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|
# -*- bash -*-
# Podman command to run; may be podman-remote
PODMAN=${PODMAN:-podman}
# Standard image to use for most tests
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_REGISTRY=${PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_REGISTRY:-"quay.io"}
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_USER=${PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_USER:-"libpod"}
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_NAME=${PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_NAME:-"testimage"}
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_TAG=${PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_TAG:-"20220615"}
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_FQN="$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_REGISTRY/$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_USER/$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_NAME:$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_TAG"
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_ID=
# Remote image that we *DO NOT* fetch or keep by default; used for testing pull
# This has changed in 2021, from 0 through 3, various iterations of getting
# multiarch to work. It should change only very rarely.
PODMAN_NONLOCAL_IMAGE_TAG=${PODMAN_NONLOCAL_IMAGE_TAG:-"00000004"}
PODMAN_NONLOCAL_IMAGE_FQN="$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_REGISTRY/$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_USER/$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_NAME:$PODMAN_NONLOCAL_IMAGE_TAG"
# Because who wants to spell that out each time?
IMAGE=$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_FQN
# Default timeout for a podman command.
PODMAN_TIMEOUT=${PODMAN_TIMEOUT:-120}
# Prompt to display when logging podman commands; distinguish root/rootless
_LOG_PROMPT='$'
if [ $(id -u) -eq 0 ]; then
_LOG_PROMPT='#'
fi
###############################################################################
# BEGIN setup/teardown tools
# Provide common setup and teardown functions, but do not name them such!
# That way individual tests can override with their own setup/teardown,
# while retaining the ability to include these if they so desire.
# Some CI systems set this to runc, overriding the default crun.
if [[ -n $OCI_RUNTIME ]]; then
if [[ -z $CONTAINERS_CONF ]]; then
# FIXME: BATS provides no mechanism for end-of-run cleanup[1]; how
# can we avoid leaving this file behind when we finish?
# [1] https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core/issues/39
export CONTAINERS_CONF=$(mktemp --tmpdir=${BATS_TMPDIR:-/tmp} podman-bats-XXXXXXX.containers.conf)
cat >$CONTAINERS_CONF <<EOF
[engine]
runtime="$OCI_RUNTIME"
EOF
fi
fi
# Setup helper: establish a test environment with exactly the images needed
function basic_setup() {
# Clean up all containers
run_podman rm -t 0 --all --force --ignore
# ...including external (buildah) ones
run_podman ps --all --external --format '{{.ID}} {{.Names}}'
for line in "${lines[@]}"; do
set $line
echo "# setup(): removing stray external container $1 ($2)" >&3
run_podman rm -f $1
done
# Clean up all images except those desired
found_needed_image=
run_podman images --all --format '{{.Repository}}:{{.Tag}} {{.ID}}'
for line in "${lines[@]}"; do
set $line
if [ "$1" == "$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_FQN" ]; then
if [[ -z "$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_ID" ]]; then
# This will probably only trigger the 2nd time through setup
PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_ID=$2
fi
found_needed_image=1
else
# Always remove image that doesn't match by name
echo "# setup(): removing stray image $1" >&3
run_podman rmi --force "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
# Tagged image will have same IID as our test image; don't rmi it.
if [[ $2 != "$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_ID" ]]; then
echo "# setup(): removing stray image $2" >&3
run_podman rmi --force "$2" >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
fi
fi
done
# Make sure desired images are present
if [ -z "$found_needed_image" ]; then
run_podman pull "$PODMAN_TEST_IMAGE_FQN"
fi
# Argh. Although BATS provides $BATS_TMPDIR, it's just /tmp!
# That's bloody worthless. Let's make our own, in which subtests
# can write whatever they like and trust that it'll be deleted
# on cleanup.
# TODO: do this outside of setup, so it carries across tests?
PODMAN_TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d --tmpdir=${BATS_TMPDIR:-/tmp} podman_bats.XXXXXX)
# In the unlikely event that a test runs is() before a run_podman()
MOST_RECENT_PODMAN_COMMAND=
}
# Basic teardown: remove all pods and containers
function basic_teardown() {
echo "# [teardown]" >&2
run_podman '?' pod rm -t 0 --all --force --ignore
run_podman '?' rm -t 0 --all --force --ignore
run_podman '?' network prune --force
command rm -rf $PODMAN_TMPDIR
}
# Provide the above as default methods.
function setup() {
basic_setup
}
function teardown() {
basic_teardown
}
# Helpers useful for tests running rmi
function archive_image() {
local image=$1
# FIXME: refactor?
archive_basename=$(echo $1 | tr -c a-zA-Z0-9._- _)
archive=$BATS_TMPDIR/$archive_basename.tar
run_podman save -o $archive $image
}
function restore_image() {
local image=$1
archive_basename=$(echo $1 | tr -c a-zA-Z0-9._- _)
archive=$BATS_TMPDIR/$archive_basename.tar
run_podman restore $archive
}
# END setup/teardown tools
###############################################################################
# BEGIN podman helpers
################
# run_podman # Invoke $PODMAN, with timeout, using BATS 'run'
################
#
# This is the preferred mechanism for invoking podman: first, it
# invokes $PODMAN, which may be 'podman-remote' or '/some/path/podman'.
#
# Second, we use 'timeout' to abort (with a diagnostic) if something
# takes too long; this is preferable to a CI hang.
#
# Third, we log the command run and its output. This doesn't normally
# appear in BATS output, but it will if there's an error.
#
# Next, we check exit status. Since the normal desired code is 0,
# that's the default; but the first argument can override:
#
# run_podman 125 nonexistent-subcommand
# run_podman '?' some-other-command # let our caller check status
#
# Since we use the BATS 'run' mechanism, $output and $status will be
# defined for our caller.
#
function run_podman() {
# Number as first argument = expected exit code; default 0
expected_rc=0
case "$1" in
[0-9]) expected_rc=$1; shift;;
[1-9][0-9]) expected_rc=$1; shift;;
[12][0-9][0-9]) expected_rc=$1; shift;;
'?') expected_rc= ; shift;; # ignore exit code
esac
# Remember command args, for possible use in later diagnostic messages
MOST_RECENT_PODMAN_COMMAND="podman $*"
# stdout is only emitted upon error; this echo is to help a debugger
echo "$_LOG_PROMPT $PODMAN $*"
# BATS hangs if a subprocess remains and keeps FD 3 open; this happens
# if podman crashes unexpectedly without cleaning up subprocesses.
run timeout --foreground -v --kill=10 $PODMAN_TIMEOUT $PODMAN $_PODMAN_TEST_OPTS "$@" 3>/dev/null
# without "quotes", multiple lines are glommed together into one
if [ -n "$output" ]; then
echo "$output"
fi
if [ "$status" -ne 0 ]; then
echo -n "[ rc=$status ";
if [ -n "$expected_rc" ]; then
if [ "$status" -eq "$expected_rc" ]; then
echo -n "(expected) ";
else
echo -n "(** EXPECTED $expected_rc **) ";
fi
fi
echo "]"
fi
if [ "$status" -eq 124 ]; then
if expr "$output" : ".*timeout: sending" >/dev/null; then
# It's possible for a subtest to _want_ a timeout
if [[ "$expected_rc" != "124" ]]; then
echo "*** TIMED OUT ***"
false
fi
fi
fi
if [ -n "$expected_rc" ]; then
if [ "$status" -ne "$expected_rc" ]; then
die "exit code is $status; expected $expected_rc"
fi
fi
}
# Wait for certain output from a container, indicating that it's ready.
function wait_for_output {
local sleep_delay=5
local how_long=$PODMAN_TIMEOUT
local expect=
local cid=
# Arg processing. A single-digit number is how long to sleep between
# iterations; a 2- or 3-digit number is the total time to wait; all
# else are, in order, the string to expect and the container name/ID.
local i
for i in "$@"; do
if expr "$i" : '[0-9]\+$' >/dev/null; then
if [ $i -le 9 ]; then
sleep_delay=$i
else
how_long=$i
fi
elif [ -z "$expect" ]; then
expect=$i
else
cid=$i
fi
done
[ -n "$cid" ] || die "FATAL: wait_for_output: no container name/ID in '$*'"
t1=$(expr $SECONDS + $how_long)
while [ $SECONDS -lt $t1 ]; do
run_podman logs $cid
logs=$output
if expr "$logs" : ".*$expect" >/dev/null; then
return
fi
# Barf if container is not running
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.Running}}' $cid
if [ $output != "true" ]; then
run_podman inspect --format '{{.State.ExitCode}}' $cid
exitcode=$output
die "Container exited (status: $exitcode) before we saw '$expect': $logs"
fi
sleep $sleep_delay
done
die "timed out waiting for '$expect' from $cid"
}
# Shortcut for the lazy
function wait_for_ready {
wait_for_output 'READY' "$@"
}
######################
# random_free_port # Pick an available port within a specified range
######################
function random_free_port() {
local range=${1:-5000-5999}
local port
for port in $(shuf -i ${range}); do
if port_is_free $port; then
echo $port
return
fi
done
die "Could not find open port in range $range"
}
function random_free_port_range() {
local size=${1?Usage: random_free_port_range SIZE (as in, number of ports)}
local maxtries=10
while [[ $maxtries -gt 0 ]]; do
local firstport=$(random_free_port)
local lastport=
for i in $(seq 1 $((size - 1))); do
lastport=$((firstport + i))
if ! port_is_free $lastport; then
echo "# port $lastport is in use; trying another." >&3
lastport=
break
fi
done
if [[ -n "$lastport" ]]; then
echo "$firstport-$lastport"
return
fi
maxtries=$((maxtries - 1))
done
die "Could not find free port range with size $size"
}
function port_is_free() {
local port=${1?Usage: port_is_free PORT}
! { exec {unused_fd}<> /dev/tcp/127.0.0.1/$port; } &>/dev/null
}
###################
# wait_for_port # Returns once port is available on host
###################
function wait_for_port() {
local host=$1 # Probably "localhost"
local port=$2 # Numeric port
local _timeout=${3:-5} # Optional; default to 5 seconds
# Wait
while [ $_timeout -gt 0 ]; do
{ exec {unused_fd}<> /dev/tcp/$host/$port; } &>/dev/null && return
sleep 1
_timeout=$(( $_timeout - 1 ))
done
die "Timed out waiting for $host:$port"
}
# END podman helpers
###############################################################################
# BEGIN miscellaneous tools
# Shortcuts for common needs:
function is_ubuntu() {
grep -qiw ubuntu /etc/os-release
}
function is_rootless() {
[ "$(id -u)" -ne 0 ]
}
function is_remote() {
[[ "$PODMAN" =~ -remote ]]
}
function is_cgroupsv1() {
# WARNING: This will break if there's ever a cgroups v3
! is_cgroupsv2
}
# True if cgroups v2 are enabled
function is_cgroupsv2() {
cgroup_type=$(stat -f -c %T /sys/fs/cgroup)
test "$cgroup_type" = "cgroup2fs"
}
# True if podman is using netavark
function is_netavark() {
run_podman info --format '{{.Host.NetworkBackend}}'
if [[ "$output" =~ netavark ]]; then
return 0
fi
return 1
}
# Returns the OCI runtime *basename* (typically crun or runc). Much as we'd
# love to cache this result, we probably shouldn't.
function podman_runtime() {
# This function is intended to be used as '$(podman_runtime)', i.e.
# our caller wants our output. run_podman() messes with output because
# it emits the command invocation to stdout, hence the redirection.
run_podman info --format '{{ .Host.OCIRuntime.Name }}' >/dev/null
basename "${output:-[null]}"
}
# rhbz#1895105: rootless journald is unavailable except to users in
# certain magic groups; which our testuser account does not belong to
# (intentional: that is the RHEL default, so that's the setup we test).
function journald_unavailable() {
if ! is_rootless; then
# root must always have access to journal
return 1
fi
run journalctl -n 1
if [[ $status -eq 0 ]]; then
return 1
fi
if [[ $output =~ permission ]]; then
return 0
fi
# This should never happen; if it does, it's likely that a subsequent
# test will fail. This output may help track that down.
echo "WEIRD: 'journalctl -n 1' failed with a non-permission error:"
echo "$output"
return 1
}
# Returns the name of the local pause image.
function pause_image() {
# This function is intended to be used as '$(pause_image)', i.e.
# our caller wants our output. run_podman() messes with output because
# it emits the command invocation to stdout, hence the redirection.
run_podman version --format "{{.Server.Version}}-{{.Server.Built}}" >/dev/null
echo "localhost/podman-pause:$output"
}
# Wait for the pod (1st arg) to transition into the state (2nd arg)
function _ensure_pod_state() {
for i in {0..5}; do
run_podman pod inspect $1 --format "{{.State}}"
if [[ $output == "$2" ]]; then
return
fi
sleep 0.5
done
die "Timed out waiting for pod $1 to enter state $2"
}
# Wait for the container's (1st arg) running state (2nd arg)
function _ensure_container_running() {
for i in {0..20}; do
run_podman container inspect $1 --format "{{.State.Running}}"
if [[ $output == "$2" ]]; then
return
fi
sleep 0.5
done
die "Timed out waiting for container $1 to enter state running=$2"
}
###########################
# _add_label_if_missing # make sure skip messages include rootless/remote
###########################
function _add_label_if_missing() {
local msg="$1"
local want="$2"
if [ -z "$msg" ]; then
echo
elif expr "$msg" : ".*$want" &>/dev/null; then
echo "$msg"
else
echo "[$want] $msg"
fi
}
######################
# skip_if_rootless # ...with an optional message
######################
function skip_if_rootless() {
if is_rootless; then
local msg=$(_add_label_if_missing "$1" "rootless")
skip "${msg:-not applicable under rootless podman}"
fi
}
######################
# skip_if_not_rootless # ...with an optional message
######################
function skip_if_not_rootless() {
if ! is_rootless; then
local msg=$(_add_label_if_missing "$1" "rootful")
skip "${msg:-not applicable under rootlfull podman}"
fi
}
####################
# skip_if_remote # ...with an optional message
####################
function skip_if_remote() {
if is_remote; then
local msg=$(_add_label_if_missing "$1" "remote")
skip "${msg:-test does not work with podman-remote}"
fi
}
########################
# skip_if_no_selinux #
########################
function skip_if_no_selinux() {
if [ ! -e /usr/sbin/selinuxenabled ]; then
skip "selinux not available"
elif ! /usr/sbin/selinuxenabled; then
skip "selinux disabled"
fi
}
#######################
# skip_if_cgroupsv1 # ...with an optional message
#######################
function skip_if_cgroupsv1() {
if ! is_cgroupsv2; then
skip "${1:-test requires cgroupsv2}"
fi
}
######################
# skip_if_rootless_cgroupsv1 # ...with an optional message
######################
function skip_if_rootless_cgroupsv1() {
if is_rootless; then
if ! is_cgroupsv2; then
local msg=$(_add_label_if_missing "$1" "rootless cgroupvs1")
skip "${msg:-not supported as rootless under cgroupsv1}"
fi
fi
}
##################################
# skip_if_journald_unavailable # rhbz#1895105: rootless journald permissions
##################################
function skip_if_journald_unavailable {
if journald_unavailable; then
skip "Cannot use rootless journald on this system"
fi
}
function skip_if_root_ubuntu {
if is_ubuntu; then
if ! is_remote; then
if ! is_rootless; then
skip "Cannot run this test on rootful ubuntu, usually due to user errors"
fi
fi
fi
}
#########
# die # Abort with helpful message
#########
function die() {
# FIXME: handle multi-line output
echo "#/vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv" >&2
echo "#| FAIL: $*" >&2
echo "#\\^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^" >&2
false
}
############
# assert # Compare actual vs expected string; fail if mismatch
############
#
# Compares string (default: $output) against the given string argument.
# By default we do an exact-match comparison against $output, but there
# are two different ways to invoke us, each with an optional description:
#
# assert "EXPECT" [DESCRIPTION]
# assert "RESULT" "OP" "EXPECT" [DESCRIPTION]
#
# The first form (one or two arguments) does an exact-match comparison
# of "$output" against "EXPECT". The second (three or four args) compares
# the first parameter against EXPECT, using the given OPerator. If present,
# DESCRIPTION will be displayed on test failure.
#
# Examples:
#
# assert "this is exactly what we expect"
# assert "${lines[0]}" =~ "^abc" "first line begins with abc"
#
function assert() {
local actual_string="$output"
local operator='=='
local expect_string="$1"
local testname="$2"
case "${#*}" in
0) die "Internal error: 'assert' requires one or more arguments" ;;
1|2) ;;
3|4) actual_string="$1"
operator="$2"
expect_string="$3"
testname="$4"
;;
*) die "Internal error: too many arguments to 'assert'" ;;
esac
# Comparisons.
# Special case: there is no !~ operator, so fake it via '! x =~ y'
local not=
local actual_op="$operator"
if [[ $operator == '!~' ]]; then
not='!'
actual_op='=~'
fi
if [[ $operator == '=' || $operator == '==' ]]; then
# Special case: we can't use '=' or '==' inside [[ ... ]] because
# the right-hand side is treated as a pattern... and '[xy]' will
# not compare literally. There seems to be no way to turn that off.
if [ "$actual_string" = "$expect_string" ]; then
return
fi
elif [[ $operator == '!=' ]]; then
# Same special case as above
if [ "$actual_string" != "$expect_string" ]; then
return
fi
else
if eval "[[ $not \$actual_string $actual_op \$expect_string ]]"; then
return
elif [ $? -gt 1 ]; then
die "Internal error: could not process 'actual' $operator 'expect'"
fi
fi
# Test has failed. Get a descriptive test name.
if [ -z "$testname" ]; then
testname="${MOST_RECENT_PODMAN_COMMAND:-[no test name given]}"
fi
# Display optimization: the typical case for 'expect' is an
# exact match ('='), but there are also '=~' or '!~' or '-ge'
# and the like. Omit the '=' but show the others; and always
# align subsequent output lines for ease of comparison.
local op=''
local ws=''
if [ "$operator" != '==' ]; then
op="$operator "
ws=$(printf "%*s" ${#op} "")
fi
# This is a multi-line message, which may in turn contain multi-line
# output, so let's format it ourself, readably
local actual_split
IFS=$'\n' read -rd '' -a actual_split <<<"$actual_string" || true
printf "#/vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv\n" >&2
printf "#| FAIL: %s\n" "$testname" >&2
printf "#| expected: %s'%s'\n" "$op" "$expect_string" >&2
printf "#| actual: %s'%s'\n" "$ws" "${actual_split[0]}" >&2
local line
for line in "${actual_split[@]:1}"; do
printf "#| > %s'%s'\n" "$ws" "$line" >&2
done
printf "#\\^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n" >&2
false
}
########
# is # **DEPRECATED**; see assert() above
########
function is() {
local actual="$1"
local expect="$2"
local testname="${3:-${MOST_RECENT_PODMAN_COMMAND:-[no test name given]}}"
local is_expr=
if [ -z "$expect" ]; then
if [ -z "$actual" ]; then
# Both strings are empty.
return
fi
expect='[no output]'
elif [[ "$actual" = "$expect" ]]; then
# Strings are identical.
return
else
# Strings are not identical. Are there wild cards in our expect string?
if expr "$expect" : ".*[^\\][\*\[]" >/dev/null; then
# There is a '[' or '*' without a preceding backslash.
is_expr=' (using expr)'
elif [[ "${expect:0:1}" = '[' ]]; then
# String starts with '[', e.g. checking seconds like '[345]'
is_expr=' (using expr)'
fi
if [[ -n "$is_expr" ]]; then
if expr "$actual" : "$expect" >/dev/null; then
return
fi
fi
fi
# This is a multi-line message, which may in turn contain multi-line
# output, so let's format it ourself, readably
local -a actual_split
readarray -t actual_split <<<"$actual"
printf "#/vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv\n" >&2
printf "#| FAIL: $testname\n" >&2
printf "#| expected: '%s'%s\n" "$expect" "$is_expr" >&2
printf "#| actual: '%s'\n" "${actual_split[0]}" >&2
local line
for line in "${actual_split[@]:1}"; do
printf "#| > '%s'\n" "$line" >&2
done
printf "#\\^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n" >&2
false
}
############
# dprint # conditional debug message
############
#
# Set PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG to the name of one or more functions you want to debug
#
# Examples:
#
# $ PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG=parse_table bats .
# $ PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG="test_podman_images test_podman_run" bats .
#
function dprint() {
test -z "$PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG" && return
caller="${FUNCNAME[1]}"
# PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG is a space-separated list of desired functions
# e.g. "parse_table test_podman_images" (or even just "table")
for want in $PODMAN_TEST_DEBUG; do
# Check if our calling function matches any of the desired strings
if expr "$caller" : ".*$want" >/dev/null; then
echo "# ${FUNCNAME[1]}() : $*" >&3
return
fi
done
}
#################
# parse_table # Split a table on '|' delimiters; return space-separated
#################
#
# See sample .bats scripts for examples. The idea is to list a set of
# tests in a table, then use simple logic to iterate over each test.
# Columns are separated using '|' (pipe character) because sometimes
# we need spaces in our fields.
#
function parse_table() {
while read line; do
test -z "$line" && continue
declare -a row=()
while read col; do
dprint "col=<<$col>>"
row+=("$col")
done < <(echo "$line" | sed -E -e 's/(^|\s)\|(\s|$)/\n /g' | sed -e 's/^ *//' -e 's/\\/\\\\/g')
# the above seds:
# 1) Convert '|' to newline, but only if bracketed by spaces or
# at beginning/end of line (this allows 'foo|bar' in tests);
# 2) then remove leading whitespace;
# 3) then double-escape all backslashes
printf "%q " "${row[@]}"
printf "\n"
done <<<"$1"
}
###################
# random_string # Returns a pseudorandom human-readable string
###################
#
# Numeric argument, if present, is desired length of string
#
function random_string() {
local length=${1:-10}
head /dev/urandom | tr -dc a-zA-Z0-9 | head -c$length
}
###########################
# random_rfc1918_subnet #
###########################
#
# Use the class B set, because much of our CI environment (Google, RH)
# already uses up much of the class A, and it's really hard to test
# if a block is in use.
#
# This returns THREE OCTETS! It is up to our caller to append .0/24, .255, &c.
#
function random_rfc1918_subnet() {
local retries=1024
while [ "$retries" -gt 0 ];do
local cidr=172.$(( 16 + $RANDOM % 16 )).$(( $RANDOM & 255 ))
in_use=$(ip route list | fgrep $cidr)
if [ -z "$in_use" ]; then
echo "$cidr"
return
fi
retries=$(( retries - 1 ))
done
die "Could not find a random not-in-use rfc1918 subnet"
}
#########################
# find_exec_pid_files # Returns nothing or exec_pid hash files
#########################
#
# Return exec_pid hash files if exists, otherwise, return nothing
#
function find_exec_pid_files() {
run_podman info --format '{{.Store.RunRoot}}'
local storage_path="$output"
if [ -d $storage_path ]; then
find $storage_path -type f -iname 'exec_pid_*'
fi
}
#############################
# remove_same_dev_warning # Filter out useless warning from output
#############################
#
# On some CI systems, 'podman run --privileged' emits a useless warning:
#
# WARNING: The same type, major and minor should not be used for multiple devices.
#
# This obviously screws us up when we look at output results.
#
# This function removes the warning from $output and $lines. We don't
# do a full string match because there's another variant of that message:
#
# WARNING: Creating device "/dev/null" with same type, major and minor as existing "/dev/foodevdir/null".
#
# (We should never again see that precise error ever again, but we could
# see variants of it).
#
function remove_same_dev_warning() {
# No input arguments. We operate in-place on $output and $lines
local i=0
local -a new_lines=()
while [[ $i -lt ${#lines[@]} ]]; do
if expr "${lines[$i]}" : 'WARNING: .* same type, major' >/dev/null; then
:
else
new_lines+=("${lines[$i]}")
fi
i=$(( i + 1 ))
done
lines=("${new_lines[@]}")
output=$(printf '%s\n' "${lines[@]}")
}
# run 'podman help', parse the output looking for 'Available Commands';
# return that list.
function _podman_commands() {
dprint "$@"
# &>/dev/null prevents duplicate output
run_podman help "$@" &>/dev/null
awk '/^Available Commands:/{ok=1;next}/^Options:/{ok=0}ok { print $1 }' <<<"$output" | grep .
}
# END miscellaneous tools
###############################################################################
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