ps shows running container (1)"
is "${lines[1]}" "c2--Up.*" "podman ps shows running container (2)"
is "${lines[2]}" "c3--Up.*" "podman ps shows running container (3)"
# Stop -a
run_podman stop -a -t 1
# Now podman ps (without -a) should show nothing.
run_podman ps --format '{{.Names}}'
is "$output" "" "podman ps, after stop -a, shows no running containers"
# ...but with -a, containers are shown
run_podman ps -a --sort names --format '{{.Names}}--{{.Status}}'
is "${#lines[*]}" "4" "podman ps -a shows exactly four containers"
is "${lines[0]}" "c1--Exited.*" "ps -a, first stopped container"
is "${lines[1]}" "c2--Exited.*" "ps -a, second stopped container"
is "${lines[2]}" "c3--Exited.*" "ps -a, third stopped container"
is "${lines[3]}" "c4--Created.*" "ps -a, created container (unaffected)"
}
# #9051 : podman stop --ignore was not working with podman-remote
@test "podman stop --ignore" {
name=thiscontainerdoesnotexist
run_podman 125 stop $name
is "$output" \
"Error: no container with name or ID \"$name\" found: no such container" \
"podman stop nonexistent container"
run_podman stop --ignore $name
is "$output" "" "podman stop nonexistent container, with --ignore"
}
# Test fallback
# Regression test for #2472
@test "podman stop - can trap signal" {
# Because the --time and --timeout options can be wonky, try three
# different variations of this test.
for t_opt in '' '--time=5' '--timeout=5'; do
# Run a simple container that logs output on SIGTERM
run_podman run -d $IMAGE sh -c \
"trap 'echo Received SIGTERM, finishing; exit' SIGTERM; echo READY; while :; do sleep 1; done"
cid="$output"
wait_for_ready $cid
# Run 'stop' against it...
t0=$SECONDS
run_podman stop $t_opt $cid
t1=$SECONDS
# ...the container should trap the signal, log it, and exit.
run_podman logs $cid
is "$output" ".*READY.*Received SIGTERM, finishing" "podman stop $t_opt"
# Exit code should be 0, because container did its own exit
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.ExitCode}}' $cid
is "$output" "0" "Exit code of stopped container"
# The 'stop' command should return almost instantaneously
delta_t=$(( $t1 - $t0 ))
[ $delta_t -le 2 ] ||\
die "podman stop: took too long ($delta_t seconds; expected <= 2)"
run_podman rm $cid
done
}
# Regression test for #8501
@test "podman stop - unlock while waiting for timeout" {
# Test that the container state transitions to "stopping" and that other
# commands can get the container's lock. To do that, run a container that
# ignores SIGTERM such that the Podman would wait 20 seconds for the stop
# to finish. This gives us enough time to try some commands and inspect
# the container's status.
run_podman run --name stopme -d $IMAGE sh -c \
"trap 'echo Received SIGTERM, ignoring' SIGTERM; echo READY; while :; do sleep 0.2; done"
wait_for_ready stopme
local t0=$SECONDS
# Stop the container, but do so in the background so we can inspect
# the container status while it's stopping. Use $PODMAN because we
# don't want the overhead and error checks of run_podman.
$PODMAN stop -t 20 stopme &
# Wait for container to acknowledge the signal. We can't use wait_for_output
# because that aborts if .State.Running != true
local timeout=5
while [[ $timeout -gt 0 ]]; do
run_podman logs stopme
if [[ "$output" =~ "Received SIGTERM, ignoring" ]]; then
break
fi
timeout=$((timeout - 1))
if [[ $timeout -eq 0 ]]; then
die "Timed out waiting for container to receive SIGERM"
fi
sleep 0.5
done
# Other commands can acquire the lock
run_podman ps -a
# The container state transitioned to "stopping"
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.Status}}' stopme
is "$output" "stopping" "Status of container should be 'stopping'"
# Time check: make sure we were able to run 'ps' before the container
# exited. If this takes too long, it means ps had to wait for lock.
local delta_t=$(( $SECONDS - t0 ))
if [[ $delta_t -gt 5 ]]; then
die "Operations took too long ($delta_t seconds)"
fi
run_podman kill stopme
run_podman wait stopme
# Exit code should be 137 as it was killed
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.ExitCode}}' stopme
is "$output" "137" "Exit code of killed container"
}
@test "podman stop -t 1 Generate warning" {
skip_if_remote "warning only happens on server side"
run_podman run --rm --name stopme -d $IMAGE sleep 100
run_podman stop -t 1 stopme
is "$output" ".*StopSignal SIGTERM failed to stop container stopme in 1 seconds, resorting to SIGKILL" "stopping container should print warning"
}
# vim: filetype=sh
|