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
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
|
#!/usr/bin/env bats -*- bats -*-
#
# Test podman local networking
#
load helpers
# Copied from tsweeney's https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/4827
@test "podman networking: port on localhost" {
skip_if_remote "FIXME: reevaluate this one after #7360 is fixed"
random_1=$(random_string 30)
random_2=$(random_string 30)
HOST_PORT=8080
SERVER=http://127.0.0.1:$HOST_PORT
# Create a test file with random content
INDEX1=$PODMAN_TMPDIR/hello.txt
echo $random_1 > $INDEX1
# Bind-mount this file with a different name to a container running httpd
run_podman run -d --name myweb -p "$HOST_PORT:80" \
-v $INDEX1:/var/www/index.txt \
-w /var/www \
$IMAGE /bin/busybox-extras httpd -f -p 80
cid=$output
# In that container, create a second file, using exec and redirection
run_podman exec -i myweb sh -c "cat > index2.txt" <<<"$random_2"
# ...verify its contents as seen from container.
run_podman exec -i myweb cat /var/www/index2.txt
is "$output" "$random_2" "exec cat index2.txt"
# Verify http contents: curl from localhost
run curl -s $SERVER/index.txt
is "$output" "$random_1" "curl 127.0.0.1:/index.txt"
run curl -s $SERVER/index2.txt
is "$output" "$random_2" "curl 127.0.0.1:/index2.txt"
# Verify http contents: wget from a second container
run_podman run --rm --net=host $IMAGE wget -qO - $SERVER/index.txt
is "$output" "$random_1" "podman wget /index.txt"
run_podman run --rm --net=host $IMAGE wget -qO - $SERVER/index2.txt
is "$output" "$random_2" "podman wget /index2.txt"
# Tests #4889 - two-argument form of "podman ports" was broken
run_podman port myweb
is "$output" "80/tcp -> 0.0.0.0:$HOST_PORT" "port <cid>"
run_podman port myweb 80
is "$output" "0.0.0.0:$HOST_PORT" "port <cid> 80"
run_podman port myweb 80/tcp
is "$output" "0.0.0.0:$HOST_PORT" "port <cid> 80/tcp"
run_podman 125 port myweb 99/tcp
is "$output" 'Error: failed to find published port "99/tcp"'
# Clean up
run_podman stop -t 1 myweb
run_podman rm myweb
}
# Issue #5466 - port-forwarding doesn't work with this option and -d
@test "podman networking: port with --userns=keep-id" {
# FIXME: randomize port, and create second random host port
myport=54321
# Container will exit as soon as 'nc' receives input
# We use '-n -v' to give us log messages showing an incoming connection
# and its IP address; the purpose of that is guaranteeing that the
# remote IP is not 127.0.0.1 (podman PR #9052).
# We could get more parseable output by using $NCAT_REMOTE_ADDR,
# but busybox nc doesn't support that.
run_podman run -d --userns=keep-id -p 127.0.0.1:$myport:$myport \
$IMAGE nc -l -n -v -p $myport
cid="$output"
# emit random string, and check it
teststring=$(random_string 30)
echo "$teststring" | nc 127.0.0.1 $myport
run_podman logs $cid
# Sigh. We can't check line-by-line, because 'nc' output order is
# unreliable. We usually get the 'connect to' line before the random
# string, but sometimes we get it after. So, just do substring checks.
is "$output" ".*listening on \[::\]:$myport .*" "nc -v shows right port"
# This is the truly important check: make sure the remote IP is
# in the 10.X range, not 127.X.
is "$output" \
".*connect to \[::ffff:10\..*\]:$myport from \[::ffff:10\..*\]:.*" \
"nc -v shows remote IP address in 10.X space (not 127.0.0.1)"
is "$output" ".*${teststring}.*" "test string received on container"
# Clean up
run_podman rm $cid
}
# "network create" now works rootless, with the help of a special container
@test "podman network create" {
myport=54322
local mynetname=testnet-$(random_string 10)
local mysubnet=$(random_rfc1918_subnet)
run_podman network create --subnet "${mysubnet}.0/24" $mynetname
is "$output" ".*/cni/net.d/$mynetname.conflist" "output of 'network create'"
# (Assert that output is formatted, not a one-line blob: #8011)
run_podman network inspect $mynetname
if [[ "${#lines[*]}" -lt 5 ]]; then
die "Output from 'pod inspect' is only ${#lines[*]} lines; see #8011"
fi
run_podman run --rm --network $mynetname $IMAGE ip a
is "$output" ".* inet ${mysubnet}\.2/24 brd ${mysubnet}\.255 " \
"sdfsdf"
run_podman run --rm -d --network $mynetname -p 127.0.0.1:$myport:$myport \
$IMAGE nc -l -n -v -p $myport
cid="$output"
# emit random string, and check it
teststring=$(random_string 30)
echo "$teststring" | nc 127.0.0.1 $myport
run_podman logs $cid
# Sigh. We can't check line-by-line, because 'nc' output order is
# unreliable. We usually get the 'connect to' line before the random
# string, but sometimes we get it after. So, just do substring checks.
is "$output" ".*listening on \[::\]:$myport .*" "nc -v shows right port"
# This is the truly important check: make sure the remote IP is
# in the 172.X range, not 127.X.
is "$output" \
".*connect to \[::ffff:172\..*\]:$myport from \[::ffff:172\..*\]:.*" \
"nc -v shows remote IP address in 172.X space (not 127.0.0.1)"
is "$output" ".*${teststring}.*" "test string received on container"
# Cannot create network with the same name
run_podman 125 network create $mynetname
is "$output" "Error: the network name $mynetname is already used" \
"Trying to create an already-existing network"
run_podman network rm $mynetname
run_podman 1 network rm $mynetname
# rootless CNI leaves behind an image pulled by SHA, hence with no tag.
# Remove it if present; we can only remove it by ID.
run_podman images --format '{{.Id}}' rootless-cni-infra
if [ -n "$output" ]; then
run_podman rmi $output
fi
}
@test "podman network reload" {
skip_if_remote "podman network reload does not have remote support"
skip_if_rootless "podman network reload does not work rootless"
random_1=$(random_string 30)
HOST_PORT=12345
SERVER=http://127.0.0.1:$HOST_PORT
# Create a test file with random content
INDEX1=$PODMAN_TMPDIR/hello.txt
echo $random_1 > $INDEX1
# Bind-mount this file with a different name to a container running httpd
run_podman run -d --name myweb -p "$HOST_PORT:80" \
-v $INDEX1:/var/www/index.txt \
-w /var/www \
$IMAGE /bin/busybox-extras httpd -f -p 80
cid=$output
run_podman inspect $cid --format "{{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}"
ip="$output"
run_podman inspect $cid --format "{{.NetworkSettings.MacAddress}}"
mac="$output"
# Verify http contents: curl from localhost
run curl -s $SERVER/index.txt
is "$output" "$random_1" "curl 127.0.0.1:/index.txt"
# flush the CNI iptables here
run iptables -t nat -F CNI-HOSTPORT-DNAT
# check that we cannot curl (timeout after 5 sec)
run timeout 5 curl -s $SERVER/index.txt
if [ "$status" -ne 124 ]; then
die "curl did not timeout, status code: $status"
fi
# reload the network to recreate the iptables rules
run_podman network reload $cid
is "$output" "$cid" "Output does not match container ID"
# check that we still have the same mac and ip
run_podman inspect $cid --format "{{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}"
is "$output" "$ip" "IP address changed after podman network reload"
run_podman inspect $cid --format "{{.NetworkSettings.MacAddress}}"
is "$output" "$mac" "MAC address changed after podman network reload"
# check that we can still curl
run curl -s $SERVER/index.txt
is "$output" "$random_1" "curl 127.0.0.1:/index.txt"
# make sure --all is working and that this
# cmd also works if the iptables still exists
run_podman network reload --all
is "$output" "$cid" "Output does not match container ID"
# check that we can still curl
run curl -s $SERVER/index.txt
is "$output" "$random_1" "curl 127.0.0.1:/index.txt"
# cleanup the container
run_podman rm -f $cid
}
# vim: filetype=sh
|