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#!/usr/bin/env bats -*- bats -*-
#
# podman volume-related tests
#
load helpers
function setup() {
basic_setup
run_podman '?' volume rm -a
}
function teardown() {
run_podman '?' rm -a --volumes
run_podman '?' volume rm -a -f
basic_teardown
}
# Simple volume tests: share files between host and container
@test "podman run --volumes : basic" {
run_podman volume list --noheading
is "$output" "" "baseline: empty results from list --noheading"
# Create three temporary directories
vol1=${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/v1_$(random_string)
vol2=${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/v2_$(random_string)
vol3=${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/v3_$(random_string)
mkdir $vol1 $vol2 $vol3
# In each directory, write a random string to a file
echo $(random_string) >$vol1/file1_in
echo $(random_string) >$vol2/file2_in
echo $(random_string) >$vol3/file3_in
# Run 'cat' on each file, and compare against local files. Mix -v / --volume
# flags, and specify them out of order just for grins. The shell wildcard
# expansion must sort vol1/2/3 lexically regardless.
v_opts="-v $vol1:/vol1:z --volume $vol3:/vol3:z -v $vol2:/vol2:z"
run_podman run --rm $v_opts $IMAGE sh -c "cat /vol?/file?_in"
for i in 1 2 3; do
eval voldir=\$vol${i}
is "${lines[$(($i - 1))]}" "$(< $voldir/file${i}_in)" \
"contents of /vol${i}/file${i}_in"
done
# Confirm that container sees vol1 as a mount point
run_podman run --rm $v_opts $IMAGE mount
is "$output" ".* on /vol1 type .*" "'mount' in container lists vol1"
# Have the container do write operations, confirm them on host
out1=$(random_string)
run_podman run --rm $v_opts $IMAGE sh -c "echo $out1 >/vol1/file1_out;
cp /vol2/file2_in /vol3/file3_out"
is "$(<$vol1/file1_out)" "$out1" "contents of /vol1/file1_out"
is "$(<$vol3/file3_out)" "$(<$vol2/file2_in)" "contents of /vol3/file3_out"
# Writing to read-only volumes: not allowed
run_podman 1 run --rm -v $vol1:/vol1ro:z,ro $IMAGE sh -c "touch /vol1ro/abc"
is "$output" ".*Read-only file system" "touch on read-only volume"
}
# Named volumes
@test "podman volume create / run" {
myvolume=myvol$(random_string)
mylabel=$(random_string)
# Create a named volume
run_podman volume create --label l=$mylabel $myvolume
is "$output" "$myvolume" "output from volume create"
# Confirm that it shows up in 'volume ls', and confirm values
run_podman volume ls --format json
tests="
Name | $myvolume
Driver | local
Labels.l | $mylabel
"
parse_table "$tests" | while read field expect; do
actual=$(jq -r ".[0].$field" <<<"$output")
is "$actual" "$expect" "volume ls .$field"
done
# Run a container that writes to a file in that volume
mountpoint=$(jq -r '.[0].Mountpoint' <<<"$output")
rand=$(random_string)
run_podman run --rm --volume $myvolume:/vol $IMAGE sh -c "echo $rand >/vol/myfile"
# Confirm that the file is visible, with content, outside the container
is "$(<$mountpoint/myfile)" "$rand" "we see content created in container"
# Clean up
run_podman volume rm $myvolume
}
# Running scripts (executables) from a volume
@test "podman volume: exec/noexec" {
myvolume=myvol$(random_string)
run_podman volume create $myvolume
is "$output" "$myvolume" "output from volume create"
run_podman volume inspect --format '{{.Mountpoint}}' $myvolume
mountpoint="$output"
# Create a script, make it runnable
rand=$(random_string)
cat >$mountpoint/myscript <<EOF
#!/bin/sh
echo "got here -$rand-"
EOF
chmod 755 $mountpoint/myscript
# By default, volumes are mounted exec, but we have manually added the
# noexec option. This should fail.
# ARGH. Unfortunately, runc (used for cgroups v1) produces a different error
local expect_rc=126
local expect_msg='.* OCI permission denied.*'
if [[ $(podman_runtime) = "runc" ]]; then
expect_rc=1
expect_msg='.* exec user process caused.*permission denied'
fi
run_podman ${expect_rc} run --rm --volume $myvolume:/vol:noexec,z $IMAGE /vol/myscript
is "$output" "$expect_msg" "run on volume, noexec"
# With the default, it should pass
run_podman run --rm -v $myvolume:/vol:z $IMAGE /vol/myscript
is "$output" "got here -$rand-" "script in volume is runnable with default (exec)"
# Clean up
run_podman volume rm $myvolume
}
# Anonymous temporary volumes, and persistent autocreated named ones
@test "podman volume, implicit creation with run" {
# No hostdir arg: create anonymous container with random name
rand=$(random_string)
run_podman run -v /myvol $IMAGE sh -c "echo $rand >/myvol/myfile"
run_podman volume ls -q
tempvolume="$output"
# We should see the file created in the container
run_podman volume inspect --format '{{.Mountpoint}}' $tempvolume
mountpoint="$output"
test -e "$mountpoint/myfile"
is "$(< $mountpoint/myfile)" "$rand" "file contents, anonymous volume"
# Remove the container, using rm --volumes. Volume should now be gone.
run_podman rm -a --volumes
run_podman volume ls -q
is "$output" "" "anonymous volume is removed after container is rm'ed"
# Create a *named* container. This one should persist after container ends
myvol=myvol$(random_string)
rand=$(random_string)
# Duplicate "-v" confirms #8307, fix for double-lock on same volume
run_podman run --rm -v $myvol:/myvol:z -v $myvol:/myvol2:z $IMAGE \
sh -c "echo $rand >/myvol/myfile"
run_podman volume ls -q
is "$output" "$myvol" "autocreated named container persists"
# ...and should be usable, read/write, by a second container
run_podman run --rm -v $myvol:/myvol:z $IMAGE \
sh -c "cp /myvol/myfile /myvol/myfile2"
run_podman volume rm $myvol
# Autocreated volumes should also work with keep-id
# All we do here is check status; podman 1.9.1 would fail with EPERM
myvol=myvol$(random_string)
run_podman run --rm -v $myvol:/myvol:z --userns=keep-id $IMAGE \
touch /myvol/myfile
run_podman volume rm $myvol
}
# Podman volume import test
@test "podman volume import test" {
skip_if_remote "volumes import is not applicable on podman-remote"
run_podman volume create my_vol
run_podman run --rm -v my_vol:/data $IMAGE sh -c "echo hello >> /data/test"
run_podman volume create my_vol2
tarfile=hello$(random_string | tr A-Z a-z).tar
run_podman volume export my_vol --output=$tarfile
# we want to use `run_podman volume export my_vol` but run_podman is wrapping EOF
run_podman volume import my_vol2 - < $tarfile
rm -f $tarfile
run_podman run --rm -v my_vol2:/data $IMAGE sh -c "cat /data/test"
is "$output" "hello" "output from second container"
run_podman volume rm my_vol
run_podman volume rm my_vol2
}
# Confirm that container sees the correct id
@test "podman volume with --userns=keep-id" {
is_rootless || skip "only meaningful when run rootless"
myvoldir=${PODMAN_TMPDIR}/volume_$(random_string)
mkdir $myvoldir
touch $myvoldir/myfile
# With keep-id
run_podman run --rm -v $myvoldir:/vol:z --userns=keep-id $IMAGE \
stat -c "%u:%s" /vol/myfile
is "$output" "$(id -u):0" "with keep-id: stat(file in container) == my uid"
# Without
run_podman run --rm -v $myvoldir:/vol:z $IMAGE \
stat -c "%u:%s" /vol/myfile
is "$output" "0:0" "w/o keep-id: stat(file in container) == root"
}
# 'volume prune' identifies and cleans up unused volumes
@test "podman volume prune" {
# Create four named volumes
local -a v=()
for i in 1 2 3 4;do
vol=myvol${i}$(random_string)
v[$i]=$vol
run_podman volume create $vol
done
# Create two additional labeled volumes
for i in 5 6; do
vol=myvol${i}$(random_string)
v[$i]=$vol
run_podman volume create $vol --label "mylabel"
done
# (Assert that output is formatted, not a one-line blob: #8011)
run_podman volume inspect ${v[1]}
if [[ "${#lines[*]}" -lt 10 ]]; then
die "Output from 'volume inspect' is only ${#lines[*]} lines; see #8011"
fi
# Run two containers: one mounting v1, one mounting v2 & v3
run_podman run --name c1 --volume ${v[1]}:/vol1 $IMAGE date
run_podman run --name c2 --volume ${v[2]}:/vol2 -v ${v[3]}:/vol3 \
$IMAGE date
# List available volumes for pruning after using 1,2,3
run_podman volume prune <<< N
is "$(echo $(sort <<<${lines[@]:1:3}))" "${v[4]} ${v[5]} ${v[6]}" "volume prune, with 1,2,3 in use, lists 4,5,6"
# List available volumes for pruning after using 1,2,3 and filtering; see #8913
run_podman volume prune --filter label=mylabel <<< N
is "$(echo $(sort <<<${lines[@]:1:2}))" "${v[5]} ${v[6]}" "volume prune, with 1,2,3 in use and 4 filtered out, lists 5,6"
# prune should remove v4
run_podman volume prune --force
is "$output" "${v[4]}" "volume prune, with 1, 2, 3 in use, deletes only 4"
# Remove the container using v2 and v3. Prune should now remove those.
# The 'echo sort' is to get the output sorted and in one line.
run_podman rm c2
run_podman volume prune --force
is "$(echo $(sort <<<$output))" "${v[2]} ${v[3]}" \
"volume prune, after rm c2, deletes volumes 2 and 3"
# Remove the final container. Prune should now remove v1.
run_podman rm c1
run_podman volume prune --force
is "$output" "${v[1]}" "volume prune, after rm c2 & c1, deletes volume 1"
# Further prunes are NOPs
run_podman volume prune --force
is "$output" "" "no more volumes to prune"
}
# vim: filetype=sh
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