Two new commands have been created:
* inspec habitat profile create /path/to/profile
* inspec habitat profile upload /path/to/profile
The `create` command creates a Habitat artifact that contains the contents
of the Habitat profile found at the provided path. This will be used later
in some Habitat + InSpec integrations.
The `upload` command does the same create process but then uploads the
resulting artifact to the Habitat Depot.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
When in inspec shell, you need to type the `help` command to find out info
about your target system. This info would be super helpful right out of the
gate so users have confidence that they're targeting the correct system.
The target info is still available via the `help` command as it always has
been, as well.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
When running InSpec with multiple profiles, and two or more of the profiles
are read in using the "Flat" SourceReader (i.e. they are not actual profiles
with a metadata file like inspec.yml, but rather just a folder containing
.rb files with controls and tests in them), InSpec would throw a NilClass
error when building the necessary objects for the formatter.
The cause was in `#profile_contains_example` in the formatter code which
checks to see if the profile name is the same as the profile_id in the given
example. However, if both of those were nil, it would potentially match the
wrong Flat-read profile.
This change fixes this in two ways: refusing to match if the profile name
or example profile ID is nil, and adding a default name to a profile if
it doesn't have a title or name. This will solve the matching issue and also
clean up the formatter output so users can more easily tell what tests
are from which profile/path.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
The crontab resource parses a particular user's crontab file into
individual entries and allows the user to assert information about
each entry as needed.
Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>
This pull request adds a packages resource so that we can check for pattern matches against all the packages on a system. This initially implements only dpkg support for debian-based platforms so we can cover this use case:
```ruby
describe packages(/^xserver-xorg.*/) do
its("list") { should be_empty }
end
```
This uses FilterTable so we can supply additional queries, too.
```ruby
describe packages(/vi.+/).where { status != 'installed' } do
its('statuses') { should be_empty }
end
```
Users can specify the name as a string or a regular expression. If it is a string, we will escape it and convert it to a regular expression to use in matching against the full returned list of packages. If it is a regular expression, we take that as is and use it to filter the results.
While some package management systems such as `dpkg` can take a shell glob argument to filter their results, we eschew this and require a regular expression to match multiple package names because we will need this to work across other platforms in the future. This means that the following:
```ruby
packages("vim")
```
Will return *all* the "vim" packages on the system. The `packages` resource will take `"vim"`, turn it into `/vim/`, and greedily match anything with "vim" in the name. To match only a single package named `vim`, it needs to be an anchored regular expression.
```ruby
packages(/^vim$/)
```
Signed-off-by: Joshua Timberman <joshua@chef.io>
Use entries instead of list
Added a few more tests and non installed package in output
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
fix lint
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Timberman <joshua@chef.io>
* Fixes an issue when specifying no profile
* Fixes an issue when displaying a profile that has included/required profiels
* Fixes an issue when specifying profiles with only metadata
* Fixes formatting for spacing to ensure it adheres to previous alignment
* Fixes issue with the Control object and the rolling up of failed
and skipped examples.
Signed-off-by: Franklin Webber <franklin@chef.io>