Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adam Leff
a6582bea9b Remove any "All Rights Reserved" references (#1969)
* Remove any "All Rights Reserved" references

InSpec is licensed and released under the Apache 2.0 license. This
change removes all reference to legacy code files that still had
any Copyright or License lines referring to "All Rights Reserved".

Signed-off-by: Adam Leff <adam@leff.co>

* fix functional tests

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hartmann <chris@lollyrock.com>
2017-06-28 04:14:19 -07:00
Alex Pop
88975bff2a Switch package resource to os.redhat detection and use two spaces as fileds delimited
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
2017-02-15 11:07:10 +00:00
Alex Pop
fae96f6249 Add RedHat support for packages resource
Fix dpkg trimming of first line
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
2017-02-15 11:07:10 +00:00
Alex Pop
ce927e657a Skip packages resource for unsupported OS
Signed-off-by: Alex Pop <apop@chef.io>
2017-02-10 10:34:01 +00:00
Tom Duffield
1ea83f526c Address rubocop violations
Signed-off-by: Tom Duffield <tom@chef.io>
2017-02-08 16:49:16 -06:00
jtimberman
d7fad68541 add "packages" resource
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>
2017-02-07 10:29:11 +00:00