inspec/test/functional/plugins_test.rb

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# Functional tests related to plugin facility
require "functional/helper"
# I wrapped the whole file in a describe to refactor the include and
# add parallelization. I didn't want to reindent the whole file until
# we know this works well.
# rubocop:disable Layout/IndentationConsistency
describe "plugins" do
include FunctionalHelper
parallelize_me!
#=========================================================================================#
# Loader Errors
#=========================================================================================#
describe "plugin loader" do
it "handles an unloadable plugin correctly" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("version", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "plugin_error_on_load"))
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("ERROR", "Have an error on stdout")
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("Could not load plugin inspec-divide-by-zero", "Name the plugin in the stdout error")
_(outcome.stdout).wont_include("ZeroDivisionError", "No stacktrace in error by default")
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("Errors were encountered while loading plugins", "Friendly message in error")
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("Plugin name: inspec-divide-by-zero", "Plugin named in error")
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("divided by 0", "Exception message in error")
assert_exit_code 2, outcome
# TODO: split
outcome = inspec_with_env("version --debug", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "plugin_error_on_load"))
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("ZeroDivisionError", "Include stacktrace in error with --debug")
assert_exit_code 2, outcome
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# Disabling Plugins
#=========================================================================================#
describe "when disabling plugins" do
describe "when disabling the core plugins" do
it "should not be able to use core-provided commands" do
run_result = run_inspec_process("--disable-core-plugins habitat")
_(run_result.stderr).must_include 'Could not find command "habitat".'
# One might think that this should be code 2 (plugin error)
# But because the core plugins are not loaded, 'habitat' is not
# a known command, which makes it a usage error, code 1.
assert_exit_code 1, run_result
end
end
describe "when disabling the user plugins" do
it "should not be able to use user commands" do
run_result = run_inspec_process("--disable-user-plugins meaningoflife answer", env: { INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "meaning_by_path") })
_(run_result.stderr).must_include 'Could not find command "meaningoflife"'
assert_exit_code 1, run_result
end
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# CliCommand plugin type
#=========================================================================================#
describe "cli command plugins" do
it "is able to respond to a plugin-based cli subcommand" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("meaningoflife answer", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "meaning_by_path"))
_(outcome.stderr).wont_include 'Could not find command "meaningoflife"'
_(outcome.stderr).must_equal ""
_(outcome.stdout).must_equal ""
assert_exit_code 42, outcome
end
it "is able to respond to [help subcommand] invocations" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("help meaningoflife", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "meaning_by_path"))
_(outcome.stderr).must_equal ""
_(outcome.stdout).must_include "inspec meaningoflife answer"
# Full text:
# 'Exits immediately with an exit code reflecting the answer to life the universe, and everything.'
# but Thor will ellipsify based on the terminal width
_(outcome.stdout).must_include "Exits immediately"
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
# This is an important test; usually CLI plugins are only activated when their name is present in ARGV
it "includes plugin-based cli commands in top-level help" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("help", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "meaning_by_path"))
_(outcome.stdout).must_include "inspec meaningoflife"
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# Input plugin type
#=========================================================================================#
describe "input plugins" do
let(:env) { { INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: "#{config_dir_path}/input_plugin" } }
let(:profile) { "#{profile_path}/inputs/plugin" }
def run_input_plugin_test_with_controls(controls)
cmd = "exec #{profile} --controls #{controls}"
run_result = run_inspec_process(cmd, json: true, env: env)
assert_json_controls_passing(run_result)
_(run_result.stderr).must_be_empty
end
describe "when an input is provided only by a plugin" do
it "should find the value" do
run_input_plugin_test_with_controls("only_in_plugin")
end
end
describe "when an input is provided both inline and by a higher-precedence plugin" do
it "should use the value from the plugin" do
run_input_plugin_test_with_controls("collide_plugin_higher")
end
end
describe "when an input is provided both inline and by a lower-precedence plugin" do
it "should use the value from inline" do
run_input_plugin_test_with_controls("collide_inline_higher")
end
end
describe "when examining the event log" do
it "should include the expected events" do
run_input_plugin_test_with_controls("event_log")
end
end
describe "when listing available inputs" do
it "should list available inputs" do
run_input_plugin_test_with_controls("list_events")
end
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# Reporter plugin type
#=========================================================================================#
describe "reporter plugins" do
# The test reporter plugin returns a single line of output, like this:
# pXX:cYY:tZZ
# where XX is the count of profiles
# YY is the count of controls
# ZZ is the count of tests
let(:env) { { INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: "#{config_dir_path}/reporter_plugin" } }
# Test a flat profile - dependencies/profile_c is a simple one
describe "when using a custom reporter on a profile with one control" do
it "finds the single control" do
cmd = "exec #{profile_path}/dependencies/profile_c --reporter test-fixture"
run_result = run_inspec_process(cmd, env: env)
_(run_result.stderr).must_be_empty
_(run_result.stdout).must_include "p1c1t1"
end
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# inspec plugin command
#=========================================================================================#
# See lib/plugins/inspec-plugin-manager-cli/test
#=========================================================================================#
# Plugin Disable Messaging
#=========================================================================================#
describe "disable plugin usage message integration" do
it "mentions the --disable-user-plugins option" do
outcome = inspec("help")
_(outcome.stdout).must_include("--disable-user-plugins")
end
end
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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#=========================================================================================#
# DSL Plugin Support
#=========================================================================================#
describe "DSL plugin types support" do
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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include PluginFunctionalHelper
let(:fixture_path) { File.join(profile_path, "dsl_plugins", "controls", profile_file) }
let(:dsl_plugin_path) { File.join(mock_path, "plugins", "inspec-dsl-test", "lib", "inspec-dsl-test.rb") }
let(:run_result) { run_inspec_with_plugin("exec #{fixture_path}", plugin_path: dsl_plugin_path) }
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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describe "outer profile dsl plugin type support" do
let(:profile_file) { "outer_profile_dsl.rb" }
it "works correctly with outer_profile dsl extensions" do
_(run_result.stderr).must_equal ""
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# The outer_profile_dsl.rb file has control-01, then a call to favorite_grain
# (which generates a control), then control-03.
# If the plugin exploded, we'd see control-01 but not control-03
controls = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"]
_(controls.count).must_equal 3
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# We expect the second controls id to be 'sorghum'
# (this is the functionality of the outer_profile_dsl we installed)
generated_control = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][1]
_(generated_control["id"]).must_equal "sorghum"
_(generated_control["results"][0]["status"]).must_equal "passed"
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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end
end
describe "control dsl plugin type support" do
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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let(:profile_file) { "control_dsl.rb" }
it "works correctly with control dsl extensions" do
_(run_result.stderr).must_equal ""
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# The control_dsl.rb file has one control, with a describe-01, then a call to favorite_fruit, then describe-02
# If the plugin exploded, we'd see describe-01 but not describe-02
results = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["results"]
_(results.count).must_equal 2
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# We expect the descriptions to include that the favorite fruit is banana
# (this is the functionality of the control_dsl we installed)
first_description_section = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["descriptions"].first
_(first_description_section).wont_be_nil
_(first_description_section["label"]).must_equal "favorite_fruit"
_(first_description_section["data"]).must_equal "Banana"
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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end
end
describe "describe dsl plugin type support" do
let(:profile_file) { "describe_dsl.rb" }
it "works correctly with describe dsl extensions" do
_(run_result.stderr).must_equal ""
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# The describe_dsl.rb file has one control, with
# describe-01, describe-02 which contains a call to favorite_vegetable, then describe-03
# If the plugin exploded, we'd see describe-01 but not describe-02
results = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["results"]
_(results.count).must_equal 3
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# We expect the description of describe-02 to include the word aubergine
# (this is the functionality of the describe_dsl we installed)
second_result = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["results"][1]
_(second_result).wont_be_nil
_(second_result["code_desc"]).must_include "aubergine"
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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end
end
describe "test dsl plugin type support" do
let(:profile_file) { "test_dsl.rb" }
it "works correctly with test dsl extensions" do
_(run_result.stderr).must_equal ""
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# The test_dsl.rb file has one control, with
# describe-01, describe-02 which contains a call to favorite_legume, then describe-03
# If the plugin exploded, we'd see describe-01 but not describe-02
results = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["results"]
_(results.count).must_equal 3
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# I spent a while trying to find a way to get the test to alter its name;
# that won't work for various setup reasons.
# So, it just throws an exception with the word 'edemame' in it.
second_result = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"][0]["results"][1]
_(second_result).wont_be_nil
_(second_result["status"]).must_equal "failed"
_(second_result["message"]).must_include "edemame"
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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end
end
describe "resource dsl plugin type support" do
let(:profile_file) { "unused" }
it "works correctly with test dsl extensions" do
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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# We have to build a custom command line - need to load the whole profile,
# so the libraries get loaded.
cmd = "exec "
cmd += File.join(profile_path, "dsl_plugins")
cmd += " --controls=/^rdsl-control/ "
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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run_result = run_inspec_with_plugin(cmd, plugin_path: dsl_plugin_path)
_(run_result.stderr).must_equal ""
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
2018-11-29 19:14:06 +00:00
# We should have three controls; 01 and 03 just do a string match.
# 02 uses the custom resource, which relies on calls to the resource DSL.
# If the plugin exploded, we'd see rdsl-control-01 but not rdsl-control-02
results = @json["profiles"][0]["controls"]
_(results.count).must_equal 3
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
2018-11-29 19:14:06 +00:00
# Control 2 has 2 describes; one uses a simple explicit matcher,
# while the second uses a matcher defined via a macro provided by the resource DSL.
control2_results = results[1]["results"]
_(control2_results[0]["status"]).must_equal "passed"
_(control2_results[0]["code_desc"]).must_include "favorite_berry"
_(control2_results[0]["code_desc"]).must_include "blendable"
_(control2_results[1]["status"]).must_equal "passed"
_(control2_results[1]["code_desc"]).must_include "favorite_berry"
_(control2_results[1]["code_desc"]).must_include "have drupals"
Plugin Type: DSLs (#3557) This PR adds 5 closely related plugin types, which allow a plugin to implement new DSL methods / keywords. The mechanism to activate the plugins are all very similar - basically, in a particular location in the code, `method_missing` is implemented, and is used to activate the particular type of DSL being requested. 4 of the DSL plugin types relate to code that could appear in a profile control file. * outer_profile_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code in profile Ruby files that appear outside `control` or `describe` blocks. * control_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `control` blocks. * describe_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `describe` blocks. * test_dsl plugins allow you to extend the code within `it`/`its` blocks. Finally, the `resource_dsl` plugin allows you to extend the code used within custom resources. Basic unit tests are provided to prove that the plugin types are properly defined. A simple plugin fixture defining DSL hooks (based on favorite foods) is included, and is exercised through a set of functional tests. The plugin developer docs are updated to describe the 5 DSLs. *Note*: Implementing a plugin using any of the DSL plugin types is experimental. The contexts that are exposed to the DSL methods are private and poorly documented. The InSpec project does not claim the APIs used by these plugin types are covered by SemVer. Plugin authors are encouraged to pin tightly to the `inspec` gem in their gemspecs. Motivation for this plugin comes from the desire to allow passionate community members to implement things like "2 out of 3" tests, example groups, improved serverspec compatibility, "they/their" and other "fluency" changes, as well as make it possible for future work by the InSpec team to be implemented as a core plugin, rather than a direct change to the main codebase.
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end
end
end
#=========================================================================================#
# Train Plugin Support
#=========================================================================================#
describe "train plugin support" do
describe "when a train plugin is installed" do
it "can run inspec detect against a URL target" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("detect -t test-fixture://", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "train-test-fixture"))
lines = outcome.stdout.split("\n")
_(lines.grep(/Name/).first).must_include("test-fixture")
_(lines.grep(/Name/).first).wont_include("train-test-fixture")
_(lines.grep(/Release/).first).must_include("0.1.0")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("os")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("windows")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("unix")
_(lines.grep(/Arch/).first).must_include("mock")
_(outcome.stderr).must_be_empty
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
it "can run inspec detect against a test-fixture backend" do
outcome = inspec_with_env("detect -b test-fixture", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "train-test-fixture"))
lines = outcome.stdout.split("\n")
_(lines.grep(/Name/).first).must_include("test-fixture")
_(lines.grep(/Name/).first).wont_include("train-test-fixture")
_(lines.grep(/Release/).first).must_include("0.1.0")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("os")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("windows")
_(lines.grep(/Families/).first).must_include("unix")
_(lines.grep(/Arch/).first).must_include("mock")
_(outcome.stderr).must_be_empty
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
it "can run inspec shell and read a file" do
# The test fixture always returns the same content regardless of path
outcome = inspec_with_env("shell -t test-fixture:// -c 'file(%q{/opt/any-path}).content'", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "train-test-fixture"))
_(outcome.stdout.chomp).must_equal "Lorem Ipsum"
_(outcome.stderr).must_be_empty
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
it "can run inspec shell and run a command" do
# The test fixture always returns the same stdout and the same exit code.
outcome = inspec_with_env("shell -t test-fixture:// -c 'command(%q{echo hello}).exit_status'", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "train-test-fixture"))
_(outcome.stdout.chomp).must_equal "17"
_(outcome.stderr).must_be_empty
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
# TODO: split
outcome = inspec_with_env("shell -t test-fixture:// -c 'command(%q{echo hello}).stdout'", INSPEC_CONFIG_DIR: File.join(config_dir_path, "train-test-fixture"))
_(outcome.stdout.chomp).must_equal "Mock Command Result stdout"
_(outcome.stderr).must_be_empty
assert_exit_code 0, outcome
end
end
end
end