I've seen an intermittent test failure in an autobuilder (sbuild)
environment where logs from failed builds cannot be retrieved,
but I can no longer reproduce it. Put the contents of the offending
file in the test's failing output so that if the failure comes back,
it can be debugged.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #264
Approved by: cgwalters
ostree-grub-generator can be used to customize
the generated grub.cfg file. Compile time
decision ostree-grub-generator vs grub2-mkconfig
can be overwritten with the OSTREE_GRUB2_EXEC
envvar - useful for auto tests and OS installers.
Why this alternative approach:
1) The current approach is less flexible than using a
custom 'ostree-grub-generator' script. Each system can
adjust this script for its needs, instead of using the
hardcoded values from ostree-bootloader-grub2.c.
2) Too much overhead on embedded to generate grub.cfg
via /etc/grub.d/ configuration files. It is still
possible to do so, even with this patch applied.
No need to install grub2 package on a target device.
3) The grub2-mkconfig code path has other issues:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761180
Task: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762220Closes: #228
Approved by: cgwalters
test-sysroot.js runs libtestExec() twice, one of which is after
creating non-hidden directories in $(pwd), so this check needs to be
skipped the second time.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #234
Approved by: cgwalters
This fixes the bug that in installed-tests that run testlib.sh under
"bash -c" (i.e. the C and JS tests), $(dirname $0) is "." and we can't do
the LD_PRELOAD correctly:
ERROR: ld.so: object './libreaddir-rand.so' from LD_PRELOAD cannot be
preloaded (cannot open shared object file): ignored.
Similarly, those tests can't copy gpghome correctly.
This also removes the confusing situation that SRCDIR in libtest.sh
(which is ${top_srcdir}/tests) does not mean the same thing as SRCDIR
in test-abi.sh (which is just ${top_srcdir}).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #234
Approved by: cgwalters
It's not working for me in `make check` on a RHEL 7 Workstation,
apparently because no GPG agent is spawned. I'm guessing this has
something to do with the GPG version?
The downside of this is we will be less likely to notice if GPG
changes again and we start leaking agents like we're in The Matrix
Reloaded. But the real solution to that is containers anyways.
Closes: #233
Approved by: smcv
Some autobuilder environments place the entire build chroot on tmpfs, so
even /var/tmp might not have this.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Closes: #232
Approved by: cgwalters
GNOME Continuous uses ginstest-runner --report-directory, which causes
the tests to save their tmpdirs persistently. This also means the
result directories didn't match the `/(var/)?tmp` regexp, which broke
the ostree tests in GContinuous.
Fix this by simply asserting that the tmpdir either has `.tmpdir` or
nothing.
I want to be able to easily test the C API on actual data in an OSTree
repo. The shell `libtest.sh` has code to generate it. Bridge the two
worlds by introducing a little `libostreetest` library which has a C
API which spawns a shell that runs things in `libtest.sh`.
Yes, this is about as beautiful as it sounds, which is to say, it's
not. But it works!
Note while we were here, I realized we were actually now creating
*two* tmpdirs per test in `make check` because the tap driver was
already doing that. Unify it so we know the C code can rely on it.
OSTree's code for testing predates the `glib-tap.mk` making its
way into GLib. Let's switch to it, as it provides a number
of advantages.
By far the biggest advantage is that `make check` can start to run
most of the tests *in addition* to having them work installed.
This commit keeps the installed tests working, but `make check` turns
out to be really broken because...our TAP usage has bitrotted to say
the least. Fix that all up.
Do some hacks so that the tests work uninstalled as well - in
particular, `glib-tap.mk` and the bits encoded into
`g_test_build_filename()` assume *recursive* Automake (blah). Work
around that by creating a symlink when installed to loop back.
If ostree is run in a test setup where it operates as root in a tmp
directory, it might cause issues to flag the deployments as immutable.
The test harness might simply be doing an `rm -rf` (effectively the case
for gnome-desktop-testing-runner), which will then fail.
We add a new debug option to the ostree_sysroot object using GLib's
GDebugKey functionality to allow our tests to communicate to ostree that
we don't want immutable deployments.
I noticed in the static deltas tests, there were some tests that
should have been under `-o pipefail` to ensure we properly propagate
errors.
There were a few places where we were referencing undefined variables.
Overall, this is clearly a good idea IMO.
Eliminates the need for constantly passing --sysroot=sysroot, but
also makes ostree place remote configs for sysroot/ostree/repo in
sysroot/etc/ostree/remotes.d where they should have been all along.
Having undefined (but in practice rarely changing) ordering for
`readdir()` ended up screwing us over for bootloader config
generation; see https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1226520
Let's make things significantly more likely to fail more quickly in
the future if similar bugs are introduced. We accomplish this by
introducing a little `LD_PRELOAD` library that randomizes the results
of `readdir()`.
Having undefined ordering (but in practice rarely changing)
ordering for `readdir()` ended up screwing us over with respect
to bootloader config file read ordering.
Let's make things significantly more likely to fail more quickly in
the future if similar bugs are introduced. We accomplish this by
introducing a little `LD_PRELOAD` library that randomizes the results
of `readdir()`.
Recursive over ostree and all subcommands, and check that --help
is supported, properly outputs to standard out, and exits
with a 0 exit status. Check that for commands with subcommands,
they produce the help output to standard error when run with no arguments.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737194
We don't want to allow MITM attackers to intercept upgrade requests
and provide clients with older OS versions vulnerable to security
flaws.
Only "ostree admin upgrade" gets this behavior for now - whether we
want to do it for "ostree admin switch" is another question.
These GPG tests were failing for me on EL7 - it appears to be because
we had only one directory for both private and public keys, and we
were giving that to ostree for verification, which passed them onto
gpgv.
In EL7 beta at least, gpgv now barfs if it finds a private key where
it is just expecting to find public keys.
Fix this by splitting out the public trusted directory from the
private key directory. Except now for signing, we still need the
public key there, so symlink it. Whee!
We need to use the full shutil_rm_rf() in order to actually delete
complete directories.
Test suite code based on a patch from Sjoerd Simons <sjored@luon.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710097
This uses gpgv for verification against DATADIR/ostree/pubring.gpg by
default. The keyring can be overridden by specifying OSTREE_GPG_HOME.
Add a unit test for commit signing with gpg key and verifying on pull;
to implement this we ship a test GPG key generated with no password
for Ostree Tester <test@test.com>.
Change all of the existing tests to disable GPG verification.
Add an optional dependency on gpgme to add GPG signatures into the
detached metadata, with the key "ostree.gpgsigs", as an "aay", an
array of signatures (treated as binary data).
The commit command gains a --gpg-sign=<key-id> argument. Also add an
argument --gpg-homedir to set the GPG homedir where we look for
keyrings.
If we had two deployments with different boot checksums, and were
trying to remove the one that was the same and add a new one (the
normal case), we'd end up assuming due to comparison with 0 that
we only needed to do the fast subbootversion swap.
Fix this by actually putting 1 where we really mean 1.
And update the tests to verify the fix; I have double-verified by
undoing the fix, and noting that the test fails.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708351
Currently OSTree supports two bootloader backends: syslinux
and U-Boot; allow to create a stub configuration for both.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708069
Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javier.martinez@collabora.co.uk>
libtest.sh has an setup_os_repository() helper function tha is
used by many tests to setup an OSTree initial repository.
This function creates an syslinux configuration unconditionally
but OSTree supports other bootloader backends besides syslinux.
So, is better to conditionally create a syslinux configuration
only when it is needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708069
Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javier.martinez@collabora.co.uk>
Use a consistent temporary filename to download uri's.
Check for downloaded files before fetching from uri.
Download to hash.part file, then copy/move to hash.done when complete.
Add argument support to setup_fake_remote_repo1 function.
Add test for pull resume.
To implement this, pass --force-range-requests into the trivial-httpd,
which will only serve half of the objects to clients at a time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706344
When running the test-admin-deploy-1.sh unit test,
cat shows the following error:
cat: boot/vmlinuz-3-6.0: No such file or directory
due a trivial typo in the kernel image file name.
Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javier.martinez@collabora.co.uk>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706371
While the first was useful way back in the day when we were importing
Debian bits and /sbin/init was expecting to find /dev/.initctl as a
named pipe, that's no longer an issue with systemd since it uses
dynamic Unix sockets.
Likewise, character and block devices in /dev are now dynamically
created by the devtmpfs from the kernel.
Less complexity and code here if we just support directories, regular
files, and symbolic links.
These corruption tests could be a lot better...like randomly try
single bit flips, range flips. Better, content-aware fuzzing. But
this is useful for now.
See https://wiki.gnome.org/OSTree/DeploymentModel2
This is a major rework of the on-disk filesystem layout, and the boot
process. OSTree now explicitly supports upgrading kernels, and these
upgrades are also atomic.
The core concept of the new model is the "deployment list", which is
an ordered list of bootable operating system trees. The deployment
list is reflected in the bootloader configuration; which has a kernel
argument that tells the initramfs (dracut) which operating system root
to use.
Invidiual notable changes that come along with this:
1) Operating systems should now come with their etc in usr/etc; OSTree
will perform a 3-way merge at deployment time, and place etc in
the actual root. This avoids the need for a bind mount, and is
just a lot cleaner.
2) OSTree no longer bind mounts /root, /home, and /tmp. It is expected
that the the OS/ has these as symbolic links into /var.
At the moment, OSTree only supports managing syslinux; other
bootloader backends will follow.
A simple HTTP server implementation is so few lines of code when one
is linking to libsoup anyways, so let's just have one here in ostree
that will be used for the test suite.
This allows us to run the archive tests that previously required
apache even in gnome-ostree.
This is where loose content objects are stored as one compressed file,
instead of the two separate ones for regular archive mode. This mode
would be suitable for HTTP servers, beause only one HTTP request is
necessary, and the result would be compressed.
Since we're making a shared library, it should be usable by non-GPL
apps.
To allow more code sharing between the core and the tests, move them
to the LGPLv2+ too.
A few bits of test and other code are still GPL. See the new COPYING
file for more information.
This necessitated a large set of changes.
We now support an "archive" mode for repositories. In this mode,
files are stored "packed" rather than hard linked. This allows one to
e.g. store an OSTree repository with root-owned files as non-root. It
is also used as the basis for serving repositories via HTTP.
While doing this I realized that GVariant is endianness-dependent; I
decided to just store all data in big endian.