summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/test/system/130-kill.bats
blob: a9456e03c26921d24a33ac175167cd6f0fcb73cf (plain)
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
#!/usr/bin/env bats   -*- bats -*-
#
# tests for podman kill
#

load helpers

@test "podman kill - test signal handling in containers" {

    # Prepare for 'logs -f'
    run_podman info --format '{{.Host.LogDriver}}'
    log_driver=$output
    run_podman info --format '{{.Host.EventLogger}}'
    event_logger=$output
    opt_log_driver=
    if [ $log_driver = "journald" ] && [ $event_logger != "journald" ]; then
        # Since PR#10431, 'logs -f' with journald driver is only supported with journald events backend.
        # Set '--log driver' temporally because remote doesn't support '--events-backend'.
        opt_log_driver="--log-driver k8s-file"
    fi

    # Start a container that will handle all signals by emitting 'got: N'
    local -a signals=(1 2 3 4 5 6 8 10 12 13 14 15 16 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 64)
    run_podman run -d ${opt_log_driver} $IMAGE sh -c \
        "for i in ${signals[*]}; do trap \"echo got: \$i\" \$i; done;
        echo READY;
        while ! test -e /stop; do sleep 0.05; done;
        echo DONE"
    # Ignore output regarding pulling/processing container images
    cid=$(echo "$output" | tail -1)

    # Run 'logs -f' on that container, but run it in the background with
    # redirection to a named pipe from which we (foreground job) read
    # and confirm that signals are received. We can't use run_podman here.
    local fifo=${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/podman-kill-fifo.$(random_string 10)
    mkfifo $fifo
    $PODMAN logs -f $cid >$fifo </dev/null &
    podman_log_pid=$!

    # Open the FIFO for reading, and keep it open. This prevents a race
    # condition in which the container can exit (e.g. if for some reason
    # it doesn't handle the signal) and we (this test) try to read from
    # the FIFO. Since there wouldn't be an active writer, the open()
    # would hang forever. With this exec we keep the FD open, allowing
    # 'read -t' to time out and report a useful error.
    exec 5<$fifo

    # First container emits READY when ready; wait for it.
    read -t 60 -u 5 ready
    is "$ready" "READY" "first log message from container"

    # Helper function: send the given signal, verify that it's received.
    kill_and_check() {
        local signal=$1
        local signum=${2:-$1}       # e.g. if signal=HUP, we expect to see '1'

        run_podman kill -s $signal $cid
        read -t 60 -u 5 actual || die "Timed out: no ACK for kill -s $signal"
        is "$actual" "got: $signum" "Signal $signal handled by container"
    }

    # Send signals in random order; make sure each one is received
    for s in $(fmt --width=2 <<< "${signals[*]}" | sort --random-sort);do
        kill_and_check $s
    done

    # Variations: with leading dash; by name, with/without dash or SIG
    kill_and_check -1        1
    kill_and_check -INT      2
    kill_and_check  FPE      8
    kill_and_check -SIGUSR1 10
    kill_and_check  SIGUSR2 12

    # Done. Tell the container to stop, and wait for final DONE
    run_podman exec $cid touch /stop
    read -t 5 -u 5 done || die "Timed out waiting for DONE from container"
    is "$done" "DONE" "final log message from container"

    # Clean up
    run_podman wait $cid
    run_podman rm $cid
    wait $podman_log_pid
}

@test "podman kill - rejects invalid args" {
    # These errors are thrown by the imported docker/signal.ParseSignal()
    local -a bad_signal_names=(0 SIGBADSIG SIG BADSIG %% ! "''" '""' " ")
    for s in ${bad_signal_names[@]}; do
        # 'nosuchcontainer' is fine: podman should bail before it gets there
        run_podman 125 kill -s $s nosuchcontainer
        is "$output" "Error: invalid signal: $s" "Error from kill -s $s"

        run_podman 125 pod kill -s $s nosuchpod
        is "$output" "Error: invalid signal: $s" "Error from pod kill -s $s"
    done

    # Special case: these too are thrown by docker/signal.ParseSignal(),
    # but the dash sign is stripped by our wrapper in utils, so the
    # error message doesn't include the dash.
    local -a bad_dash_signals=(-0 -SIGBADSIG -SIG -BADSIG -)
    for s in ${bad_dash_signals[@]}; do
        run_podman 125 kill -s $s nosuchcontainer
        is "$output" "Error: invalid signal: ${s##-}" "Error from kill -s $s"
    done

    # This error (signal out of range) is thrown by our wrapper
    local -a bad_signal_nums=(65 -65 96 999 99999999)
    for s in ${bad_signal_nums[@]}; do
        run_podman 125 kill -s $s nosuchcontainer
        is "$output" "Error: valid signals are 1 through 64" \
           "Error from kill -s $s"
    done

    # 'podman create' uses the same parsing code
    run_podman 125 create --stop-signal=99 $IMAGE
    is "$output" "Error: valid signals are 1 through 64" "podman create"
}

@test "podman kill - print IDs or raw input" {
    # kill -a must print the IDs
    run_podman run --rm -d $IMAGE top
    ctrID="$output"
    run_podman kill -a
    is "$output" "$ctrID"

    # kill $input must print $input
    cname=$(random_string)
    run_podman run --rm -d --name $cname $IMAGE top
    run_podman kill $cname
    is "$output" $cname
}

# vim: filetype=sh